Patton v. Walter CA2/6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 2022
DocketB293694
StatusUnpublished

This text of Patton v. Walter CA2/6 (Patton v. Walter CA2/6) 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
Patton v. Walter CA2/6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 12/5/22 Patton v. Walter CA2/6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SIX

JACK T. PATTON, 2d Civil No. B293694 (Super. Ct. No. 56-2007- Plaintiff, Cross-Appellant 00288787-PR-PW-VTA) and Respondent. (Ventura County)

v.

SALLY PATTON WALTER, et al.,

Defendants, Cross- Respondents and Appellants,

Sally Patton Walter, individually and as trustee of the Patton Family Trust dated February 7, 2002, and Jodi Patton Ream appeal from orders of the probate court overruling their objections to their brother Jack Patton’s Supplement to Complaint for Imposition of Constructive Trust and Petition to Determine Entitlement to Share of Trust Assets and referring the matter to a referee.1 Jack Patton cross-appeals, contending the probate court should have entered an order distributing certain assets to him, without reference to a referee. We conclude the probate court erred. Jack’s Supplement to Complaint for Imposition of Constructive Trust and related petitions are based on the same cause of action he alleged in a prior civil action, In re Lowell T. Patton Trust, Ventura Sup. Ct. No. 56-2007-00288787. The final judgment in that action precludes litigation of the claims alleged here. Accordingly, we reverse the probate court’s order of September 20, 2018 appointing a referee, and its order of October 10, 2018 rejecting appellants’ objections to respondent’s petitions. Our resolution of the appeal renders Jack’s cross- appeal moot. Facts and Procedural History In 2002, Lowell T. Patton and his wife, Mary Lou Patton, signed pour-over wills and established the Patton Family Trust. The Patton Family Trust was revocable during the joint lifetimes of the settlors, Lowell and Mary Lou. On the death of the first settlor, it divided into three trusts: a Survivor’s Trust (A), a Decedent’s Trust (B) and a Qualified Terminable Interest Trust or Marital Trust (C). Trusts B and C became irrevocable on the death of the first settlor and provided for a life estate to the surviving settlor. After the survivor passed away, the remainder would be divided equally between their three children, appellants Sally Patton Walter and Jodi Patton Ream, and respondent Jack T. Patton. Lowell and Mary Lou also established three charitable remainder unitrusts (CRUTs). These irrevocable

1 Like the trial court and the parties, we use the first names of the parties for clarity, intending no disrespect.

2 trusts pay income to the Pattons’ three children for a defined period of time and then distribute the remainder to designated charities. The Pattons owned a minor league baseball team. To fund the CRUTs, they incorporated the team and transferred the shares of stock into each CRUT. Mary Lou died in April 2002. By the summer of 2003, Lowell was dissatisfied with the 2002 estate plan. Among other things, he came to believe that the lawyers and estate planner who designed it had used the CRUTs to sell the baseball team without his consent. Sally and Jodi agreed with their father. Jack, who worked as the team’s general manager, supported the sale and worked with the lawyers to close the transaction. After the sale closed, in November 2004, Jack’s CRUT received 60% of the proceeds. The CRUTs established for Sally and Jodi each received 20%. In October 2003, Lowell granted his power of attorney to Sally. With respect to his employee retirement and other benefits, the power of attorney states: “The agent is authorized to establish one or more [IRAs] and employee benefits plans . . . on my behalf, to contribute to any IRA or plan held in my name, to roll over or direct transfers of plan benefits into other retirement plans or IRA accounts . . . , to manage the account, to withdraw from any account without limitation, to select or change payment options and to apply for and make any elections under any IRA or employee benefit plan in which I am a participant . . . , to take possession of all such benefits, and to distribute such benefits to or for my benefit. The agent shall have the power to designate and change beneficiaries who are either my spouse or my descendants or their spouses, except the

3 agent may not designate himself or herself without a showing that such designation is my intention.” In February 2005, Lowell revoked the Survivor’s Trust (A) of the 2002 Patton Family Trust and created the Lowell T. Patton Trust (the 2005 Trust). He also executed a new pour- over will, naming the 2005 Trust as his sole beneficiary. Sally is the trustee of the 2005 Trust. She and Jodi are its sole beneficiaries; Jack is excluded. About eight months later, in October 2005, Lowell signed a Designation of Beneficiary naming the 2005 Trust as the beneficiary of his IRAs and of the Lowell T. Patton Profit Sharing Plan. Sally also signed the document as his power of attorney. Lowell filed lawsuits against the charitable beneficiaries of the CRUTs. He also sued the lawyers and the estate planner, alleging causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, professional negligence, fraud on various theories and elder financial abuse. After Lowell’s death, Sally amended the complaint to name Jack as a defendant, on the theory that he aided and abetted the wrongdoing of the other defendants. The claims against most of the charities were settled. We have recently resolved the remaining claims in a related appeal, Walter, et al. v. Estate Strategies, Inc., et al., No. B280172. Lowell died in April 2007. Sally presented his 2005 will for probate. Jack filed petitions to contest the 2005 will and trust, and for an accounting, all on the theories that, in 2005, Lowell lacked capacity to change his 2002 will and trust and that the changes were the result of undue influence by Sally and Jodi. Jack also filed a complaint for imposition of a constructive trust in which he alleged that he and his sisters were named as beneficiaries of Lowell’s profit sharing plan and

4 IRAs in a 1999 Designation of Beneficiaries. Jack further alleged that the October 2005 Designation of Beneficiary was void because Lowell was not competent when he signed it and Sally’s power of attorney did not include the authority to change the beneficiaries of the Retirement Assets. In his prayer for relief, Jack requested, “That the court determine that the [2005 Designation of Beneficiary] is not a valid or enforceable Revised Beneficiary Designation, and that assets of the decedent shall pass by prior [1999 Designation of Beneficiaries] executed by decedent at a time when he was fully competent and not subject to undue influence.” Jack’s trust and will contests and his complaint relating to the Retirement Assets were consolidated. After a 34- day non-jury trial, the trial court issued a statement of decision which became its “final decision and judgment.” The trial court found that Lowell’s revocation of his 2002 Survivor’s Trust (A), execution of the 2005 will and establishment of the 2005 Trust were not the product of undue influence and that these documents reflected Lowell’s “own free will and intent.” Lowell intended to exclude Jack as a beneficiary of the 2005 Trust and had personal reasons for doing so, including Jack’s participation in the sale of the baseball team. The 2005 will and trust are “fully valid and enforceable.” The trial court further found that the October 5, 2005 Designation of Beneficiary was not valid or enforceable because Lowell lacked capacity when he signed it.

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Patton v. Walter CA2/6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-walter-ca26-calctapp-2022.