Court Opinion

ID: 9955653
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-28 21:02:43.304859+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:15:10.420306
License: Public Domain

Filed 3/28/24 Nelson v. Offield CA1/2

              NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
      California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not
      certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not
      been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

      IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                  FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                               DIVISION TWO

       NANCY OFFIELD NELSON,
       Plaintiff and Appellant,
                                                                    A160134
       v.
       DIANE M. OFFIELD,                                            (San Mateo County
                                                                    Super. Ct.
       Defendant and Appellant.
                                                                    No. PRO119451)

      This appeal is the latest—and, we hope, the last—chapter in the saga of
the Estate of Archie and Olive Offield, who died in 2001 and 2009
respectively, at the ages of 87 and 92. The saga began in December 2009,
when Nancy Nelson, one of four Offield siblings, filed five probate petitions
against her brother Duffy and her sister Martha. A bench trial was held in
2013, with the last day of testimony in mid-October. In March 2014, the trial
court issued its proposed statement of decision, and in October 2018, its final
statement of decision, a four-plus year delay nowhere explained in the record.
It would be over another year until judgment was entered, specifically in
December 2019, which judgment held for Nancy on some of her claims
against Duffy, for Duffy on other of the claims against him, and for Martha
on all the claims against her, exonerating her from liability.

                                                            1
      Duffy filed an appeal, and Nancy a cross-appeal, between them
asserting seven claims of error, in appellate briefs totaling over 400 pages
with over 20,000 words.1 So here we are, in 2024, over 14 years since Nancy
filed her petitions, and neither Martha, who was completely exonerated, nor
Joan, the fourth sibling who was never even a party—both of whom, we
understand, are now in their late 70s, if not early 80s—has received anything
from their parents’ substantial estate. Something is very wrong here, and it
is time that the saga be brought to an end. And that we do, concluding that
neither Duffy’s appeal nor Nancy’s cross-appeal has merit, and affirming the
judgment in its entirety.
                               BACKGROUND
      The Offield Family
      Olive Offield and Archie Offield, Sr. had four children: Martha
Zarcone, Joan Stoneberg, Nancy Nelson, and Archie Offield, Jr. called Duffy.2
Archie and Olive lived in Burlingame, where they raised their children, and
where Archie owned an insurance business, which business was located in
the Offield Building, a building so named because Archie’s father had built it.
Archie and his siblings inherited it, and Archie then bought out his siblings’
shares. The Offield Building is listed as a Burlingame historical site.
      The Offield Estate Plan
      In January 1983, Olive and Archie established the Offield Family Trust
(Family Trust), a document prepared by the law firm of Carr McClellan,
Ingersoll, Thompson & Horn P.C. (Carr McClellan) Under the terms of the

      1 Duffy died in 2021, at age 72, after the appeal was filed, and Diane

Offield, the executrix of his estate, substituted in. For clarity and consistency
with the briefing, we refer to the appeal as Duffy’s.
      2 As is typical in family-based litigation, we refer to the parties by their

first names.

                                        2
Family Trust, the four Offield children were to inherit in equal shares. Dick
raised the possibility of Archie gifting the building to Duffy. Archie replied
that he did not want Duffy to have the building, and the children should
share it equally.
      In 1992, Archie and Olive executed a First Amendment to the Family
Trust, which provided that upon the death of Archie or Olive, the assets
would be divided into a Bypass Trust and a Survivor’s Trust. The Bypass
Trust was irrevocable and would receive the lesser of either (1) the deceased’s
interest in the Family Trust assets or (2) the largest amount that would not
incur certain tax liabilities. Olive would be sole beneficiary under the Bypass
Trust and the four children would be remainder beneficiaries in equal shares.
The Survivor’s Trust was revocable and would hold for the surviving spouse
any assets that did not flow into the Bypass Trust. And while the surviving
spouse could revoke or amend the Survivor’s Trust, the First Amendment did
not change the Offield children’s inheritance in equal shares.
      We digress briefly from the discussion of the trust documents to note
that according to Nancy’s testimony at trial sometime in the early to mid-
1990s she was told by Martha that she suspected Duffy was stealing from
Archie because Duffy was taking lavish vacations and living beyond his
means. Nancy spoke with Duffy about this, but did not tell her parents
because she thought Duffy would stop. Duffy denied the accusation, and a
few weeks later, Martha denied having raised the issue with Nancy. After
that Nancy and Duffy rarely spoke to each other.
      The four Offield children had good individual relationships with Olive.
But Nancy was estranged from Martha and Duffy, to the extent they would
not speak or physically be near each other. Indeed, Nancy testified she was
not invited to Olive’s 90th birthday because her “family wouldn’t talk to [her],

                                       3
because [she’s] evil.” Nancy also testified that Olive knew there was a rift
between Nancy and her siblings, but did not try to fix it. As a result, in most
instances Nancy would see her mother separately from her siblings, with
Olive visiting Nancy at homes she owned in Hawaii and Donner Lake.
       In 1998 Archie and Olive executed the Second Amendment to the
Family Trust, which amendment named Duffy and Martha successor
trustees, with Nancy to be appointed if Duffy and Martha did not qualify or
ceased to act. The amendment did not change that the Offield children would
inherit equally.
       As indicated, the Family Trust, as well as the amendments, had been
prepared by attorneys at Carr McClellan, and in 2000 Steven Anderson of
that firm took over the representation of the Offield estate plan, their prior
attorney having retired.
       Duffy Becomes Involved in Handling Olive’s Affairs and
       Acquires the Offield Building
       In 1976, Duffy began working for Archie’s insurance business.3 And
sometime in the 1980s, Duffy assumed management of the Offield Building,
where he maintained an office.
       In 1998, Duffy was given power of attorney over Olive, and in the early
2000s—Duffy said it was in 2004—he began balancing Olive’s checkbook.
Following Archie’s death, Duffy became more involved in caring for his
mother’s day-to-day needs, such as taking her to doctor appointments, paying
her bills, purchasing her groceries and prescription medications, and
managing and paying her part-time caregivers. At trial Nancy acknowledged

       3 According to Duffy, in 1980 Archie gifted the insurance business to

him.

                                       4
that Duffy “took great care of” Olive, and that she was “very grateful that he
was there to take care of Mom.”
      But while Nancy’s testimony of Duffy’s care for his mother might have
been positive, as will be seen, most of the evidence about Duffy offered by
Nancy was not.
      In June 2005, Olive, Martha, and Duffy met with Mr. Anderson at the
Carr McClellan offices to discuss Olive’s estate plan. The meeting began with
Mr. Anderson being told that Nancy was very wealthy and did not have a
good relationship with Martha or Duffy. Mr. Anderson’s notes of that
meeting reflect that Olive discussed changing the Bypass Trust and the
Survivor’s Trust such that a non-pro rata allocation of “Bgame Ave” (i.e., the
Offield Building) would go to Duffy upon her death so that he could own 100
percent of the building.
      From that point on, there were a series of meetings, over a period of
years, among Olive, Duffy, Mr. Anderson (and sometimes others) to discuss
Duffy’s acquiring ownership of the Offield Building. Those meetings were
testified to at length at trial, and are the subject of much discussion in the
briefs, especially Nancy’s, which points to those meetings, and numerous
documents pertinent to them, in support of her position, which testimony will
be discussed in detail below in connection with the issue to which it pertains.
Suffice to say here that two things occurred as a result of those meetings:
      In December 2007, Olive signed a new will and the Third Amendment
of the Survivor’s Trust (the Third Amendment), which effectuated the
transfer of the Survivor’s Trusts interests in the Offield Building to Duffy on
Olive’s death—an amendment the trial court would uphold.
      In March 2008, Olive and Duffy signed the paperwork that would
effectuate the sale of the Offield Building to two newly created legal entities,

                                        5
Offield Ventures, LP and Offield Management, LLC, the effect of which
transferred ownership of the Offield building to Duffy while Olive was alive—
transactions the trial court would rescind on the basis they were a result of
undue influence by Duffy.
      One last item of background that would factor into the trial court’s
analysis here was Olive’s physical and mental condition. As early as 2001,
Olive had been diagnosed with a form of leukemia and also with several
heart issues, including hypertension, coronary artery disease, and atrial
fibrillation. In early 2006, Olive complained of dizziness, and in July of that
year she presented to the emergency room after Duffy noticed she was “goofy,
wobbly, and disoriented” for about a week, mispronouncing words and
behaving strangely. The emergency room doctor diagnosed Olive with acute
disorientation, and the internist diagnosed her with “altered mental status,”
likely due to excess sodium.
      In early 2007, Martha called Olive’s doctor with concerns Olive was
“declining” and asked if he would see her. After examining Olive, the doctor
diagnosed her with “cognitive impairment.”4 Shortly thereafter, Duffy’s wife
called the medical advice hotline and reported that Olive was suffering from
“agitation and restlessness and confusion,” and that she was “disoriented”
and had “slurred speech.” The hotline provider diagnosed Olive with

      4 Martha would later write that after Olive was released from the

hospital in January, she “declined RAPIDLY!” She was “lethargic, wanting
to sleep most of the time, and not eating well.” She “had trouble speaking,
often not able to say the words though she tries and they just don’t come out.”
Martha also reported Olive had “gotten VERY weak,” had trouble getting out
of a chair, and complained of general pain, describing her as “very weak when
she tried to speak.”

                                       6
“confusion” and “delirium” and recommended she be seen by her doctor
within four hours.
         On April 4, Olive saw her doctor, who noted she suffered from
“cognitive impairment.” And at a May 22 visit, Olive’s doctor again
diagnosed her with “cognitive impairment” and as “unsteady on feet,” but
that her “memory was improving.” A week later, Martha called Olive’s doctor
to advise Olive was “kind of out of it.”
         In January and February 2008, Olive’s doctor noted that she suffered
“memory impairment,” and at a February 2009 appointment that she had
“cognitive impairment.”5 In June, Olive was hospitalized for liver, kidney,
and heart problems, and the doctors told Duffy she might not survive. Duffy
decided to bring Olive home for hospice care, where she died a few weeks
later.
         The Proceedings Below
         The Pleadings
         In December 2009, Nancy filed five petitions in probate court, seeking
(1) a declaration that the Third Amendment was invalid; (2) to remove Duffy
as Trustee; (3) return of certain property to the Family Trust; (4) probate of
Olive’s 1992 will; and (5) a claim for elder abuse, fraud, and conversion, also
seeking a constructive trust (the elder abuse petition).

         5 In February 2008, Martha’s granddaughter interviewed Olive to

complete a project called Hallmark Legacy Keeper, which project provides the
interviewer questions to ask regarding family histories. Olive struggled with
many questions, unsure of Archie’s birthday, the day he proposed to her,
when they married, or where they honeymooned. And when asked about the
difficult times in her life or decisions she would change, she said she could
not remember. At other points, Olive was nonresponsive.

                                           7
      In February 2010, Duffy and Martha filed responses to Nancy’s
petitions, denying all allegations of wrongdoing and asserting various
affirmative defenses.
      In July 2011, by order of the trial court (the Honorable George Miram),
Duffy and Martha were suspended as co-trustees of the Family Trust and
Michael J. Valencia was appointed interim trustee.
      In March 2012, Nancy filed a motion seeking to add Martha as a
respondent in the elder abuse petition, which Judge Miram granted.
      In May, Nancy filed a motion seeking leave to add Carr McClellan and
Mr. Anderson as respondents in the elder abuse petition, which motion was
also granted by Judge Miram. Following that, Carr McClellan withdrew as
counsel for Duffy and Martha, and the firm of Hassard Bonnington, LLP
substituted in, and remains their counsel on appeal.
      In December, Carr McClellan and Mr. Anderson settled Nancy’s claims
against them. And in January 2013, the interim trustee petitioned for an
order approving the settlement. According to the petition, the claims against
Carr McClellan and Mr. Anderson would be dismissed in exchange for
payment of $2,000,000 to Nancy as “reimbursement for attorney’s fees and
expenses incurred by Nancy” and payment of $41,098 to the Offield Family
Trust as “reimbursement of attorneys’ fees and costs associated with the
planning, drafting and execution of the amendments to the estate plan and
the sale of the Offield Building. . . .” In January 2013, the trial court (the
Honorable Joseph Scott) granted the petition. No good faith determination
was sought.
      The Trial
      A bench trial before the Honorable Marie Weiner began in August,
2013, and proceeded for 25 trial days, the last of which was October 16.

                                        8
Numerous witnesses testified and over 300 exhibits were introduced. Post-
trial briefs were filed.
      On March 17, 2014, the trial court issued a proposed statement of
decision that said at some future point the court would issue “a more
factually detailed amended proposed statement of decision” and that
objections to the statement of decision would be determined “upon service of
the amended proposed statement of decision.”
      On March 27, 2015, when more than a year had passed and no
amended proposed statement of decision had been issued, Duffy and Martha
filed a motion requesting leave to file objections to the proposed statement of
decision.
      On August 27, the trial court issued its amended proposed statement of
decision.
      In September, the parties filed objections to the amended proposed
statement of decision. And on December 4, the court held a hearing on the
parties’ objections.
      It would be almost three years later, specifically, October 3, 2018, when
the court issued its final statement of decision.6
      The Final Statement of Decision
      The final statement of decision was a comprehensive 72 pages, which
statement addressed all the issues before the trial court, many of which are

      6 As mentioned at the outset of this opinion, the reason(s) for the

extraordinary delay in this case is not clear in the record. What we glean is
that after August 27, 2015, the date of the amended proposed statement of
decision, the trial court issued no fewer than nine case management orders,
and the appellant’s appendix reflects that over 1,000 pages of pleadings were
filed. As to this latter point, we are not certain that the appellant’s appendix
contains all the filings, as a comparison of it and the 198-page register of
actions indicates there could have been many other filings.

                                        9
not involved in this appeal. The statement also addressed, at great length,
the Third Amendment that would result in Duffy obtaining the Offield
Building upon Olive’s death, and the complicated transaction that resulted in
Duffy acquiring the Offield Building while Olive was still alive. We thus
discuss the evidence leading to these transactions in some detail.7
      It begins, as noted, in June 2005, when Duffy and Martha took Olive to
meet with Mr. Anderson to discuss Olive’s estate plan. Among other things,
Duffy indicated he wanted 100 percent of the Offield Building. Olive said
that all the children should inherit equally. They also discussed a no contest
clause, based on the concern that an unnamed child would challenge any
changes to the estate plan.
      Mr. Anderson followed up with a letter confirming Olive’s desire that
the children inherit equally and recommending how to proceed, recognizing
Olive’s desire to keep the Offield Building in the family. However, Mr.
Anderson proposed creating a family limited partnership to own and manage
the Offield Building that would facilitate sale of the property to Duffy, and
avoid a partition action if someone challenged the transaction. Mr. Anderson
also proposed a family installment sale in which the Offield Building was
appraised, and then an undivided interest in the property transferred to
Duffy in exchange for a promissory note secured by the property.
      By November 2006, Duffy had called Mr. Anderson at least twice to
discuss the family installment sale option. Meanwhile, Duffy pursued an
appraisal for the Offield Building, and on April 16, 2007 advised Carr

      7 Much of this evidence is from the statement of decision, most of which

is not challenged as unsupported by substantial evidence. We thus accept
those facts, and determine whether they support the judgment. (Rael v.
Davis (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 1608, 1617.)

                                       10
McClellan attorneys that he was looking to purchase the Offield Building for
below $2 million—this, at a time when the building was appraised at $4.8
million.
      On April 26, Duffy took Olive to meet with Mr. Anderson. Olive again
expressed that she wanted a four-way distribution of the assets. They also
discussed selling the Bypass Trust’s 15.77 percent interest in the Offield
Building to Duffy.
      On April 30, Duffy left a voicemail message with Mr. Anderson’s
partner stating that Olive would sell Duffy the Bypass Trust’s entire interest,
plus a portion of the Survivor’s Trust’s interest in the Offield Building, for a
total of 76 percent interest in the property. The sale terms included two
promissory notes for 15 and 30 years at five percent interest, secured by the
Offield Building.
      In June 2007, Mr. Anderson sent Olive documents that included a
Third Amendment to the Trust, along with a letter explaining the changes.
The letter explained that although Olive could not change the Bypass Trust,
she could sell its interest in the Offield Building, and the sale proceeds and
promissory note would belong to the trust, and the children would inherit
equally. If Olive sold the Survivor’s Trust’s interest in the Offield Building to
Duffy, upon her death, Duffy would (1) receive the remaining Survivor’s
Trust interest to the extent it did not exceed his equal share of the trust fund,
and (2) have the option to purchase that excess interest.
      Olive did not respond for several months, so in September
Mr. Anderson wrote a follow-up letter.
      On October 4, Duffy and Martha (and her husband Paul) took Olive to
meet with Mr. Anderson. Nancy and Joan were not present. Paul recorded
the meeting, and a transcript of that meeting was introduced at trial and

                                       11
discussed at length in the final statement of decision—and in terms
devastating to Duffy.
      Olive began discussing her wishes, but Duffy interjected to make sure
she discussed the Offield Building. When Olive again attempted to state her
wishes, Duffy insisted she read a typewritten note that, he said, Olive had
typed that morning.8 Reading the note, Olive said the Offield Building
should go to Duffy, while the other children should receive the residence and
securities. Duffy then asked about finalizing the sale of the Offield Building.
Mr. Anderson suggested Olive could sell a portion of the Survivor’s Trust’s
interest in the building, taking back a promissory note from Duffy, going on
to explain that upon her death Olive could give the note back to Duffy, which
would forgive Duffy’s debt. Duffy liked that option because the financial
impact on him would be less than his tax liabilities. Olive remained silent.
      Mr. Anderson then discussed another option in which Duffy would
purchase interests in the Offield Building from the Bypass and Survivor’s
Trusts totaling 50 percent and create a limited liability corporation with
Olive into which they would “dump the property.” Mr. Anderson explained
this arrangement would allow Duffy to avoid a Proposition 13 reassessment
and give him other advantages. But according to Mr. Anderson, Olive would
have to give Duffy the rest of her interest in the Offield Building or the
limited liability company, and it would reduce the value of the building,
making it easier for Duffy to purchase it. Duffy replied, “it doesn’t bother me

      8 Olive’s typewriter was non-electric and weighed 15 pounds.   At trial,
Joan testified the typewriter was kept in the upstairs bedroom, testimony
consistent with that Duffy gave at his deposition. However, at trial Duffy
testified that Olive was unable to carry the typewriter downstairs where she
supposedly typed, surmised that it was in a downstairs closet, and that one of
Olive’s home caretakers could have retrieved it. Olive’s principal caregiver
testified she never saw a typewriter.

                                       12
that the value of the building would be going down[.]” Olive said nothing.
Mr. Anderson continued, explaining to Duffy “we could create a family
limited partnership after your purchase from her” and recommended Duffy
purchase an amount of interest in the Offield Building that would avoid “a
property tax reassessment when mom dies.” Martha replied, “Yeah, that
would be good,” and Duffy echoed “It’s all sounding better.” Olive remained
silent.
       To avoid other estate taxes, Mr. Anderson recommended Duffy and
Olive split ownership 51-49 before creating the family limited partnership.
Duffy inquired how the partnership would end and how it would impact
transferring the building to the children. After hearing Mr. Anderson’s
explanation, Duffy said “Okay, so that’s what I want to do. Whatever it
takes.” He then quickly corrected himself, and said “That’s what she wants to
do.”
       Mr. Anderson explained Olive needed to affirm she wanted to be a
limited partner with 49 percent ownership. Olive replied, however
unresponsively, “Give me some money!” and laughed. Mr. Anderson
explained Olive needed to say she wanted “to give [Duffy] 51 percent of what
the building is worth.” Duffy immediately interjected to make sure his 17
percent down payment was factored into the transaction. Mr. Anderson
agreed.9

       9 The only thing Olive expressed was confusion, as this portion of the

transcript reveals:
      “DUFFY: Less the 17 [percent].
      “OLIVE: Hmmm? What did he say?
      “MARTHA: Less the 17 [percent].
      “DUFFY: Less that down payment. Okay?
      “MR. ANDERSON: Okay. Done. That would certainly protect,
minimize the value and protect the building in the long run.

                                       13
      Near the end of the meeting Mr. Anderson advised Olive he also
represented Duffy, had a “technical conflict of interest,” and Duffy would not
be in the room when she returned to execute the documents. Duffy said he
should have invited Nancy to the meeting, which he would later describe as
sarcasm because he knew Nancy would object. Duffy asked Olive whether
she was happy “with all of this.” Olive replied simply, “Alright” and “I was
born happy.”
      After the meeting Mr. Anderson emailed Carr McClellan colleagues
Laurelle Gutierrez and Lisa Stalteri, advising that Olive had drastically
changed her estate plan, going on to note that “the big fight here will come
from evil rich sister when mom kicks.”
      In November, Mr. Anderson emailed Ms. Gutierrez again, reiterating
that the estate “planning has evolved,” and that he wanted to make sure the
attorneys were on the same page, because Olive was “really unsophisticated
and understands virtually nothing of what we send her.” He also stated that
“there is going to be a risk of WWIII when she dies because one of the three
sisters hates everyone and is very rich.” That same month Mr. Anderson sent
the draft Third Amendment to Olive.
      In early December, Duffy—not Olive—called Mr. Anderson and
discussed finalizing Olive’s estate documents. And on December 20, Duffy
took Olive to meet Ms. Gutierrez to execute the changes to her estate plan.
There, alone with Olive, Ms. Gutierrez reviewed the Third Amendment. She
explained that Duffy would receive the entire Survivor’s Trust interest in the
Offield Building upon Olive’s death, while the remainder of that Trust’s
assets would pass to the other three children. Olive remarked she wanted

      “MARTHA: Great.”

                                      14
Copenhagen Bakery, one of the Offield Building’s longstanding tenants, to
remain, and if Duffy owned the property, he would charge the bakery below
market rent so it could stay. Olive also stated that if any part of the Offield
Building would pass to one of her children, the bakery would be forced out.
Olive signed the Third Amendment that day.
      Meanwhile, the Offield Building’s value increased to $5.375 million. At
the end of February 2008, Mr. Anderson sent Olive a letter advising of the
appraisal’s impact on a sale of that building to Duffy. A few days later, Duffy
and Olive called Mr. Anderson. Duffy complained about the high purchase
price and stated, “transfers within the family should be handled any way
they want to.”
      On March 28, Duffy took Olive to see Mr. Anderson and finalize the
documents and transactions that gave Duffy immediate ownership and
control of the Offield Building, transactions the trial court described as
“complicated and confusing.” Specifically:
      Duffy created an entity named Offield Management LLC, of which he
was the sole member and operating agreement signator, and under which
agreement Duffy owned 100 percent of the LLC. Its assets were one percent
of the Offield Building, which Duffy alone contributed. Olive’s name
appeared nowhere in the articles of incorporation or the operating agreement.
      A limited partnership called Offield Ventures LP was also formed.
Offield Management was the General Partner, and the limited partners were
the Survivor’s Trust, through Olive as trustee, and Duffy individually. The
interest in Offield Ventures was divided among Offield Management
(one percent), the Survivor’s Trust (49 percent), and Duffy (50 percent).
Duffy maintained full control of Offield Ventures’s bank accounts and funds

                                       15
and had full management authority over the Offield Building via Offield
Management.
      Duffy then transferred his remaining 50 percent in the Offield Building
to Offield Ventures. Olive executed a grant deed transferring the remaining
49 percent of the Survivor’s Trust’s interest in the building to Offield
Ventures LP for no consideration.
      Duffy purchased the Bypass Trust’s 15.77 interest in the Offield
Building for $626,000, consisting of a $126,000 down payment and a $500,000
promissory note at five percent interest secured by the property. Monthly
payments were $3,954.51.
      Duffy also purchased a 35.23 percent interest in the Offield Building
from the Survivor’s Trust. The price was $1.399 million, with a $280,000
down payment and a $1.119 million promissory note at five percent interest,
secured by the property. Monthly payments were $6,012.69.
      The upshot of these transactions was that Olive had transferred her
entire ownership in the Offield Building to Duffy for a minority interest in
Offield Ventures LP, which Duffy controlled.10
      Describing all this, the trial court found Duffy was “not content to have
achieved the right to inherit almost all of the Offield Building (over
88 [percent] with his share of the Bypass Trust),” and “was too anxious to
wait for Olive to pass away.” So, “Duffy decided he wanted to get ownership
and control of the Offield Building now, and not have to wait for Olive to die.”

      10 The same day this occurred, Mr. Anderson presented Olive and Duffy

with a letter explaining the potential for conflicts of interest due to Carr
McClellan representing Olive, Duffy, Offield Ventures, LP, and Offield
Management, LLC concurrently, and conflict waiver forms were signed by
both Olive and Duffy.

                                       16
At the same time, Duffy “wanted to work out a way to do so without having to
pay the fair market value of the property, or make any substantial payment
to the benefit of his sisters out of his own money.”
      With regard to “[t]he transactions and multitude of paperwork” in
March 2008 that transferred the Offield Building to Duffy, the trial court
noted they were “complicated and confusing—such that it would be difficult
for Olive to understand.” Not only that, the court said, “the evidence reflects
that Duffy didn’t understand them either—he just cared about getting control
over the Offield Building and all of its revenues.”
      The trial court discussed the transcript of the October 4, 2007 meeting,
noting that Mr. Anderson “did basically all of the talking” through “long, dry,
complicated, technical soliloquies about estate taxes and potential avenues
for structuring transactions mindful of tax implications, an[d] goes on
monologs [sic] about LLCs, limited partnerships, general partnerships,
percentages, loans, discounts, value, apportioning taxes, etc. etc.” He
“dominated the conversation,” the court said, giving complicated explanations
of tax liabilities. “Most of it,” the court found, “is not understandable to a lay
person” and “Olive’s reactions” to it consisted of “ ‘Uh huh,’ ‘Um hum,’ or
laughing.” The court further noted that “Olive didn’t understand any of it,”
which, it added, “was the perception of Anderson as well.” In short, the court
found “there [was] no substantive indication that Olive knew or understood
anything about a proposal to sell the Offield Building to Duffy right now and
during Olive’s lifetime.”
      The trial court further found that Olive’s investment portfolio had
diminished during the Great Recession, that “Olive’s only income was the
rent she received from the Offield Building,” and thus “it made no sense” for
Olive to transfer her ownership of the building and its revenue “in exchange

                                        17
for a minority interest in a limited partnership” that “was utterly controlled
by Duffy.” The court summed it up this way: “Although Olive did sign the
paperwork in March 2008 to sell 51 [percent] interest in the Offield Building
during her lifetime, it was a highly complicated transaction that neither
Duffy nor Olive understood at all. Indeed, all corporate formalities were
ignored by Duffy and Olive. Instead, Duffy acted as though he were the
owner of the Offield Building and entitled to all of its revenue. Duffy
syphoned [sic] off all [the] revenue, leaving little to no ‘profit’ to be
distributed to Olive as income for her 49 [percent] share. The creation and
existence of Offield Ventures and Offield Management was a sham
transaction, given Duffy’s completely incongruous conduct thereafter.”
      The trial court’s analysis included a detailed discussion of Olive’s
physical and cognitive problems, particularly in the last two years of her life,
describing how “Olive’s mental and physical health w[ere] diminishing” and
she “was now utterly dependent upon Duffy to take care of her and her needs
and finances.” And the court concluded, Duffy “exercised undue influence
upon his mother” regarding the inter vivos transfer of the Offield Building
“facilitated by her diminished cognitive ability, advanced age, failing health,
and her faith and trust in her son.” Noting what it called Duffy’s “rampant
and escalating plunder of Olive’s assets—especially the bank accounts and
brokerage account”—the court concluded with this: “[n]ot content to take the
key assets of the estate, namely the Offield Building, Duffy diverted Olive’s
existing funds to his own benefit (and her financial detriment), and thereby
also depleting those assets that Olive intended to be inherited by her three
daughters as their share of the estate.”

                                         18
      The trial court also found that “Duffy started writing checks from his
mother’s bank account to himself.”11 As the court put it: “What resulted was
the absurd farce of Duffy taking money from Olive’s personal bank accounts
and Olive’s income, and using those funds to pay Olive the money that Duffy
owed her on the promissory notes. To repeat: Duffy took Olive’s money and
used Olive’s money to pay debts he owed to Olive.”
      The trial court also discussed Duffy’s creation of a secret joint bank
account through which he “siphon[ed] off Olive’s money from other accounts
and place[d] it under the control of Duffy in secret.” The specifics of this were
that in April 2007 Duffy opened a joint checking account with Olive under a
number ending in 1323. But despite its joint nature, Duffy was the only
signator on the account and received statements at his home address—
despite that the checks had only Olive’s name and address. The checks in
account 1323 looked exactly like the ones from Olive’s longstanding personal
checking account (ending in 1669) with the same bank. This allowed Duffy to
drain Olive’s 1669 account by writing checks to Olive from that account, and
then endorsing and depositing them in the 1323 account, a scheme, for
example, that allowed Duffy to siphon $87,000 from the 1669 account in
2008. Duffy also deposited Olive’s social security benefits into the 1323
account.
      The trial court also discussed transactions through which “Duffy had
Olive deplete the [UBS] investment account—which was for the inheritance
of his sisters—for his benefit.” The court also explained how Duffy took
money from Olive’s personal and Bypass Trust accounts, transferred the

      11 Though Duffy and his spouse had some income from other sources,

the court noted “they relied predominantly upon getting money from Olive,”
with Duffy’s monthly deposits from 2004 to 2007 averaging $10,000 and in
2008 increasing to $25,000.

                                       19
funds to the Offield Ventures account, and then used it “to enhance the value
of the building that was his sole inheritance” and to pay himself “draws.”
The trial court criticized Duffy’s management fees despite his “basically non-
existen[t] ‘management’ of the Offield Building.” And it found Duffy had
“converted” “$200,000 of Olive’s personal funds” “into a loan to Martha
Company, being of no benefit to Olive at all,” and also “taking liquid assets
which would never be inherited by Duffy (because they would all go to his
sisters under the terms of the Third Amendment) and using them for his
long-term benefit (as shareholder in Martha Company).” And as to all this,
the court found, “Olive did not exercise knowing and independent control over
her bank accounts and disbursement of funds”—including the alleged
“delegation to Duffy to receive and give to Olive all of the rent revenue from
the Offield Building.”
      The trial court not only found that these transactions were the result of
Duffy’s undue influence, but also found Duffy liable for financial elder abuse
under Welfare and Institutions Code sections 15600 et seq. Nancy had
proven by clear and convincing evidence that (1) Duffy committed bad faith
financial abuse against Olive by fraudulently taking her “non-real estate
assets such as cash and investments” and (2) “Olive was substantially unable
to manage her financial resources or to resist undue influence at the time of
these acts until her death.”
      Proceedings After the Final Statement of Decision
      As indicated above, the trial court set numerous post-trial hearings.
Several briefs addressing various issues followed, including as to calculation
of damages and interest, and also on Duffy’s belated claim that he was
entitled to a credit under Code of Civil Procedure section 877 for the
settlement with Carr McClellan. Following several additional submissions

                                      20
regarding the calculation of damages and other issues, on December 31, 2019,
the court issued its judgment.
      Nancy moved for a new trial, and Duffy for a new trial, for vacatur of
the judgment and entry of a different judgment, and to correct clerical errors.
In March 2020, the trial court denied Duffy’s motions. As to Nancy’s motion,
in lieu of granting a new trial, the court vacated and set aside (1) the
judgment and (2) the portion of the final statement of decision that declined
to award double damages under Probate Code section 859.
      Duffy filed a notice of appeal, and Nancy a notice of cross-appeal.
      In July 2020, the trial court issued amendments to final statement of
decision and amendments to decision on judgment calculations.
      Nancy moved for $2,996,840 in attorney fees, seeking fees incurred
from early 2013 forward, asserting that the settlement with Carr McClellan
had been applied to cover her fees before that time. The trial court
ultimately awarded Nancy $640,890 in fees.
                                 DISCUSSION
                             DUFFY’S APPEAL
      Duffy Demonstrates No Error in the Trial Court Imposing a
      Presumption of Undue Influence as to the Inter Vivos Sale of
      the Interests in the Offield Building.
      The final statement of decision held that Duffy’s inter vivos acquisition
of the Offield Building resulted from his undue influence. Doing so, the trial
court first held that “under the circumstances, Duffy has the burden of
overcoming the presumption of undue influence over Olive’s sale of her
interests (directly or through her trusts) in the Offield Building,” a burden
shifted to Duffy because he had a confidential and fiduciary relationship with
Olive, and the transfer of Olive’s 49 percent interest to Offield Ventures was
made for inadequate consideration.

                                       21
      Duffy’s first argument is that the trial court erred in imposing on him a
presumption of undue influence, asserting that the trial court did not follow
the law set forth in the case it relied on, Estate of Young (2008)
160 Cal.App.4th 62, 79 (Young), specifically that the court disregarded
Young’s requirements that such inter vivos transaction must be “without
consideration” and without “independent advice.”
      We reject the argument. Before discussing why, we begin with the law
of undue influence.
      Undue influence is defined by both statute and common law. As to the
former, section 86 of the Probate Code defines it as “excessive persuasion that
causes another person to act or refrain from acting by overcoming that
person’s free will and results in inequity.” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 15610.70,
subd. (a) [same].) In determining whether a result was produced by undue
influence, a court must consider the vulnerability of the victim, the
influencer’s apparent authority, the actions or tactics used by the influencer,
and the equity of the result. (Ibid.; Prob. Code, § 86.) The statutory
framework is intended to “supplement the common law meaning of undue
influence without superseding or interfering with the operation of that law.”
(Prob. Code, § 86.)
      Under the common law, undue influence is described as “pressure
brought to bear directly on the testamentary act, sufficient to overcome the
testator’s free will, amounting in effect to coercion destroying the testator’s
free agency.” (Rice v. Clark (2002) 28 Cal.4th 89, 96; accord In re Estate of
Stoddart (1917) 174 Cal. 606, 612.) As the leading commentary describes it,
citing numerous cases: “Undue influence may be proved by showing: (a) the
existence of a confidential relationship between the testator and the
individual alleged to have unduly influenced the testator; (b) a propensity on

                                       22
the testator’s part—whether by reason of old age, mental infirmity or
otherwise—to have their free will usurped by the individual exercising undue
influence; and (c) the execution of a testamentary document ‘unduly
benefitting’ the person alleged to have influenced the testator. [Citations.]”
(Ross et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Probate (The Rutter Group 2023)
¶ 15:153.)12
      In certain situations a presumption of undue influence can arise, which
situations include when that parties are in a confidential relationship or the
beneficiary of the transaction is a close personal relative. “ ‘[A] confidential
relationship exists when one party gains the confidence of the other and
purports to act with the other’s interest in mind; it may exist although there
is no fiduciary relationship; it is particularly likely to exist when there is a
family relationship or one of friendship.’ ” (Estate of Sanders (1985)
40 Cal.3d 607, 615.) If the presumption applies, the person against whom it
runs must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the transaction was
freely made, without the exertion of undue influence. (Bernard v. Foley
(2006) 39 Cal.4th 794, 800; Estate of Graves (1927) 202 Cal. 258, 262−263.)
      In Estate of Stephens, supra, 28 Cal.4th 665, cited in Young, our
Supreme Court set out the law of undue influence in an inter vivos situation:
“In an undue influence case, for example, ‘[w]here the relationship between
the parties is that of parent and child and the parent relies on the child for
advice in business matters, a gift inter vivos . . . which is without
consideration and where the parent does not have independent advice, is

      12 While most of the cases and authorities talk in terms of
testamentary acts, undue influence can exist in inter vivos transactions as
well. (See Estate of Stephens (2002) 28 Cal.4th 665, 676; Young, supra,
160 Cal.App.4th at p. 79.)

                                        23
presumed to be fraudulent and to have been made under undue influence.’
[Citation.] The burden of proof then shifts to the child ‘to show that the
transaction was free from fraud and undue influence, and in all particulars
fair.’ [Citation.] Put differently, this presumption may be rebutted by
‘evidence that the act in question had its genesis in the mind of the parent
and that he was not goaded to a completion by any act of such child.’
[Citation.]” (Estate of Stephens, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 677.)
      Duffy argues that the trial court ignored the “without consideration
and where the parent does not have independent advice.” He is wrong on
both counts.
      At several places in the statement of decision the trial court referred to
“consideration,” but only in a way indicating it was inadequate. As indeed it
was. For example, Duffy asserts that he made down payments and executed
promissory notes to Olive in order to acquire 51 percent of the Offield
Building, and that he never missed a loan payment. But this ignores that
Olive transferred her remaining 49 percent interest to Offield Ventures—
thus giving him 100 percent control of the Offield Building—for no
consideration. He also ignores the fact that he paid Olive only a fraction of
the rents to which she was entitled for her transfer of the 49 percent interest.
And Duffy’s claim about never missing a loan payment is, in the words of the
trial court, “an absurd farce,” because he used Olive’s money to make those
payments—a fact Duffy does not dispute on appeal.
      Duffy also contends the trial court ignored evidence of Carr McClellan’s
involvement in the inter vivos transfer. He argues this was error because
“when independent legal advice is provided, the likelihood of undue influence
is decreased as the transferor is informed of the legal consequences of their

                                       24
actions.” Maybe so, if the advice is truly independent, which is hardly the
situation here.
       As noted, Carr McClellan had at best a conflict-of-interest, as Mr.
Anderson himself recognized, obtaining a waiver. Put otherwise, the firm’s
“advice” was hardly for Olive’s benefit, as perhaps best demonstrated by the
fact that Carr McClellan reimbursed over $41,000 in fees it had charged for
its services.
       Further, and as the trial court observed, the “transaction and
multitude of paperwork” involved with the inter vivos transfer was
“complicated and confusing—such that it would be difficult for Olive to
understand.” And specifically referencing the transcript of the October 4,
2007 meeting, the court found “there is no substantive indication that Olive
knew or understood anything about a proposal to sell the Offield Building to
Duffy right now and during Olive’s lifetime.” Indeed, as Mr. Anderson
himself wrote, Olive was “really unsophisticated and understands virtually
nothing of what we send to her.” So much for “independent legal advice.”
       Duffy points to the finding that Olive understood an unequal
distribution of the estate would result from her changes to the estate plan.
But the trial court made that finding in upholding the Third Amendment. It
has no bearing on whether Olive understood the inter vivos transfer, in
regard to which the trial court found that “Olive didn’t understand[] any of
it.”
       But even if the trial court erred in shifting the burden of proof to Duffy,
any error was harmless. “[A]rticle VI, section 13 [of the California
Constitution] generally ‘prohibits a reviewing court from setting aside a
judgment due to trial court error unless it finds the error prejudicial.’ ”
(People v. Chun (2009) 45 Cal.4th 1172, 1201; accord, TriCoast Builders,

                                        25
Inc. v. Fonnegra (2024) 15 Cal.5th 766, 786; F.P. v. Monier (2017) 3 Cal.5th
1099, 1108.) This rule of prejudicial error applies when the error claimed is a
misallocation of the burden of proof. (In re Marriage of Burkle (2006)
139 Cal.App.4th 712, 738 [“error in allocating the burden of proof must be
prejudicial in order to constitute reversible error”].)
      Duffy bears the burden of showing such prejudice (Citizens for Open
Government v. City of Lodi (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 296, 308), a burden that
requires him to show “it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable
to [him] would have been reached in the absence of the error.” (Cassim v.
Allstate Ins. Co. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 780, 800.) This, he has not done, as the
evidence was overwhelming that, in the court’s words, Duffy “exercised undue
influence over Olive Offield in regard to the transfer of [her] assets of the
Trusts and of her personally during her lifetime, facilitated by her
diminished cognitive ability, advanced age, failing health, and her faith and
trust in her son.” At the time of the inter vivos transfer, Olive was 91 years
old and in failing health. She had been hospitalized on numerous occasions
for dizziness, confusion, and disorientation, and on numerous occasions, over
several years, diagnosed by her doctors as suffering from cognitive
impairment.
      At the same time—and as Duffy admits—he shared a confidential
relationship with Olive managing her financial affairs and the Offield
Building on Olive’s behalf while she owned it. Moreover, Duffy misused Carr
McClellan, whom he repeatedly called—sometimes with Olive, mostly
without—to discuss the transactions, and to set up meetings with them. And
as the transcript of the October 4, 2007 meeting shows, Olive lacked
understanding of the inter vivos transfer, not in its broad terms, let alone its
intricacies.

                                        26
      Were all that not enough, Duffy’s conduct after the inter vivos transfer
reinforces that it was, in the trial court’s words, a “sham.” Even though Olive
was a 49 percent minority partner in Offield Ventures, Duffy admittedly
never distributed any revenue from the Offield Building through Offield
Ventures. Instead, Duffy pocketed the rent and only sporadically wrote Olive
checks that fell well short of what she was owed. On top of that, Duffy
siphoned Olive’s cash and checking accounts into his own personal accounts,
and used her funds to pay back the loans he took from her.
      Duffy Demonstrates No Error on Damages or Interest
      Duffy’s second argument is that the trial court erred in calculating
damages and prejudgment interest, an argument that includes four sub-
parts: (1) ordering him to pay $150,000 he never received; (2) that in
“unwinding” his purchase of the fractional shares of the Offield Building,
failing to restore the parties to their positions prior to the transactions; (3)
failing to give him credits to which he was entitled; and (4) calculating
prejudgment interest.
      By way of brief background, the trial court rescinded the March 2008
sale of the Offield Building and the transfer of assets to Offield Ventures and
Offield Management, and as a result ordered the distribution of the Offield
Building as an asset of both the Survivor’s Trust and Bypass Trusts to
proceed “as though no sale or transfer” of their respective interests occurred.
This meant the Survivor’s Trust was entitled to 84.23 percent of the rent and
other revenue from 2008 forward, the Bypass Trust entitled to 15.77 percent,
and all debt on the Offield Building allocated 100 percent to Duffy. The trial
court also ordered Duffy to pay restitution for seven items: (a) the fair value
of his office rent, (b) his car purchase, (c) monetary draws starting April 1,
2008, (d) funds Olive transferred to Offield Ventures, (e) funds taken from

                                        27
Olive’s bank accounts via cash or checks to Duffy, (f) checks made out to Olive
but deposited in the joint account, and (g) gift distributions to Duffy from the
UBS account in 2009. The trial court made clear that the effect of its ruling
was to restore the parties to their respective positions as if the Third
Amendment was valid, but the inter vivos transfer of the Offield Building to
Duffy was not.
      The first three sub-parts in Duffy’s arguments are connected,
essentially contending that the trial court’s rescission award was error, as it
did not completely restore him to the position he otherwise would have
enjoyed had he not obtained the Offield Building from Olive. As he describes
the argument in his reply brief: “[t]he fundamental problem with the court’s
erroneous approach, is that it failed to follow the mandates governing
rescission remedies, where the party who paid money for property receives
that money back, and the party that sold property for money receives the
property back. Although the court claims the payments Duffy made on the
S[urvivor’s] T[rust] and B[ypass] T[rust] notes from the date of the purchase
through the appointment of the interim trustee were from Olive’s bank
accounts or rent he improperly took for personal use, that claim has no
bearing on how a rescission remedy must be implemented.”
      The argument reflects a misunderstanding of the law of rescission.
      Runyan v. Pacific Air Industries, Inc. (1970) 2 Cal.3d 304 (Runyan) has
an exhaustive discussion of the law of rescission, including its development
since 1961 changes in the Civil Code (Runyan, at pp. 310−311), and the
numerous cases applying the law, and went on to affirm a judgment
determining that a contract had been rescinded and ordering restitution and
consequential damages. Doing so, the Supreme Court said this: “The
fundamental principle underlying these decisions and the awards which they

                                       28
upheld is that ‘in such actions the court should do complete equity between
the parties’ and to that end ‘may grant any monetary relief necessary’ to do
so. (Stewart v. Crowley [(1931)] 213 Cal. 694, 701.) It is the purpose of
rescission ‘to restore both parties to their former position as far as possible’
(Bank of America v. Greenbach [(1950)] 98 Cal.App.2d 220, 238, citing 3
Pomeroy, Equity Jurisdiction (5th ed.) 578) and ‘to bring about substantial
justice by adjusting the equities between the parties’ despite the fact that ‘the
status quo cannot be exactly reproduced.’ (Lobdell v. Miller [(1952)]
114 Cal.App.2d 328, 344; see also Utemark v. Samuel [1953] 118 Cal.App.2d
313, 317.) As the court said in Greenbach ‘concurrent with the award of
rescission, the trial court may award money damages or order such other
relief as justice may require.’ (98 Cal.App.2d at p. 238.)” (Runyan, supra,
2 Cal.3d at p. 316.)
      Although the purpose of rescission “is to restore both parties to their
former position as far as possible,” exactitude is not required. Rather, courts
should “bring about substantial justice by adjusting the equities between the
parties despite the fact that the status quo cannot be exactly reproduced.”
(Lobdell v. Miller, supra, 225 Cal.App.2d at p. 344 [“No matter what may be
the complications or complexities, the powers of a court of equity are so broad
as to adequately meet the exigencies of the case and render a decree which
will justly determine the rights of the respective parties”].)
      Particularly apt here is the rule we applied over 60 years ago, in
Farina v. Bevilacqua (1961) 192 Cal.App.2d 681, 685 (Farina), where we
observed that when rescission results from the defendant’s misconduct,
courts “ ‘are not so much concerned with decreeing that defendant receive
back the identical property with which he parted . . . as they are in declaring
that his nefarious practices shall result in no damage to the plaintiff.’

                                        29
[Citation.]” In sum and in short, “ ‘ “concurrent with the award of rescission,
the trial court may award money damages or order such other relief as justice
may require.” ’ ” (Neptune Society Corp. v. Longanecker (1987)
194 Cal.App.3d 1233, 1246, quoting Runyan, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 316; see
Civ. Code, § 1692.)
      Duffy asserts that the standard of review on this claim is substantial
evidence. Duffy is wrong. Rescission is an exercise of the trial court’s
equitable powers, and thus our review is abuse of discretion, as we recently
confirmed in Husain v. California Pacific Bank (2021) 61 Cal.App.5th 717,
727 to 728 where, quoting our Division Four colleagues in Richardson v.
Franc (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 744, 751, we said: “ ‘After the trial court has
exercised its equitable powers, the appellate court reviews the judgment
under the abuse of discretion standard. [Citation.] “Under that standard, we
resolve all evidentiary conflicts in favor of the judgment and determine
whether the trial court’s decision ‘ “falls within the permissible range of
options set by the legal criteria.” ’ ” ’ ”
      As to what is required for Duffy to show an abuse of discretion, it has
been described in terms of a decision that “exceeds the bounds of reason”
(People v. Beames (2007) 40 Cal.4th 907, 920) or one that is “arbitrary,
capricious, patently absurd, or even whimsical.” (Artus v. Gramercy Towers
Condominium Assn. (2022) 76 Cal.App.5th 1043, 1051.) As our Supreme
Court has put it, “[a] ruling that constitutes an abuse of discretion has been
described as one that is ‘so irrational or arbitrary that no reasonable person
could agree with it.’ ” (Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern
California (2012) 55 Cal.4th 747, 773.) That hardly describes the ruling
here—and Duffy has demonstrated no abuse.

                                              30
      The trial court found that before the appointment of the interim
trustee, Duffy used the money he took from Olive to meet his monthly
payment obligations on the promissory notes—and thus forfeited any credit
from those payments. As the court put it: “Duffy is not receiving the return
of any of his monthly payment of principal and interest on the promissory
note, prior to the appointment of the Interim Trustee, as the evidence reflects
that those funds actually came from Duffy’s conversion of Olive’s bank
accounts and/or taking of rent revenue for his personal use (as improper
‘draws’ or ‘fees’). As all of those monthly payments on the note were using
Olive’s money to pay the debt owed Olive, Duffy receives no monetary credit
in the rescission of the transactions (other than his down payment).” Or as
the court reiterated in the judgment: “As stated in the Final Statement of
Decision, none of the payments made by [Duffy] actually came out of his own
pocket and industry—but rather were funds he took that actually belonged to
Olive and the Trusts.”
      Although the court attempted to protect Duffy from double-
reimbursement, it explained that Duffy’s own misconduct made that
impossible, and that he bore the consequences, noting as follows: “Although
the Court has attempted to avoid double-counting, unfortunately the parties
have been unable to agree as to most of the damages calculations, making the
determination conflicting. The problem is caused by [Duffy’s] continuing
pattern of shifting and diverting funds, and creating of multiple bank
accounts to do so—making tracing of funds difficult. Thus any ultimate
duplication of damages is caused by the conduct of [Duffy] and thus the
consequences are borne by him.”
      Duffy contends that his misdeeds should play no role in the rescission
holding, and that he is “being forced to repay the Trusts twice” for the

                                       31
amounts he stole. The first is wrong as a matter of law. (See Arthur v.
Graham (1923) 64 Cal.App. 608, 612 [“as a result of the rescission by the
court, nothing is exacted from the plaintiff out of particular regard for the
condition of the defendant. If his fraudulent acts have resulted in disastrous
financial consequences to himself, it is no one’s fault but his own, and he
must sustain the necessary inconveniences thereby entailed”]; to the same
effect, see Farina, supra, 192 Cal.App.2d at p. 685.)
      The second is wrong as a matter of fact: Duffy cannot “double-pay”
anything when his first “payments” consisted of money that, as the trial court
found, was not his, but money taken from Olive to repay Olive.
      Duffy’s last sub-argument is that in calculating the pre-judgment
interest he owed the Survivor’s Trust, the trial court failed to credit him for
sums over which the Survivor’s Trust held “dominion and control” but that
belonged to Duffy during the prejudgment interest period, specifically for:
(1) his down payment, (2) promissory note payments made before and after
the interim trustee’s appointment, and (3) his claimed share of net rents the
interim trustee has been collecting. Factoring in these sums, Duffy says, the
Survivor’s Trust owes him roughly $272,000 in prejudgment interest.
      “Prejudgment interest . . . is a creation of statute designed to
compensate for the presumed harm caused by the inevitable delays inherent
in litigation. . . . Thus, the purpose of prejudgment interest is to compensate
plaintiff for the loss of use of his or her property.” (Union Pacific Railroad
Co. v. Santa Fe Pacific Pipelines, Inc. (2014) 231 Cal.App.4th 134, 198,
internal quotations and citation omitted.) That said, “if, during any
prejudgment period, a party has dominion and control over money that is
awarded to it as damages, it is not entitled to prejudgment interest for that

                                       32
period.” (Greg Opinski Construction, Inc. v. City of Oakdale (2011)
199 Cal.App.4th 1107, 1119.)
      Duffy’s argument fails because his payments are not “money awarded
to” the Survivor’s Trust as damages. On the contrary, except for the note
payments Duffy made before the interim trustee was appointed, Duffy will be
receiving those amounts back under the rescission award. So, what Duffy
really argues is he is entitled to prejudgment interest on amounts paid to the
Survivor’s Trust that will be returned to him, a view that turns the
prejudgment interest rule on its head.
      Finally on this issue, we note that Duffy fails to mention that the trial
court credited him for the amounts he claims. The parties contested
prejudgment interest on amounts “pertaining to the unwinding of the Offield
Building transactions,” and Duffy sought credit for the same three categories
of funds he attacks on appeal. The court declined to award prejudgment
interest on any amounts arising from rescission, finding it was “a wash”—i.e.,
it was “not awarding prejudgment interest on these calculations which offset
each other.”
      The Award of Statutory Damages Under Probate Code Section
      859 Was Not Error
      Duffy’s third argument is that the trial court erred in awarding
statutory damages pursuant to Probate Code section 859, which provides in
relevant part as follows: “If a court finds that a person has in bad faith
wrongfully taken, concealed, or disposed of property belonging to . . . an elder,
a dependent adult, a trust, or the estate of a decedent, or has taken,
concealed, or disposed of the property by the use of undue influence in bad
faith or through the commission of elder or dependent adult financial abuse,
as defined in Section 15610.30 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, the

                                       33
person shall be liable for twice the value of the property recovered by an
action under this part.”13
      The trial court found that “certain aspects” of Duffy’s misconduct
during the inter vivos transfer of the Offield Building were so “egregious” as
to constitute “bad faith” and that he was liable for double the amount of
property he had taken. The trial court explained that Duffy “used undue
influence to obtain 15.77 percent ownership of the Offield Building from the
Bypass Trust, including but not limited to, structuring transactions to ‘buy’
the property for far less than fair market value to an uncreditworthy
purchaser.” And the court continued, “The promissory note held by the
Bypass Trust was basically non-collectible” due to Duffy’s poor finances and
“the transfer of the 15.77 percent ownership interest to a sham limited
partnership.” “In addition,” he “purloined” the net rents “that should have
gone to the Bypass Trust” and by extension to Olive for use during her life
and then to Duffy’s siblings as Bypass Trust beneficiaries. All this, the court
found, was “egregious and in bad faith.”
      The court determined the Bypass Trust’s ownership interest was
$822,011, or 15.77 percent of the appraised value of the Offield Building; that
Trust also was deprived of $135,556 in lost rents. However, Duffy was
entitled to offset his own down payment and any payments he made on the
promissory note after the interim trustee was appointed. All told, the
statutory penalty for Duffy’s bad faith against the Bypass Trust was
$1,259,774.

      13 From 2008, when Duffy acquired the Offield Building, to 2020, when

the trial court analyzed the statute, Probate Code section 859 was amended
twice, in 2011 and 2013. The trial court held the 2013 version governed, but
the result would be the same even if the 2008 version controlled.

                                      34
      With regard to the Survivor’s Trust, the trial court explained that but
for the improper inter vivos transfer, “Olive, as the life beneficiary of the
Survivor’s Trust, would have received 84.23 percent of the net rent from
leasing of the Offield Building,” which would have been her “only source of
income” at the time. Moreover, even after the initial 2007 sale of the
Survivor’s Trust’s 35.23 percent interest, “Olive was still entitled to 49
percent of the rents—but [Duffy] had that ownership interest transferred
away for zero consideration to his sham limited partnership.” Thus,
“[c]ommencing April 1, 2008, until her death in July 2009, basically Olive
(and the Survivor’s Trust) received no rental income. This is egregious and in
bad faith.”
      The court ruled Duffy’s bad faith conduct prevented Olive (and thus the
Survivor’s Trust) from recovering her 49 percent share of rents from
April 2008 to July 2009, specifically $298,119. However, the court also found
Duffy was entitled to offset the $280,000 down payment he made to acquire
the Survivor’s Trust ownership, leaving a difference of $18,119. The
statutory penalty for Duffy’s bad faith against the Survivor’s Trust was
therefore double the difference—$36,238.
      Duffy does not contest the finding that his misconduct constituted bad
faith. Rather, his argument is addressed to the court’s calculation of the
penalty, going so far as to say he does not owe anything to the Survivor’s
Trust.
      Duffy first claims that the trial court should have valued the Bypass
Trust’s 15.77 percent ownership interest based on what it would have sold for
at the time of Olive’s death, rather than its appraised value; that such
interest would have sold for far less than its appraised value because the
interest was fractional; and that the “value” of this property interest he

                                        35
converted—i.e., the amount that should be doubled under Probate Code
section 859—should be less.
      The trial court’s valuation was fully supported. It found that evidence
showing the fractional value of the Offield Building was generated to assess
tax consequences of selling that Building. These fractional values were
“artificially lower” because the leases of building spaces were below market
rates due to Duffy’s mismanagement and the prohibition against selling any
interest in the building outside the family. In short, the fractional value was
a way to allow Duffy to purchase his interests in the Offield Building for “less
than fair market value.”
      According to the trial court, the better approach to assess the penalty
was to examine the appraised value at Olive’s death, at which point the
Bypass Trust’s interest would be distributed to the four Offield children
without regard to the tax consequences of a sale or related discounts for
fractional values. This decision reflects a reasoned attempt to calculate the
Offield Building’s value based on what would likely have happened when
Olive died, which was simply a testamentary distribution to the Offield
children. In sum, apart from arguing for the method he wanted, Duffy never
explains why the trial court’s method was wrong.
      Duffy also contends the trial court should have reduced its valuation by
the amount of unpaid principal on his promissory note. But Duffy did not
raise this argument below, and we consider it waived. (Doers v. Golden Gate
Bridge, Highway and Transportation District (1979) 23 Cal.3d 180, 184,
fn. 1.) It also has no merit.
      To award the penalty under Probate Code section 859, the trial court
needed to value the Offield Building and the Bypass Trust’s interest. Duffy
received a credit for his down payment on the purchase of that interest,

                                       36
because the down payment came out of his pocket and added value to the
property. But the unpaid balance of the promissory note—i.e., the remaining
amount of Duffy’s debt accrued after his down payment—has no bearing on
the value of what Duffy took as far as Probate Code section 859 is concerned.
Again, Duffy does not explain why the amount he financed should lower the
value of the Bypass Trust’s interest, particularly since he borrowed the
money from Olive. His only “explanation” is to say “[t]he value of the
promissory note should have been offset.” That is insufficient.14
      Finally on this issue, Duffy claims the trial court also should have
credited payments he made on the note before appointment of the interim
trustee. But the appraised value of the property remains the same regardless
of whether Duffy made note payments. Furthermore, the court found that
before the appointment of the interim trustee, Duffy used the money from
Olive to meet his monthly payment obligations on the notes and thus
forfeited any credit resulting from those payments. The trial court’s refusal
to credit Duffy for pre-interim trustee loan payments ensured that he did not
profit from his misdeeds.

      14 Duffy also asserts that the note’s unpaid balance of the note is not in

the record and asks us to calculate that amount based on a formula he
obtained from www.wikihow.com. We decline the invitation. (See
Bombardier Recreation Prods. Inc. v. Dow Chem. Can. ULC (2013)
216 Cal.App.4th 591, 605 [appellate courts make factual findings only in
“exceptional circumstances”].) Indeed, our declination is particularly apt
here, where Duffy had the chance to obtain the finding from the trial court
but failed to do so. (See ibid. [refusing to engage in fact-finding where
requesting party “failed to bring the facts to the trial court’s attention in the
first instance”].)

                                        37
      Refusing Code of Civil Procedure Section 877 Credits to Duffy
      Was Not Error
      Code of Civil Procedure section 877 provides in pertinent part as
follows: “Where a release, dismissal with or without prejudice, or a covenant
not to sue or not to enforce judgment is given in good faith before verdict or
judgment to one or more of a number of tortfeasors claimed to be liable for the
same tort, or to one or more other co-obligors mutually subject to contribution
rights, it shall have the following effect:
      “(a) It shall not discharge any other such party from liability unless its
terms so provide, but it shall reduce the claims against the others in the
amount stipulated by the release, the dismissal or the covenant, or in the
amount of the consideration paid for it, whichever is the greater. . . .” (Italics
added.)
      Duffy’s last argument is that the trial court erred in refusing to credit
him for the $2+ million settlement payment by Carr McClellan.
      Duffy asserts we review the decision de novo, citing to Wade v.
Schrader (2008) 168 Cal.App.4th 1039, 1044 (Schrader). But as Schrader
itself acknowledges—indeed, on that very page—“[w]e generally review a
ruling granting or denying a [Code of Civil Procedure] section 877 settlement
credit under the deferential abuse of discretion standard.”15 Again, Duffy has
shown no abuse.
      The trial court decided against Duffy on this issue partly because his
claim for credit was “procedurally improper.” As it was. The Carr McClellan
settlement occurred in December 2012; trial testimony ended in October

      15 Going on to note that “[t]o the extent that we must decide whether

the trial court’s ruling was consistent with statutory requirements, we apply
the independent standard of review. [Citation.]” (Schrader, supra,
168 Cal.App.4th at p. 1044.)

                                        38
2013; and Duffy requested a statement of decision that did not raise the
credit issue. In August 2015, the court issued its amended proposed
statement of decision; Duffy objected to it, but did not raise the credit issue.
The court issued its final statement of decision in 2018, after which the
parties exchanged proposed judgments; Duffy’s proposed judgment did not
raise the credit issue. In fact, Duffy raised the credit issue for the first time
in February 2019, in briefs discussing final judgment calculations—and even
then, he did not provide the settlement agreement so the court could evaluate
whether credit was appropriate. Given all that, the trial court did not abuse
its discretion in ruling Duffy’s setoff request was procedurally improper.
      But not only was Duffy’s request late, it would fail for other reasons,
including that Duffy has not demonstrated the requirements of Code of Civil
Procedure section 877: that the release was “given in good faith” to “one or
more of a number of tortfeasors claimed to be liable for the same tort.”
      As noted, there was no good faith determination. And he and Carr
McClellan were not “a number of tortfeasors claimed to be liable for the same
tort.” Among other things Duffy was found liable for financial elder abuse,
based on the various, and numerous, instances of misconduct discussed
above. Carr McClellan’s involvement, on the other hand, was described this
way in the papers seeking to hold it responsible: “The Attorney Respondents
had an attorney-client relationship with Olive Offield but gave her
misinformation about the effects of the estate plan they created and failed to
disclose material information to her. Notwithstanding that they were her
attorneys, the Attorney Respondents represented interests adverse to hers,
failed to meet privately with her and instead accepted Duffy’s statements
about her testamentary intent and advised, encouraged and created a one-

                                        39
sided transaction favoring Duffy and ignoring the stated intentions of their
nonagenarian client.”16
      Finally there is the settlement itself, which compensated Nancy for a
portion of the attorney’s fees she incurred in the action, and the trial court
awarded a non-duplicative additional portion.
                          NANCY’S CROSS-APPEAL
      Upholding the Third Amendment Was Not Error
      Nancy’s cross-appeal has three arguments, the first two of which
address the trial court’s decision upholding the Third Amendment to the
Survivor’s Trust. The first argument is that the court erred in using the
wrong legal standard. As Nancy’s brief puts it, the trial court misconstrued
“the law regarding undue influence in two ways. First, the court erroneously
believed the standard for undue influence was the same as for testamentary
capacity, and thus it erroneously boiled down its analysis of these two
distinct issues to whether Olive was competent to execute the Third
Amendment.” Nancy’s second argument is that the court erred in equating
the mistake of fact issue with the “other distinct undue influence grounds for
invalidating the Third Amendment.” Neither argument is persuasive.
      The Third Amendment was, the trial court concluded, “not the result of
undue influence.” This conclusion followed the trial court’s lengthy
discussion of how the Third Amendment came to be; a four-page exposition of
the law of testamentary capacity; and the court’s finding that Olive had
testamentary capacity at the time she executed the Third Amendment. The

      16 Oliveira v. Kiesler (2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 1349, the case cited by

Duffy as having facts “almost identical” to this case, is distinguishable. As
Duffy’s own discussion of the case reveals, after the wrongdoing plan was
hatched, one of the wrongdoing stepsons hired “the Attorney Defendants to
further his plan.” That is not the situation here.

                                       40
conclusion that the Third Amendment was not the result of undue influence
was followed by this discussion:
      “As set forth above, the Court finds that the evidence demonstrates
that Olive knowingly made the decision—even though done at the suggestion
of Duffy—to give her existing ownership interest, via the Survivor’s Trust, in
the Offield Building to Duffy for distribution after her death. She was willing
to accommodate the desire of her son to have all of his share of the
anticipated estate distribution be in one asset, rather than [one-quarter] of
all the various assets. This general concept had been discussed between
Olive, Duffy and Martha for years prior to the Third Amendment. Further,
Olive was willing to give Duffy a ‘leg up’ to effectuate a plan for Duffy to buy
out his sisters as to their interests in the Offield Building that they would
inherit through the Bypass Trust—all to occur after Olive’s death.”
      The trial court went on to cite evidence in support of the above,
including testimony from caregiver Edith Mena, who testified that Olive told
her, “I am leaving the building to Duffy because he always takes care of it,”
the court expressly noting the “future tense” of the statement. The trial court
also cited at length the testimony of Carr McClellan attorney Laurelle
Gutierrez, who met with Olive “alone on December 20, 2007” to sign the
Third Amendment. Ms. Gutierrez and Olive discussed that the Offield
Building would go to Duffy, and that if he were to die it would then go to his
children. They discussed the changes made to the Trust and Will, and Olive
told Ms. Gutierrez she was concerned about the possibility of a challenge by
an unhappy beneficiary. Ms. Gutierrez assured Olive there was now a
“lengthy ‘no contest’ clause,” and Olive seemed more at ease. They then
discussed the downtown Burlingame improvements being made by the City,

                                       41
and Olive said that she wanted the Offield Building to go to Duffy, and she
knew he would be sure the bakery would stay as a tenant.
      The trial court then summed up: “Olive and Gutierrez specifically
discussed that the Offield Building would go to Duffy upon her death, and the
three daughters would receive all of the stock/investments and the Offield
Residence. Gutierrez told Olive that the assets might change in value over
time, prior to her death, so the division of the assets might be unequal
between her son and her daughters upon Olive’s death. Olive acknowledged
that there would be an unequal distribution under the Third Amendment.
Olive signed the Third Amendment and the new Will with the notary
present.”
      Following all that, the trial court made two other observations:
      (1) “To the extent that the Petition also contested the Third
Amendment on the grounds of ‘mistake’ of understanding by Olive, that basis
is also rejected on the same factual grounds”;
      (2) “The Court finds that Nancy did not prove, by clear and convincing
evidence, undue influence as to the Third Amendment or the 2007 Will.
Alternatively, regardless of who had the burden of proof on this issue, the
conclusion by the Court would be the same, as the preponderance of the
evidence shows that Olive knew and understood the nature and substance of
the change in post-death distribution she was effectuating by the Third
Amendment and the 2007 Will.”
      Nancy’s first argument asserts, as her brief puts it, the “court
erroneously believed the standard for undue influence was the same as for
testamentary capacity.” Nancy does not contend there is no substantial
evidence supporting the court’s finding that Olive “knew and understood her
actions” with respect to the issue of testamentary capacity. Nancy also

                                       42
acknowledges this finding “bears on the undue influence analysis,” but
argues it does not mean no undue influence occurred, asserting rather the
court’s decision should be reversed because it failed to adequately consider
other “indicia” of undue influence that she claims were present. Little need
be said about this claim, other than that is what fact-finders do: accept some
evidence and reject other evidence.
      To the extent Nancy argues that the trial court had to shift the burden
to Duffy to overcome the presumption of undue influence, a complete answer
is found in the trial court’s holding that there was no inequity or undue
benefit that would support a presumption of undue influence. (See Estate of
Stephens, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 678, citing Camperi v. Chiechi (1955)
134 Cal.App.2d 485, 505.)17
      Finally, if there was error, it was harmless, as the trial court expressly
stated, noting that its decision would be the same “regardless of who had the
burden of proof.”

      17 The court added these two paragraphs:   “The concept reflected in the
Third Amendment is that upon Olive’s death, Duffy would receive the Offield
Building, even if it was more than [one-quarter] share of the estate, and the
three daughters would receive the house (or proceeds of the house) and all of
the investments. In this fashion, Duffy would have no rights to the other
assets in the Survivor’s Trust (although he would have rights to other assets
through the Bypass Trust) and instead shift his distribution to be the Offield
Building.
      “Although not 100 [percent] equal between the four siblings, at the time
back in December 2007, the value of the assets was not overly unbalanced
between the value of the Offield Building versus the value of the Offield
residence, the cash and investments, and the anticipated income from the
rent of the Offield Building (which would potentially increase the amount of
cash and investments.)”

                                       43
      Nancy’s second, and related, argument is that the court erred by failing
to adequately consider her “mistake of fact” claim or to consider it separately
from the undue influence claim. Nancy contends that “Olive signed the Third
Amendment because she erroneously believed Nancy would (1) file a partition
action and bring a stranger into the Offield Building ownership, and (2) raise
rents thus forcing Copenhagen Bakery out,” and that signing the Third
Amendment would prevent these things from happening. She contends “the
court erroneously rejected [her] mistake of fact claim based on its finding that
Olive understood the Third Amendment would give Duffy control over the
Offield Building upon her death.”
      Although the court’s discussion of the “mistake of fact” issue is not as
extensive as its discussion of the undue influence issue, it is clear that the
court considered them separately. As quoted above, following a detailed
discussion of the reasons for, and evidence supporting, its conclusion that the
Third Amendment was not the result of undue influence, the court expressly
concluded that: “To the extent that the Petition also contested the Third
Amendment on the grounds of ‘mistake’ of understanding by Olive, that basis
is also rejected on the same factual grounds.”
      Exonerating Martha Was Not Error
      Nancy’s last argument is that the trial court erred in exonerating
Martha, a brief argument we easily reject.
      We begin with the observation that the argument is based on a
recitation of the record that is in disregard of settled principles of appellate
review, ignoring the rule that the evidence must be viewed most favorably to
Martha, the prevailing party, and in support of the judgment. (Crawford v.
Southern Pacific Co. (1935) 3 Cal.2d 427, 429.) As another leading case
would put it, “ ‘It is well established that a reviewing court starts with the

                                        44
presumption that the record contains evidence to sustain every finding of
fact.’ . . . A recitation of only defendants’ evidence is not the ‘demonstration’
contemplated under the above rule. . . . Accordingly, if, as defendants here
contend, ‘some particular issue of fact is not sustained, they are required to
set forth in their brief all the material evidence on the point and not merely
their own evidence. Unless this is done the error is deemed to be waived.’ ”
(Foreman & Clark Corp. v. Fallon (1971) 3 Cal.3d 875, 881, citations
omitted.) Nancy’s argument can be deemed waived.
      It also has no merit. In exonerating Martha, the trial court set forth its
reasons in detail, including with these three paragraphs:
      “As to any and all claims asserted against Defendant Martha Jane
Zarcone, the Court finds in favor of Martha Jane Zarcone and against
Petitioner. Petitioner Nancy failed to prove her claims against Respondent
Martha by a preponderance of the evidence. The substantive evidence
overwhelmingly reflects that there was no scienter on the part of Martha,
there was no undue influence by Martha, there were no operative acts of [sic]
lies to or concealment from Olive by Martha. She did what she thought was
best for Olive, or proceeded with what she believed, in good faith, to be the
wishes of her mother—Martha acted with a good heart.
      “Martha achieved no benefit for herself, and did not wrongfully take or
transfer any assets of Olive to herself . . . . Martha did not engage in ‘breach
of trust’ as she was not the Trustee at the time of these transactions, nor did
she assert control over the assets of the Trusts or of Olive at the time, and
thus did not purport to conduct herself as a de facto Trustee. . . .
      “The allegations that Martha did not fully explain to or did actively
conceal[] from Olive the financial and economic ramifications of the division
of the trust property by fractional interests, and the valuation of

                                        45
fractionalized property interests by use of discount rates, do not raise any
liability as to Martha. . . . The evidence reflects that Martha didn’t have any
independent understanding of any of those concepts. Instead she was relying
upon the advice of Olive’s attorney, who himself suggested and thereafter
implemented these convoluted transactions, which were designed to address
tax implications.”
      There was no evidence that Martha wrongfully took, transferred, or
received any assets that belonged to Olive. And no evidence that Martha
benefited in any way from the Third Amendment or from the sale of
fractional interests in the Offield Building to Duffy. As quoted, the trial court
described that the evidence “overwhelmingly reflects” in Martha’s favor, who
acted with a “good heart” in a “good faith” belief in her “mother’s wishes.”
Nancy has demonstrated nothing to the contrary.
      On this issue, we close with the observation that the trial court held
that “Nancy failed to prove her claims.” Such conclusion creates a heavy, if
not insurmountable, burden on Nancy here, as set forth, for example in Sonic
Manufacturing Technologies, Inc. v. AAE Systems, Inc. (2011)
196 Cal.App.4th 456, 466: “ ‘[W]here the issue on appeal turns on a failure of
proof at trial, the question for a reviewing court becomes whether the
evidence compels a finding in favor of the appellant as a matter of law.
[Citations.] Specifically, the question becomes whether the appellant’s
evidence was (1) “uncontradicted and unimpeached” and (2) “of such a
character and weight as to leave no room for a judicial determination that it
was insufficient to support a finding.” ’ (In re I.W. (2009) 180 Cal.App.4th
1517, 1527−1528[, disapproved on other grounds in Conservatorship of O.B.
(2020) 9 Cal.5th 989, 1010, fn. 7].)” (Accord, Los Angeles County Dept. of
Children & Family Services v. Superior Court (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 962,

                                       46
967; Fabian v. Renovate America, Inc. (2019) 42 Cal.App.5th 1062, 1067 [“ ‘
“[w]here, as here, the judgment is against the party who has the burden of
proof, it is almost impossible for him to prevail on appeal by arguing the
evidence compels a judgment in his favor” ’ ”].)
      Nancy has not even attempted to make such demonstration.18
                               DISPOSITION
      The judgment is affirmed. The parties are to bear their respective costs
on appeal.

      18 Nancy asserts that she may be entitled to additional attorney fees, an

argument necessarily dependent on her having some success on her cross-
appeal, which she has not.

                                       47
                                     _________________________
                                     Richman, Acting P. J.

We concur:

_________________________
Miller, J.

_________________________
Mayfield, J. *

Nelson v. Offield (A160134)

       *Superior Court of Mendocino County, Judge Cindee Mayfield,
sitting as assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6
of the California Constitution.

                                48