Staley v. Woodgrift CA2/6 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 7/3/13 Staley v. Woodgrift CA2/6
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for
    publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SIX
    KERI M. STALEY, as Special Trustee, etc.,                                      2d Civil No. B240835
    (Case No. 56-2011-0397502-
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                                      PR-TR-OXN)
    (Ventura County)
    v.
    BEVERLY D. WOODGRIFT, as Trustee,
    etc.,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    This is a dispute between the surviving spouse and her stepdaughter over
    the meaning of a family trust. The stepdaughter petitioned the trial court for
    instructions regarding the trust. We modify the trial court's judgment to require the
    surviving spouse to allocate half of the appraised value of the personal property to the
    subtrust created for the benefit of the stepchildren. We also reverse and remand for
    further proceedings on whether property acquired by the spouses in joint tenancy after
    the trust's creation is to be deemed withdrawn from the trust. We otherwise affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Kenneth and Beverly Woodgrift created the Woodgrift Family Trust
    (Trust) in May 2000.1 Kenneth passed away nearly 10 years later. As the Trust
    required, Beverly divided up the Trust's assets into two subtrusts: (1) a Survivor's Trust
    consisting of Beverly's half of the "Trust Estate"; and (2) an Exemption Trust consisting
    of "the balance" of the "Trust Estate." (Art. III, §§ 1-5.) Beverly became the Trustee of
    the Survivor's Trust. Keri M. Staley, one of Kenneth's children from a prior marriage,
    became the Special Trustee of the Exemption Trust. (Art. IX, § 2b.)
    Keri filed a petition with the trial court seeking instructions on eight
    different provisions of the Trust. The trial court declined to provide instructions on one
    of the issues, but resolved the remaining issues largely in Beverly's favor.
    DISCUSSION
    We independently review the trial court's interpretation of a trust and
    other written instruments. (Johnson v. Greenlesch (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 598
    , 604.)
    I. Keri's Authority as Special Trustee of the Exemption Trust
    The Trust provides that Beverly, as the surviving spouse, is entitled to "all
    of the net income" from the Survivor's Trust and the Exemption Trust. (Art. III, § 7a.)
    Beverly is also entitled to use the principal of those subtrusts' assets as she "deems
    necessary for [her] proper health, support, and maintenance." (Id., § 7b.) However,
    "before making any principal distributions" from the Exemption Trust if assets remain
    in the Survivor's Trust, Beverly "must obtain the approval of the Special Trustee" of the
    Exemption Trust. (Ibid.) The Special Trustee of the Exemption Trust exists "solely for
    the purpose of approving any discretionary distributions of principal from [that Trust]
    for the benefit of [Beverly.]" (Art. IX, §1b.)
    Keri contends that, as Special Trustee, she is authorized and obligated to
    (1) confirm that the Exemption Trust was correctly funded at its creation; (2) review all
    1
    We intend no disrespect, but will use the parties' first names for clarity.
    2
    distributions from the Exemption Trust to verify that Beverly is properly characterizing
    withdrawals as "interest" rather than "principal"; and (3) approve or deny the accrual of
    further interest as well as any further withdrawals on the reverse mortgage on the home
    where Beverly lives.
    A. Implied powers of the Special Trustee
    Keri argues that her role in approving Beverly's requests to use the
    principal of the Exemption Trust for her support makes Keri responsible for the
    Exemption Trust's principal. Keri asserts that she can viably discharge this
    responsibility only if she also has the authority to ensure proper initial funding of the
    Exemption Trust's principal and to verify every withdrawal from that Trust (even if
    Beverly deems it to be "income" under the terms of the California Revised Uniform
    Principal and Income Act that Beverly is obligated to follow (Art. X, § 22)). For
    support, Keri relies upon (1) precedent recognizing a trustee's authority "'. . . to do acts
    which, though not specified in the instrument, are implied in its general directions . . .'"
    (Kipp v. O'Melveny (1905) 
    2 Cal.App. 142
    , 144); and (2) statutes obligating a trustee to
    "administer the trust with reasonable care, skill and caution" (Prob. Code, § 16040),2
    and "to take reasonable steps . . . to take and keep control of and to preserve the trust
    property" (§ 16006; see also § 16200). The trial court rejected Keri's position, and
    limited her role to approving "invasion[s] of the principal of the Exemption Trust."
    The trial court's construction is correct. "'The extent of the duties and of
    the powers of a trustee depends primarily upon the terms of the trust. . . .' [Citation.]"
    (Crocker-Citizens Nat. Bank v. Younger (1971) 
    4 Cal.3d 202
    , 211.) A trustee's implied
    powers are, by definition, limited to those "necessary to carry out the objects and
    purposes of the trust." (Craven v. Dominguez Estate Co. (1925) 
    72 Cal.App. 713
    , 719.)
    A trustee's statutory duties are similarly circumscribed. (§ 16200 [limiting trustee's
    powers to those "in the trust instrument"].)
    2
    Unless otherwise stated, all statutory references are to the Probate Code.
    3
    According to the Trust, the Special Trustee of the Exemption Trust has the
    "sole[]" duty of "approving any discretionary distributions of principal from [the
    Exemption Trust] for the benefit" of the surviving spouse when that spouse seeks to use
    the Exemption Trust's principal while assets remain in the Survivor's Trust. (Art. IX,
    §1b.) This duty is to be exercised in light of the Trust's "primary objective" "to provide
    for the present and future health, support and maintenance" of the surviving spouse.
    (Art. III, § 7d.) Moreover, a Special Trustee is appointed only if the surviving spouse is
    acting as her own trustee. (Id., § 7b.) Given this narrow function, the Special Trustee is
    not a trustee of the Exemption Trust for any and all purposes, and consequently has no
    general duty to safeguard the Exemption Trust's property. Absent such a duty, the
    authority Keri seeks is not implied by the Trust or by statute.
    B. Special Trustee's role regarding the reverse mortgage
    Keri further contends that her power to approve distributions of principal
    from the Exemption Trust includes authority over the reverse mortgage on one of the
    Trust's properties. At the time of Kenneth's death, Kenneth and Beverly owned a home
    on Quail Run Lane in Indian Wells, California (Quail Run property) valued at
    $2,645,000. The property is subject to a "reverse mortgage." Under this mortgage,
    interest not immediately paid becomes additional loan principal. The maximum "cap"
    of the reverse mortgage is $1,067,800; at the time of Kenneth's death, the outstanding
    principal balance of the reverse mortgage was $259,240. When Kenneth died, Beverly
    allocated half of the value of the property and half of the reverse mortgage to each
    subtrust.
    Keri argues that she is entitled to approve the accrual of further interest on
    the reverse mortgage because that interest is added to the principal of the loan and thus
    reduces the equity in the property (and hence the principal of the Exemption Trust).
    Keri also argues that she is entitled to approve Beverly's withdrawal of any further
    funds from the reverse mortgage for the same reason. The trial court declined to
    address Keri's first contention, and rejected her second on the ground that Beverly could
    4
    allocate any further withdrawals to the Surviving Trust's half interest in the property
    with the caveat that Keri could later intervene "if the outstanding balance of the reverse
    mortgage threatens to exceed or exceeds fifty percent (50%) of the fair market value of
    the Quail Run Property."
    The Special Trustee's authority to approve or disapprove "distributions of
    principal" from the Exemption Trust does not confer the right to "approve" the accrual
    of interest or Beverly's further withdrawals of funds against the reverse mortgage on the
    Quail Run property. To be sure, the continuing accrual of interest on the original
    $259,240 loan amount reduces the equity in the property. But such increases in the
    amount of the loan principal are not "distribution[s] of principal" from the Exemption
    Trust. The Survivor's Trust and Exemption Trust have one-half interests in the
    property; as long as the accruing interest on the reverse mortgage is allocated, as an
    accounting matter, to the Survivor's Trust's interest in the Quail Run property, the
    Exemption Trust's interest is not diminished.
    The same logic applies to further draws on the reverse mortgage. The
    Trust expressly grants Beverly the power to "encumber the Trust Estate or any property
    therein by mortgage . . . or otherwise." (Art. X, § 12.) We agree with the trial court that
    further draws on the reverse mortgage, if combined with reduced property values, might
    create the possibility that the reverse mortgage's balance (although capped at
    $1,067,800) might exceed the value of the Surviving Trust's one-half interest in the
    Quail Run property and implicate the Special Trustee's authority to approve further
    withdrawals. Until such time, however, the Exemption Trust's principal is sufficiently
    protected if Beverly allocates, as an accounting matter, any withdrawals to the
    Survivor's Trust's interest and keeps Keri apprised of possible diminution of the
    Exemption Trust's interest in that property.
    II. Tangible Personal Property
    The Trust states that "[t]he Survivor's Trust shall include" the surviving
    spouse's "interest in the Trust Estate." (Art. III, § 2.) The Trust then states: "In funding
    5
    the Survivor's Trust, the Trustee shall allocate to the Survivor's Trust all of the Trustors'
    automobiles, memberships, household furniture and furnishings, personal effects and
    other articles of household or personal use or ornamentation constituting part of the
    Trust Estate." (Ibid.) Focusing on the second provision, Beverly construed the
    language as awarding the Survivor's Trust all of the couple's personal property; on that
    basis, she kept for herself the proceeds of selling $28,000 in furniture and $85,000 for
    two boats. The trial court disagreed with Beverly's reading, concluding instead that
    (1) the Survivor's Trust and Exemption Trust are each entitled to half of the value of
    couple's personal property; and (2) Beverly may allocate the property itself to either
    subtrust. We agree with the trial court's first ruling, but not with its second.
    The trial court correctly determined that the couple's personal property is
    to be divided equally between the Survivor's Trust and the Exemption Trust. As noted
    above, these subtrusts divide the "Trust Estate." The "Trust Estate" is defined to include
    "[a]ll property now or hereafter subject to this Trust," and specifically includes the
    couple's personal property. (Art. III, § 2; Preamble; Schedule A to the Trust.)
    Beverly raises two objections to this reasoning. She points to the sentence
    allocating personal property to the Survivor's Trust. But that sentence enumerates the
    specific assets that are to be allocated to the Survivor's Trust, and thereby ensures that
    Beverly gets to keep using her household furniture and other belongings. It does not
    override the Trust's mandate that the value of the Trust Estate be split between the two
    subtrusts. Beverly also argues that allocating half of the Trust's personal property to the
    Exemption Trust unfairly benefits the beneficiaries of the Exemption Trust who will get
    half of that property now, and another half from the Survivor's Trust (for a total of 75
    percent of the personal property) when Beverly dies. This argument overlooks that this
    alleged unfairness is avoidable because Beverly has the authority under the Trust to
    alter the default beneficiaries to the Survivor's Trust. (Art. XII, § 2.)
    We accordingly agree with the trial court's ruling requiring an appraisal of
    all personal property not already valued by a prior sale. Once appraised, however,
    6
    assets totaling one-half of that value should be allocated to the Exemption Trust. The
    Trust contains no language justifying a delay in this allocation, so we disagree with the
    trial court's ruling that the allocation may occur following Beverly's death. Unlike the
    trial court, we further conclude that Beverly may not allocate any personal property to
    the Exemption Trust absent the consent of that Trust's beneficiaries. The Trust states
    that personal property "shall" be allocated to the Survivor's Trust; it leaves no discretion
    to allocate differently.
    III. After-Acquired Assets Held in Joint Tenancy
    When they executed the Trust, Kenneth and Beverly also executed an
    Agreement to Convert Property (Agreement). In pertinent part, that Agreement
    provided that "[a]ll property hereafter acquired by [Kenneth] and [Beverly] or either of
    them shall be immediately and automatically converted into [their] community
    property." (Italics added.) Consistent with the Agreement, the Trust included in the
    "Trust Estate" all "bank accounts . . . now owned or hereafter acquired" and
    "[h]ousehold furniture and furnishings, personal effects and other articles of household
    or personal use or ornamentation . . . now owned or hereafter acquired." (Schedule A,
    italics added.)
    Keri argues that three different bank accounts, two cars, and two boats
    held in joint tenancy were part of the Trust Estate and are to be divided between the
    Survivor's Trust and the Exemption Trust. The trial court ruled that those assets owned
    by Beverly and Kenneth at the time the Trust was executed (namely, the Bank of
    America checking account ending in 5272 and the Ameritrade account with a balance of
    $7,348) were included in the Trust Estate. It ruled that a Bank of America certificate of
    deposit and the other assets acquired after the Trust was executed and held in joint
    tenancy were outside the Trust Estate because Keri had not shown their inclusion by
    clear and convincing evidence, as section 5302 required.
    The trial court applied section 5302, which provides that jointly held
    accounts pass to the surviving holder(s) unless a different arrangement is proven by
    7
    clear and convincing evidence. (Id., subd. (a).) However, section 5302 does not apply
    to married couples like Kenneth and Beverly. (§ 5305, subd. (a).) Consequently, the
    question of whether these after-acquired assets are part of the Trust Estate turns instead
    on whether Kenneth and Beverly were overriding their earlier intent (expressed in the
    Trust and the Agreement) to include these assets in the Trust Estate by exercising their
    right to withdraw them from the Trust Estate. (Art. XII, § 1.) This hinges on whether
    (1) Kenneth's and Beverly's decision to place title to these assets in joint tenancy was
    meant to effect a withdrawal; and (2) whether this decision was executed with a
    "writing, signed by the person or persons having the power" to withdraw assets, as
    required by the Trust. (Id., § 5.) We remand to the trial court for further proceedings on
    the issue of withdrawal.
    IV. Funeral Expenses
    The Trust specifies that when one spouse dies before the other, the
    deceased spouse's "last illness and funeral expenses" are to be paid "out of the Trust
    Estate." (Art. III, § 6a.) The Trust also provides that the "last illness and funeral
    expenses" of the second spouse are to be paid "from the Survivor's Trust." (Art. IV,
    § 2a.) Keri argues that Beverly erred in charging Kenneth's funeral expenses to the
    Exemption Trust because those expenses are chargeable to the "Trust Estate" (and thus
    half to each of the subtrusts). Beverly responds that Kenneth's funeral expenses are to
    be allocated to the Exemption Trust, and hers to the Survivor's Trust. The trial court
    agreed with Beverly. So do we.
    The plain language of the Trust assigning the duty to pay Kenneth's
    funeral expenses "out of the Trust Estate" is ambiguous on the question of how those
    expenses are to be allocated between the Survivor's Trust and the Exemption Trust. We
    resolve this ambiguity by applying the default rule set forth in section 19326 that bars
    assigning the funeral expenses of the first spouse to "the community share of the
    surviving spouse." (Ibid.) This resolution also yields an equitable result: The Trust
    explicitly instructs that Beverly's funeral expenses are to be allocated to the Survivor's
    8
    Trust, so requiring Kenneth's funeral expenses to be paid from the Exemption Trust
    means that the subtrust created for the benefit of each spouse's children will pay their
    respective parent's funeral expenses.
    V. Keri's Attorney's Fees
    Keri argues that she is entitled to reimbursement for her attorney's fees
    under the Trust and under sections 16243 and 16247. The trial court ruled that the fees
    associated with this litigation were not "reasonably incurred," and did not decide the
    threshold question of her entitlement to reimbursement.
    We conclude that Keri is not entitled to attorney's fees by virtue of her
    position as Special Trustee of the Exemption Trust. The Trust allows "[e]ach Trustee"
    to be "reimbursed for reasonable expenses incurred on behalf of this Trust." (Art. IX,
    § 13.) But the Trust defines "Trustee" as "the original Trustee or Trustees as well as to
    any successor, replacement or added person, corporation or other entity from time to
    time acting." (Id., § 3.) Keri does not meet this definition: She is not Beverly or
    Kenneth, and did not incur the fees she now seeks while "acting" as their successor.
    Keri's reliance on statutory authority suffers from a similar defect. Sections 16243 and
    16247 empower a "trustee" to hire and pay attorneys, but section 84 defines "trustee" as
    "an original, additional, or successor trustee." As Special Trustee of a subtrust assigned
    a very specific and limited duty, Keri also does not meet the statutory definition of
    "trustee" that would entitle her to rely on sections 16243 and 16247.
    DISPOSITION
    We modify the judgment to require that Beverly allocate one-half of the
    appraised value of the personal property to the Exemption Trust. We reverse and
    remand for further proceedings on whether Beverly's and Kenneth's acquisition of assets
    in joint tenancy after the Trust's creation withdrew those assets from the Trust.
    Otherwise, we affirm the judgment.
    9
    The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED.
    HOFFSTADT, J.*
    We concur:
    GILBERT, P. J.
    YEGAN, J.
    * (Judge  of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, assigned by the
    Chief Justice pursuant to art. 6, § 6 of the Cal. Const.)
    10
    Glen Reiser, Judge
    Superior Court County of Ventura
    ______________________________
    Law Offices of Gregory M. Hultgren and Gregory M. Hultgren;
    Benton, Orr, Duval & Buckingham and Thomas E. Olson for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Law Offices of David A. Esquibias, David A. Esquibias and Tracy H.
    Kitzman for Defendant and Respondent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B240835

Filed Date: 7/3/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021