Newell v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 2024
DocketB339383
StatusPublished

This text of Newell v. Super. Ct. (Newell v. Super. Ct.) 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
Newell v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 12/20/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

LUCY MANCINI NEWELL, B339383

Petitioner, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 23STPB02659) v.

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY,

Respondent;

NENETH D. ROLLINS,

Real Party in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS in mandate. Jessica A. Uzcategui, Judge. Petition granted. Fuller & Fuller, Bruce Fuller and Joshua Maldonado for Petitioner. No appearance for Respondent. The Burbank Firm, James G. Morris and Diana Lam for Real Party in Interest. __________________ INTRODUCTION

Lucy Mancini Newell was supposed to be the trustee and sole beneficiary of her parents’ trust. But after her father, Arthur Mancini, died in his early 90’s, Newell learned he had amended the trust to name his 56-year-old caregiver, Neneth Rollins, as the trust’s trustee and sole beneficiary. Newell filed a petition challenging the validity of the trust amendments that changed the trustee and beneficiary of the trust from Newell to Rollins. And when Newell discovered Rollins used trust assets to purchase real property, Newell recorded a lis pendens against the property and amended her petition to include, among other things, a request to impose a constructive trust on the property. Rollins moved to expunge the lis pendens under Code of Civil Procedure section 405.31. 1 The probate court granted the motion, ruling Newell’s petition did not contain a “real property claim,” within the meaning of section 405.4. Because Newell’s petition, if successful, would affect title to the property, she pleaded a real property claim. Therefore, we grant Newell’s petition for writ of mandate, direct the probate court to vacate its order granting the motion to expunge, and direct the court to enter a new order denying the motion.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Arthur and Julia Mancini created the Mancini Family Trust in 2002 and named Newell and her two siblings as the beneficiaries following the surviving parent’s death. Julia died in 2009. Some years after Julia died, Arthur amended the trust and named Newell the successor trustee and sole beneficiary of the trust following his death. Rollins began working as Arthur’s caregiver in July 2020, when Arthur was 89 years old. Rollins was 56. Six months later, in January 2021, Arthur executed a second restatement of the trust that designated an attorney named Edgardo Lopez (whom Rollins had recommended to Arthur and who drafted the second restatement) 2 as the successor trustee upon Arthur’s death and that gave Lopez 9 percent of the trust’s gross assets as trustee compensation. The restatement directed the trustee to distribute 51 percent of the trust assets to Rollins and 40 percent to Newell. 3 Arthur amended the second restatement in April 2021 to increase Lopez’s compensation to 15 percent of the trust’s assets, to name Rollins as the sole successor trustee (to serve without compensation) if Lopez could not serve, and to distribute

2 Arthur’s long-time friend and attorney Kenneth Roberts had previously represented Arthur and prepared his estate planning documents. 3 The restatement also directed the trustee to distribute to Rollins a 2 percent membership interest Arthur at one time had in a limited liability company. The parties do not argue Arthur’s interest in that company was in the trust or Arthur’s estate at the time of his death.

3 100 percent of the remaining trust assets to Rollins, leaving Newell with nothing. Arthur stopped communicating with Newell in May 2021. He died in November 2022. Because Lopez had died in October 2022, Rollins became the successor trustee upon Arthur’s death. Newell learned of the January 2021 second restatement and the April 2021 amendment in December 2022, when an attorney for Rollins sent Newell a notice under Probate Code section 16061.7. Newell filed a petition in probate court to determine the validity of the January 2021 second restatement and the April 2021 amendment, naming Rollins and Lopez (and later Lopez’s estate) as respondents. Citing Probate Code section 21380, which provides that a donative transfer to a care custodian of a transferor who is a dependent adult is presumptively the product of fraud or undue influence, Newell alleged Rollins and Lopez obtained the January 2021 second restatement and the April 2021 amendment through fraud and undue influence. Newell also alleged Rollins and Lopez committed financial elder abuse, within the meaning of Welfare and Institutions Code section 15610.30, subdivision (a). Newell asked the court to suspend and ultimately remove Rollins as trustee of the trust, appoint Newell as trustee, order Rollins to account for all trust assets during the period she worked for Arthur, and require Rollins to post a $2 million bond. Newell also sought damages, attorneys’ fees, and costs under Probate Code section 859. After learning Rollins had used trust assets to purchase real property in Van Nuys, California, Newell filed a second supplement to the petition. Newell alleged Rollins held title to

4 the Van Nuys property as trustee of the trust and asked the court to impose a constructive trust on the property. Newell also recorded a notice of lis pendens. Rollins filed a motion to expunge the lis pendens under section 405.31, which provides the “court shall order the notice [of lis pendens] expunged if the court finds that the pleading on which the notice is based does not contain a real property claim.” Rollins argued Newell’s petition did not contain a real property claim because Newell was challenging the validity of trust documents and claiming to have a beneficial interest in the trust, not claiming an interest in the Van Nuys property. In opposition to the motion to expunge Newell argued her petition, as supplemented, included a real property claim because the result of the petition “will clearly affect title to and the right to possession of the real property subjected to the lis pendens” and because she was asking the court to impose a constructive trust on the property. In reply Rollins argued Newell was not asserting a real property claim because the petition sought to change the trustee of the trust, not to recover real property from, or on behalf of, the trust. Rollins also argued Newell’s request for a constructive trust was not valid because the Van Nuys property belonged to the trust and had not been transferred to a third party. The probate court granted the motion to expunge the lis pendens. The court ruled that the petition did not state a claim that affected title to or possession of real property because Newell sought only to invalidate the January 2021 second restatement and the April 2021 amendment. The court stated that, because Rollins purchased the Van Nuys property after Newell filed her petition, none of the causes of action in the

5 petition implicated the property. The court also ruled Newell’s request for a constructive trust on the Van Nuys property was not a real property claim, but was merely an effort to preserve trust assets during the pendency of the litigation. The court awarded Rollins $5,500 in attorneys’ fees and costs. Newell filed a petition for writ of mandate, 4 and we issued an alternative writ. The probate court subsequently held a hearing, decided not to vacate its order, and again ruled Newell’s petition did not contain a real property claim.

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