Okonski v. Jones CA4/3 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 3/5/15 Okonski v. Jones CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    JUDITH A. OKONSKI, as Trustee, etc.,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                         G048475
    v.                                                            (Super. Ct. No. A218268)
    CASSANDRA D. JONES,                                                    OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County,
    Nancy Wieben Stock, Judge. Affirmed.
    Cassandra D. Jones, in pro. per., for Defendant and Appellant.
    Law Offices of Steven A. Ehrlich and Steven A. Ehrlich for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    *               *               *
    INTRODUCTION
    The trial court approved the account and report prepared by a trust’s
    successor trustee. The court found the objections to the account and report, filed by one
    of the trust’s beneficiaries, were without reasonable cause and made in bad faith.
    Therefore, the beneficiary was surcharged for the successor trustee’s attorney fees and
    costs incurred in defending against those objections. The beneficiary appeals.
    We affirm. Substantial evidence supported the court’s findings that the
    account and report were proper and should be approved, and that the successor trustee did
    not breach any fiduciary duties. Having reviewed the record de novo, we agree the
    beneficiary did not have reasonable cause to bring the objections. Substantial evidence
    supported the court’s finding that the beneficiary acted in bad faith in bringing and
    pursuing the objections.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    Marie Hicks Jones was the mother of Cassandra D. Jones, Louis Jones, and
    1
    Tracey Bronson. In December 1995, Marie established The Marie Hicks Jones
    Revocable Trust (the Trust), of which she was the initial trustee. The Trust owns several
    parcels of real property, including two parcels on which Jones Community Care, Inc.,
    operates residential care facilities for adults with developmental disabilities. Jones
    Community Care, Inc., was also owned by Marie.
    Following a lengthy dispute with her siblings, Cassandra was appointed as
    the first successor trustee of the Trust in October 2003, and was also appointed as the
    conservator of Marie’s person and estate. In September 2008, Cassandra was removed as
    1
    We will refer to Marie Hicks Jones and Cassandra D. Jones by their first
    names to avoid confusion; we mean no disrespect.
    2
    conservator and replaced by Judith A. Okonski (the Trustee), who also replaced
    Cassandra as successor trustee in November 2008. Marie died on April 14, 2011.
    The Trustee filed a second account current and report, petition for
    settlement, and petition for preliminary distribution of the Trust in March 2012. She filed
    two supplements to the second account current. Cassandra filed objections to the second
    account current.
    Following a trial, the court:
    (1) Settled, allowed, and approved the second account current, as filed, and
    ratified, confirmed, and approved all of the Trustee’s acts and transactions, as set forth in
    the second account current as supplemented.
    (2) Approved payment of fees to the Trustee from the Trust’s assets.
    (3) Approved payment of the Trustee’s attorney fees and costs from the
    Trust’s assets.
    (4) Approved the distribution of shares of Jones Community Care, Inc.,
    stock to the residual beneficiaries of the Trust.
    (5) Found that Cassandra’s objections to the second account current were
    without reasonable cause and in bad faith, and surcharged Cassandra for the Trustee’s
    2
    attorney fees and costs incurred in defending against the objections.
    Judgment was entered, and Cassandra timely appealed.
    2
    The trial court also found that Cassandra’s objections to Okonski’s
    second account as the conservator were without reasonable cause and made in bad faith,
    and that the Trustee’s attorney fees and costs incurred in opposing those objections
    should be surcharged against Cassandra’s share of the Trust’s assets. Cassandra does not
    address this issue in her appellate brief. Cassandra does argue about some of the issues
    raised in her objections to the second account of the conservator. We will address these
    issues as appropriate in dealing with Cassandra’s appeal from the approval of the
    Trustee’s second account current.
    3
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    DID THE TRIAL COURT ERR IN APPROVING THE TRUSTEE’S SECOND ACCOUNT CURRENT?
    When a beneficiary objects to a trustee’s account, the burden shifts to the
    trustee to produce evidence justifying the account. (Purdy v. Johnson (1917) 
    174 Cal. 521
    , 527-530.) Cassandra identifies several areas in which she claims the Trustee’s
    second account current and report were inaccurate or incomplete, and, on that basis,
    claims the trial court erred in approving the second account current. We use the
    substantial evidence standard of review to review the court’s findings based on its
    determination of disputed factual issues. (Penny v. Wilson (2004) 
    123 Cal.App.4th 596
    ,
    603.)
    Cassandra contends that items of personal property, located at real property
    on Daniel Lane, which were taken by the beneficiaries, were not reported in the schedules
    attached to the second account current and report, in violation of Probate Code
    section 1061, subdivision (a)(9). The Trustee testified that after Marie’s death, family
    members were permitted to take personal items from the Daniel Lane property, and the
    value of those items, while not included in the schedules attached to the second account
    current and report, would be deducted from the family member’s shares when the Trust
    was distributed. Accordingly, the court’s finding that Cassandra failed to meet her
    burden of proof on this issue was supported by substantial evidence.
    Cassandra claims the second account current and report failed to show the
    receipt of a $200,000 loan. (Prob. Code, §§ 1062, subd. (a), 16063, subd. (a)(1) & (2).)
    Cassandra concedes receipt of the $200,000 was reflected in the first account current of
    the Trust, prepared and filed by Cassandra when she was the successor trustee. By the
    time the second account current was prepared at the end of the period, that cash had been
    paid out and was reflected in other schedules. Therefore, substantial evidence supported
    4
    the court’s finding that the second account current and report were not improper based on
    this contention.
    Cassandra next contends the second account current failed to adequately
    show the Trust’s liabilities for taxes and for a judgment against it. (Prob. Code, § 1063,
    subd. (g)(2) & (4).) As we understand her argument, Cassandra criticizes the Trustee for
    failing to reconcile the estate’s personal tax liability with the Trust’s tax liability. The
    Trustee testified that certain tax liabilities were still to be determined because while
    Cassandra was successor trustee, she had failed to pay some taxes, and had never
    provided the Trustee with the information necessary to fully determine the tax liabilities
    of the Trust and Marie’s estate. There was substantial evidence to support the trial
    court’s finding that the second account current should be approved, despite any alleged
    issues with the tax liabilities reflected in the second account current.
    As to the judgment against the Trust, we presume that Cassandra is
    referring to the order to pay fees to the guardian ad litem. The earlier court order
    approved fees for the guardian ad litem be paid to the law firm with which she was then
    associated. In the interim, the guardian ad litem had moved to a new firm; the trial court
    ordered that the payment of fees be made to the attorney, not to her current or former
    firm. The trial court found that the individual attorney, not a law firm, was named as the
    guardian ad litem and that there was no potential exposure of the Trust if it paid the
    attorney rather than her law firm. Substantial evidence supported the court’s order that
    the payment for the fees of the guardian ad litem be made directly to the guardian ad
    litem, rather than to her old or her new law firm.
    II.
    DID THE TRIAL COURT ERR IN FINDING THE TRUSTEE DID NOT BREACH ANY DUTIES?
    In the statement of decision, the trial court found the Trustee had not
    breached her duty to the Trust or its beneficiaries: “[T]he Trustee appropriately
    5
    discharged her duties and administered the Trust with reasonable care, skill and caution,
    acted prudently and exercised appropriate business judgment and/or normal judgment,
    given the circumstances as Successor Trustee. [¶] . . . The Successor Trustee came into
    the administration of the Trust in less than ideal conditions, predicated upon the finances
    of the Trust being in disarray, based upon the prior conduct/tenure of . . . Cassandra D.
    Jones, and additionally by failure of Cassandra D. Jones to give to the Successor Trustee
    a Fourth and Final Account and/or documents relative to the accounting status of the
    Trust. [¶] . . . Issues relative to cash flow and lack of income to the Trust, as well as
    issues relating to the entity, Jones Community Care, of which the Trust held 75% of the
    outstanding share[s], were all existing at the time of the appointment of the Successor
    Trustee, and were not caused by her.”
    Probate Code section 16040, subdivision (a) sets forth the criteria by which
    a trustee’s actions are judged: “The trustee shall administer the trust with reasonable
    care, skill, and caution under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent person
    acting in a like capacity would use in the conduct of an enterprise of like character and
    with like aims to accomplish the purposes of the trust as determined from the trust
    instrument.” The trial court’s finding that the Trustee did not breach her fiduciary duties
    is reviewed to determine whether it is supported by substantial evidence. (Penny v.
    Wilson, supra, 123 Cal.App.4th at p. 603.)
    On appeal, Cassandra argues the Trustee breached her duties through the
    same acts and omissions detailed ante as grounds supporting Cassandra’s objections to
    the second account current. For the same reasons that we conclude the trial court did not
    err in approving the second account current and report, we conclude the trial court did not
    err in finding the Trustee did not breach any duties to the Trust or its beneficiaries.
    Cassandra also argues the Trustee breached her fiduciary duties by failing
    to make a property owned by the Trust—the “Maple Property” (italics omitted)—
    income-producing. In the statement of decision, the trial court found: “With regard to
    6
    the issue of the Walnut and Maple properties, and as to the profitability and cash position
    of Jones Community Care, the Court determined that Judith A. Okonski acted properly
    and was not to blame for any reduced money to either the Estate or Trust. [¶] . . . The
    Court based its decision on the following facts: The profitability/cash position of Jones
    Community Care had been a problem for years. This was borne out by way of [the
    Trustee]’s Request for Judicial Notice 13: The Independent Audit Report, as well as the
    testimony relative to the change in regulatory policies which drove revenue down.
    [Cassandra] produced insufficient evidence of control of Jones Community Care
    regarding rental payments.”
    The Trustee’s testimony was that a review of the tax returns, books, and
    records of Jones Community Care, Inc., indicated the corporation did not have sufficient
    funds to pay rent to the Trust after all other necessary payments were made. The Maple
    Property had been modified to serve as a residential care facility for multiple residents,
    and could not easily be rented out to a single-family renter. Therefore, the potential
    demand for the property was limited. Accordingly, the Trustee used her best judgment as
    trustee to allow Jones Community Care, Inc., to continue operating at that location
    3
    without paying rent to the Trust.
    Our prior opinion in this case makes clear that at the time the Trustee took
    over from Cassandra, the finances of the Trust were in disarray, Cassandra had failed to
    file income tax returns or make property tax payments, and Cassandra had made
    substantial payments to herself from the Trust’s assets. (Conservatorship of Jones
    (Mar. 7, 2012, G043185) [nonpub. opn.].) The evidence presented at the trial we are
    currently considering on this appeal did not support a claim that the Trustee breached her
    fiduciary duties by permitting Jones Community Care, Inc., to continue operating at the
    Maple Property without paying rent.
    3
    A real estate broker testified the fair market rental value of the Maple
    Property was $8,800 per month.
    7
    Cassandra cites authority explaining how a trustee should administer a trust
    and for what a trustee may be charged if he or she commits a breach of trust. Cassandra
    does not specify any alleged losses or charges to the Trust for which she claims the
    Trustee is liable.
    Cassandra claims the Trustee violated her duty to keep Cassandra, a
    beneficiary of the Trust, reasonably informed about the Trust and its administration.
    (Prob. Code, § 16060.) Cassandra’s only evidence in support of this claim is the
    testimony of the Trustee’s counsel that she received “calls from [Cassandra] stating that
    [she] was not receiving return phone calls from [the Trustee].” Such evidence is
    insufficient to reverse the trial court’s order.
    Cassandra argues the Trustee failed to safeguard the Trust property, and the
    Trust’s real property was vandalized, causing a loss to the Trust estate. Evidence was
    offered that the Trust credited the buyers of the Raitt Street property with between $4,000
    and $8,200, which was withheld from escrow on the closing of the deal, for damage to
    the property. No evidence was presented, however, that the damage to the Raitt Street
    property was caused by the negligence, malfeasance, or breach of fiduciary duty on the
    part of the Trustee.
    III.
    DID THE TRIAL COURT ERR IN FINDING CASSANDRA’S OBJECTIONS WERE FILED WITHOUT
    REASONABLE CAUSE AND IN BAD FAITH?
    “If a beneficiary contests the trustee’s account and the court determines that
    the contest was without reasonable cause and in bad faith, the court may award against
    the contestant the compensation and costs of the trustee and other expenses and costs of
    litigation, including attorney’s fees, incurred to defend the account. The amount awarded
    shall be a charge against any interest of the beneficiary in the trust. The contestant shall
    be personally liable for any amount that remains unsatisfied.” (Prob. Code, § 17211,
    8
    subd. (a).) Whether a contest was brought without reasonable cause is a legal issue we
    review de novo; whether the contest was brought in bad faith is a factual determination
    reviewed on appeal for sufficiency of the evidence. (Bosetti v. United States Life Ins. Co.
    in City of New York (2009) 
    175 Cal.App.4th 1208
    , 1226.) The burden of proof in any
    hearing on objections to an accounting is on the objector. (Conservatorship of Hume
    (2006) 
    140 Cal.App.4th 1385
    , 1390.)
    “‘Reasonable cause,’ when used with reference to the prosecution of a
    claim, ordinarily is synonymous with ‘probable cause’ as used in the malicious
    prosecution context. [Citation.] [¶] ‘Probable cause’ to prosecute an action means an
    objectively reasonable belief that the action is legally tenable. [Citation.] There is no
    probable cause to prosecute an action only if no reasonable attorney would believe that
    the action had any merit and any reasonable attorney would agree that the action was
    totally and completely without merit. [Citations.] The probable cause determination is
    objective and is based on the facts known to the malicious prosecution defendant at the
    time the action was initiated or prosecuted. [Citation.] Probable cause is a low threshold
    designed to protect a litigant’s right to assert arguable legal claims even if the claims are
    extremely unlikely to succeed. [Citations.] [¶] Whether there was probable cause to have
    prosecuted an action in light of the facts then known to the malicious prosecution
    defendant is a legal question for the court to decide. [Citations.] Any controversy as to
    what facts were known to the malicious prosecution defendant at the time the action was
    initiated presents a question of fact for the trier of fact. [Citation.] If there is no dispute
    as to what facts were known or if the factual dispute is not material to the probable cause
    determination, the existence of probable cause is a pure question of law. [Citation.]”
    (Uzyel v. Kadisha (2010) 
    188 Cal.App.4th 866
    , 926-927, fns. omitted.)
    Would any reasonable attorney have believed Cassandra’s objections to the
    Trustee’s second account current and report had merit? Cassandra’s objections listed 12
    specific ways in which she challenged the Trustee’s account and report. Following trial,
    9
    the court found that “after four days of trial[,] I have been unable to determine that any
    one of these objections has been proved to even a civil standard.” In the statement of
    decision, the court found the objections were without reasonable cause because “[t]here
    was no basis for the objections in that no credible evidence supporting the objections was
    introduced by Cassandra D. Jones.” The court further found, “[t]here was no evidence
    presented which met the burden of proof required.”
    As explained ante, all of Cassandra’s objections were without merit. The
    trial court did not err in approving the second account current and report, or in finding the
    Trustee did not breach her fiduciary duties. Having reviewed the record de novo, we
    agree with the trial court’s conclusion that Cassandra did not have reasonable cause to
    bring the objections.
    At the conclusion of trial, the court found the term “bad faith” is “not
    described within the statute; but in my experience, it’s generally understood that a bad
    faith filing is something that’s done for a purpose that’s essentially at odds with a proper
    use of the fact-finding process. [¶] It may be informed by anger, emotions, it may be a
    frivolous activity, it may be something that’s designed to perhaps harm or harass another
    party. Those are the features that one would normally associate with bad faith. [¶] In this
    case I do acknowledge that I believe [Cassandra] was and still is angry over the manner
    in which her mother’s last months took place. She sees the current fiduciary in the case
    as being a causative factor. She appears to have great disappointment in the fiduciary’s
    role and also in the conduct of certain fellow family members and certain co-beneficiaries
    who she believes have perhaps been taking advantage of certain situations. [¶] This
    appears to be the primary impetus for the filings; but again, looking at the filings
    themselves, the court must filter the claims and attacks made in the objections through a
    neutral filter, free of any anger, emotion, or other thoughts to see if they have merit, are
    they nonfrivolous, are they viable, are they good faith objections. The court is unable to
    make that conclusion at this time.”
    10
    As to Cassandra’s bad faith, the statement of decision states Cassandra’s
    objections to the Trustee’s second account current and report were “motivated by anger
    and disappointment as to the fiduciary’s role and as to certain family members and
    co-beneficiaries.” Cassandra does not make any specific arguments on appeal supporting
    her claim that she was not acting in bad faith when she filed objections to the second
    account current and report. We presume that Cassandra’s argument is that because she
    had reasonable cause to file the objections, she could not have done so in bad faith. As
    explained, ante, Cassandra did not have reasonable cause to file the objections.
    IV.
    DID THE TRIAL COURT FAIL TO MAKE SUFFICIENT FINDINGS OF FACT?
    Cassandra argues the trial court failed to make sufficient factual findings in
    the statement of decision. The trial court’s factual findings must be sufficient to allow
    meaningful appellate review, and must state the facts found by the court and must specify
    the grounds on which the judgment rests. (Conservatorship of Pelton (1982) 
    132 Cal.App.3d 496
    , 502, fn. 3.)
    In the statement of decision, the trial court made the following findings:
    “With regard to the issue of Second Account Current and Report of Successor Trustee,
    Judith A. Okonski, and Petition for its Settlement and for Allowance of Compensation to
    the Successor Trustee and her Attorney BettyJane Champlin; Petition for Preliminary
    Distribution as Supplemented, the Court[’]s decision is that the Second Account Current
    and Report of Successor Trustee, be settled, allowed and approved as filed, and all acts
    and transactions of the [Trustee], set forth in said accounting as supplemented or relating
    to matters set forth in same, are ratified, confirmed and approved. [¶] . . . The Court
    based its decision on the following facts: [¶] . . . That the Trustee appropriately
    discharged her duties and administered the Trust with reasonable care, skill and caution,
    acted prudently and exercised appropriate business judgment and/or normal judgment,
    11
    given the circumstances as Successor Trustee. [¶] . . . The Successor Trustee came into
    the administration of the Trust in less than ideal conditions, predicated upon the finances
    of the Trust being in disarray, based upon the prior conduct/tenure of . . . Cassandra D.
    Jones, and additionally by the failure of Cassandra D, Jones to give to the Successor
    Trustee a Fourth and Final Account and/or documents relative to the accounting status of
    the Trust. [¶] . . . Issues relative to cash flow and lack of income to the Trust, as well as
    issues relating to the entity, Jones Community Care, of which the Trust held 75% of the
    outstanding share[s], were all existing at the time of the appointment of the Successor
    Trustee, and were not caused by her.” The court also found: “With regard to each and
    every objection set forth and/or presented at trial by Cassandra D. Jones, the Court finds
    that as to said objections, Cassandra D. Jones failed to meet her burden of proof and that
    each and every objection, therefore, fails. [¶] . . . The Court based its decision on the
    following facts: There was no evidence presented which met the burden of proof
    required. [¶] . . . The legal basis for the Court’s decision is that with regard to objections
    to an accounting, pursuant to Vandekamp v. Bank of America (1988) 
    204 Cal.App.3d 819
    , 
    251 Cal.Rptr. 530
    , the burden of proof is on the objector. With regard to
    guardianships and conservatorship proceedings, the burden of proof in any hearing on
    objections is on the objector. In Re: Conservatorship of Hume (2006) 
    140 Cal.App.4th 1385
    , 1390. Objector failed to meet her burden of proof.”
    Cassandra complains that the trial court “failed to provide precise facts to
    support the findings.” As to the propriety of the Trustee’s actions, nothing more was
    required in the statement of decision. As to the objections, Cassandra fails to explain
    what additional findings the court could have made beyond the finding that Cassandra
    failed to provide evidence to meet her burden of proof. The trial court was not required
    to identify the evidence presented, and then explain why it was not sufficient to meet
    Cassandra’s burden, nor was it required to identify the evidence Cassandra might have
    presented to meet her burden. The court did not omit any material facts from its factual
    12
    findings; it was not required to delve into evidentiary minutiae. (See People v. Casa
    Blanca Convalescent Homes, Inc. (1984) 
    159 Cal.App.3d 509
    , 524 [detailed evidentiary
    analysis not required by California law, but trial court must make findings as to material
    issues which fairly disclose court’s determination].)
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondent to recover costs on appeal.
    FYBEL, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O’LEARY, P. J.
    MOORE, J.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G048475

Filed Date: 3/5/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/5/2015