Babbitt v. Super. Ct. , 246 Cal. App. 4th 1135 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 4/25/16
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    MARY LYNNE BABBITT,                                 B263917
    Petitioner,                                 (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BP158931)
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    LELIA CAROL McCORMACK,
    Real Party in Interest.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING; petition for writ of mandate. David S.
    Cunningham, Judge. Petition granted.
    Law Office of Jan Morrison and Jan Morrison for Petitioner.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Cooper & Lewis and Kenneth D. Cooper for Real Party in Interest.
    _______________________________________
    INTRODUCTION
    In In re Estate of Giraldin (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 1058
     (Giraldin) the California
    Supreme Court held that when the settlor of a revocable trust appoints, during his
    lifetime, “‘someone other than himself to act as trustee, once the settlor dies and the trust
    becomes irrevocable,’” the remainder beneficiaries “‘have standing to sue the trustee for
    breaches of fiduciary duty committed during the period of revocability.’” (Id. at
    pp. 1065-1066, 1068.) This standing gives the beneficiaries the right to demand an
    accounting and information from the trustee regarding trust assets and transactions during
    the time period before the trust became irrevocable. (Id. at pp. 1069-1072.) But what if
    the settlor of a revocable trust does not appoint “someone other than himself to act as
    trustee,” but instead appoints himself to be the trustee? We conclude that in this situation
    the rule is different. Although the beneficiaries of the irrevocable trust have standing to
    petition the probate court for an accounting and information after the settlor dies and the
    trust or a portion of the trust becomes irrevocable, the probate court does not have
    authority to order the trustee to provide an accounting or information regarding trust
    assets and transactions while the trust was still revocable, where, as here, there is no
    claim that the deceased settlor was incapacitated or subject to undue influence during the
    period of revocability.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Mary Lynne Babbitt (Babbitt) and her husband Leland Babbitt (Leland)
    established the Leland C. Babbitt and Mary Lynne Babbitt Family Trust dated August 8,
    1998, and they designated themselves co-trustees. The assets of the trust are the settlors’
    respective interests in their community property, including their residence in Los
    Angeles, another property located in Riverside County, and various bank and investment
    accounts, although Leland and Babbitt transferred only the Los Angeles property to the
    trust during Leland’s lifetime.
    2
    When Leland died on May 5, 2014, the trust was divided into two subtrusts, Trust
    A, the survivor’s trust, and Trust B, the decedent’s trust. Both subtrusts distribute their
    income to Babbitt, who also has broad discretion to invade the principal of both subtrusts.
    During her lifetime, Babbitt retains the authority to amend or revoke Trust A. Trust B is
    irrevocable, and cannot be modified without the written consent of its beneficiaries.
    Leland’s daughter from a previous marriage, Lelia Carol Babbitt, also known as Carol
    McCormack (McCormack), has a 50 percent remainder interest in Trust A and Trust B.
    After Leland’s death, McCormack requested an accounting of the trust assets from
    her stepmother, Babbitt. Dissatisfied with Babbitt’s response, McCormack filed a
    petition on January 9, 2015 under Probate Code section 17200,1 asking the probate court
    to compel Babbitt to provide an accounting and the information required by section
    16061.7.2 Babbitt opposed the petition to the extent it sought an accounting of assets
    other than those in Trust B. She also argued that McCormack did not need an accounting
    because McCormack already had the original trust documents showing that the “one
    current trust asset” was the Babbitts’ residence in Los Angeles. Babbitt asserted that her
    efforts to transfer to the trust the other assets that were supposed to be in the trust had
    been “frustrated and inhibited” by McCormack, who had in her possession the original
    trust and related documents that were necessary to effect the transfers but would not give
    them to Babbitt.
    1      Undesignated statutory references are to the Probate Code.
    2       Probate Code section 16061.7 requires that, when a revocable trust becomes
    irrevocable, the trustee must so notify the beneficiaries within 60 days of the event that
    caused the revocable trust to become irrevocable, which in this case was the death of
    Leland Babbitt. This notification must include the name and address of the trustee, the
    date of execution of the trust instrument, and a notice that the recipient is entitled, upon
    reasonable request, to receive from the trustee the “terms of the trust.” (§ 16061.7, subd.
    (g)(5).)
    3
    In her reply in support of the petition, McCormack questioned what had happened
    to the trust assets that had not yet been transferred into the trust, including the “fate of at
    least $800,000 i[n] cash accounts held in Leland’s name within approximately 24 months
    of his death.” For this reason, McCormack asked the court to compel Babbitt to provide
    a “full report of the activities of the trust and account of the assets . . . for the period May
    5, 2011 to the present.” At the hearing on McCormack’s petition, Babbitt objected to the
    scope of the accounting, arguing that the Probate Code did not authorize McCormack’s
    request for pre-May 5, 2014 documents and that her request for those documents was
    untimely because McCormack made the request in her reply brief three days before the
    hearing.
    The court granted McCormack’s petition and ordered Babbitt to account “as to the
    activities of the trust from May 5, 2011 to the present.” Babbitt prepared an accounting,
    but it only included information for the time period of May 5, 2014, the date of Leland’s
    death, through March 2015. Among other things, the report stated that Babbitt had
    initiated the transfer of the Riverside County property to the trust and had opened a bank
    account into which she intended to transfer the cash assets of Trust B. The accounting
    also stated that certain accounts identified in the original trust document did not yet have
    to be transferred to the trust, no longer existed, or had been consumed, gifted, or changed
    during Leland’s lifetime. The accounting identified an account at Bank of America as
    “subject to funding into the Trust.”3
    Babbitt subsequently filed a motion to stay the proceedings in the probate court
    while she sought review of the probate court’s order compelling the accounting. The
    court denied the motion. Babbitt then filed a petition for writ of mandate and a request
    for a stay. We issued an alternative writ and stayed proceedings in the probate court
    relating to McCormack’s petition for an accounting.
    3     On September 11, 2015 the probate court approved the transfer of the Bank of
    America account to the trust.
    4
    DISCUSSION
    A.     The Probate Code Authorizes Accountings for Beneficiaries of Irrevocable
    Trusts
    McCormack asked the probate court to compel Babbitt to provide an accounting of
    the trust’s assets pursuant to sections 16060, 16061, 16062, and 17200, subdivision
    (b)(7). Section 16060 sets forth a trustee’s general duty to keep beneficiaries “reasonably
    informed of the trust and its administration.” Section 16061 provides that, except where
    a trust is revocable, “on reasonable request by a beneficiary, the trustee shall report to the
    beneficiary by providing requested information to the beneficiary relating to the
    administration of the trust relevant to the beneficiary’s interest.” Section 16062 sets forth
    a trustee’s obligation to account on a regular basis, but provides that contingent or
    remainder beneficiaries like McCormack are not entitled to an accounting. (See § 16062
    [only beneficiaries to whom “income or principal is required . . . to be currently
    distributed” are entitled to an accounting]; Esslinger v. Cummins (2006) 
    144 Cal.App.4th 517
    , 526 (Esslinger) [“[a] remainder beneficiary does not have a right to an accounting
    under Probate Code section 16062”].) Because McCormack is a remainder beneficiary,
    she is not entitled to an accounting under section 16062.
    Section 17200 authorizes a trustee or beneficiary of an irrevocable trust to petition
    the court concerning the “internal affairs of the trust.” (Id., subd. (a).) Section 17200,
    subdivision (b)(7)(B), gives the probate court discretion to compel a trustee to provide
    “information about the trust” to a remainder beneficiary where the beneficiary has sought
    such information under section 16061 and the trustee has failed to provide it within 60
    days of the beneficiary’s reasonable request.4 This information may include an
    4      McCormack’s original petition did not identify which subdivision of section
    17200, subdivision (b)(7), she alleged authorized her petition, but neither subdivision
    (b)(7)(A) nor subdivision (b)(7)(C) applies. Subdivision (b)(7)(A) allows a court to
    compel a trustee to provide a copy of the “terms of the trust,” but such terms exclude
    “documents which were intended to affect disposition only while the trust was
    5
    accounting, even though remainder beneficiaries are not entitled to such information
    under section 16062. (See Esslinger, supra, 144 Cal.App.4th at p. 526 [“[w]hile an
    accounting under section 16062 is mandatory, information or a particular account under
    section 16061, sought by petition under section 17200, subdivision (b)(7), lies within the
    probate court’s discretion”].)
    “A revocable trust is a trust that the person who creates it, generally called the
    settlor, can revoke during the person’s lifetime.” (Giraldin, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 1062,
    fn. omitted.) During the time a trust is revocable, section 15800 limits a trustee’s
    obligations to the trust’s beneficiaries. In particular, section 15800 provides that trustees
    of revocable trusts owe their duties not to the beneficiaries but to the settlors of the trust.
    (See Giraldin, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 1066 [section 15800 makes clear that, “so long as
    the settlor is alive, the trustee owes a duty solely to the settlor”].) Among the duties
    postponed by section 15800 are the duties to provide information or an accounting to
    beneficiaries of revocable trusts under sections 16061 and 16062. (See also § 16069,
    subd. (a) [limiting trustee’s obligations “for the period when the trust may be revoked”].)
    The parties do not dispute that Babbitt and her late husband were the sole settlors
    and co-trustees of the trust, that until Leland’s death on May 5, 2014 the trust was fully
    revocable, and that McCormack is a remainder beneficiary of Trust B. McCormack has
    not alleged that Leland was incapacitated, incompetent, or subject to undue influence
    before his death, nor has McCormack asserted a claim against Babbitt on Leland’s behalf
    for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, or other misconduct as a co-trustee of the trust before
    revocable.” (§ 17200, subd. (b)(7)(A); see § 16060.5 [defining “terms of the trust”].)
    Subdivision (b)(7)(C) allows a court to compel the trustee to account to the beneficiary
    where a trustee fails to do so pursuant to section 16062, which does not entitle remainder
    beneficiaries such as McCormack to an accounting. (Esslinger, supra, 144 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 526.) Therefore, the only subdivision of section 17200 that authorizes a court to
    compel an accounting on behalf of a remainder beneficiary is subdivision (b)(7)(B).
    6
    Leland’s death.5 McCormack has also not alleged that Babbitt breached any fiduciary
    duty owed to the beneficiaries after Leland’s death. Babbitt argues that under these
    circumstances McCormack lacked standing to petition the probate court under section
    17200 and that the probate court exceeded its jurisdiction by compelling an accounting
    for the period of time during which Leland was alive and the trust was revocable. We
    conclude that McCormack had standing to petition the probate court under section 17200
    but that the court erred by ordering Babbitt to account for trust assets before Leland’s
    death.6
    B.     McCormack Had Standing To Petition the Probate Court for an Accounting
    of Trust Assets
    Although Babbitt did not raise the issue of standing in the probate court, she does
    now, and “contentions based on a lack of standing involve jurisdictional challenges and
    may be raised at any time in the proceeding.” (Common Cause v. Board of Supervisors
    (1989) 
    49 Cal.3d 432
    , 438; see Sanowicz v. Bacal (2015) 
    234 Cal.App.4th 1027
    , 1043
    [lack of standing “is a nonwaivable jurisdictional defect”]; Drake v. Pinkham (2013) 
    217 Cal.App.4th 400
    , 407 (Drake) [“‘“the issue of standing is so fundamental that it need not
    5      In her opposition to Babbitt’s petition for writ of mandate, McCormack suggests
    that Babbitt somehow misused trust assets or neglected Leland while he was alive, but
    McCormack conceded in the probate court that she “is not saying or alleging that
    mischief with the trust or trust assets has taken place.” McCormack also claims that
    Babbitt breached her duty as trustee “to care for the welfare and wellbeing of Leland,”but
    she does not cite any trust provision or statute that creates such a duty and, because she
    did not make this argument in the probate court, she has forfeited it. (See Johnson v.
    Greenelsh (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 598
    , 603 [party may not, for the first time on appeal, change
    the theory of the cause of action or raise new issues not raised in the trial court]; In re
    Estate of Westerman (1968) 
    68 Cal.2d 267
    , 278-279 [same].) At oral argument counsel
    for McCormack confirmed that McCormack is not aware of, and is not claiming, any
    breach of fiduciary duty owed by Babbitt to Leland or the beneficiaries.
    6      Babbitt argues in the alternative that the scope of the probate court’s order violates
    her constitutional right to privacy. We do not reach this argument.
    7
    even be raised below—let alone decided—as a prerequisite to our consideration”’”].)
    “The interpretation of statutory provisions bearing on the standing issue is a question of
    law.” (T.P. v. T.W. (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 1428
    , 1433; see Neil S. v. Mary L. (2011)
    
    199 Cal.App.4th 240
    , 249 [“standing is a question of law, particularly where, as here, it
    depends on statutory provisions conferring standing”].)
    Whether a beneficiary has standing to file a petition for an accounting of an inter
    vivos trust under section 17200 depends on whether the trust is revocable at the time the
    petition is filed. Until the trust becomes irrevocable, section 15800 limits the rights of
    beneficiaries to petition for an accounting. “[S]ection 15800 is consistent with the
    principle that ‘[p]roperty transferred into a revocable inter vivos trust is considered the
    property of the settlor for the settlor’s lifetime,’ and thus, ‘the beneficiaries’ interest in
    that property is “‘merely potential’ and can ‘evaporate in a moment at the whim of the
    [settlor].’”’” (Drake, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at p. 407, quoting Giraldin, supra, 55
    Cal.4th at pp. 1065-1066; see Giraldin, supra, at p. 1062 [“beneficiaries’ interest in [a
    revocable] trust is contingent only, and the settlor can eliminate that interest at any
    time”].) Therefore, before a settlor’s death (and in the absence of a showing of
    incompetence), a contingent beneficiary lacks standing to petition the probate court to
    compel a trustee to account or provide information relating to the revocable trust. (Id. at
    pp. 1071-1072; Drake, at pp. 408-409.)
    After a settlor’s death, however, “the rights of the contingent beneficiaries are no
    longer contingent. Those rights, which were postponed [by section 15800] while the
    holder of the power to revoke was alive, mature into present and enforceable rights
    under . . . the trust law.” (Giraldin, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 1070.) Under section 17200,
    “a contingent beneficiary may petition the court subject only to the limitations provided
    in section 15800.” (Id. at p. 1069.) Thus, after a settlor dies and the trust or a portion of
    the trust becomes irrevocable, section 17200 gives a contingent beneficiary standing to
    petition the probate court for an accounting of assets. (Giraldin, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p.
    1070.)
    8
    McCormack petitioned the probate court for an accounting after Leland’s death
    when a portion of the trust had become irrevocable. She therefore had standing under
    section 17200 to bring a petition. The fact that she had standing to bring her petition,
    however, does not mean she was entitled to all of the relief she sought in her petition.
    C.     The Probate Court Erred by Compelling Babbitt To Account for Revocable
    Trust Assets
    The probate court has general power and the duty to supervise the internal affairs
    and administration of trusts. (Christie v. Kimball (2012) 
    202 Cal.App.4th 1407
    , 1413;
    Schwartz v. Labow (2008) 
    164 Cal.App.4th 417
    , 426.) “To preserve [a] trust and to
    respond to perceived breaches of trust, the probate court has wide, express powers to
    ‘make any orders and take any other action necessary or proper to dispose of the matters
    presented’ by [a] section 17200 petition.” (Schwartz v. Labow, at p. 427; see § 17206.)
    The probate court, however, must exercise those powers “within the procedural
    framework laid out in the governing statutes” of the Probate Code. (Ferraro v.
    Camarlinghi (2008) 
    161 Cal.App.4th 509
    , 546.) We review the probate court’s
    construction of the Probate Code de novo. (Kucker v. Kucker (2011) 
    192 Cal.App.4th 90
    ,
    93; Araiza v. Younkin (2010) 
    188 Cal.App.4th 1120
    , 1124.)
    Section 17200, subdivision (a), states: “Except as provided in Section 15800, a
    trustee or beneficiary of a trust may petition the court under this chapter concerning the
    internal affairs of the trust or to determine the existence of the trust.” (Italics added.) As
    noted, section 15800 does not preclude a contingent beneficiary such as McCormack
    from petitioning the probate court under section 17200 after the trust or a portion of the
    trust becomes irrevocable. The issue is whether the term “the internal affairs of the trust”
    includes an accounting of assets held by the trust while it was revocable where, as here,
    the trustee and the settlor were the same person.
    9
    The term “internal affairs of a trust” includes “information about the trust under
    Section 16061.” (§ 17200, subd. (b)(7)(B).) Section 16061 provides that, except where a
    trust is revocable, “the trustee shall report to the beneficiary by providing requested
    information . . . relating to the administration of the trust relevant to the beneficiary’s
    interest.” (Italics added.) The term “internal affairs of a trust” also may include
    information sought pursuant to section 16060, which requires trustees to keep
    beneficiaries “reasonably informed of the trust and its administration.” (See Salter v.
    Lerner (2009) 
    176 Cal.App.4th 1184
    , 1187 [recognizing a beneficiary’s right to petition
    the probate court for information under section 16060].) “The duty to provide
    information under section 16060 ‘is independent of, and potentially even broader than[,]
    the duty to report under . . . section 16061 or to account under . . . section 16062.’” (Id.
    at p. 1188.) Information sought under section 16060, however, must be “‘reasonably
    necessary to enable the beneficiary to enforce the beneficiary’s rights under the trust or
    prevent or redress a breach of trust.’” (Id. at p. 1187, italics added.) Thus, under
    sections 16061 and 16060, the term “internal affairs of the trust” includes information
    relevant to the beneficiary’s interests, information necessary to enforce the beneficiary’s
    rights, and information that could prevent or redress a breach of trust.
    Because assets held in a revocable trust essentially belong to the settlor, the settlor
    may dispose of the trust’s assets and effectively eliminate the beneficiaries’ interest
    altogether “with no need to justify or explain” his or her actions. (Rest.3d Trusts, § 74,
    com. a, p. 25; see Giraldin, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 1072 [“California courts have
    considered the Restatement of Trusts in interpreting California trust law”].) Indeed, “the
    authority and rights of settlors . . . are not subject to fiduciary obligations.” (Rest.3d
    Trusts, supra, § 74, com. a, p. 25; see Giraldin, at p. 1066.) Where, as here, the assets
    were held in trust as community property, either spouse could have revoked the trust or
    10
    withdrawn trust assets at his or her discretion while the trust was revocable.7 (See Fam.
    Code § 761, subd. (b); Rest.3d Trusts, § 63, com. k, p. 461.)
    Thus, during Leland’s lifetime, and as long as he was competent, “the trust
    beneficiaries were powerless to act regarding the trust.” (Giraldin, supra, 55 Cal.4th at
    p. 1067.) During that period, the co-trustees could not have had any liability for
    “fail[ing] to sufficiently preserve” the beneficiaries’ interests. (Id. at p. 1071; see
    § 16462, subd. (a) [trustee of revocable trust is not liable to beneficiary for acts condoned
    by settlor or other person with power to revoke].) Nor could the beneficiaries have
    petitioned the probate court for information concerning the trust, including asking for the
    reports or accountings required by sections 16061 and 16062, and the beneficiaries were
    not entitled to a copy of the “terms of the trust.” (§ 17200, subds. (a), (b)(7)(A).)8
    Leland’s death did not give the beneficiaries a right to obtain information about
    the disposition of assets while the trust was revocable as “internal affairs of the trust”
    under the Probate Code. In the absence of any claim that Leland was incompetent or
    subject to undue influence, nothing that an accounting of such assets after his death might
    reveal could support a claim for breach of trust based on actions that occurred before his
    death. Thus, the probate court erred by compelling Babbitt to account for trust assets
    while the trust was revocable.
    While the list of proceedings in section 17200, subdivision (b), that concern the
    “internal affairs of the trust” is non-exclusive, the legislative history of the statutes
    governing the reporting and accounting provisions of the Probate Code confirms that this
    phrase does not include an accounting or information concerning trust assets while the
    trust was revocable where the settlor and trustee are the same person. The legislative
    7      The Babbitts’ trust provides that either grantor can revoke the trust in whole or in
    part and bind the trust without first obtaining the consent of the other grantor.
    8      The Probate Code’s definition of “terms of the trust” excludes “documents which
    were intended to affect disposition only while the trust was revocable.” (§ 16060.5.)
    11
    history of section 16069, which excuses a trustee, while a trust is revocable, from
    complying with sections 16061, 16062, and 17200, subdivision (b)(7)(A), shows that the
    Legislature understood beneficiaries would not have a right to an accounting of revocable
    trust assets: “Revocable trusts are different from irrevocable trusts in that the contents of
    a revocable trust can be amended without approval from the beneficiaries. For this
    reason, the contents of revocable trusts should remain secret from beneficiaries so as to
    ensure the settlor’s intent is fully realized, without undue pressure from potential
    beneficiaries.” (Governor’s Office of Planning and Research, enrolled bill rep. on Sen.
    Bill No. 202 (2009-2010 Reg. Sess.) Sept. 1, 2010, p. 5.)9 The Legislature demonstrated
    a similar understanding when it amended the definition in section 16060.5 of “terms of
    the trust” to clarify that information “regarding investment instructions and requests for
    withdrawals during the period when a trust was revocable” are not required disclosures.
    (Dept. of Consumer Affairs, enrolled bill rep. on Assem. Bill No. 2069 (1997-1998 Reg.
    Sess.) Aug. 24, 1998, p. 3.) One of the purposes of this amendment was to clarify that
    only documents and trust provisions “that describe or affect an irrevocable trust . . . must
    be disclosed.” (Ibid.; see also § 16060.7 [excusing trustee from providing “terms of the
    trust” while trust is revocable].)
    The primary case on which McCormack relies, Giraldin, supra, 
    55 Cal.4th 1058
    ,
    actually supports Babbitt. Giraldin involved a third-party trustee who owed a fiduciary
    duty to the settlor and whose breach of that duty could “substantially harm the
    beneficiaries by reducing the trust’s value against the settlor’s wishes.” (Id. at p. 1062.)
    Here, that did not and could not happen because the trustees and settlors were one and the
    9      In construing a statute, bill reports and other legislative records are “‘appropriate
    sources from which legislative intent may be ascertained.’” (Mt. Hawley Insurance
    Company v. Lopez (2013) 
    215 Cal.App.4th 1385
    , 1401; see Ste. Marie v. Riverside
    County Regional Park and Open-Space District (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 282
    , 291 [relying on
    enrolled bill report to interpret a statute]; American Financial Services Assn. v. City of
    Oakland (2005) 
    34 Cal.4th 1239
    , 1263-1264 [using enrolled bill reports to determine the
    scope of legislative debate].)
    12
    same.10 As the Supreme Court in Giraldin explained, through the use of what the court
    called a “colorful” hypothetical, settlors like Leland and Babbitt may dispose of
    revocable trust assets however they please without incurring any liability to contingent
    beneficiaries: “‘[I]f the settlor of a revocable trust learned he had a terminal disease, and
    was going to die within six months, he might decide that his last wish was to take his
    mistress on a deluxe, six-month cruise around the world—dissipating most of the assets
    held in his trust. The trustee, whose duties are owed to the settlor at that point, would
    have no basis to deny that last wish,’” and could not be liable for failing to preserve the
    assets of the trust for the beneficiaries. (Ibid.) Like the dying cruise voyager in the
    Giraldin hypothetical, Leland and Babbitt owed their duties as trustees only to
    themselves before part of the trust became irrevocable, and they did not need to account
    to the beneficiaries for the disposition of trust assets during that time.
    Finally, courts in other jurisdictions that have considered whether a beneficiary
    can compel an accounting of revocable trust assets where the settlor and trustee were the
    same person, or where there is no evidence that the beneficiaries were damaged by a
    breach of duty to the settlor while the trust was revocable, have reached a similar result,
    although often because the beneficiaries lacked standing. For example, in In re Trust No.
    T-1 of Trimble (Iowa 2013) 
    826 N.W.2d 474
     the court held that, while a trust is
    revocable, “the trustee owes duties exclusively to the settlor and the settlor has full
    discretion to do what she wishes with her assets—whether it works to the benefit of the
    10     The other cases cited by McCormack are similarly distinguishable because, like
    Giraldin, they involved third-party trustees who owed fiduciary duties to the settlor
    during the settlor’s lifetime or to the beneficiaries after the death of the settlor. (See
    Christie v. Kimball, supra, 202 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1410-1411; Esslinger, supra, 144
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 520-521; Evangelho v. Presoto (1998) 
    67 Cal.App.4th 615
    , 618.)
    Although some courts have allowed beneficiaries to obtain an accounting for periods
    before a settlor’s death where the settlor had “‘lost capacity, was under undue influence,
    or did not approve or ratify the trustee’s conduct’” (Giraldin, supra, 55 Cal.4th at
    p. 1073; see Drake, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at p. 407), McCormack has not asserted any
    such claim on Leland’s behalf.
    13
    beneficiaries of the trust or not.” (Id. at p. 487; see Tseng v. Tseng (Or. App. 2015) 
    271 Or.App. 657
    , 669, fn. 3 [“[b]ecause the settlor retains complete control over the trust
    during the settlor’s lifetime, actions by a settlor/trustee cannot harm the interests of a
    beneficiary in any cognizable way”].) The court in Trimble concluded that “[a] trustee
    who owes no accounting to beneficiaries while the trust is revocable should not face
    retroactive accounting duties for the same period upon the settlor’s death.” (Trimble, at
    p. 489.)
    Similarly, in Matter of Malasky (N.Y. App. Div. 2002) 
    290 A.D.2d 631
     a husband
    and wife created a joint revocable living trust and named themselves trustees. (Id. at p.
    631.) After the husband died, his children from a prior marriage sought an accounting
    from their stepmother of the trust assets from the trust’s inception to the date of their
    father’s death. (Ibid.) The court in Malasky held that, because the settlors also acted as
    trustees and retained the power to revoke or amend the trust at any time, the stepchildren
    had no pecuniary interest in the revocable trust until their father’s death, and therefore
    could not seek an accounting of assets while the trust was revocable. (Id. at p. 632.)11
    DISPOSITION
    Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the respondent court to vacate its
    order of April 22, 2015 and to enter a new order excluding the period of time between
    May 5, 2011 and May 5, 2014 from the order compelling Babbitt to provide an
    11     McCormack also argues that the doctrine of unclean hands bars Babbitt from
    seeking relief in this court because, according to McCormack, Babbitt has repeatedly
    underreported the cash and real property held by the trust. For example, McCormack
    complains that Babbitt originally represented that the only asset in the trust was the Los
    Angeles residence, but later identified “another approximate $300,000 in trust assets.”
    McCormack mischaracterizes Babbitt’s representations, which appear to have been
    accurate when she made them. After Leland’s death and the commencement of these
    proceedings, Babbitt began transferring additional assets into the trust, as set forth in her
    April 27, 2015 accounting.
    14
    accounting of trust assets. The stay of proceedings issued June 3, 2015 is vacated.
    Petitioner is to recover her costs in connection with this petition.
    SEGAL, J.
    We concur:
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    BLUMENFELD, J.*
    *Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B263917

Citation Numbers: 246 Cal. App. 4th 1135

Filed Date: 4/25/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023