Restate of Swetmann

102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457, 85 Cal. App. 4th 807
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 2000
DocketA089985
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457 (Restate of Swetmann) 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
Restate of Swetmann, 102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457, 85 Cal. App. 4th 807 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

102 Cal.Rptr.2d 457 (2000)
85 Cal.App.4th 807

RESTATE OF Regis SWETMANN, Deceased.
Margaret Corcoran, Petitioner and Respondent,
v.
George Cushing, Objector and Appellant.
Estate of Vera Swetmann, Deceased.
Margaret Corcoran, Petitioner and Respondent,
v.
George Cushing, Objector and Appellant.

No. A089985.

Court of Appeal, First District, Division Five.

December 20, 2000.

*458 Dario de Ghetaldi, Corey, Luzaich, Manos & Pliska, Millbrae, Counsel for Objector and Appellant George Cushing.

Ruth Downs Sullivan, Sullivan Law Office, Lyn C. Bierce, Mires & Bierce, San Francisco, Counsel for Petitioner and Respondent Margaret Corcoran.

RICHMAN, J.[*]

In this case of first impression, we are called upon to interpret section 21350 of the Probate Code insofar as it restricts transfers to a fiduciary who "transcribes the instrument or causes it to be transcribed." (Subd. (a)(4).) We then apply that interpretation to the will of Regis Swetmann, who left the residue of his estate to George Cushing (Cushing), his conservator (who also had, for many years, a power of attorney), who procured for decedent the company which produced the will, introduced the company representative to him, and as conservator paid for the services, but who had nothing to do with the contents of the will or its physical preparation. We conclude, contrary to the trial court, that those activities do not support the conclusion that Cushing caused the will to be transcribed. We therefore reverse.

FACTS

Regis Swetmann (Regis) and Vera Swetmann (Vera) were husband and wife, who died within two months of each other, on November 2, 1997, and September 6, 1997, respectively. Regis, age 89, had been diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer, and Vera, age 84, had been in the beginning stages of Alzheimer's disease. The couple had no children.

Regis, a deputy district attorney in his working years, met John and Margaret Corcoran in the late 1940's and early 1950's when they, too, worked in the San Francisco District Attorney's office. The Corcorans remained lifelong friends of the Swetmanns, although they did not see each other often after the Corcorans moved out of San Francisco in the 1970's, first to Walnut Creek and then to Antioch.

John Corcoran testified at trial that at some point Regis told him that when he died he wanted the Corcorans to have certain items of personal property. Corcoran also testified that about a month before Regis died, he said he wanted the Corcorans to have a third of the proceeds from the sale of his house. Corcoran encouraged Regis to make a will. As discussed in detail below, the Corcorans initiated the proceedings leading to the issue before us and are the respondents on appeal.[1]

*459 Cushing, age 89 at the time of trial, had been the Swetmanns' next door neighbor since 1972. In the early to mid 1970's Cushing began doing the Swetmanns' shopping, driving them wherever they needed to go, doing household repairs, maintaining their automobile, and helping them pay their bills. Bernice Grantz, a long time neighbor of the Swetmanns who had known them over 60 years, and who, while not herself a protagonist in the litigation, understood that she would benefit by more than $100,000 if the Corcorans were to prevail, described Cushing's relationship with the Swetmanns this way: "[He] took them to the doctors, took them to the beauty parlor, he took them shopping, and then he also did all the shopping for them. And they called him day and night. He went there every day. . . . [H]e was there all the time." Vera "call[ed] on [Cushing] for everything in the middle of the night or whatever."

About 1974, Regis, who was disabled from childhood polio, asked Cushing to handle his finances and gave Cushing a power of attorney. There was no evidence that the power of attorney was ever abused or misused.

In December 1993 Regis broke his hip and became physically unable to manage his own affairs. At his request, in June 1994 Vera and Cushing were appointed Regis's coconservators. The court investigator's 1995 review report found Regis "eminently satisfied" with Cushing's performance as his conservator. So, too, did the 1997 review report, which found that Regis continued to prefer Cushing as his conservator.[2]

Regis wrote a holographic will in 1993. That will left his estate to Vera, with specific bequests to six other beneficiaries, including the Corcorans and Cushing, but had no provision for an alternate disposition of the residue. Cushing testified that he was unaware of the holographic will at the time it was made and advised Regis many times to make a will. He also advised him to have a living trust.

Cushing testified that in 1997, several months before the Swetmanns died, Regis saw an advertisement in the newspaper for living trusts, and asked Cushing to call on his behalf. The company that had placed the advertisement was American Estate Services, based in Dallas, Texas, with branch offices elsewhere, including one in San Jose. Cushing called and made an appointment with an agent from the San Jose office, Kellie Mittnacht (Mittnacht). Mittnacht came to Cushing's house and met with Cushing for several hours to discuss Cushing's own estate plan and the purchase of an annuity. Afterward, Cushing asked Mittnacht to return to meet with the Swetmanns, informing her that he was the conservator for Regis and handled his finances.

About a week later, on June 25, 1997, Mittnacht again met Cushing at his home, and Cushing then escorted her to the Swetmanns' house, where she met with the Swetmanns to discuss the services offered by American Estate Services. Mittnacht sat with the Swetmanns in the dining room while Cushing remained in the adjoining living room. The Swetmanns decided to employ the company to prepare an estate plan for them, and that day they signed a written agreement to retain American Estate Services. An estate plan sold by American Estate Services included a living trust, a pour-over will, a living will, a durable springing power of attorney, and a durable power of attorney for health care. Regis told Mittnacht he wanted a trust to *460 avoid the problems of probate. The Swetmanns also decided to purchase an annuity for Vera.

Mittnacht took down directly from the Swetmanns the necessary information for the creation of a trust and for the purchase of an annuity, and the Swetmanns signed the information sheet. As noted, Cushing was in the house at the time Mittnacht discussed the estate plan with the Swetmanns, but not in the same room. Mittnacht testified that she never discussed the Swetmanns' testamentary intentions with Cushing, nor did the Swetmanns ever defer to Cushing or indicate they needed to consult with him.

Mittnacht did obtain from Cushing a copy of Regis's 1993 holographic will, which she reviewed with Regis to determine the changes he wanted in the beneficiaries. She also received from Cushing information about the Swetmanns' bank accounts and securities holdings, information necessary to know what assets to place in the trust. Mittnacht did not discuss with Cushing which assets were to be transferred to the trust, never discussed with Cushing the contents of the trust documents, and never received any instructions from him as to the contents of the trust or wills. Mittnacht also obtained from Cushing a check in the amount of $1,895, payable from the conservatorship account, to cover the costs of preparing the entire estate plan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457, 85 Cal. App. 4th 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/restate-of-swetmann-calctapp-2000.