In re Tung Trust

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 2026
DocketB343197
StatusPublished

This text of In re Tung Trust (In re Tung Trust) 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
In re Tung Trust, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 6/9/26 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

In re TUNG TRUST DATED B343197 OCTOBER 24, 2011 (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No.20STPB01034 LILLIAN GAECKE, as Temporary Successor Trustee, etc.,

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

NICHOLAS YEH et al,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Daniel Juarez, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions. Braunstein & Braunstein, Clark Anthony Braunstein and Annie Berlin for Defendants and Appellants. Wright Kim Douglas and Jeffrey S. Cohen for Plaintiff and Respondent. __________________________

In 2011 Ya-Ching Tung established the Tung Trust, a revocable living trust, designating as successor beneficiaries her three children—son Lin-Chuan Yeh and daughters Lin-Chia Yeh and Lillian Gaecke.1 Lin-Chuan died in July 2016 and is survived by his three children, Nicholas, Savannah, and Joyce (the Yeh children). After Tung died in May 2019, Gaecke, as temporary successor trustee of the Tung Trust, filed a petition in the probate court seeking a determination that the transfer of trust property to Lin-Chuan failed because he had predeceased Tung. Over the opposition of the Yeh children, the court granted Gaecke’s motion for summary adjudication, finding California’s antilapse statute, codified in Probate Code section 21110,2 did not apply to preserve the transfer of property to Lin-Chuan under the trust for the benefit of the Yeh children. On appeal, the Yeh children contend the probate court erred in finding the antilapse statute did not apply. California’s antilapse statute provides that if the transferee under an instrument (including a trust or will) predeceases the transferor, if certain conditions are met, including that the instrument does not express a contrary intention, the transferee’s issue (lineal descendants) stand in the shoes of the transferee

1 We refer to family members who use the Yeh surname by their given names. 2 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Probate Code.

2 and receive the benefit of the transfer.3 The antilapse statute prevents the unintended disinheritance of descendants of a transferee by creating a presumption that the transferor intended for the descendants to receive the transfer under the instrument in place of a transferee who has died by the time of the transfer. If the antilapse statute does not apply, the transfer under the trust fails, and the distribution under the instrument is made under the laws of intestacy. We agree with the Yeh children that the probate court erred in finding the Tung Trust expressed a “contrary intention” to override application of the antilapse statute under section 21110, subdivision (b). The trust provided that if a person named in the trust failed to survive the transferor (Tung) for 30 days, “the person shall be considered to have predeceased the settlor.” What the trust did not say is that if the person named in the trust failed to survive Tung for 30 days, the person would not receive the gift under the trust. In the absence of clear language indicating Tung’s contrary intention to disinherit Lin-Chuan’s issue (the Yeh children), the antilapse statute applied. We therefore reverse the order granting Gaecke’s motion for summary adjudication and direct the court to enter a new order denying the motion.

3 Section 50 defines the “‘[i]ssue’” of a person to mean “all his or her lineal descendants of all generations.”

3 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The Tung Trust Tung, an unmarried woman,4 established the revocable Tung Trust in October 2011. She designated herself as trustee and Lin-Chuan, her oldest child, as successor trustee. The trust estate included her residence located on 26th Street in Santa Monica (Santa Monica property), unspecified bank accounts, and the contents of safe deposit boxes. Article 5, paragraph B of the trust provided that upon Tung’s death, the trustee would distribute the assets in the estate to Tung’s three children as follows: “any and all real property” would go to Lin-Chuan, and “[a]ll bank accounts where no beneficiary is designated” would go one-half to Lin-Chuan, one-third to Lin-Chia, and one-sixth to Gaecke. The trust did not provide for any alternative disposition of the trust estate and did not include a residuary clause specifying how any assets not subject to specific transfers would be distributed. The trust contained no express reference to the Yeh children (who were adults at the time it was established).

4 In 1974 Tung divorced Shih Chieh Yeh, the father of Gaecke, Lin-Chuan, and Lin-Chia; Shih Chieh died in 2010. Shih Chieh held a 50 percent interest in Tung’s Santa Monica property, the final distribution of which is the subject of a pending related action, Estate of Shieh Yeh, Deceased (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. case No. 20STPB03775).

4 Article 10 of the Tung Trust, titled “Miscellaneous Provisions,”5 contains three provisions relevant to the parties’ arguments. Paragraph J, titled “Survivor by 30 Days” (the survivor provision) states, “Except as otherwise specifically provided in this instrument, if any person named herein fails to survive a settler for thirty days, for all purposes of this trust, the person shall be considered to have predeceased the settlor.” Paragraph A, titled “Additions to the Trust” (the additions provision), provides in part, “Any addition to a trust that at such time has been wholly distributed shall be distributed to the beneficiary of such trust or, if he or she shall not be living, to his or her then-living issue, on the principle of representation.” Paragraph G, titled “No-Contest Clause,” provides in part: “If any beneficiary under this trust . . . contests in any court the validity of this trust . . . or seeks otherwise to void, nullify, or set aside this trust or any of its provisions, then that person’s right to take any interest given to him or her by this trust shall be determined as it would have been determined if that person had predeceased the execution of this declaration of trust without surviving issue.”

B. Gaecke’s Petition Lin-Chuan died on July 26, 2016. Tung died nearly three years later, on May 7, 2019. Lin-Chia died eight months after Tung, on January 3, 2020, without issue.

5 We omit block capitalization used in the Tung Trust.

5 Gaecke, as Tung’s sole living child, initiated this action on February 3, 2020, filing an ex parte application in the probate court to be appointed successor trustee of the Tung Trust.6 On February 6 the probate court appointed Gaecke as the temporary successor trustee and authorized her to address pressing tax issues. On May 13, 2020 Gaecke filed a combined petition (1) “to determine the existence of trust property”7 and (2) “to ascertain trust beneficiaries and to determine distribution of the trust estate.” The petition was filed pursuant to sections 17200, subdivision (b)(4) and (10), 21110, and 21111 (among other Probate Code provisions). Gaecke alleged the transfer to Lin- Chuan failed because he predeceased Tung, and thus the Yeh children were excluded as beneficiaries under section 21100, subdivision (b). Further, she argued, Lin-Chuan’s share reverted to Tung’s estate under section 21111, subdivision (a)(3) (which applies to failed transfers), and should be divided according to the laws of intestacy. On November 4, 2020 the Yeh children filed a response and objection to the petition, requesting in relevant part that the probate court deny Gaecke’s request to exclude them as beneficiaries. They argued that as Lin-Chuan’s biological

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Bluebook (online)
In re Tung Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tung-trust-calctapp-2026.