Crowe v. Tweten CA4/2 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 12/29/14 Crowe v. Tweten CA4/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    NANCY CROWE et al.,
    Plaintiffs, Objectors and                                          E058311
    Respondents,
    (Super.Ct.No. INP0000515)
    v.
    OPINION
    LEONARD M. TWETEN,
    Objector, Cross-complainant and
    Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. James A. Cox, Judge.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, remanded with directions.
    Bingham McCutchen, Marshall B. Grossman and Karen Ho; Orrick, Herrington &
    Sutcliffe and Marshall B. Grossman; Ervin Cohen & Jessup, Rodney C. Lee and Jeffrey
    A. Merriam-Rehwald; Morrison & Foerster, Miriam A. Vogel and Jacob M. Harper for
    Objector, Cross-complainant and Appellant.
    Loeb & Loeb, Adam F. Streisand and David C. Nelson for Plaintiffs, Objectors
    and Respondents.
    1
    This is the second appeal from an action involving a dispute concerning the
    validity of an amendment to, and/or the need to reform, a trust executed by Leonard M.
    and Eileen Tweten in 2008.1 Following a court trial, the trust was reformed to comply
    with the language in the amendment and judgment was entered in favor of objector,
    cross-complainant and appellant Leonard M. Tweten, who then brought a motion
    pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 2033.4202 seeking cost-of-proof sanctions
    against plaintiffs, objectors, and respondents Nancy Crowe and Janet Houston
    (collectively, plaintiffs) based on their denials of certain requests for admission. The trial
    court denied the motion and Leonard appeals.
    I. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Leonard and Eileen had four children: Jim, Scott (deceased),3 Nancy, and Janet.4
    In 2008 the Twetens executed the LET Revocable Trust (Trust).5 According to its terms,
    1  On our own motion, we take judicial notice of the record and our opinion in
    plaintiffs’ first appeal (Nancy Crowe et al. v. Leonard M. Tweten, case No. E056920
    [nonpub.opn.].) (Evid. Code § 452, subd. (d) [permissive judicial notice of court
    records].) The relevant facts herein are taken from our opinion in case No. E056920
    (hereafter, E056920) which is filed concurrently with this opinion.
    2   All further statutory references are to Code of Civil Procedure.
    3   Scott suffered from alcoholism, which caused his death in 2010.
    4  Because of the family relationship of the parties, we adopt their practice and
    refer to them by their first names. No disrespect is intended.
    5The Trust was drafted by Best, Best, & Krieger attorney Joseph Hahn after the
    Twetens consulted with their financial advisor, Matthew McCutchen of the McCutchen
    Group.
    2
    at the first death, the Tweten estate would be split in half (two estimated $50 million
    community property shares); a small amount from the deceased spouse’s share (shown on
    the diagram attached to E056920 as Exhibit No. 1 as $1 million) would be divided
    equally among the four children via a “family trust” and would be distributed to them
    immediately. If Eileen died first, a small amount6 would be divided equally among the
    four children and the remainder of her share ($49 million) would be held in a “marital
    trust” for Leonard’s benefit; if Leonard died first, a small amount would be divided
    equally among the four children; then $5 million would go to a foundation, and the
    remainder of his share ($44 million) would be held in a marital trust for Eileen’s benefit.
    The surviving spouse would receive the income from the marital trust and also would
    have access to the principal for specified purposes. Only at the death of the surviving
    spouse would the estate be distributed to the children. And even after that death,
    Leonard’s share would pass to the children in trust. Under no circumstances would Scott
    inherit his share of the trust outright.7
    In April 2010, when Eileen began hospice care, the financial advisors for the
    Twetens realized the Trust needed to be amended to ensure that it effectuated their intent
    to leave only a token amount to the children upon the first death, and the bulk of the
    6 The small amount was set based on the federal estate tax (FET) exemption,
    which was $2 million in 2008 and $3.5 million in 2009. However, it was slated to expire
    in 2010 (i.e, the FET exemption amount would be 100 percent).
    7  The Twetens did not want Scott to receive the same full outright share as their
    other children at any point in time because “they both felt that giving him additional
    money due to his health issues would go ahead and just basically potentially kill him.”
    3
    deceased spouse’s share to a marital trust for the surviving spouse’s benefit. They
    realized that because of the absence of an FET in 2010, the entire share of the deceased
    spouse would go into the family trust for immediate distribution to the children, leaving
    nothing to be deposited in the marital trust. Thus, an amendment8 was drafted that
    directed everyone to “[r]ead the trust as if this was a 2009 trust so that it wasn’t 2010
    with no [FET].” Leonard signed the amendment and then presented it to Eileen, who also
    signed it.
    Following Eileen’s death, plaintiffs petitioned the court in September 2010 to
    invalidate the amendment on grounds of fraud, undue influence, forgery, lack of capacity,
    and invalidity because the signatures were not notarized. Jim did not join his sisters’
    petition. Leonard also petitioned the court, asking that the court modify or reform “the
    provisions of the Trust to provide that Eileen’s share of the Trust be divided following
    her death so that the Family Trust be funded with $2,500,000 and the residue of Eileen’s
    property be funded into the Marital Trust.”
    By August 2011, plaintiffs had deposed and obtained documents from a number of
    key witnesses, including Attorney Joseph Hahn, who drafted the Trust, Attorney David
    Erwin, who prepared the amendment and was present when the Twetens signed it, the
    family’s financial manager, Matthew McCutchen, who also witnessed the Twetens
    execute the Trust and the amendment, and the nurse, Cheryl Readinger, who cared for
    8 “This Trust during the year 2010 in the event of death of one of the Grantors is
    amended throughout to provide distribution, administration and allocation based upon the
    Federal Estate and Generation-Skipping Transfer tax law as the same existed and would
    have been applicable to estate of decedents dying during the year 2009.”
    4
    Eileen during her terminal illness. A number of experts, including forensic psychiatrist
    Dr. James Spar, had already been consulted by the plaintiffs and their lawyers. None of
    the deposition testimonies of the witnesses supported plaintiffs’ claims.
    On July 27, 2011, Leonard served requests for admission, asking plaintiffs to
    admit (1) that the signature appearing on the amendment was Eileen’s and not a forgery;
    (2) that Eileen was not mentally incapacitated when she signed the amendment; (3) that
    Eileen’s signature on the amendment was not the product of Leonard’s undue influence;
    and (4) that if she died first, Eileen wanted Leonard to receive the income from the
    majority of her assets. On September 6, 2011, after completion of percipient witness
    depositions and other discovery, plaintiffs responded to all of the requests for admission
    with boilerplate objections followed by one word: “Denied.”
    Following a bench trial, the court issued a detailed tentative decision, wherein it
    found in favor of Leonard and against plaintiffs. Specifically, the court rejected the
    opinion of the plaintiffs’ handwriting expert, William Leaver, finding that he had relied
    on incorrect information in forming his opinion about the legitimacy of Eileen’s signature
    on the amendment.9 The court noted that plaintiffs’ own expert, Dr. Spar, “concluded
    that at the time of the signing of the amendment, the decedent had testamentary and
    decisional capacity.” Finding no undue influence, the court concluded the evidence
    9  “It is clear from Leaver’s testimony, that his opinion as to the signature’s
    validity was very greatly influenced by his belief that the decedent was ‘near death’ and
    was ‘two days before coma’ at the time of execution. The information, underlying
    Leaver’s belief, was incorrect, and was relayed to the expert by daughter’s counsel at the
    time the expert was retained.”
    5
    failed to support plaintiffs’ claim that Eileen wanted to change the trust to deprive
    Leonard of his share. The trial court observed that “the evidence is most convincing that
    the trust failed to comply with the settlor’s intended distributions upon the death of either
    settlor if such death happened to occur in the year 2010.” Unable to enforce the
    amendment because the signatures of the Twetens had not been notarized (King v. Lynch
    (2012) 
    204 Cal. App. 4th 1186
    , 1193), the court used its equitable power to reform, and,
    alternatively, modify the Trust to add the language in the amendment in order to give
    effect to the consistent intent of the Twetens “that the trust provide a marital trust for the
    use of the survivor.” Judgment was entered on August 7, 2012.
    On September 13, 2012, Leonard filed a motion under section 2033.420.10
    Plaintiffs’ opposition to the motion claimed they had a “reasonable ground to believe
    they would prevail on the issue.” (Capitalization omitted.) They maintained they had a
    good faith basis for their denials based on “documents, deposition testimony, anticipated
    expert testimony, and legal arguments . . . .” Denying the section 2033.420 motion, the
    trial court noted that plaintiffs’ opposition pointed “to much evidence (including
    deposition testimony) that they reasonably believed would support their denial of the
    admissions, and would assist them in prevailing at trial. It is clear that they believed they
    would prevail, and that this belief was in good faith. The fact that the responding parties
    were ultimately proven wrong at the time of trial, does not change their belief that they
    10  Leonard served the requests for admission on July 27, 2011, and plaintiffs
    verified their responses on September 2, 2011.
    6
    would prevail, and that they had sufficient evidence to support their position, and, hence,
    their denials of the requests for admissions.”
    II. LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    A. Governing Law
    Any party may obtain discovery by a written request that the other party admit
    “the truth of specified matters of fact, opinion relating to fact, or application of law to
    fact. A request for admission may relate to a matter that is in controversy between the
    parties.” (§ 2033.010.)
    “Requests for admissions differ fundamentally from other forms of discovery.
    Rather than seeking to uncover information, they seek to eliminate the need for proof.
    [Citation.]” (Stull v. Sparrow (2001) 
    92 Cal. App. 4th 860
    , 864 [Fourth Dist., Div. Two].)
    Requests for admissions expedite the trial. (Id. at p. 865.) “A party responding to
    requests for admissions has a duty to make a reasonable investigation to ascertain the
    facts even though the party has no personal knowledge of the matter when the party has
    available sources of information as to the matters involved in such requests for
    admissions. [Citation.]” (Brooks v. American Broadcasting Co. (1986) 
    179 Cal. App. 3d 500
    , 510 (Brooks).11)
    11  In Brooks, a truck/semitrailer rig lost control and hit a tree. 
    (Brooks, supra
    ,
    179 Cal.App.3d at p. 505.) The truck driver sued the driver of a bus and his employer,
    alleging that the accident was caused by the bus driver crossing over the centerline of the
    road. (Id. at p. 506.) At trial, the jury found in favor of defendant bus driver, who moved
    for cost-of-proof sanctions on the grounds the truck driver refused to admit that he, not
    the bus driver, had crossed the line. (Id. at pp. 506-507.) The trial court awarded
    sanctions for refusing to admit that the truck was over the line, but denied them for
    [footnote continued on next page]
    7
    “Under Code of Civil Procedure section 2033.420, a party that denies a request for
    admission may be ordered to pay the costs and fees incurred by the requesting party in
    proving that matter.” (Laabs v. City of Victorville (2008) 
    163 Cal. App. 4th 1242
    , 1276
    (Laabs) [Fourth Dist., Div. Two].) Allowing recovery of expenses “is directly related” to
    the purpose underlying requests for admissions—to expedite trial. 
    (Brooks, supra
    , 179
    Cal.App.3d at p. 509.) “Unlike other discovery sanctions, an award of expenses pursuant
    to section [2033.420] is not a penalty. Instead, it is designed to reimburse reasonable
    expenses incurred by a party in proving the truth of a requested admission . . . such that
    trial would have been expedited or shortened if the request had been admitted.” (Ibid.
    [discussing predecessor provision].)
    While recovery of costs is not contingent upon success of the action, costs of proof
    “are not recoverable simply because the party promulgating the request prevails at trial.”
    
    (Brooks, supra
    , 179 Cal.App.3d at p. 513.) There are limits on section 2033.420’s
    application. As provided in subdivision (a), the statute applies only where the
    propounding party later proves the matter at issue in the request for admission.
    (§ 2033.420, subd. (a); Stull v. 
    Sparrow, supra
    , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 864.) As provided in
    [footnote continued from previous page]
    refusing to admit that the bus was not. (Id. at pp. 512-513.) The appellate court affirmed
    both rulings for the following reasons: Regarding the truck being over the line, the truck
    driver’s denial was unreasonable after the Highway Patrol issued its report that concluded
    the truck was over the line given the tire marks made on the pavement. (Id. at p. 512.)
    Regarding the bus being over the line, the denial was reasonably given the consistent
    testimony of one witness (the truck driver’s father) who stated that he saw the bus over
    the line. (Id. at p. 513.) Thus, according to Brooks, absent credible evidence, a denial of
    a request for admission is subject to cost-of-proof sanctions. (Id. at pp. 512-513.)
    8
    section 2033.420, subdivision (b), there are four explicit exceptions to the statute’s
    application: (1) where an objection to the requested admission has been sustained or a
    response waived (§ 2033.420, subd. (b)(1)); (2) where the requested admission was not of
    substantial importance at the time of the response (id., subd. (b)(2)); (3) when the party
    denying the request for admissions had a reasonable belief in prevailing on the disputed
    matter (id., subd. (b)(3)); and (4) where the responding party had some other good cause
    for denying the request for admission (id., subd. (b)(4)).
    B. Standard of Review
    The trial court’s ruling on a section 2033.420 motion is reviewed for an abuse of
    discretion. (Miller v. American Greetings Corp. (2008) 
    161 Cal. App. 4th 1055
    , 1066
    (Miller).12) “The determination of whether ‘there were no good reasons for the denial,’
    whether the requested admission was ‘of substantial importance,’ and the amount of
    expenses to be awarded, if any, are all within the sound discretion of the trial court.
    12  In Miller, a plaintiff had been hit by the driver of a pickup truck. The injured
    plaintiff and her husband sued the driver and his employer, American Greetings
    Corporation. As part of his employment, the driver worked from his home and car and
    relied on his cell phone to conduct business. 
    (Miller, supra
    , 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 1061.)
    On the day of the accident, however, he had taken the day off work. (Ibid.) American
    Greetings Corporation requested that the plaintiffs admit that the driver was not acting
    within the course and scope of his employment at the time of the accident. (Id. at pp.
    1058-1059.) The plaintiffs denied the request. The trial court found that the denial was
    unreasonable and awarded fees to the defendants. (Id. at p. 1061.) In finding that the
    award was an abuse of discretion, the appellate court explained: “Because the law
    involving ‘mobile’ offices inside an employee’s car is unsettled, appellants could have
    reasonably entertained a good faith . . . belief that they could prevail here under
    respondeat superior.” (Id. at p. 1066.) In the case at bar, the requests did not call for the
    application of unsettled law.
    9
    [Citation.] By contrast, if the trial court exercises its discretion and determines that the
    requirements of the statute exist, reasonable expenses must be awarded. [Citation.] On
    appeal, the trial court’s decision will not be reversed unless the appellant demonstrates
    that the lower court abused its discretion.” 
    (Brooks, supra
    , 179 Cal.App.3d at p. 508.)
    III. ANALYSIS
    In making the determination as to whether a request for admission was
    unreasonably denied, the trial court generally assesses the situation at the time the request
    was denied. 
    (Brooks, supra
    , 179 Cal.App.3d at pp. 509-510.) Factors to be taken into
    consideration in making this determination, include: (1) was the fact sought to be
    admitted of substantial importance at the time the request was made; (2) the extent to
    which the information sought to be admitted was within the personal knowledge of the
    responding party; (3) whether the necessary information to properly respond could have
    been gained through reasonable investigation; (4) did the responding party, in good faith,
    believe that he or she would prevail on the issue; (5) whether, following an initial denial,
    the responding party subsequently offered to admit the fact rather than requiring the
    propounding party to prove up the previously denied request for admission; and (6) at
    trial, did the responding party actually submit evidence relative to admission sought by
    way of the request. (See 
    id. at pp.
    509-511; Wimberly v. Derby Cycle Corp. (1997) 
    56 Cal. App. 4th 618
    , 634-635.)
    As Leonard pointed out to the trial court, he “asked for admissions . . . of the core
    factual issues in this case, testamentary intent, undue influence, four separate ones on
    forgery, and testamentary capacity.” The requests for admission that were the subject of
    10
    Leonard’s section 2033.420 motion are discussed based on the parties’ presentation and
    argument at the trial level.
    A. Eileen’s Intent
    “REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 10: [¶] Admit that EILEEN wanted LEN to
    receive the income from the majority of her assets after her death and during his lifetime
    as her survivor.”
    Request for admission No. 10 sought an admission that Eileen intended to leave
    the majority of her assets after her death and during his lifetime to Leonard. According
    to Leonard, each of the percipient witnesses testified that both Eileen and Leonard were
    consistent in their intent to establish a lifetime benefit for the surviving spouse. In
    response, plaintiffs argued that their denial was supported by the language in the Trust,
    along with the deposition testimony of Attorney Hahn, who “understood that the Twetens
    wanted their trust to pass the maximum amount free of estate tax to their children at the
    first death,” opined that the Twetens “understood that in 2010 there was no estate tax
    under the law as it existed at that time, and [affirmed] that as drafted in 2008, the trust
    was consistent with [their] intent.” Plaintiffs argued that the court’s reliance on “Hahn’s
    testimony to the contrary at trial is irrelevant.”
    Regarding the language in the Trust, the fact that in every year but 2010 Leonard
    would have received the income from the majority of Eileen’s assets after her death and
    during his lifetime, belies plaintiffs’ claim that they reasonably believed that they would
    prevail. Regarding Hahn’s deposition testimony, the record shows that plaintiffs are
    using it out of context. The excerpts of Hahn’s deposition attached to Leonard’s motion
    11
    provide that Eileen was “very clear that she wanted the money to be available to
    [Leonard] while he was alive” even though she believed that the children should “get it
    outright.” Hahn added that both Leonard and Eileen “wanted the full amount of the
    estate to be available to the surviving spouse. They didn’t want to impact the survivor’s
    lifestyle in any way.” Hahn’s deposition was taken on July 28, 2011. Additionally, on
    August 24, 2011, Matthew McCutchen testified that in September 2007, both Eileen and
    Leonard agreed that “when the first passed away, their assets would be available for the
    survivor.” Furthermore, the existence of the amendment further supports a finding of the
    Twetens’ desire to pass their assets to the surviving spouse.
    At trial, plaintiffs failed to produce any witness regarding the Twetens’
    testamentary intent that contradicted that provided by Hahn and McCutchen. The trial
    court nonetheless denied Leonard’s postrial section 2033.420 motion, finding plaintiffs
    “point[ed] to much evidence (including deposition testimony) that they reasonably
    believed would support their denial of the admissions, and would assist them in
    prevailing at trial. It is clear that they believed they would prevail, and that this belief
    was in good faith.” We conclude, the trial court erred in finding, on this record, that
    plaintiffs had a reasonable basis for their denial of Eileen’s testamentary intent. The
    evidence consistently showed Eileen’s desire to pass her assets to Leonard for his use
    until his death. Thus, failure to award Leonard expenses incurred in proving her intent is
    an abuse of discretion. (Wimberly v. Derby Cycle 
    Corp., supra
    , 56 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    636-637.)
    12
    B. Eileen’s Signature
    “REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 1: [¶] Admit that EILEEN’s signature to the
    AMENDMENT was not forged . . . .”
    “REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 3: [¶] Admit that LEN did not actively
    procure a forged signature to the AMENDMENT as alleged in Paragraph 16 of the
    PETITION. . . .”
    “REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 4: [¶] Admit that EILEEN signed the
    AMENDMENT.”
    “REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 5: [¶] Admit that EILEEN’s signature to the
    AMENDMENT was written by her own hand.”
    Requests for admission Nos. 1, 4, and 5 sought an admission that Eileen
    personally signed the amendment. Request for admission No. 3 sought an admission that
    Leonard did not actively procure a forged signature. Leonard’s argument in support of
    his motion regarding the admission of these requests was short. He merely noted that
    three witnesses testified to being present when Eileen signed the amendment and that the
    trial court rejected plaintiffs’ handwriting expert’s [William Leaver] opinion on the
    grounds it failed to account for the fact that Eileen was in a reclining position with the
    amendment on her lap supported by one of her magazines and it “was tainted by
    [Leaver’s] belief that Eileen was ‘near death’ and ‘two days before coma’ at the time of
    execution.” In response, plaintiffs argued that their denial was supported by their
    familiarity with Eileen’s signature, along Leaver’s opinion that it was “highly probable”
    the signature was not Eileen’s, and the possibility that it was forged, given the inability of
    13
    anyone who could account for the whereabouts of the original amendment taken from the
    Tweten home.
    In evaluating whether a “good reason” exists for denying a request to admit, “a
    court may properly consider whether at the time the denial was made the party making
    the denial held a reasonably entertained good faith belief that the party would prevail on
    the issue at trial. [Citation.]” 
    (Brooks, supra
    , 179 Cal.App.3d at p. 511 [interpreting,
    former § 2034].) Here, as to requests for admission Nos. 1, 4 and 5, plaintiffs were asked
    to admit that Eileen signed the amendment. While the trial court concluded that the
    signature was Eileen’s, the fact that it had not been notarized prevented the court from
    upholding the amendment as valid. More importantly, plaintiffs were familiar with their
    mother’s signature and they both opined that the signature on the amendment was not
    Eileen’s. Their opinion was supported by that of their expert, Leaver, who opined that it
    was “highly probable” that the signature on the amendment was not Eileen’s, along with
    Leonard’s expert, Howard Rile, who agreed that the questioned signature did not look
    like Eileen’s known contemporaneous signature. On this record, plaintiffs could have
    reasonably believed that they would prevail at trial. 
    (Brooks, supra
    , 179 Cal.App.3d at p.
    513.)13 Therefore, the denial of Leonard’s section 2033.420 motion with respect to the
    13  During oral argument, Leonard maintained there were no documents to support
    plaintiffs’ claim that their mother’s signature on the amendment did not resemble the
    signature that they were familiar with from her various correspondence with them. He
    pointed to the testimony of Eileen’s hairdresser (regarding the checks she used to pay him
    for his services) and his expert, Mr. Riles (regarding his review of the checks Eileen
    signed based on proximity to the time she signed the amendment), and argued that such
    evidence shows that plaintiffs’ denial of the requests regarding Eileen’s signature was
    [footnote continued on next page]
    14
    requests for admission concerning Eileen’s signature was not an abuse of discretion.
    
    (Laabs, supra
    , 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1276-1277.)
    Turning to request for admission No. 3, this request addresses Leonard’s actions
    with respect to Eileen’s signature. Plaintiffs’ sole support for their denial of this request
    is found in their expert’s opinion that it was possible that the signature was forged, given
    the inability of anyone who could account for the whereabouts of the original amendment
    taken from the Tweten home. However, no person was ever identified as the person who
    procured the allegedly forged signature. Absent such evidence, plaintiffs’ denial was
    unreasonable. Plaintiffs’ accusation towards Leonard was based on nothing more than
    pure speculation. Thus, the failure to award Leonard expenses incurred in proving his
    innocence is an abuse of discretion.
    C. Eileen’s Mental Capacity
    “REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 7: [¶] Admit that EILEEN was not mentally
    incapacitated on April 14, 2010.”
    Request for admission No. 7 sought an admission that Eileen had the mental
    capacity on April 14, 2010, to consent to the amendment. Leonard argued that plaintiffs’
    [footnote continued from previous page]
    unreasonable. However, Leonard failed to offer this evidence to the trial court in support
    of his motion. His counsel’s invitation that the trial court “go broader than the motion
    and consider everything that the Court heard at trial and in pretrial proceedings” was
    declined. Moreover, such argument was not presented to this court during briefing.
    Thus, Leonard forfeited this contention by failing to timely raise it. (Julian v. Hartford
    Underwriters Ins. Co. (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 747
    , 761, fn. 4; Neighbours v. Buzz Oates
    Enterprises (1990) 
    217 Cal. App. 3d 325
    , 335, fn. 8 [We do not consider matters raised for
    the first time in the reply brief].)
    15
    own expert, Dr. Spar, opined that Eileen had the “testamentary and decisional capacity”
    at the time of the signing of the amendment. In response, plaintiffs relied on the facts
    that (1) Eileen’s Advance Health Care Directive gave Leonard the legal authority to make
    medical decisions for her only if she lacked capacity; (2) on April 10, 2010, Leonard, not
    Eileen, executed the hospice forms suggesting she lacked the mental capacity to do so;
    (3) there was no evaluation of her mental capacity on April 14, 2010; and (4) plaintiffs
    found Eileen to be nonresponsive from April 18, 2010, until her death.
    Plaintiffs retained Dr. Spar in May or June 2011. After reviewing hospice notes
    and deposition transcripts of witnesses present at the time Eileen signed the amendment,
    Dr. Spar acknowledged the hospice care notes from April 2010 which observed that
    Eileen may have had an “altered mental status” caused by pain medication. However,
    Dr. Spar concluded that Eileen’s impaired state of mind had nothing to do with her
    mental capacity on April 14, 2010. He told plaintiffs, and later testified that the evidence
    was insufficient to support a conclusion that Eileen lacked testamentary capacity on
    April 14, 2010. Given Dr. Spar’s expert opinion, it was not reasonable for plaintiffs to
    believe that Eileen lacked mental capacity, and the failure to award Leonard expenses
    incurred in proving Eileen’s mental capacity is an abuse of discretion.
    D. Leonard’s Undue Influence
    “REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 8: [¶] Admit that EILEEN’s execution of
    the AMENDMENT was not the product of LEN’s undue influence over her.”
    Request for admission No. 8 sought an admission that Leonard did not unduly
    influence Eileen into signing the amendment. Leonard pointed out that while Dr. Spar
    16
    opined that Eileen was “susceptible to undue influence,” he also agreed that “mere
    susceptibility to undue influence does not mean that any undue influence actually
    occurred.” He further noted that after finding the Twetens intended to fund a marital trust
    on the first death for the use and benefit of the surviving spouse, the court determined,
    “There was no undue benefit to be derived by the surviving settlor in the execution of the
    proposed amendment.” In response, plaintiffs argued that Eileen was in a weakened state
    and susceptible to undue influence from Leonard who procured the amendment. They
    noted that Leonard was the one to procure the amendment when he called McCutchen to
    confirm that Eileen’s estate would pass to him upon her death. Such telephone call
    resulted in the creation of the amendment, even though Eileen “never expressed any
    desire to amend the Trust, and no one told her anything about the amendment before it
    was presented to her for her signature,” including the fact that if she died in 2010, “she
    could pass her entire net estate to her children free of any estate tax . . . .”
    At trial, plaintiffs failed to produce any evidence that Leonard unduly influenced
    Eileen in signing the amendment. Their claim of undue influence primarily rests on the
    Leonard’s telephone call to McCutchen (to confirm that Eileen’s estate would pass to him
    upon her death), which “le[]d to the drafting of the amendment— not any request from
    Eileen.” While Leonard’s call prompted the financial advisors and lawyers of the
    Twetens to review the Trust in order to determine whether its language would accomplish
    the Twetens’ intent, in no way does the call equate to undue influence. The need to
    amend the Trust was determined by the financial advisors and lawyers who represented
    both Leonard and Eileen. Only upon their determination that the Trust would not operate
    17
    to carry out Eileen’s intent in the year 2010 did they decide to prepare the amendment.
    The Twetens were presented with the amendment and signed it on the advice of their
    financial advisors and lawyers.
    On appeal, plaintiffs emphasize Eileen’s weakened condition, hospice care
    paperwork which indicated she was bedbound, required total care, and suffering from an
    “altered mental status,” along with their expectation that Dr. Spar would opine that she
    was susceptible to undue influence. However, according to the evidence at trial, neither
    of the Twetens ever tried to influence the other regarding their distribution of their assets
    despite their disagreement on how their estate should be finally distributed. (E056920)
    Plaintiffs’ reliance on Estate of Davison (1967) 
    256 Cal. App. 2d 807
    is misplaced. In that
    case, the decedent moved in with her sister, Mrs. Weld, who cared for decedent during
    the last days of her life. (Id. at pp. 813-815.) Upon learning that decedent was terminal,
    Mrs. Weld contacted the Welds’ family attorney, saying that decedent wished to make a
    will leaving all of her property to Mrs. Weld. (Id. at p. 814.) Although decedent was
    able to talk on the telephone, she did not. Further, she was “deprived . . . of any
    independent advice.” (Ibid.) The attorney for the Welds prepared a “‘death-bed will,’”
    which he presented to decedent, who was bedridden. (Id. at pp. 814-815.) Mrs. Weld
    was the sole beneficiary of the will. (Ibid.) In contrast to Estate of Davison, here, Eileen
    was not presented with a “death bed will”; rather, her testamentary intentions were made
    clear to her financial advisors and lawyers as early as 1991 and continuing through the
    drafting of the Trust in 2008. The amendment did not change the guidelines for
    18
    distribution of her estate upon her death; rather, it assured that her estate would be
    distributed pursuant to her stated intent in 2008.
    On this admission, we conclude the trial court erred in finding that plaintiffs had a
    reasonable basis for their denial that Eileen was not unduly influenced by Leonard.
    Failure to award Leonard expenses incurred in proving that he did not unduly influence
    her is an abuse of discretion.
    E. Burden of Demonstrating Costs-of-Proof
    In their responding brief, plaintiffs contend that we should affirm the trial court’s
    order denying Leonard’s section 2033.420 motion on the grounds “his request for some
    $1.5 million in attorneys’ fees and costs as sanctions” was not supported by any
    declarations that identified “with any particularity the expenses they claimed were
    incurred in proving the issues discussed above . . . .” Recognizing that the trial court did
    not rule on this ground, plaintiffs’ argue that Leonard’s “counsel’s declarations plainly
    are not sufficient to support a Section 2033.420 sanctions award.” Leonard replies by
    pointing out his counsel’s declaration, which specified the areas of work performed for
    various billing periods, such as reviewing plaintiffs’ handwriting expert’s work, deposing
    percipient witnesses, and researching testator’s susceptibility to undue influence and
    mental capacity. Logically, if Leonard had succeeded in his motion, he would have
    recovered all of the amount requested. Because we have reversed in part and affirmed in
    part the trial court’s order, we must remand for a determination of the amount of
    sanctions to be awarded. On remand, Leonard is directed to identify with particularity
    19
    the expenses incurred in proving the issues which we have concluded plaintiffs
    unreasonably denied, including, requests for admission Nos. 3, 7, 8, and 10.
    IV. DISPOSITION
    We reverse the order of January 24, 2013, which denied appellant costs and fees
    under section 2033.420 as to requests for admission Nos. 3, 7, 8, and 10. In all other
    respects, we affirm the order. We remand the matter to the trial court to determine the
    amount of costs and fees appellant should be awarded. Appellant Leonard M. Tweten
    shall recover his costs on appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    HOLLENHORST
    J.
    We concur:
    RAMIREZ
    P.J.
    MILLER
    J.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E058311

Filed Date: 12/29/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021