Tang v. Blatt CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 2023
DocketA163147
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tang v. Blatt CA1/4 (Tang v. Blatt CA1/4) 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
Tang v. Blatt CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 2/6/23 Tang v. Blatt CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

INDIA BLATT TANG et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A163147 v. MICHAEL BLATT et al., (Marin County Super. Ct. No. PRO1702513) as Trustees, etc., Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiffs India Blatt Tang and Ashley Blatt are trust beneficiaries who alleged, as relevant here, that the trustees, defendants Michael Blatt and Valerie Wall, breached their fiduciary duties by failing to properly notify them of the existence of the trust following the death of the settlors, as required by former Probate Code section 16061.7,1 because the notice was mailed to them “c/o” their father at an address at which they did not live. After a bench trial, the court found for plaintiffs in part on their claim that defendants improperly administered the trust, but found that plaintiffs’ failure-to-notify claim was “inconsequential” and that they had not established that defendants’ defective notification under former section 16061.7 caused them damage.

1 All further undesignated statutory references are to the Probate Code. Plaintiffs argue that the evidence at trial established that the ineffective notice did cause them damage in the form of attorney’s fees they otherwise would not have incurred, and that to the extent the evidence was insufficient, any uncertainty about whether the lack of notice caused harm should be charged to defendants. We find no basis to reverse the trial court’s decision that an award of attorney’s fees was not warranted, and accordingly we affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND A. Creation and Division of the Trusts Plaintiffs are sisters, and India is Ashley’s conservator. Defendants are plaintiffs’ paternal uncle and aunt. Plaintiffs’ grandparents, Raymond and Barbara Blatt, created the Raymond C. Blatt and Barbara R. Blatt 1988 Trusts in 1988. The trust agreement provided that when the last surviving grandparent died, and after debts were paid and specified items of personal property distributed, the trustee was to divide the trust estate into equal shares, one for each of the grandparents’ living children, defendants, and Steven Blatt, plaintiffs’ father. The share allocated to Steven was to be retained and administered by the trustee in a separate trust. Under the terms of the trust, Steven would be entitled to annual distributions of $12,000 from the net income of his trust during his lifetime. The trust agreement further provided that upon Steven’s death, the trustee was to divide his trust into equal shares, one for each plaintiff, and those shares were to be retained and administered in separate trusts. A 1995 amendment to the trust provided that when India reached the age of 30, the trustee was to distribute outright to India the balance of her trust.

2 B. The Section 16061.7 Notice Raymond died in 1991, and Barbara died in 1998, at which point defendants became trustees. Michael retained an attorney, who sent a notification to the trust beneficiaries under former code section 16061.7 that all the trusts and sub-trusts of the Raymond C. Blatt and Barbara R. Blatt 1988 Trusts became irrevocable in November 1998, the month Barbara died. As required by former section 16061.7, the notification advised the recipients that they were entitled to receive a copy of the trust. (Former § 16061.7, subd. (a), added by Stats. 1997, ch. 724, § 23.2) Defendants mailed the notification to plaintiffs “c/o” Steven at an address in Healdsburg, California. The evidence adduced at trial in this action indicates that India never received the notification and did not learn about her and her sister’s interests in the trust until after their father died in December 2014, more than sixteen years after Barbara’s death. C. The Sonoma County Action and Defendants’ Petition for First Account In 2017, a couple of years after Steven died, plaintiffs filed a petition in Sonoma County Superior Court for, among other things, relief under sections 16420 and 17200 and for an accounting of the trust. According to the petition, defendants did not inform plaintiffs of their vested rights under the trust until 2014, and they thereafter failed to respond to plaintiffs’ requests for information about the trust. The petition further alleged that since 1998, defendants had not provided any accounting or report of trust assets, expenses, and distributions, and after Steven’s death, they provided India with only one financial document, which showed the amount of funds in a

2 All further references to former section 16061.7 are to this version of section 16061.7.

3 trust investment account in March 2015. The court dismissed the petition for improper venue a few months later. A month before the court dismissed plaintiffs’ Sonoma County action, defendants provided plaintiffs a copy of an accounting for the period of December 2014 to March 2017, and asked plaintiffs to consent to the accounting. After receiving no response from plaintiffs, defendants initiated this action by filing a petition to settle first account under section 17200. Plaintiffs filed objections to the petition to settle first account, asserting that defendants, in their capacity as trustees, failed to provide timely accountings to plaintiffs until they filed their Sonoma County petition. The objections also contained allegations like those in the Sonoma County petition regarding defendants’ failure to notify plaintiffs of their interests in the trust. Plaintiffs later filed a petition to compel defendants to allow inspection of trust records showing how defendants had administered the trust since 1998. Over defendants’ objections, the court granted plaintiffs’ petition to compel. D. Plaintiffs’ Petitions for Surcharge and for Accounting In February 2019, plaintiffs filed a petition for surcharge, for relief for breach of trust, to recover trust property, and to redress financial elder abuse. They amended the petition in September 2019. The amended petition alleged in part that defendants breached their duties as trustees by failing to maintain records, making it difficult to determine how defendants managed Steven’s trust from 1998 to 2014, and by imprudently investing trust assets and using the trust’s money to pay for their expenses. In October 2020, plaintiffs filed a petition to compel defendants to account for the period of November 1998 to December 2014. Plaintiffs alleged in the petition that defendants’ production in response to the court’s order

4 granting plaintiffs’ petition to compel did not include any check registers, fiduciary income tax returns, financial statements, or bank statements dated before January 2012. According to the petition, India was unable to obtain records from other sources, and many records no longer existed, and therefore it was impossible to tell whether defendants fulfilled their fiduciary duties by, for example, distributing only the net income from Steven’s trust during his lifetime. E. The Trial In January 2021, plaintiffs filed an issue conference statement detailing the facts and law pertinent to defendants’ alleged failure to fulfill “any” of the fiduciary duties they owed to plaintiffs. Those duties included the duty to administer the trust according to its terms (§ 16000), the duty to keep beneficiaries reasonably informed of the trust and its administration (§ 16060), and the duty to serve notification on each beneficiary when a revocable trust or any portion of it becomes irrevocable because of the death of one of the settlors (§ 16061.7).

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Tang v. Blatt CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tang-v-blatt-ca14-calctapp-2023.