Estate of Wong CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 2025
DocketA169589
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Wong CA1/1 (Estate of Wong CA1/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Wong CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 6/20/25 Estate of Wong CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

Estate of LLOYD QUONG WONG, Deceased.

DEBRA LEE MILLS, Petitioner and Appellant, A169589 v. (Marin County DAVID HAW, Super. Ct. No. PRO2204029) Objector and Respondent.

After appellant Debra Lee Mills informed respondent David Haw about the death of Lloyd Quong Wong, a man they both knew as their uncle, they both filed separate petitions to be recognized as Wong’s heirs. Haw disputed that Mills was his biological cousin and entitled to a portion of Wong’s estate. The trial court granted Haw’s petition and denied Mills’s petition. In light of the deferential standard of review, we affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND This case is a reminder of the disheartening historical treatment of Chinese immigrant women, its continuing consequences, and the law’s inability, in the face of uncertain evidence, to remedy possible past wrongs.

1 The facts about the parties’ familial connections are taken from a declaration Mills submitted in the probate court. (Haw asserts that some facts lack corroboration.) In researching her family history, Mills learned that her grandmother, Lum Sing Wong, was forced to work as a concubine in the early 1900s in Oregon. The grandmother fled to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1918 because she was being treated cruelly. At the time she fled, she had a son who was born in 1915. That son is the father of respondent David Haw. There is no dispute that Haw is Wong’s nephew and thus his heir. According to Mills, the grandmother was pregnant with Mills’s mother when she fled to California, and Mills’s mother was born later the same year. The parties dispute Mills’s version of her mother’s early life and, as a result, whether Mills also is Wong’s heir. Mills stated that because Haw’s father was born in Oregon and both his mother and the man who had brought the mother from China appeared on his birth certificate, he was considered a “legitimate” child. Because he was considered legitimate and the fact he was a boy, Haw’s father was placed in a boarding school for Chinese boys. In contrast, Mills’ mother was considered “illegitimate” and ineligible for such a school.1 She was placed with foster parents, whose names were listed on her birth certificate. Mills attested that she “believe[s] that the information provided on [her mother’s] birth certificate was false and that no legal adoption occurred.” According to Mills, the false information was likely provided “in an effort to protect [Mills’s] mother from a life as an illegitimate

1 Haw stated below that his understanding of the circumstances

surrounding his grandmother’s departure from Oregon are “inconsistent” with Mills’s description. For example, he provided accounts of San Francisco institutions that he said did, in fact, care for the babies and young children of prostitutes.

2 child born to a prostitute and hunted by . . . gangs controlling . . . smuggling rings.” Mills notes that a midwife, not a medical doctor, attested to the birth, which “makes the falsified record more plausible.” The midwife is identified on the birth certificate as “Mrs. Wong,” and the midwife’s signature does not appear on the certificate, only a typed name on the signature line. Mills has been unable to find any legal documentation that the people who raised her mother ever legally adopted her. The death certificate for Mills’s mother lists the mother’s mother as “Lin Lee,” which is similar to the woman listed on her birth certificate (“Lee Quan Lin”) and different from the name of the woman Mills claims was her biological grandmother, Lum Sing Wong. After Mills’s mother was born, Mills’s grandmother later had two more children, a son born in 1923, and then decedent Wong, who was born in 1945 and is the subject of these probate proceedings. According to Mills, this means that Mills is Wong’s niece, and Mills and Haw are cousins. Also according to Mills, her mother knew her own mother (Mills’s grandmother, Lum Sing Wong) and her three brothers, as did Mills, and no one questioned their family ties. For example, Mills attended Haw’s 1979 wedding and was part of a family wedding photo that was submitted to the probate court showing her standing between decedent Wong and his brother, Haw’s father. Wong died intestate in August 2022. He was never married and did not have children, and his siblings predeceased him. The Marin County Public Administrator (Public Administrator) contacted Mills, apparently after obtaining her contact information in Wong’s effects. Mills informed the Public Administrator that Haw also was related to Wong, and she informed Haw of Wong’s death. Mills and Haw corresponded by email and text about their familial relations. Mills at one point wrote to Haw, “We did not know of your dad

3 until that trip to SF to meet grandma. Then we started keeping in touch with him and Uncle Bill [the other son born to the grandmother]. I think I was 10 or 11 years old.” Her email ended, “We sent a letter to Raymond, the guy that keeps emailing us. That we know back then they did not want girls, that’s why Grandma gave her up to a friend in Stockton. But it’s strange because mom’s birth certificate says she was born in Modesto. I thought it was Oakland, we were told. And then her mom’s name is not the same. So we emailed Raymond to see if we can get DNA tests to see if we are related. If not, we still enjoyed being family!” Haw later texted Mills, “Apparently you and I are Uncle Lloyd’s only remaining blood relatives.” In December 2022, Mills filed a Nomination of Public Administrator stating she was entitled to administer Wong’s estate but that she declined to act and nominated the Public Administrator instead. That same day, the Public Administrator filed a petition to administer Wong’s estate and for letters of administration. Mills was the only relative listed in the petition.2 The probate court appointed the Public Administrator as administrator and issued letters in February 2023. The Public Administrator hired an heir search company. The company’s search found “insufficient information to establish the existence of any heirs of decedent.”

2 Later, Mills’s niece Theresa Lee and her nephews Michael Lee and

Daniel Lee (the Lees) made an appearance in the probate court and were represented by the same attorneys who represented Mills below. Mills is currently self-represented but purports to file a brief on behalf of herself and the Lees. But she was the only party who appealed from the probate court’s order and thus is the sole appellant.

4 Haw in June 2023 filed a petition for a determination of rights under Probate Code section 11700.3 The petition does not appear in the appellate record. But the record reveals that Haw attested as part of that petition that he had no personal knowledge or credible basis to affirm the existence of any other heirs at law to Wong’s estate. And there are indications in the record that Haw might have represented that he did not recall Mills attending his wedding. Mills and the Lees did not oppose the petition.4 Two months later, in August 2023, Mills and the Lees filed their own petition for a determination of rights under section 11700 (the Mills/Lee petition). Mills submitted family photos and various correspondence to establish her and her mother’s connection to Wong and the extended family.

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Related

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245 Cal. Rptr. 3d 498 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2019)

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Estate of Wong CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-wong-ca11-calctapp-2025.