Godoy v. Linzner

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 13, 2024
DocketB330725
StatusPublished

This text of Godoy v. Linzner (Godoy v. Linzner) 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
Godoy v. Linzner, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 11/13/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

SONIA GODOY et al., B330725

Plaintiffs and Respondents, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 21STPB08536) v.

LETICIA LINZNER, as Trustee, etc.,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Michael C. Small, Judge. Affirmed. Westlake Law Group, Law Office of David A. Esquibias and Davis A. Esquibias for Defendant and Appellant. Oldman, Sallus & Gold and Nathan M. Talei for Plaintiffs and Respondents.

______________________ INTRODUCTION Silvia Villareal named her three children, Leticia Linzer, Arturo Villareal, and Sonia Godoy, as the beneficiaries of her living trust, the assets of which included her long-time home. Upon her death, each sibling was to receive a one-third fee simple interest in the home. In her last amendment to the trust instrument, however, Silvia decreed the siblings could only sell their respective shares for an amount well below the market value and only to each other, citing her desire to keep the home in the family. After Silvia passed, Arturo and Sonia petitioned the probate court, in part, for an order determining the trust instrument unreasonably restrained their ability to alienate their interests in the real property. Over Leticia’s objection, the court granted Arturo and Sonia’s requested relief and declared the amendment void. Because Silvia’s amendment imposed an unreasonable restraint on alienation in violation of Civil Code section 711, we affirm the probate court’s order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. The Trust Instrument In 2005, Silvia Villarreal created a revocable living trust by a declaration of trust, which she subsequently amended twice. In 2018, with the assistance of an attorney, she amended and restated the trust instrument (2018 restatement). The 2018 restatement stated that the trust’s purpose was two-fold: first, to provide for the support of Silvia while she was alive; and second, “to provide for the distribution of the trust property, after [Silvia’s] death, to [Silvia’s] children or their issue,” to enable them “to live productive and meaningful lives.” In 2019, without

2 the assistance of an attorney, she again amended the trust instrument with a handwritten document (2019 amendment). According to the 2018 restatement, the trust assets included the real property in Cerritos where Silvia resided (the Property). A provision entitled “Special Gift of the family residence,” under the article governing “Distributions After [Silvia’s] Death,” provided that on Silvia’s death, the trustee was to distribute the Property to Arturo, Sonia, and Leticia. The siblings were each to receive an undivided one-third interest, as tenants in common, of all of Silvia’s interest in the Property. Silvia requested “the children retain this real property for a minimum of five years after the date of [her] death,” suggesting they “could also consider selling/buying the property to/from a sibling or to one or more of [her] grandchildren.” The 2018 restatement emphasized that these “requests and suggestions” were “precatory and not mandatory.” The “vesting of interests” pursuant to the terms of the trust instrument was “as of the date of [Silvia’s] death.” The 2019 amendment stated that Silvia “would like to add the following” language to her “will/living trust”: “With the intention of leaving my house to my kids (Sonia, Arturo, and Leticia) which I worked all my life for, my legacy [and] my wish, is to keep the house as a place for all three of my children to enjoy, live and prosper and not to be sold or given outside of a [sic] family.” Below that line, she included four clauses that read in full as follows: “(A) Should any one of my children [Sonia, Arturo, or Leticia] upon my death or in the future wish to sell their portion they must to [sic] offer it for 100,000 (one hundred thousand doll.) to each other. [¶] (B) They must be flexible in received [sic] the purchase if it takes one to ten years (1-10

3 years). [¶] (C) If the sibling chooses to split the payments of the property 50% and 50% it is equal shares, it is my wish to do so. [¶] (D) My wish is for this home to be in the family, no outsiders. No dispute or adversary behavior among my children take place. Therefore, no contesting of my will/trust and this document. It is a gift.” B. Arturo and Sonia’s Petition When Silvia passed away in November 2020, Leticia became trustee under the terms of the trust instrument. A probate referee valued the Property at $1,050,000 at the time of Silvia’s death and $1,300,000 as of December 2022. In September 2021, Arturo and Sonia filed a petition under Probate Code section 17200, seeking a determination whether Silvia’s “wishes” in the 2019 amendment as to the Property were precatory or mandatory. If the wishes were mandatory, Arturo and Sonia asked the probate court to modify the trust instrument by striking the 2019 amendment because its language imposed an unreasonable restraint on alienation under Civil Code section 711 (section 711). Arturo and Sonia also sought an order compelling Leticia, as trustee, to sell the Property on the open market and equally distribute the proceeds, as well as an order instructing her to not use trust assets to purchase their interests. Leticia objected to each of these requests. Relevant here, Leticia asserted that section 711 did not apply to testamentary gifts of real property, and that in any event the 2019 amendment did not impose an unreasonable restraint on alienation under section 711. Leticia also asserted that in executing the 2019 amendment, Silvia revised the trust instrument to create a new testamentary trust to hold the Property and lawfully limit the siblings’ ability to sell their interests in the Property.

4 The probate court determined Silvia’s wishes in the 2019 amendment were mandatory, not precatory. The court also agreed with Arturo and Sonia that section 711’s prohibition of unreasonable restraints on alienation applied to real property transferred through testamentary instruments. The court further determined the 2019 amendment unreasonably restrained alienation by precluding an open market sale of the Property at its fair market value. Based on that determination, the court declared the 2019 amendment was void and the 2018 restatement was the operative trust document. The court declined at that juncture to compel Leticia to sell the Property and distribute the proceeds. The court set a future date for consideration of that request to afford Arturo and Sonia time to attempt to sell their interests to family members for fair market value to honor Silvia’s precatory wish in the 2018 restatement that the Property remain in the family. Leticia timely appealed. DISCUSSION Leticia contends the probate court erred in concluding that Silvia’s wishes in the 2019 amendment impermissibly restrained the siblings’ rights to sell their interests in the Property. She contends (1) the prohibition of unreasonable restraints on alienation under section 711 does not apply to testamentary instruments, and (2) any restraint on alienation in the 2019 amendment was reasonable. Alternatively, she contends the 2019 amendment placed the Property into a new testamentary trust, in lieu of the outright distribution of an absolute one-third fee simple interest to each sibling granted by the 2018 restatement. We review each of these issues de novo. (Burch v. George (1994) 7 Cal.4th 246, 254, superseded by statute on other

5 grounds as stated in Estate of Rossi (2006) 138 Cal.App.4th 1325, 1331-1332, 1339; Apple Inc. v. Superior Court (2013) 56 Cal.4th 128, 135.) But first we address Arturo and Sonia’s contention that this appeal was not taken from an appealable order. A.

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