Tedesco v. White

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 27, 2023
DocketG061197
StatusPublished

This text of Tedesco v. White (Tedesco v. White) 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
Tedesco v. White, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 10/27/23

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

THOMAS S. TEDESCO et al.,

Plaintiffs and Appellants, G061197

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2019-01078628)

LAURA K. WHITE, as Co-trustee, etc., OPINION et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, David L. Belz, Judge. Affirmed. Herzog, Yuhas, Ehrlich & Ardell, Ian Herzog and Evan D. Marshall for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton, Adam F. Streisand, Nicholas J. Van Brunt and Valerie E. Alter for Defendants and Respondents Laura K. White, Julie M. Bas and Sandra L. Kay. Freeman, Freeman & Smiley, Saul Ewing, Geraldine A. Wyle, Jeryll S. Cohen and Thomas C. Aikin for Defendant and Respondent David M. Wilson. * * * A bulldozer can move piles of dirt from one place to another. But when the goal is to move minds rather than dirt, employing a bulldozer may be counterproductive. The bulldozer in this case is appellant Debra Wear’s counsel. In our prior nonpublished opinion, Tedesco v. White (June 15, 2022, G059883) (Tedesco 1), we made clear to these lawyers that “[w]e do not confuse aggressive argument with persuasive advocacy.” Although the aggression has not abated, our view of it remains unchanged. This appeal challenges an order of discovery sanctions in the amount of $6,000. But that sanctions order does not appear to be counsel’s real concern; if it were, counsel would have noticed an appeal from that order on their own behalf as well, since counsel were held jointly and severally liable for the same sanction. 1 They did not. Instead, counsel attempt to use that sanctions order as a basis for challenging the merits of the trial court’s nonappealable order quashing Wear’s document subpoena, and then to further use the trial court’s analysis underlying that discovery ruling into a basis for reviewing a separate order we have already ruled cannot be appealed. All of this seems to be in furtherance of counsel’s broader quest: to again collaterally attack the validity of a conservatorship over the estate of Thomas S. Tedesco, which was established in the probate court in Riverside county in 2015. In keeping with that sweeping goal, Wear’s counsel has presented us with an appellant’s appendix in excess of 9,000 pages.

1 Attorney Russell L. Davis, who also represented Wear in connection with the deposition subpoena and the opposition to Wilson’s motion to quash, is similarly liable for payment of the monetary sanction. But he is not involved in this appeal as either counsel or client.

2 That same attack has already been repeatedly rejected by both the probate court and the appellate court in Riverside County, and also by a trial in Orange County Superior Court and this court in Tedesco 1. Counsel’s dogged refusal to acknowledge those losses (other than by disparaging some of the courts involved) 2 changes nothing. In any event, as we explain below, our jurisdiction here is limited to the issue of sanctions. The court justified its order on the basis that “one of more of the requirements of the subpoena was oppressive” and “the subpoena was a misuse of discovery,” which followed its determination that the subpoena should be quashed on the basis it was overly broad and constituted an unreasonable intrusion on the privacy rights of Wilson’s conservatee, Tedesco. Our review is limited to those issues. Wear fails to directly challenge the court’s pertinent determinations, let alone demonstrate why the court abused its discretion in making them. We find no error in the court’s ruling. We therefore affirm. 3

FACTS This case arises out of disputes over the propriety and enforceability of amendments to Tedesco’s living trust, which was conceived of as part of a family estate plan Tedesco created with his late wife, Wanda Tedesco. The trust came into being

2 In appellant’s opening brief, counsel once again explicitly disparages the integrity of our colleagues in the Fourth District, Division 2. We caution counsel about such tactics. 3 Respondents Laura K. White, Julie M. Bas, and Sandra L. Kay (Tedesco’s adult daughters and the cotrustees of the Thomas S. Tedesco Living Trust) use their respondents’ brief solely to argue for dismissal of the appeal on the ground Wear lacks standing to participate in the trial court proceeding. The assertion is misplaced. This appeal is from an order imposing a monetary sanction against Wear. As the subject of that order, Wear has standing to appeal from it, without regard to whether she has standing to participate in this case on the merits.

3 following Wanda Tedesco’s death in 2002, and it was later restated. The primary beneficiaries of the restated trust are the cotrustees. Specifically, Wear questions the propriety of a June 2013 amendment to the restated trust that limited Tedesco’s ability to further amend the restated trust without the concurrence of the cotrustees. Wear also challenges other actions by the cotrustees and seeks a court order to suspend their powers as cotrustees. For their part, the cotrustees have petitioned the court to validate the 2013 amendment, and thus to establish the invalidity of a purported 2020 amendment to the restated trust. 4 The 2020 amendment indicates it is Tedesco’s intent to revoke the restated trust entirely, but due to Tedesco’s concerns that he may be unable to accomplish that amendment, he modifies its provisions to (1) remove cotrustees as trustees and as beneficiaries, and (2) leave 75% of the assets to his current wife, Gloria Tedesco, and in the event she does not survive him, to her two daughters (including Wear). Wear also contends that Wilson has abdicated his responsibilities as Tedesco’s conservator by refusing to challenge the validity of the 2013 amendment or by otherwise addressing the allegedly fraudulent actions of Tedesco’s daughters. She alleges Wilson refused to do so “despite findings of fiduciary breach by his own attorneys, Parker Mills, as set forth in a letter of July 16, 2016,” 5 and further that his inaction was “in exchange for payment of exorbitant fees of himself and his lawyers by the daughters from the trust. [Wilson] and his attorneys thus became the daughters’ tool.”

4 We say “purported” not because we have developed any opinion about the propriety of this 2020 amendment, but rather to acknowledge that it fails to comply with the explicit requirements of the 2013 amendment. 5 The Parker Mills letter Wear is concerned about is actually dated July 5, 2016.

4 In June of 2021, Wear served a notice of deposition on the custodian of records at Parker Mills, LLP (Parker Mills), the law firm that previously represented Wilson and allegedly found the “fiduciary breach” Wear is concerned about. The subpoena requested that the custodian of records for Parker Mills produce eight separate categories of documents: “1. Each record, writing and/or electronically stored data that in any way relate or refer to any communication concerning Thomas S. Tedesco, or any account, asset or trust in which Thomas S. Tedesco has or at any time had an interest, or TW Tedesco Properties. “2. Each record, writing and/or electronically stored data that in any way relate or refer to any investigation concerning Thomas S. Tedesco, or any account, asset or trust in which Thomas S. Tedesco has or at any time had an interest, or TW Tedesco Properties. “3. Each record, writing and/or electronically stored data that in any way relate or refer to any communication with MICHAEL BAS, ROBERT LATIMER, LATIMER & MASSONI, MICHAEL BAS, LAURA WHITE, SANDRA KAY, JULIE BAS or their attorneys including SHEPPARD MULLIN RICHTER & HAMPTON, or with DAVID WILSON or his attorneys, including HOLLAND & KNIGHT, concerning Thomas S. Tedesco, or any account or trust in which Thomas S.

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Bluebook (online)
Tedesco v. White, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tedesco-v-white-calctapp-2023.