Trotter v. Van Dyck

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2024
DocketD081916
StatusPublished

This text of Trotter v. Van Dyck (Trotter v. Van Dyck) 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
Trotter v. Van Dyck, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 6/27/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

TIMOTHY J. TROTTER, as Trustee, D081916 etc.,

Petitioner and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 37-2022- v. 00031695-PR-TR-CTL)

WENDY TROTTER VAN DYCK,

Objector and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Julia C. Kelety, Judge. Affirmed. Yale & Baumgarten and David W. Baumgarten for Appellant. The Inheritance Recovery Attorneys and Edward Terzian for Respondent. Timothy J. Trotter (Timothy), successor trustee of the Trotter Family Revocable Trust (Trust), petitioned the probate court seeking guidance about whether certain e-mails from his mother, Mary Trotter (Mary), constituted a valid amendment to the Trust’s beneficiaries. The court found that Mary’s writings were insufficient to constitute an amendment to the Trust, and it ordered that the Trust be distributed to its original beneficiaries, including Wendy Trotter Van Dyck (Van Dyck). Timothy contends on appeal that each of the various grounds upon which the probate court based its order was erroneous. We conclude that at least two of the grounds the court relied on were proper: (1) there was no signed document amending the Trust and the electronic signature provision of the Uniform Electronics Transaction Act (UETA) does not apply because a unilateral trust amendment does not constitute a “transaction” within the

meaning of the statute (Civ. Code,1 § 1633.2, subd. (o)); and (2) Mary’s writings did not adequately express an intent to amend the trust by the writings themselves. Accordingly, we affirm the order without deciding Timothy’s contentions as to the other grounds. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Jerry and Mary Trotter, who were married, established the Trust as a revocable trust in 2011, and named themselves collectively as both “Trustee” and “Trustors.” The Trust names Timothy, their son, as the successor trustee in the event neither Jerry nor Mary can act as a trustee. The Trust also provides that upon the death of whichever spouse survives the other, certain stock is to be distributed to Timothy, and the rest of the trust estate should be distributed in equal shares to each of several children, including Jerry’s daughter from another marriage, Van Dyck. When Jerry died in 2012, Mary became the sole trustee. According to declarations in the record, Mary intended to exclude Van Dyck as a beneficiary because Van Dyck had already inherited from Jerry’s previous wife, and Mary believed Van Dyck had “been fairly provided for” in 2015. In relevant part, the Trust authorized Mary to amend the Trust “by an

1 Unless otherwise noted, further undesignated statutory references are to the Civil Code. 2 instrument in writing signed” by Mary and delivered to the “Trustee” – at the time, herself. In late June 2020, Mary, Timothy, and Matthew Pribyl, Mary’s estate planning attorney, exchanged e-mails about amending the Trust, excerpted below. On June 25, before her scheduled surgery on July 1, Mary e-mailed Timothy stating: “My mind is quite clear now as [to] how to move forward on the house and will.

“I will write it out and then we need to see that the lawyer gets a copy asap and start redoing the will and trust.

“1. The house will go to you

“2. My cash assets will be divided among my five children; nothing to Wendy [¶] . . . [¶]

“The rest of selected items will be assigned to different children/grandchildren and I’m working on that list.

“Thanks, mom”

The next day, on June 26, 2020, Timothy e-mailed Pribyl and copied Mary. He told Pribyl that Mary “want [sic] to make some updates on her personal stuff” and that they were “working on getting the financials all up to date . . . .” Timothy asked whether Pribyl was “available to meet on Zoom or phone to discuss.” Pribyl wrote in response: “Relative to any updates/amendments Mary wants to make to her Trust and/or companion estate planning documents, maybe we can schedule a phone conference either next week before the July 4th holiday, or that following week.” Mary replied and told Pribyl that she would “be available to discuss the [Trust] and Will anytime on Monday or

3 Tuesday of next week and then after the [sic] July 4th. [¶] If you have questionnaires regarding the changes, please forward to me . . . .” A few days later on June 29, 2020, Pribyl responded: “Attached to this message is my Questionnaire/Estate Plan Data Sheet that you can use to indicate the changes you want to make to your Trust, Will, Health Care and Asset Powers of Attorney, etc.

“And I will have time tomorrow . . . if you want to discuss the changes by phone as well.

“But if you want to review the Questionnaire in greater detail, and then schedule a time to talk next week, that works for me too. I’ll be in my office every day during the week beginning Monday, July 6th, so you can let me know a day and time that would work best for your schedule.”

Mary replied later that day: “Working on the questionnaire and will email tonight or tomorrow morning. We can decide then about what we may need to discuss.” On June 30, 2020, Mary sent Pribyl a scanned copy of the questionnaire, which she completed by hand. Her cover e-mail said that the “estate planning questionnaire” was attached and “[t]his is something you can review before we talk . . . . Thanks, Mary[.]” The questionnaire, entitled “Client Estate Plan Data Sheet,” included spaces for biographical information such as address, family members, personal property, bank information, and citizenship. Under “Dispository Plan,” where the instructions say to “describe in detail” who should inherit her assets when she dies, Mary left that space blank. On the following page, in the section for listing “CHILDREN AND GRANDCHILDREN,” Mary listed her children’s names from present and prior marriages, including Van Dyck. Mary drew an asterisk next to Van Dyck’s name and drew another asterisk at the bottom of

4 the page with the words, “NO CONTACT – WOULD PREFER TO DROP FROM WILL – IF POSSIBLE[.]” On the next page, she drew asterisks next to certain lines in the “Stocks and Mutual Funds” section, and noted next to another asterisk in the footer: “1 SHARE APPLE – FOR [beneficiary J.] – DISCUSS ACCT FOR [beneficiary J.] . . . .” Mary underwent surgery the next day on July 1, 2020, and contracted an infection while in the hospital. She suffered two heart attacks and passed away a few weeks after her surgery. Timothy became the successor trustee, and when disputes arose about the administration of the Trust, Timothy petitioned the probate court for instructions. He sought, among other things, guidance about “whether under the express terms of the Trust, [Van Dyck], by reason of Mary’s writings, has been removed as a beneficiary of the [Trust].” Pribyl signed a declaration included with the petition stating that Mary completed his firm’s “standard form client Questionnaire regarding estate planning issues[,]” but she “was not able to sign a traditional amendment to the Trust.” After reviewing the writings, declarations, and the parties’ briefs, the court issued an order first finding that Mary’s e-mails and the questionnaire were instruments in writing delivered in accordance with section 7.02(b) of the Trust. The court went on to find, however, that Mary did not “sign” her e- mails as the Trust requires, nor did she sign the questionnaire. The court rejected Timothy’s argument that she electronically signed the e-mails under the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, which provides that in certain contexts, “[i]f a law requires a signature, an electronic signature satisfies the law.” (§ 1633.7, subd.

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Trotter v. Van Dyck, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trotter-v-van-dyck-calctapp-2024.