Court Opinion

ID: 9868162
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-26 18:03:51.751861+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:03:38.505275
License: Public Domain

Filed 9/26/23 Sims v. Kote 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                         NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for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

 SHARON DEON SIMS et al.,

       Plaintiffs and Appellants,                                                G061460

            v.                                                                   (Super. Ct. No. 30-2012-00539610)

 PETER C. KOTE, as Trustee etc., et al.,                                         OPINION

       Defendants and Respondents.

                     Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Randall
J. Sherman, Judge. Affirmed.
                     Sharon Deon Sims, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
                     Daniel Keith Larson, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
                     Christopher Ryan Perez, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
                     Erin Ellen Larson, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
                     Alchehayed Law and Ilian Alchehayed for Defendant and Respondent Peter
C. Kote.
              No appearances for Defendants and Respondents Dana Kim Perez Shelton
and Daniel Scott Perez Larson.
              Sharon Deon Sims, Daniel Keith Larson, and Christopher Ryan Perez,
beneficiaries of a family trust, appeal from the probate court’s judgment approving
trustee Peter C. Kote’s account and adjudicating other matters. They claim primarily that
the late cosettlor Barbara Larson’s interest in a deed of trust (DOT) she co-owned with
Daniel (her son), and the proceeds from the subsequent sale of the encumbered property,
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should not have been included in the trust’s assets. They contend that after Barbara
passed away, her interest in the DOT belonged to her estate, which never went through
the probate process, rather than the trust.
              We conclude appellants’ claim regarding the DOT is barred by res judicata
because the probate court previously approved an account that included the DOT as a
trust asset. Moreover, even assuming error, appellants have not shown prejudice from the
inclusion of the DOT in the trust. We also reject appellants’ remaining contentions and
therefore affirm.
                                              FACTS
I. The DOT and the Trust
              In 1991, Barbara and Daniel loaned Dana Kim Perez Shelton (Barbara’s
daughter and Daniel’s sister) $118,000, with specified interest, secured by a DOT on
Shelton’s home that named Barbara and Daniel as beneficiaries. According to appellants,
Barbara and Daniel later agreed to forebear any payments from Shelton until she either
sold the property or received an inheritance from her parents.
              In 2007, Barbara and her husband, Gerald Larson, created a living trust
(Larson Trust) naming their three children (Daniel, Sims, and Shelton) and other relatives

1
             Because Daniel and Barbara shared a last name, we refer to them by their
first names. We do not refer to respondent Daniel Scott Perez Larson or appellant Erin
Larson, whose role in the litigation is not pertinent to the resolution of this appeal.

                                                2
as beneficiaries and naming Shelton as first successor trustee. The trust did not include
Barbara’s interest in the DOT. Gerald died in 2010, and Barbara passed away in 2011. It
is undisputed that Barbara’s will contained a pour-over provision, devising her entire
estate to the trust. It is likewise undisputed her will never went through the probate
process.
              After both parents passed away, Shelton sued Daniel, seeking, inter alia,
quiet title and declaratory judgment. She claimed Barbara had acquired Daniel’s interest
in the DOT and later agreed to relieve Shelton of her debt. In 2014, after a bench trial,
the superior court (Judge Robert D. Monarch) ruled against Shelton and issued a
declaratory judgment providing that the note secured by the DOT was payable one-half to
                                            2
Daniel and one-half to the family trust.
              That same year, following a petition by Daniel, the probate court (Judge
Kim R. Hubbard) removed Shelton as trustee, finding she had a conflict of interest and
had breached her fiduciary duties. The court ordered Shelton to disgorge all previously
                                                3
paid trustee fees, attorney fees, and costs. It appointed Kote, a professional fiduciary, as
successor trustee. On appeal, this court reversed the probate court’s order that Shelton
disgorge all fees and costs to the trust.
II. The First Account and the 2020 Judgment
              In 2015, Kote filed his first trustee’s account, in which he included
Barbara’s interest in the DOT as a trust asset. Kote served notice of the proceeding on all
trust beneficiaries, including Daniel, Shelton, and Sims. During the lengthy litigation that

2
             It is unclear why the judgment provided that Barbara’s share of the note
was payable to the trust rather than to her estate.
3
               During a hearing on these matters, Shelton’s counsel asked the court to
order Daniel to remove the lien on Shelton’s title, but the court stated this was a matter
for the civil proceeding and the court did not have jurisdiction over the note, as it was
“not part of the trust.”

                                                    3
followed, the probate court (Judge David Belz) approved the account but ultimately
removed Kote as trustee and appointed Sims as successor trustee. The court also placed
the trust under court supervision and ordered that any subsequent payments from trust
funds must be pre-approved by the court. Kote successfully challenged certain collateral
rulings on appeal. In 2020, following the remittitur from this court, the probate court
(Judge Hubbard) issued a judgment approving Kote’s first account and making various
other orders.
III. The Bankruptcy Sale and Further Trust Proceedings
                In the meantime, in 2017, appellants filed a petition seeking a declaration
that the DOT was not a trust asset, among other prayers for relief. While that petition
remained pending, Shelton filed for bankruptcy, and the federal bankruptcy court later
approved the sale of her home. The trust received almost $220,000 from the sale
proceeds. In 2019, Kote filed his final account, which included the proceeds of the sale
                4
in trust assets. Appellants raised various objections to the account, including that the
DOT and the proceeds from the bankruptcy sale were not trust property and that before
his removal, Kote expended trust funds without court approval in violation of Judge
Belz’s order.
                During a bench trial on appellants’ 2017 petition and Kote’s final account,
the probate court (Judge Randall J. Sherman) stated it was bound by Judge Monarch’s
2014 judgment in Shelton’s civil action, which provided that Barbara’s share of the note
                                               5
secured by the DOT was payable to the trust. The court added that even if it were not
bound by that judgment, Barbara’s pour-over will meant that “any proceeds received by
the note, secured [by] this [DOT], would have gone into the Larson trust.” In 2022,
4
                Appellants have not included this final account in the record on appeal.
5
               Kote incorrectly claims that appellants failed to produce a reporter’s
transcript on appeal. Appellants have included a reporter’s transcript of the bench trial in
the record.

                                               4
following trial, the court denied appellants’ 2017 petition and approved Kote’s final
        6
account. Appellants timely appealed.
                                      DISCUSSION
              We review a probate court’s judgment approving an account for abuse of
direction. (Estate of McKenzie (1962) 199 Cal.App.2d 393, 398.) The court’s factual
findings are reviewed for substantial evidence (Estate of Fain (1999) 75 Cal.App.4th 973,
987), but any legal determination based on undisputed facts is reviewed de novo (Blech v.
Blech (2018) 25 Cal.App.5th 989, 1000).
              In challenging the probate court’s 2022 judgment, appellants primarily
contend it was error to include in the trust Barbara’s share of the proceeds from the sale
of Shelton’s home. They note the DOT named Barbara individually and claim it
therefore became part of her estate, rather than trust property, upon her death. We
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conclude the probate court’s 2020 judgment precluded appellants’ claim.
              The 2020 judgment approved Kote’s first account, which included
Barbara’s interest in the DOT as a trust asset. Thus, that judgment barred appellants’
current claim that Barbara’s interest (and the proceeds from the sale of the property)
                                                    8
should not have been included in the trust’s assets. (See Lazzarone v. Bank of America

6
              The probate court also denied a request by Sims to distribute funds from the
trust. The court issued no statement of decision because appellants’ request for one was
untimely.
7
            Given our conclusion, we need not consider the effect of Judge Monarch’s
2014 judgment in Shelton’s civil action.
8
              To the extent appellants suggest Judge Hubbard had ruled in 2014 that
Barbara’s interest in the DOT was not a trust asset, they are mistaken. As noted, Judge
Hubbard’s statement that the note secured by the DOT was not part of the trust was in
response to a request by Shelton’s counsel that the court order Daniel to remove the lien
from the property. Thus, Judge Hubbard’s statement merely pointed out the obvious—
that Daniel’s interest in the DOT was not part of the trust.

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(1986) 181 Cal.App.3d 581, 591-592 [order settling account is entitled to res judicata
effect and is conclusive as to all matters passed upon].)
              Appellants suggest that any judgment concerning the DOT is “void”
because Barbara’s estate had not gone through the probate process and beneficiaries of
her estate never received notice of the underlying proceedings. They are mistaken. Our
Legislature anticipated that an unprobated estate may have an interest in a trust
administration proceeding. To accommodate the rights of the estate’s beneficiaries to
proper notice and an opportunity to participate, the Legislature provided in Probate Code
section 17203, subdivision (c): “If a person to whom notice otherwise would be given
has been deceased for at least 40 days, and no personal representative has been appointed
for the estate of that person, and the deceased person’s right, title, or interest has not
passed to any other person . . . , notice may instead be given to the following persons: [¶]
(1) Each heir and devisee of the decedent, and all persons named as executors of the will
of the decedent, so far as known to the petitioner.” While appellants broadly assert that
the beneficiaries of Barbara’s estate “have never been named, noticed, served, appeared
or joined,” they point to no potential beneficiary who did not receive notice of the
account proceeding. In fact, Barbara’s intestate heirs, her adult children, received proper
notice of Kote’s first account. (See Prob. Code, § 6402, subd. (a) [if there is no surviving
spouse, entire intestate estate passes to decedent’s issue].) According to appellants, two
of those children, Shelton and Daniel, were also the named executors of Barbara’s will.

                                               6
And it is undisputed that Barbara left a pour-over will, devising her estate to the trust, and
                                            9
thus that she had no additional devisees.
              Additionally, even assuming the 2020 judgment did not bar appellants’
claim and further assuming it was error to treat Barbara’s interest in the DOT as trust
property, appellants have not shown any resulting harm to them, either as beneficiaries of
the trust or otherwise. Indeed, while they assert that including the DOT in the trust
caused them “harm” (italics omitted), they offer no meaningful explanation of the alleged
harm in their appellate briefs, even after Kote noted in his respondent’s brief that
appellants failed to argue prejudice. Having failed to meaningfully argue that they have
suffered prejudice, appellants cannot establish reversible error: “[W]e cannot presume
prejudice and will not reverse the judgment in the absence of an affirmative showing
there was a miscarriage of justice. [Citations.] Nor will this court act as counsel for
appellant by furnishing a legal argument as to how the trial court’s ruling was prejudicial.
[Citations.]” (Century Surety Co. v. Polisso (2006) 139 Cal.App.4th 922, 963.)
Moreover, given that Barbara’s will devised her interest in the DOT to her trust and that
appellants have not proffered any valid ground precluding a transfer of her interest to the
trust, there is no reasonably probable scenario under which that interest would not have
ultimately passed to the trust. (See Sabato v. Brooks (2015) 242 Cal.App.4th 715, 724-

9
                For the first time in their reply brief, appellants assert that Barbara’s will
did not specifically identify her interest in the DOT as being part of her estate devised to
the trust and thus the statute of frauds rendered any testamentary intent to transfer that
interest to the trust ineffective. Initially, by failing to raise the issue in their opening
brief, they have forfeited this contention. (Provost v. Regents of University of California
(2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 1289, 1295 [“we will not address arguments raised for the first
time in the reply brief”].) Moreover, an assignment need not specifically identify
conveyed real property to satisfy the statute of frauds. (Ukkestad v. RBS Asset Finance,
Inc. (2015) 235 Cal.App.4th 156, 163 [trust instrument’s reference to “‘all of [the
settlor’s] real and personal property, including . . . real property . . . , wherever situated’”
satisfied statute of frauds].) Appellants’ reliance on dicta to the contrary in Kucker v.
Kucker (2011) 192 Cal.App.4th 90, is misplaced. (See Ukkestad, at p. 163, fn. 7
[rejecting Kucker’s remark on this point as unpersuasive dicta].)

                                                7
725 [miscarriage of justice exists only where “‘it is reasonably probable that a result more
favorable to the appealing party would have been reached in the absence of the error’”].)
              In the argument section of their opening brief, appellants add the following
conclusory claims: (1) “Kote’s accountings do not comply with Prob[ate] Code [section]
1060 et seq., Prob[ate] Code [section] 16060 et seq. and Larson Trust [section] 7.25”;
(2) “Removed trustee Shelton abused her power, breached her fiduciary duty and
weaponized the Larson Trust to contest, attack and deny Barbara’s DOT”; (3) “Removed
trustee Kote abused his power, breached his fiduciary duty and repeated Shelton’s
weaponizing the Larson Trust to contest, attack Barbara’s DOT from a value of
$112,200.00 to $61,030.71”; (4) “Shelton was ordered to disgorge all her charges back to
the Larson Trust”; and (5) “Kote should be ordered to disgorge his $445,900.51 charges
back to the Larson Trust.” These undeveloped assertions, devoid of any meaningful
analysis, cannot establish error in the probate court’s judgment. (Jameson v. Desta
(2018) 5 Cal.5th 594, 608-609 [on appeal, trial court’s judgment is presumed to be
correct, and appellant bears burden to affirmatively establish error]; Dills v. Redwoods
Associates, Ltd. (1994) 28 Cal.App.4th 888, 890, fn. 1 [we need not reach issues
presented without argument and will not develop appellants’ arguments for them].)
              We additionally observe that appellants have not included Kote’s final
account in the record on appeal. Because they have failed to provide an adequate record
for our review of the relevant account, we must resolve their challenges to the account
against them. (Maria P. v. Riles (1987) 43 Cal.3d 1281, 1295-1296 [failure to furnish
adequate record of attorney fee proceedings defeated appellants’ challenge to fee award].)
As for appellants’ claim that Shelton was ordered to disgorge funds to the trust, we note
this court reversed that portion of Judge Hubbard’s 2014 order. And to the extent
appellants complain that Kote expended trust funds without prior court approval in
violation of Judge Belz’s order, the probate court subsequently approved Kote’s
expenditures, as reflected in the final account, and appellants offer neither argument nor

                                             8
authority suggesting the expenditures must be repaid to the trust under these
circumstances. Accordingly, we find no reversible error in the probate court’s
            10
judgment.
                                       DISPOSITION
                 The judgment is affirmed. Kote is awarded costs on appeal.

                                                  O’LEARY, P. J.

WE CONCUR:

GOETHALS, J.

SANCHEZ, J.

10
              In a “Preface” section of their opening brief, appellants state, “Judge
Sherman’s order denying Sims access to any Larson Trust funds to preserve, administer
and distribute the Larson Trust, is untenable.” Because they raise no claim in this regard
in the argument section of their brief, we do not consider this assertion. (Hollingsworth
v. Heavy Transport, Inc. (2021) 66 Cal.App.5th 1157, 1172, fn. 3 [legal contentions
forfeited where they were alluded to in introduction of opening brief but not included in
argument section under an appropriate heading].)

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