Royals v. Lu

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 18, 2022
DocketA160985
StatusPublished

This text of Royals v. Lu (Royals v. Lu) 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
Royals v. Lu, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 7/18/22

CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION *

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

LISA ROYALS, as Trustee, etc., Plaintiff and Respondent, A160985 v. (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. MENG JING LU, No. MSP19-01563) Defendant and Appellant.

Meng Jing Lu appeals from a pretrial right to attach order (RTAO) issued against her and in favor of Lisa Royals under section 15657.01 of the Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (the Elder Abuse Act or the Act) (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 15600 et. seq.). The underlying dispute in this probate action centers on the testamentary intent and capacity to make certain estate planning decisions of Royals’s late father and Lu’s late husband, Chambers Daniel Adams, who died at age 99. By petition and cross-petition, Royals and Lu pursue competing claims of financial elder abuse. Each alleges that the other engaged in a scheme to manipulate Adams in his waning years, with the objective of enriching herself at the expense of the other’s expected inheritance.

Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1100 and 8.1110, this *

opinion is certified for publication with the exception of part II.C. of the Discussion.

1 The primary question raised by the appeal, presented as a matter of first impression, is whether the prospect of punitive recovery on a financial elder abuse claim—in the form of exemplary damages or statutory penalties—may be secured by the extraordinary remedy of pretrial attachment. In the published portion of this opinion, we answer that question no. A financial elder abuse claimant may obtain an attachment for potential compensatory damages and an award of attorney fees and costs associated with those damages, but only if the request for it complies with all applicable provisions of the statutory scheme governing pretrial attachments (the Attachment Law) (Code Civ. Proc., § 481.010 et. seq.). We conclude that Royals’s attachment application did not comply with four provisions of the Attachment Law, namely that an attachment request (i) must be supported by competent evidence (id., § 482.040), (ii) must rest on an attachable “amount” (id., § 484.020, subd. (b)), (iii) must be based on a claim “upon which an attachment may be issued” (id., § 484.020, subd. (a)), and (iv) must be measured by the defendant’s claimed “indebtedness” to the plaintiff (id., § 483.015, subd. (a)(1)). No attachment was warranted here, for any of the relief requested, because Royals failed to support her prayer for compensatory damages with competent evidence. (Code Civ. Proc., § 482.040.) And to the extent she sought an attachment for prospective recovery of punitive damages and statutory penalties in addition to compensatory damages, her attachment request also failed to comply with some or all of the attachable amount (id., § 484.020, subd. (b)), attachable claim (id., § 484.020, subd. (a)), and claimed indebtedness (id., § 483.015, subd. (a)(1)), requirements. Accordingly, the RTAO will be reversed.

2 I. BACKGROUND After Adams passed away October 14, 2019, Royals became the successor trustee and sole beneficiary of the Adams Trust (the Adams Trust or the Trust), a living trust established in the early 1990’s by Adams and his former wife of 56 years, Cornelia Adams, who passed away in 2008. 1 Lu, Adams’s second wife, was 59 years old when she married Adams, then 95 years old, in 2015. According to Lu, Royals never accepted the marriage and saw it as a threat to her inheritance. Royals alleges that Adams intended to leave none of his assets to Lu. Lu denies that allegation and claims Adams intended to provide for her support by depositing certain funds in certain accounts under Lu’s control outside of the Trust. A. Petition, Demurrer, and Motion To Strike Once Royals became trustee of the Adams Trust following her father’s death, she filed a verified petition against Lu for return of trust assets, for breach of spousal fiduciary duty, and for financial elder abuse. 2 According to

1 About the structure of the Adams Trust, Royals alleges that “[t]he Trust names Mr. and Mrs. [Cornelia] Adams as the original co-trustees of the Trust . . . , and, following their deaths, names [Royals] as the successor trustee. . . . [¶] . . . Upon the death of the first spouse, the Trust splits into two subtrusts: a revocable Survivor’s Trust and an irrevocable Family Trust. . . . [¶] [Royals] is named as the sole beneficiary of both subtrusts upon the death of the second spouse.” 2 Under section 15610.30 of the Elder Abuse Act, “ ‘Financial abuse’ of an elder . . . occurs when a person or entity does any of the following: [¶] (1) Takes, secretes, appropriates, obtains, or retains real or personal property of an elder or dependent adult for a wrongful use or with intent to defraud, or both. [¶] (2) Assists in taking, secreting, appropriating, obtaining, or retaining real or personal property of an elder or dependent adult for a wrongful use or with intent to defraud, or both. [¶] (3) Takes, secretes, appropriates, obtains, or retains, or assists in taking, secreting, appropriating, obtaining, or retaining, real or personal property of an elder or

3 the petition, Adams had no need for cash late in his life, but nonetheless suddenly encumbered his home in Orinda with a second mortgage, sold a vacation property in Sea Ranch, and deposited the proceeds into accounts controlled by Lu. Royals alleged that, contrary to Adams’s testamentary intent, the proceeds from the Orinda second mortgage and from the Sea Ranch sale are actually assets of the Adams Trust. Adams diverted these funds from the Trust, Royals alleged, while acting under the undue influence of Lu and in a state of cognitive decline. In essence, Royals’s theory is that her father intended to leave all assets of his estate to her and nothing to his wife, Lu, but that Lu thwarted his plan by misappropriating his assets before his death. Royal’s petition alleged on information and belief that the total amount of the misappropriated funds was “at least $1,095,000.” In addition to recovery of that amount, her third cause of action for financial elder abuse sought punitive damages, trebled under Civil Code section 3345, subdivision (b) 3 plus attorney fees and costs. She made no mention of any other basis for relief in her financial elder abuse cause of action, but in her

dependent adult by undue influence as defined in Section 15610.70 [of the Act].” (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 15610.30, subd. (a), 15610.70.) 3 Civil Code section 3345 provides in pertinent part that “in actions brought by, on behalf of, or for the benefit of senior citizens or disabled persons . . . to redress unfair or deceptive acts or practices or unfair methods of competition” (id., subd. (a)), a remedy up to “three times greater than authorized by the statute” is available if “the trier of fact makes an affirmative finding in regard to one or more of the following factors . . . ” (id., subd. (b)). These factors include whether the plaintiff acted with knowledge that she was directing her conduct toward a protected person (id., subd. (b)(1)), caused the plaintiff to suffer certain losses (id., subd. (b)(2)), and how vulnerable the protected person was relative to other members of the public based on their poor physical or mental health (id., subd. (b)(3)).

4 general prayer for relief on all causes of action she included a demand under Probate Code section 859 4 for double the value of her compensatory damages. B. Application for a Writ of Attachment On the same day Royals filed her petition, she applied for a pretrial writ of attachment in the amount of $3,440,000.

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Royals v. Lu, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royals-v-lu-calctapp-2022.