Vulovic v. Robinson

145 Cal. App. 4th 152
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 28, 2006
DocketNo. E036685
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 Cal. App. 4th 152 (Vulovic v. Robinson) 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
Vulovic v. Robinson, 145 Cal. App. 4th 152 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

McKINSTER, Acting P. J.

Eighty-seven-year-old Helen L. Odian died in January 2003, leaving her entire estate to appellant Catharina Vulovic, who [155]*155had been her paid live-in companion for approximately two years before Ms. Odian moved into a nursing home. The trial court found that Ms. Vulovic (hereafter sometimes appellant) exercised undue influence to make herself the sole beneficiary of Ms. Odian’s trusts, wills and annuities, and that Ms. Odian lacked legal capacity when she executed the trusts and the annuity contracts. The court also found that appellant was a care custodian within the meaning of Probate Code section 21350, and as such, was disqualified as a beneficiary of Ms. Odian’s testamentary instruments.

In the published portion of this opinion, we address appellant’s contention that she was not a care custodian within the meaning of Probate Code section 21350. We conclude that the undisputed evidence demonstrates that appellant was a care custodian. Because she failed to rebut the presumption of undue influence which arises from that fact, we affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Helen Odian and her older sister, Ruth, lived together their entire adult lives. Neither married, and neither had children. Although the sisters had modest incomes, they invested wisely. With the help of their financial advisor, Richard Robinson, who advised them from 1976 until 2002, they amassed significant wealth. At the time of her death, Helen’s estate was worth approximately $3 million.1

In 1997, the sisters executed wills leaving their estates to each other and then to the seven charities which are parties to this action. In 1997, Ruth Odian died. Helen Odian continued to rely on Richard Robinson for financial advice and tax preparation. He had a power of attorney for her bank account and wrote checks for certain items, such as estate tax and income tax payments. Robinson and his wife, Jessie, also had a social relationship with the Odian sisters. After Ruth’s death, their contact with Helen increased. Ruth had been the dominant sister and had made most of the decisions. After her death, the Robinsons felt that they had to take care of Helen “to some degree” and to reassure her that they would assist her if any problems arose.

Helen had designated Ruth the beneficiary of her IRA’s (individual retirement accounts). After Ruth’s death, Mr. Robinson advised Helen to designate another beneficiary in order to avoid taking increased distributions from the IRA’s. Helen designated Mrs. Robinson. Mrs. Robinson agreed that she would donate the IRA’s to charity after Helen’s death.

[156]*156In the spring of 2000, Jessie Robinson suggested to Helen that she get someone to help her. Her home was cluttered and needed cleaning. In February 2000, Helen had hurt her back, and she had also lost her driver’s license. A mutual acquaintance told Catharina Vulovic that Helen needed help with household tasks and transportation and encouraged her to contact Helen. Ms. Vulovic called Helen and then met with her to discuss arrangements.

Helen hired Ms. Vulovic to do housework and laundry, cook, and drive her to appointments and on shopping trips. Helen asked her to work from noon to 6:00 p.m. seven days a week, for $9 an hour. Ms. Vulovic began working for Helen on March 1. The initial plan was for Ms. Vulovic to work only for one month. However, toward the end of March, Helen asked Ms. Vulovic to move in with her. Jessie Robinson liked Ms. Vulovic and encouraged the arrangement. Ms. Vulovic agreed to do so and to stay on for an additional four months. Her rate of pay remained the same, as did the services she was to provide and the number of hours she was paid to work each day. At the end of the four-month period, Helen asked Ms. Vulovic to stay permanently. After discussing it with her family, Ms. Vulovic agreed. Thereafter, Helen paid her $500 a week.

Helen was very appreciative of Ms. Vulovic’s assistance. She told friends and acquaintances that Ms. Vulovic “did everything” for her and she appeared to look to Ms. Vulovic “more or less for help and guidance.” She told her friend David Gibson that she would not have lived as long if she had not had Ms. Vulovic’s assistance and that she wanted to leave her estate to Ms. Vulovic.2 Helen became acquainted with Ms. Vulovic’s family and was invited to family gatherings, including the wedding of Ms. Vulovic’s son. Ms. Vulovic celebrated some holidays with Helen and David Gibson. Ms. Vulovic’s children and grandchildren visited Helen at home frequently, and Helen enjoyed their visits. When Helen was hospitalized, Ms. Vulovic visited her every day. After Helen was moved to a residential care facility, Ms. Vulovic and her family visited her. However, Helen never gave Ms. Vulovic a birthday or Christmas gift.

Beginning in 2001, Ms. Vulovic began helping Helen pay her bills. At first, Ms. Vulovic merely wrote the checks at Helen’s direction and Helen signed them. Eventually, Helen gave her a power of attorney and Ms. Vulovic began writing checks on Helen’s account and signing them. In the middle of 2001, Helen accepted $250,000 as payment in full of two promissory notes from Kirk Brown. However, Helen and Ruth had lent Brown $500,000, and the [157]*157notes were for $250,000 each. When Richard Robinson learned that Brown had paid Helen $250,000 for both notes, he reminded her that the loan was for $500,000. Helen became very upset and said that she would not have accepted the money if she had known that. Mr. Robinson prevailed upon Brown to return the notes, and returned the $250,000 to him. Helen remained upset about the incident for several weeks, and had to be reminded several times that it had been resolved.

Both Robinsons had noticed that Helen’s memory was failing. Richard Robinson had noticed that Helen could carry on a normal conversation but that within a few minutes, she would not remember what they had talked about. Jessie Robinson also began to notice that Helen was having difficulty expressing herself. If she was asked a “yes or no” question, she could respond, but if she was asked a more complex question, she had greater difficulty responding.

In the summer of 2001, Mr. Robinson suggested to Helen that she create a living trust to avoid probate of her estate. She agreed, and told him that she wanted the trust proceeds to go to the seven charities that were the beneficiaries of her 1997 will. Mr. Robinson was concerned about Helen’s capacity to make a trust, but he concluded that he could proceed because Helen was not changing beneficiaries but merely avoiding probate. Late in 2001, Helen told him that she wanted to leave her mobilehome to Ms. Vulovic. Mr. Robinson did not question that, because the mobilehome was a small part of Helen’s estate.

Mr. Robinson arranged to have the trust and pour-over will prepared by the attorney who prepared Helen’s earlier will. He made an appointment with Helen for March 2, 2002, for her to sign the trust documents and the will and to discuss her taxes. However, on March 1, Mr. Robinson received a faxed letter from Helen cancelling the appointment and stating that Helen intended to write her own will. Ms. Vulovic wrote the letter and Helen signed it. The Robinsons’ subsequent efforts to contact Helen failed. She did not respond to any of their letters or return any of their telephone calls. Helen directed her mutual fund company to cease sending statements to Mr. Robinson, as they had for 26 years.

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Related

In Re Estate of Odian
51 Cal. Rptr. 3d 390 (California Court of Appeal, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
145 Cal. App. 4th 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vulovic-v-robinson-calctapp-2006.