Estate of Wong

40 Cal. App. 4th 1198, 47 Cal. Rptr. 2d 707
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 1995
DocketH012397
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 40 Cal. App. 4th 1198 (Estate of Wong) 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, 40 Cal. App. 4th 1198, 47 Cal. Rptr. 2d 707 (Cal. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

40 Cal.App.4th 1198 (1995)
47 Cal. Rptr.2d 707

Estate of TAI-KIN WONG, Deceased.
XI ZHAO, as Adminstrator, etc., Petitioner and Respondent,
v.
TAI-SHING WONG et al., Contestants and Appellants.

Docket No. H012397.

Court of Appeals of California, Sixth District.

December 7, 1995.

*1200 COUNSEL

Hallisey & Johnson and Jeremiah F. Hallisey for Contestants and Appellants.

McManis, Faulkner & Morgan, James McManis, William Faulkner and Lisa Herrick for Petitioner and Respondent.

*1201 OPINION

WUNDERLICH, J.

In this case we review the trial court's decision that a document containing eight words, seven of them proper names and an appellation, constituted a holographic will.

Tai-Kin Wong (Tai) was a successful 44-year-old businessman who until just before death had a history of good health. He was living with his girlfriend Xi Zhao (Xi), and he enjoyed a close and loving relationship with his large family. On New Year's Eve in 1992, he took ill and died in a hospital emergency room of unexplained causes. Sometime after his death, found in his office was a sealed envelope, decorated with stickers and containing a handwritten note which read "All Tai-Kin Wong's → Xi Zhao, my best half TKW 12-31-92." This document — containing no subject, no verb, no description of property, and no indication of its subject matter or purpose — was found by the trial court to be a holographic will, passing Tai's entire estate to Xi. Tai's father, Kok-Cheong Wong (appellant)[1] brought this appeal. For the reasons stated below, we will reverse the judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

At the time of his death, Tai was 44 years old. He had never married and he had no children. For the previous three years, he and Xi had lived together in Saratoga. Tai and Xi had met in 1987 at a scientific conference. They fell in love and began to live together in 1989 after Xi received her doctorate in cell biology. They lived together until the time of Tai's death on New Year's Eve.[2]

When Xi relocated to California to be with Tai, she turned down several job offers that were more attractive than the one she accepted at Stanford University. Previously she had visited Tai in California and they had kept in close touch. She immediately moved into his house in Saratoga and worked at her full-time job at Stanford. Tai, meanwhile, was engaged in running a company he founded with his brother, Danny Wong (Danny) called Baekon, Inc. Xi helped Tai run Baekon, working for Baekon in the evenings and on weekends. In 1990 Tai and Xi founded a new company, Transgenic Technologies, Inc. (TTI) which they owned equally. Tai worked every day at TTI in Fremont, developing the new business. Baekon was wound down; Danny transferred his interest in the business to Tai.

*1202 Tai and Xi thus lived together and worked together for the last three years of Tai's life. Whether their love relationship was flourishing or floundering was disputed at trial. Though supposedly lovers, on the day of Tai's death, New Year's Eve, they had arranged to dine separately — Tai with his close friend, Dr. Jianmin Liu and his girlfriend, and Xi with a man she describes as then a casual social acquaintance, Brien Wilson, a local attorney.

The evidence Xi introduced tended to show that she was close to Tai's family, indeed, practically accepted as a member of it. After Mr. Wong came home from the hospital following a stroke, Tai and Xi took care of him four nights a week, Monday through Thursday. Mr. Wong viewed Xi as his son's companion, and presented her with gifts of money, traditionally given only to family members in Chinese families.

When Tai died on December 31, 1992, it was in the throes of an illness which was similar in its symptoms to sicknesses that had afflicted him two or three times earlier that month. On December 11, 1992, he felt very ill while dining in a restaurant. Xi told him to see a doctor. On December 20, 1992, Tai collapsed at home but recovered and told Xi he would be fine. On December 21st he called Xi at her Stanford office and told her he was sick again. Xi told Tai to call "911"; he was taken to Washington Hospital in Fremont by ambulance. He spent three days in the intensive care unit. Doctors were unable to diagnose his illness, but wished to do a test which Tai declined. On December 31st, he again became ill, was taken to the hospital by ambulance, and died with the same symptoms.

The onset of the final episode was unclear. During the day on New Year's Eve, Tai was working at his office in Fremont. He had business meetings that afternoon until about 4:30, which Xi and others attended. Although not 100 percent healthy, he appeared to be well and to be functioning well. He called Dr. Liu two or three times to finalize dinner arrangements for the evening. Another employee who was working at the office waved good-bye to Tai at 6 p.m. and he appeared to be just fine. At 7 p.m. Dr. Liu's received a call from Tai saying that he was feeling very ill. Dr. Liu's girlfriend advised him to call "911" which Tai did. His friends agreed to come to the Fremont office from Berkeley. When they reached the office the ambulance had already taken Tai to the hospital. The ambulance attendants found Tai conscious upon their arrival at the office building, but he lost consciousness in the ambulance, never regained it, and died at the hospital before midnight.

By the time Dr. Liu and his girlfriend Jennifer Zhang arrived at the hospital, Tai was in a coma. When the doctors told Dr. Liu that Tai was *1203 dying, he tried to reach members of Tai's family. Because he did not have their telephone numbers, he called Tai's Saratoga house trying to reach Xi. There was no answer. Meanwhile, Xi was having dinner with Brien Wilson at a fancy French restaurant in Los Gatos. She had concealed from Tai the fact that she was dining on New Year's Eve with Brien Wilson, a man she moved in with two and one-half months after Tai's death. After dinner, she returned to the Saratoga house, and shortly after her arrival she received a call from Dr. Liu informing her that Tai was in the hospital. (Dr. Liu testified he never did reach Xi on the telephone. Rather, she called him at the hospital after Tai's death.) According to Xi, when she arrived at the hospital, close to midnight, Tai was already dead. While Tai had some symptoms similar to those that characterized his illness 10 days earlier, the cause of death was mysterious and has never been determined.

The questioned document or purported will was discovered in the following way: Xi made no effort to find a will at the residence she shared with Tai. Instead, on January 18, 1993, two weeks after Tai's funeral, Xi, Roy Tottingham (then a business consultant to TTI and now vice-president), Dr. Gin Wu (a TTI employee) and Heston Chau (an old friend of Tai's) searched Tai's office. Xi had asked Danny Wong to help go through Tai's papers, but he refused to do it. These four people, then, including Xi, divided the papers into business documents and personal papers and placed them in separate boxes.

During this search they found a sealed envelope in one of Tai's desk drawers, but Xi could not remember which one nor who saw it first. The upper left hand corner contained Tai's address label, the center of the envelope bore two stickers: a rainbow with the words "You're Special," and a rainbow with the words "Love You." This sealed envelope was placed in the box of Tai's personal papers which itself was sealed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Cal. App. 4th 1198, 47 Cal. Rptr. 2d 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-wong-calctapp-1995.