Zeme v. Wolfe CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 2, 2025
DocketA170035
StatusUnpublished

This text of Zeme v. Wolfe CA1/3 (Zeme v. Wolfe CA1/3) 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
Zeme v. Wolfe CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 9/2/25 Zeme v. Wolfe CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

SUSAN ZEME, as Trustee, etc., Plaintiff and Respondent, v. MARC D. WOLFE, as Trustee, etc., A170035, A170457, A170525 et al., (Marin County Defendants and Appellants; Super. Ct. No. PRO2002412) SUSAN WOLFE, Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

In January 2024, the probate court ordered Marc Wolfe and his co- appellants to disburse $1.6 million from Robert (Bob) Wolfe’s trust (the trust) to Bob’s wife, Susan Wolfe, and to make future disbursements monthly.1 It thereafter awarded fees to Susan Zeme — the independent trustee — and Susan Wolfe for securing the disbursements, and it ordered appellants to comply with the fee award to Zeme notwithstanding their appeal. Appellants challenge the orders. We remand with instructions to add language to the fee award to Zeme but otherwise affirm.

1 We occasionally refer to Wolfe family members by their first name for

clarity, intending no disrespect. At oral argument, all parties agreed that Bob passed away in April 2025. 1 BACKGROUND Before he married Susan, Bob had two children from a previous marriage, Lisa Wagonfeld and Marc. In 1991, Bob established the trust and named himself the trustee. Marc, Lisa, and Roger Herst — a friend of Bob’s — are successor cotrustees (trustees). In addition to his duties as a successor trustee, Marc also manages or comanages most of the entities in which the trust has an ownership interest — including entities that hold the most assets and produce the most income — and he decides (alone or with comanagers) whether entities distribute money to the trust. Lisa manages another trust property (the Ohio property). Susan and Bob were the trust’s income beneficiaries. The trust dictates that after Bob’s death, his and Susan’s primary residence, his interest in the Ohio property and any income from that interest, and — at a minimum — a $300,000 lump sum be placed in a marital trust for Susan’s benefit. It also mandates that if he and Susan sold the family home, “income generated from those proceeds” is payable to Susan for her lifetime. The balance of the trust shall be divided between Marc, Lisa, and their children. The trust also includes an incapacity clause. It states that, if the trustor “becomes incapacitated for more than a thirty (30) day period, Trustor authorizes the distribution of one-third (1/3) of the net income of all Trust assets to be distributed to Trustor’s wife, SUSAN, on a monthly basis for the duration of Trustor’s incapacity.” The clause also requires an independent trustee for its execution, and it allows the independent trustee to make additional distributions to Susan for her “health, maintenance and support” at the independent trustee’s discretion. Any trustee — other than Bob — is

2 “entitled to reasonable compensation” for their services “payable from income or principal as the Trustee may deem proper.” Although the specific date was disputed, the parties agreed Bob became incapacitated no later than June 2020. In February 2022, the probate court appointed Zeme as independent trustee (confirmation order). The court ordered that she be compensated at $250 per hour and authorized her to pay herself professional fees and costs from the trust’s assets. To facilitate payment, it ordered the trustees to fund a cash account with $100,000 and to replenish the account to $100,000 whenever it fell below $20,000. Zeme hired counsel and a forensic accountant to assist her. With some effort, she received the trust’s 2020 tax returns, some 2021 account statements, and the entities’ business ledgers. In October 2022, Zeme petitioned the probate court to distribute money from the trust to Susan. She explained that, “[b]ased on the terms of the Trust, and the consistent income and business practices of [Bob] Wolfe,” “the proper net income of the Trust should be based on the net income earned by the Trust Income Generating Properties.” She reasoned that the incapacity provision required her “to distribute ‘one-third (1/3) of the net income of all Trust assets’ ” to Susan (italics added) and, historically, Bob “would retain a reasonable reserve of cash in each of the Trust Income Generating Properties and then distribute all additional income to the Trust.” But after Bob’s incapacitation, “the cash reserves of the Trust Income Generating Properties have increased significantly beyond the historic baselines [Bob] established” rather than being distributed to the trust. Thus — after amending her petition in December — she requested the trustees distribute $1,296,404.51 to her cash account for money potentially owed to Susan for 2020 and 2021. She also requested that the court order the trustees to distribute $50,000 per

3 month beginning in January 2023, subject to annual true-up payments. The trustees objected, contending the trust had “no net income to distribute.” After a nine-day trial, the probate court concluded that Susan is entitled to receive “1/3” of “the net income of each trust asset.” It concluded the trust’s language was “unambiguous” and “additional evidence is unnecessary to understand its meaning.” It also found the trust’s assets are “largely controlled by” the trustees and that “Bob did not want the [trustees] (who have a direct conflict of interest with Susan and control the income distributions to the trust) to participate in (or manipulate)” Susan’s payments. Otherwise, “there would have been no reason to appoint an independent trustee for Susan nor would there be a need to use the words ‘net income of all trust assets’ as opposed to ‘net income of the trust.’ ” It also found “that Marc Wolfe is manipulating the trust assets in a calculated manner to deprive Susan of her distributions.” (Fn. omitted.) In January 2024, Zeme petitioned the probate court to order the trustees to pay her $2,049,124.88 for her attorney and accountant fees. (Unless otherwise indicated, subsequent dates refer to 2024.) She also petitioned the court to modify the confirmation order by requiring the trustees to replenish the cash account with sufficient funds to pay her outstanding professional fees within 15 days of her request. In March, the probate court granted Zeme’s petition (the March order) over the trustees’ objection. It ordered the trustees to fund the cash account with $1,990,654.88 (lump sum) for Zeme’s outstanding fees. It also ordered Zeme to demand outstanding fees on the first day of each month — beginning in April — and required the trustees to replenish the cash account within 15 days of each demand with sufficient funds to pay her expenses.

4 After the trustees appealed the March order, Zeme petitioned the probate court to order that the trustees comply notwithstanding the appeal under Probate Code section 1310 (all undesignated statutory references are to this code). In May, the court granted the petition. At the hearing, it was concerned with “Zeme’s ability to defend the trust first and foremost.” It noted she needed funds to address “litigation,” “appeals to orders,” “to retain . . . [and] pay” “experts,” and “to ensure that she can properly, adequately, and reasonably defend the trust in this case.” It balanced Zeme’s need for fees against the trustees’ right to appeal — specifically their right to challenge the reasonableness of the March fee award — and concluded Zeme’s need was greater since the trustees had already argued Zeme’s requested fees were unreasonable at the probate court.

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Bluebook (online)
Zeme v. Wolfe CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeme-v-wolfe-ca13-calctapp-2025.