Court Opinion

ID: 9383278
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-30 01:02:35.747221+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:51.466826
License: Public Domain

Filed 3/29/23 Avina v. Avina CA4/1
                 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

                COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION ONE

                                         STATE OF CALIFORNIA

MARIA AVINA,                                                         D080302

         Petitioner and Respondent,

         v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 37-2019-
                                                                     00063638-PR-SP-CTL)
MARCO AVINA et al.,

         Objectors and Appellants.

         APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
Julia Craig Kelety, Judge. Affirmed.
         Southwick Law Firm and Stanley K. Southwick for Objectors and
Appellants.
         Law Office of Dianna Juengst Hunt, Dianna Juengst Hunt; Law Office
of David P. Mayberry and David P. Mayberry for Petitioner and Respondent.

                                               INTRODUCTION

         Maria Avina’s husband, Jesus Enrique Avina, died without a will.
Jesus allegedly left behind his property interest in A & A: Grove Service &
Produce (A & A), a company he and Maria built together during their
marriage.1 After his death, Maria brought a spousal property petition
seeking a determination that her one-half community property interest in
A & A belonged to her, and Jesus’s one-half interest in A & A passed to her as
the surviving spouse.
      Two of the couple’s children, Marco Antonio Avina and Marcial Avina,
objected to Maria’s petition. They asserted the property interest identified by
Maria in her petition did not exist, and that ownership rights in A & A were
the subject of a civil action for declaratory relief they had filed against Maria.
The probate court continued resolution of Maria’s petition for more than two
years awaiting resolution of the civil action and, when the civil action was
dismissed, the probate court granted Maria’s petition. It found that Marco
and Marcial lacked a “probate interest” because Jesus died intestate, and all
interests owned by Jesus that are community property passed to Maria as
the surviving spouse.
      On appeal, Marco and Marcial contend the probate court erred in
deciding the petition without proper notice and an evidentiary hearing. We
conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting Maria’s

petition because Marco and Marcial lacked standing to contest it.2 Because

1      To distinguish the members of the Avina family, we refer to them by
their first names.

2      Because this issue was not raised by either party in the briefing on
appeal, we issued an order requesting the parties submit supplemental letter
briefs addressing the question of whether Marco and Marcial met their
burden in the probate court to establish their standing to object to the
petition under Probate Code section 48. We have received and considered the
parties’ supplemental briefing in deciding this appeal.

                                        2
we affirm on that basis, we do not reach Marco and Marcial’s other
contentions.
               FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

                                        I.
                       Maria’s Spousal Property Petition
      Maria and Jesus were married for 49 years and had five children,
including Marco and Marcial. When they married, they did not own any real
property, and Jesus was employed and had a net worth of approximately
$10,000 or less. Maria and Jesus used “community property monies” to seed
and maintain A & A, during their marriage. They “built the business
together during their marriage, handling the day-to-day operations together,”
and, eventually, they hired “their sons to assist.” At the time A & A was
incorporated, “[Jesus] was the owner of all shares of the corporate stock.”
      Jesus died intestate on August 2, 2019.
      On December 2, 2019, Maria filed a form petition for a determination of

property passing to her as the surviving spouse under Probate Code3 sections

13500 and 13650 (petition).4 Maria requested that Jesus’s “one-half interest

3     Unspecified statutory references are to the Probate Code.

4      Section 13500 provides in relevant part: “[W]hen a spouse dies
intestate leaving property that passes to the surviving spouse under [s]ection
6401, . . . the property passes to the survivor subject to [sections 13540 and
13550], and no administration is necessary.”
       Section 13650 provides: “A surviving spouse . . . may file a petition . . .
requesting an order that administration of all or part of the estate is not
necessary for the reason that all or part of the estate is property passing to
the surviving spouse” and “an order confirming the ownership of the
surviving spouse of property belonging to the surviving spouse under
[s]ection 100 or 101.”

                                        3
in all 200 shares, common stock, in A & A” be determined “as having passed”
to her as the surviving spouse. She also requested the other one-half interest
in the 200 shares of common stock be determined “as having belonged” to her
as the surviving spouse.
                                        II.
                        Marco and Marcial’s Objections
      After being served with the petition and notice of hearing, Marco and
Marcial filed separate form objections on February 20, 2020. They were the
only persons to file objections to Maria’s petition.
      Marco and Marcial stated they were vice president and assistant vice
president of A & A, respectively. Their objections were based first on their
assertion that “[n]o shares of stocks in A & A . . . have ever been issued” and
thus, “[t]he property listed as being passed and/or confirmed to [Maria] does
not exist and has never existed.”
      The second basis for their objections was that there was a pending
action “to determine the ownership rights” of A & A. Before filing their
objections to Maria’s petition, Marco and Marcial filed a civil action against
Maria seeking declaratory relief “to determine the ownership rights” of A & A

in superior court.5
      In a joint case management statement, Marco and Marcial claimed
they were “co-owners and managing partners of A & A.” Referring to the
company as “a California partnership,” they claimed Jesus “was the

     Section 100, subdivision (a), states: “Upon the death of a person who is
married . . . , one-half of the community property belongs to the surviving
spouse and the other one-half belongs to the decedent.”

5    Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, case No. 37-2020-
00008943-CU-MC-NC. This action was filed in February 2020.

                                        4
partnership’s third partner prior to and at the time of his death,” and held
“his one-third interest in the business through his California corporation.”
They filed a second joint case management statement and this time, they
claimed “ownership of the corporation equitably belongs to [Jesus’s] estate
and to [Marco and Marcial] individually in equal parts.” (Italics added.)
                                      III.
           Marco and Marcial’s Civil Action for Declaratory Relief
      As noted, Marco and Marcial asserted “any and all issues involving
[Jesus’s] interest and/or [Maria’s] interest” in A & A were the subject of their
pending action for declaratory relief. They requested that the proceedings on
Maria’s petition “be stayed to allow the civil department to resolve the
dispute over the relative ownership interests in the ongoing partnership
A & A,” and then Maria’s “spousal interest in [Jesus’s] corporation’s interest
can be reduced to a sum certain.”
      Maria demurred twice to her sons’ complaint. Both demurrers were

sustained. In its ruling on the first demurrer,6 the superior court “noted
significant confusion in the allegations as to the nature of the business in
question and the nature of the corporate structure of that business.” The
court granted Marco and Marcial leave to amend, and “extend[ed] a
particularly long time for the parties to explore whatever proper alternatives
may need to be taken[,] i.e. initiating probate proceedings so that the nature

6      Copies of the superior court’s orders on the first and second demurrer
were not included in the record on appeal. The record does contain a copy of
the court’s December 14, 2021 minute order denying Marco and Marcial’s
later-filed motion for relief pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 473,
subdivision (b), in which the court describes in detail the proceedings on the
demurrers. We take our summary of the declaratory relief action from the
December 14, 2021 minute order.

                                       5
of whether [Jesus’s] interest passed to [Maria] can be determined, and so
that, if [Jesus] needs to be named individually in this lawsuit, his Estate will
have a personal representative, etc.” The court also “provided [Marco and
Marcia with] a detailed analysis of why the allegations, and the case in
general, was so unclear (and lacking with regard to the issue of standing).”
(Italics added.) Having done so, the court “advised” them that it “will not be
inclined to continue granting leave to amend if the confusion, and the issues
addressed in both this ruling and the briefing on the demurrer, are repeated
in any amended complaint.” (Italics omitted.)
      Maria demurred again when Marco and Marcial filed their first
amended complaint. But before the hearing on the second demurrer, Marco
and Marcial filed a second amended complaint, without a stipulation or leave
of court, and instead of filing an opposition to the demurrer. The demurrer
remained on calendar, and at the hearing where Marco and Marcial failed to
appear, the superior court struck the second amended complaint “as
improperly filed” and sustained the unopposed demurrer to the first amended
complaint without leave to amend.
      Marco and Marcial then moved for relief from the superior court’s order

of dismissal, under Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b).7 In a
declaration, their lawyer claimed he “was mistaken as to the law” and
believed they were permitted to file the second amended complaint instead of
an opposition to the demurrer.

7     “The court may, upon any terms as may be just, relieve a party or his or
her legal representative from a judgment, dismissal, order, or other
proceeding taken against him or her through his or her mistake,
inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 473,
subd. (b).)

                                       6
         In December 2021, the superior court denied the motion for relief. It
explained that, with its prior “warning . . . , the failure of Plaintiff’s [sic]
counsel to appear at the hearing [after receiving the court’s tentative ruling
explaining its intention to strike the second amended complaint and grant
the unopposed demurrer] and explain his mistake of routine law regarding
filing amended pleadings, presently has no explanation on the record before
[it].”
                                         IV.

                         Proceedings on Maria’s Petition8
         On January 10, 2022, a case management conference and hearing on
the petition were held for the probate court “to check on the status” of Marco
and Marcial’s declaratory relief action.
         Maria’s attorney advised the court that Maria’s demurrer to Marco and
Marcial’s first amended complaint had been sustained without leave to
amend, and the sons’ subsequent motion for relief from the order of dismissal
had also been denied. Marco and Marcial’s attorney responded he believed
the “declaratory relief case was still active because no dismissal or judgment
had yet been entered in it,” and that his clients “were still considering their
options to file an appeal” of the order denying relief under Code of Civil
Procedure section 473, subdivision (b), “as well as other potentially available

8      The parties elected to use a settled statement as the record of the oral
proceedings. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.137(b)(1) [A settled statement is a
condensed narrative of the oral proceedings that the appellant believes
necessary for the appeal.].) We derive our summary of the proceedings from
the settled statement, and limit our summary to the facts relevant to our
disposition of this appeal.

                                          7
remedies.”9 The court believed, “based on her review, the civil matter was
concluded.”
      The court asked Marco and Marcial’s attorney “whether he or his
clients believed . . . whatever interest [Jesus] had in the asset would be a
community property asset.” When counsel answered the question by stating
“the [p]etition was only for 200 shares of common stock in A & A” (italics
omitted), the court explained “[it] was not interested in whether shares of
stock existed or did not exist,” but only “whether [Jesus] had a community
property interest in A & A[.]” So the court repeated the question, “ ‘Are your
clients maintaining that this asset was community or separate?’ ” Marco and
Marcial’s attorney responded, “ ‘If there was an interest, I would say that
it[’]s community.’ ”
      Next, the court asked “whether [Marco or Marcial] agreed that [Jesus]
had an interest in A & A . . . to which Marco . . . replied, ‘Yes.’ ” The court
then confirmed with all parties there was no disagreement that Jesus died
without a will.
      Upon the court’s inquiry, Maria’s attorney confirmed that Maria “was
asserting that one-half of [Jesus’s] interest in the asset belongs to [her] as her
separate property and that the other one-half of [his] interest passes under
the laws of intestate succession to the spouse.”
      The court stated it “was going to grant” the petition “after striking the
words ‘. . . in all 200 shares common stock’ ” from it, which it did by
interlineation from the bench. Counsel for Marco and Marcial “asked the
court whether it was proper at a case management conference to grant such

9    The record on appeal does not reveal that Marco and Marcial have
appealed the order denying relief, or that they pursued any other remedies.

                                         8
relief without at least 15 days notice.” The court responded that Marco and
Marcial had been on notice “that such order could be entered by the [c]ourt
since 2019 when the [p]etition was filed.” (Italics omitted.)
      The court allowed counsel for Marco and Marcial to “make an offer of
proof as to what [they] would be able to establish” that would preclude the
court from granting the petition. Counsel responded that the only property
the petition sought was the 200 shares of common stock in A & A, but the
court “ha[d] now changed it to any interest in the business.” Counsel
emphasized that Jesus’s interest in A & A “ha[d] yet to be defined and would
need to be worked out in civil court.”

      The court explained that under section 6401,10 “a person’s community
property passes one-hundred percent (100%) to the surviving spouse when
[the other spouse] die[s] without a will.” It stated that “its ruling was only on
[Jesus’s] portion . . . in A & A,” and that “when a person dies without a will
and they own community property, the probate code says it passes to the
spouse” and “[i]t is for the [o]bjectors to show that they had some sort of
interest in A & A.” The court then ruled Marco and Marcial “ ‘[c]ertainly
have no probate interest, because there is no will’ ” and the petition would be
granted “as to [Jesus’s] one-half interest and the surviving spouse’s one-half
interest.” The judge emphasized, “ ‘That’s all I’m ruling today.’ ”
      On January 13, 2022, the probate court entered a spousal property
order granting the petition with the determination that “[a]ll of . . . Jesus[’s]
. . . one-half (1/2), community property interest in the business known as

10    Section 6401, subdivision (a), provides: “As to community property, the
intestate share of the surviving spouse is the one-half of the community
property that belongs to the decedent under Section 100.”

                                         9
A & A” passed to Maria as the surviving spouse, and the other one-half
interest in A & A was confirmed as belonging to Maria. Marco and Marcial
timely appealed.
                                 DISCUSSION
                                        I.
                          Dispositive Issue on Appeal
      Marco and Marcial contend the probate court erred in granting Maria’s
petition by rendering a dispositive ruling at a case management conference
without giving them notice and an opportunity to present evidence to support
their objections, and by striking the phrase “ ‘in all 200 shares of common
stock’ ” from the petition rather than requiring proof to a “legal certainty”
whether Jesus held any ownership interest in A & A when he died.
      But, in granting the petition, the probate court determined both Marco
and Marcial had “ ‘no probate interest’ ” in Jesus’s estate because “ ‘there is
no will.’ ” The record does not reveal that the court expressly predicated its
ruling on finding that Marco and Marcial were not “ ‘interested person[s]’ ”
under section 48, the controlling statute on standing to object to the petition.
However, because of the presumption of correctness, we may assume the
probate court decided so, even if this may not actually have been its
reasoning. In reviewing a judgment, “we review the correctness of the order
and not the court’s reasons.” (Carbajal v. CWPSC, Inc. (2016) 245
Cal.App.4th 227, 237.)
      As our high court said long ago, “No rule of decision is better or more
firmly established by authority, nor one resting upon a sounder basis of
reason and propriety, than that a ruling or decision, itself correct in law, will
not be disturbed on appeal merely because given for a wrong reason. If right
upon any theory of the law applicable to the case, it must be sustained

                                       10
regardless of the considerations which may have moved the trial court to its
conclusion.” (Davey v. Southern Pacific Co. (1897) 116 Cal. 325, 329, italics
added; accord Estate of Rossi (2006) 138 Cal.App.4th 1325, 1334–1335.)
      Because Marco and Marcial’s standing to object to the petition in the
first instance is dispositive in this appeal, we start with this issue.
                                        II.
                  Standing to Object in a Probate Proceeding
      A party has standing to object to a spousal property petition only if he
or she is an “interested person.” (§ 1043, subd. (a).)
      Section 48, subdivision (a), defines an “ ‘interested person.’ ” It states:
“Subject to subdivision (b), ‘interested person’ includes any of the following:
[¶] “(1) An heir, devisee, child, spouse, creditor, beneficiary, and any other
person having a property right in or claim against a trust estate or the estate
of a decedent which may be affected by the proceeding. [¶] (2) Any person
having priority for appointment as personal representative. [¶] (3) A
fiduciary representing an interested person.” (Italics added.)
      Subdivision (b) of section 48 provides “[t]he meaning of ‘interested
person’ as it relates to particular persons may vary from time to time and
shall be determined according to the particular purposes of, and matter
involved in, any proceeding.”
      By the express terms of section 48, “[t]he probate court has flexibility in
determining whether to permit a party to participate as an interested party.”
(Estate of Sobol (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 771, 782.) It has been said:
“ ‘Subdivision (a) of section 48 does not purport to provide an exclusive list of
recognizable interests. Rather, it permits the court to designate as an
interested person anyone having an interest in an estate which may be
affected by a probate proceeding. Subdivision (b) allows the court to

                                        11
determine the sufficiency of that party’s interest for the purposes of each
proceeding conducted. Thus, a party may qualify as an interested person
entitled to participate for purposes of one proceeding but not for another.’ ”
(Sobol, at p. 782, quoting Estate of Davis (1990) 219 Cal.App.3d 663, 668.)
      “In the seminal case of Estate of Land [(1913) 166 Cal. 538], the
California Supreme Court noted ‘ “the statute contemplates a legal interest
and not merely a grievance to the feelings of propriety or sense of justice.” ’ ”
(Estate of Lind (1989) 209 Cal.App.3d 1424, 1431.) “The purpose of
restricting who may contest probate is to avoid ‘delaying the settlement of the
estate.’ ” (Lind, at p. 1431, quoting Estate of Plaut (1945) 27 Cal.2d 424, 429
[“[t]he requirement that the contestant be an interested person prevents
persons with no interest from delaying the settlement of the estate”]; Estate
of Maniscalco (1992) 9 Cal.App.4th 520, 523 [The legislative intent of the
“ ‘interested person’ ” requirement is to prevent “persons with no interest
from delaying the settlement of estate affairs.”].) Thus, “the right to ask the
court for an adjudication of [a] claim to the estate should be denied” when the
objector’s purported “interest ‘has not even the appearance of validity or
substance.’ ” (Plaut, at pp. 428−429.)
      “Because the determination of whether a party is an interested person
pursuant to Probate Code section 48 is subject to the probate court’s
discretion, we apply the deferential abuse of discretion standard in reviewing
the determination.” (Estate of Prindle (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 119, 126; see
Estate of Maniscalco, supra, 9 Cal.App.4th at p. 525.) The probate court “is
empowered to resolve competing claims over the title to and distribution of
the decedent’s property” (Estate of Heggstad (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th 943, 952)
and has a duty to act as “ ‘the guardian of estates of deceased persons’ ”
(Estate of Sapp (2019) 36 Cal.App.5th 86, 102). “ ‘ “[T]hat power is not to be

                                         12
interfered with by the appellate court, unless there has been a clear abuse of
that discretion.” ’ ” (Estate of Hammer (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 1621, 1633–
1634.)
      Here, “ ‘[t]he test is not whether we would have made a different
decision had the matter been submitted to us in the first instance. Rather,
the discretion is that of the [probate] court, and we will only interfere with its
ruling if we find that under all the evidence, viewed most favorably in
support of the . . . court’s action, no judge reasonably could have reached the
challenged result.’ ” (Estate of Hammer, supra, 19 Cal.App.4th at p. 1634.)
“ ‘We presume that the court properly applied the law and acted within its
discretion unless the appellant affirmatively shows otherwise.’ ” (Safeco Ins.
Co. of America v. Superior Court (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 814, 832–833.)
                                       III.
   The Probate Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Granting the Petition
   Because Marco and Marcial Failed to Demonstrate They Are “Interested
                           Persons” Under Section 48
      In their supplemental letter brief, Marco and Marcial assert they had
standing to object to the petition “on at least two different grounds” under
section 48. They do not state explicitly the two grounds, but argue that no
shares of stock had been issued by A & A at the time of Jesus’s death; they
are two of the five surviving children of Jesus; and they were “the sole
corporate directors and officers of A & A” so they stand to be “dramatically
impacted” by the disposition of the petition. None of these asserted facts
establish that Marco and Marcial are interested persons within the meaning
of section 48.
      Jesus died intestate and Maria is his surviving spouse. Maria alleged
in the petition that she and Jesus used “community property monies” to build

                                       13
A & A together during their marriage, which makes whatever interest Jesus
had in A & A presumptively community property. (See Fam. Code, § 760
[“Except as otherwise provided by statute, all property, real or personal,
wherever situated, acquired by a married person during the marriage while
domiciled in this state is community property.”].) Marco and Marcial did not
dispute this fact. At the January 10, 2022 hearing, they conceded that Jesus
“had an interest in A & A,” and their attorney, speaking for them, agreed “[i]f

there was an interest, . . . it[’]s community.”11
      Now, in their reply to Maria’s supplemental letter brief, Marco and
Marcial argue the probate court’s use of the term “ ‘interest’ ” was
“ambiguous,” and “could reasonably be interpreted to also mean: [Jesus]
having been an incorporator of A & A . . . , one of its directors, or have
referred to the salary [Jesus] received prior to his death.” And because they
had “consistently alleged that no shares of common stock were ever issued to
Jesus . . . during [his] lifetime,” Marco’s statement that Jesus had an interest
in A & A “would not have meant that his father was an owner of, or held a
community property interest in, A & A.” We disagree.
      There was nothing ambiguous about the probate court’s use of the term
“ ‘interest.’ ” The court expressly directed its many questions to whether

11      The probate court asked “whether any of the Objectors [i.e. Marco or
Marcial] agreed that [Jesus] had an interest in A & A,” and Marco replied,
“ ‘Yes.’ ” (Italics added.) Although Marcial did not audibly respond, he also
did not challenge Marco’s affirmative response. It is reasonable to infer from
his silence that Marcial implicitly adopted Marco’s answer. (See Evid. Code,
§ 1221 [“Evidence of a statement offered against a party is not made
inadmissible by the hearsay rule if the statement is one of which the party,
with knowledge of the content thereof, has by words or other conduct
manifested his adoption or his belief in its truth.”].)

                                        14
Jesus had “a community property interest” in A & A. (Italics added.)
Moreover, Marco and Marcial’s attempt to explain away their admissions is
belied by their own pleadings. In their first joint case management
conference statement, Marco and Marcial claimed A & A was a “partnership”
and Jesus held a “one-third interest in the business.” (Italics added.) In their
second statement, they claimed A & A “equitably belongs” to Jesus’s estate
and to each of them “in equal parts.” (Italics added.) A party cannot first
advocate one position, and later, if it becomes beneficial, assert the opposite.
(See Jackson v. County of Los Angeles (1997) 60 Cal.App.4th 171, 181.)
      “Upon the death of a person who is married . . . , one-half of the
community property belongs to the surviving spouse and the other one-half
belongs to the decedent” (§ 100, subd. (a)), and “[a]s to community property,
the intestate share of the surviving spouse is the one-half of the community
property that belongs to the decedent under [s]ection 100.” (§ 6401,
subd. (a).) The probate court was correct in its determination that, upon
Jesus’s death without a will, one-half of the community property interest in
A & A belonged to Maria, and the other one-half interest belonging to Jesus
passed to Maria as the surviving spouse.
      Under California laws on intestate succession, none of the five
surviving children, including Marco and Marcial, stood to inherit from any
community property asset in Jesus’s estate. Because Marco and Marcial “did
‘not stand to inherit one iota of any asset in any outcome’ in the present
litigation,” they are not interested persons under section 48 with standing to
object to the petition. (Estate of Sobol, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at pp. 782,
783.) Under the plain terms of section 48, subdivision (a), the status of being
the “ ‘child’ ” of the decedent, “by itself, is not enough to make a party an
‘interested person’ for standing purposes.” (Sobol, at p. 782.) “A ‘beneficiary’

                                        15
must have ‘ “a property right in or claim against a trust estate or the estate of
a decedent which may be affected by the proceeding” ’ to be an interested
person.” (Ibid.; see § 48, subd. (a).) We conclude the probate court properly
found Marco and Marcial did not have such a property right in Jesus’s estate
that could be affected by granting Maria’s petition.
      Having failed to identify a property right or interest that could be
affected by the petition, Marco and Marcial argue in their supplemental
letter brief that they have a “direct interest” “[b]y virtue of their managerial
positions.” (Italics added.) They explain that, as A & A’s “sole corporate
directors and officers,” they “were solely responsible for the management and
operations of A & A . . . and each held control over the corporation” and “[a]s
such, [their] control of A & A . . . and their roles within the corporation could
be dramatically impacted” by the disposition of the petition and “gave them
standing to object.” They contend that under the “broad permissions”
granted by subdivision (b) of section 48, “[a]ny action that sought to confirm
property held by the corporation or related to the operation, management, or
functionality of the corporation would, by virtue of their position within the

corporation, necessarily make [them] interested persons.”12
      Although it is true probate courts have in their discretion given
standing to parties not specifically listed in subdivision (a) of section 48 (see
Estate of Sobol, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at p. 782 [discussing cases]), we are
not aware of a case in which standing was conferred on a person “[b]y virtue

12    We note that in their supplemental letter brief and their reply to
Maria’s supplemental letter brief, submitted to directly address the issue of
standing, Marco and Marcial no longer assert, as they did in the probate
court, that they have any ownership interest in A & A. Rather, they assert
only that they had “managerial positions” with A & A.

                                        16
of their managerial positions.” Marco and Marcial fail to cite us to any case
authority supporting that contention. Instead they rely solely on Estate of
Maniscalco, supra, 9 Cal.App.4th 520, a case that does not help them.
      In Estate of Maniscalco, a corporation purchased real property held by
a probate estate and three days after the sale was confirmed at a
confirmation hearing without objection, the City of El Cajon (City) moved to
vacate the confirmation order, alleging it intended to appear and overbid at
the confirmation hearing but was erroneously advised by counsel for the
estate administrator that the hearing had been continued. (Estate of
Maniscalco, supra, 9 Cal.App.4th at p. 522.) Under these circumstances, the
probate court concluded the City was an interested party within the meaning
of section 48, subdivision (b), to bring a motion for relief pursuant to Code of
Civil Procedure section 473. (Maniscalco, at pp. 522, 525−526.)
      The “sole issue” presented on appeal in Estate of Maniscalco was
whether the City was an interested person under Probate Code section 48 “to
have the necessary standing under Code of Civil Procedure section 473 to
move to vacate the order confirming the sale.” (Estate of Maniscalco, supra, 9
Cal.App.4th at pp. 522−523, italics added.) The Court of Appeal agreed the
probate court properly determined the City was an interested party for that
purpose, based on the weighing of policy considerations. Those policy
considerations included “encouraging competitive bidding, protecting the best
interest of the estate by obtaining the highest possible sales price for the
estate real property, and providing relief where an adversary has been
victimized in the legal process by mistake, inadvertence, surprise or
excusable neglect.” (Id. at p. 525.) None of those policy considerations are
implicated in this case. Estate of Maniscalco does not compel the conclusion
urged by Marco and Marcial.

                                       17
      Instead, Estate of Maniscalco affirms what subdivision (b) of section 48
already makes explicit⎯“[t]he meaning of ‘interested person’ as it relates to
particular persons may vary from time to time and shall be determined
according to the particular purposes of, and manner involved in, any
proceeding.” (§ 48, subd. (b), italics added.) For that reason, “ ‘a party may
qualify as an interested person entitled to participate for purposes of one
proceeding but not for another.’ ” (Estate of Maniscalco, supra, 9 Cal.App.4th
at p. 524, italics added.) In other words, “section 48 is designed to provide
the probate court with flexibility to control its proceedings to both further the
best interests of the estate and to protect the rights of interested persons to
those proceedings.” (Ibid., italics added.)
      Here, the probate court determined Marco and Marcial had “ ‘no
probate interest’ ” to object to Maria’s spousal property petition. So we
assume the court necessarily declined to exercise its discretion to recognize
them as “ ‘interested person[s]’ ” under section 48, subdivision (b), for that
purpose. (Zang v. Northwestern Title Co. (1982) 135 Cal.App.3d 159, 164
[“Ordinarily, omitted findings may be implied from other findings and the
judgment.”]; see also Taylor v. Nu Digital Marketing, Inc. (2016) 245
Cal.App.4th 283, 287–288 [“ ‘ “A judgment or order of the lower court is
presumed correct. All intendments and presumptions are indulged to support
it on matters as to which the record is silent[.]” ’ ”].) Marco and Marcial made
known their “managerial positions” in A & A to the probate court, and it was
the court’s discretion under section 48, subdivision (b), to grant or not grant
them standing to participate in the probate proceedings on the basis of that
asserted interest. We see no abuse of that discretion in the court’s decision to
not recognize Marco and Marcial as interested persons for the purpose of the
proceedings before it.

                                       18
      Almost two years after they objected to Maria’s petition, Marco and
Marcial failed to establish any property interest in Jesus’s estate and they
failed to establish any ownership interest in A & A by way of their civil action
for declaratory relief against Maria. And no one else had appeared to object
to Maria’s petition. Given these circumstances, the probate court’s decision
not to recognize Marco and Marcial as “ ‘interested persons’ ” was consistent
with the public policy underlying section 48 to “prevent[ ] persons with no
interest from delaying the settlement of estate affairs.” (Estate of
Maniscalco, supra, 9 Cal.App.4th at p. 523; accord Estate of Lind, supra, 209
Cal.App.3d at p. 1431.)
      We turn to the other point Marco and Marcial mentioned in their
supplemental letter brief. As they did below, Marco and Marcial claim “no
stock shares had been issued by A & A” at the time of Jesus’s death, thus
there was no community property within the petition that it could award
Maria. We again note this claim is inconsistent with Marco and Marcial’s
admissions that Jesus possessed a community property interest in A & A.
Regardless, they also never explain why the asserted fact is even relevant to
whether they had standing to object to Maria’s petition. The probate court
specifically stated: “its ruling was only on [Jesus’s] portion . . . in A & A,”
whatever that was. If there is any dispute as to the relative ownership of
A & A, including any shares of stock, a party may seek a declaration of his or
her rights in a civil action. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1060.) Marco and Marcial
did just that, but failed to establish their entitlement to declaratory relief.
      Marco and Marcial last contend due process requires that if the probate
court questioned their standing, it should have given them notice and an
opportunity to present evidence on standing. The probate court did provide
them with the opportunity to make an offer of proof as to why it should not

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grant the petition; in response, they did not provide reasons that would
compel a different result then the one we have reached. A remand for a
hearing may be appropriate if Marco and Marcial can state a prima facie
interest in Jesus’s estate, but they cannot even meet that minimal threshold.
(See Estate of Plaut, supra, 27 Cal.2d at p. 428 [“the right to ask the court for
an adjudication of his claim to the estate should be denied a person whose
interest ‘has not even the appearance of validity or substance’ ” (italics
added)].) Any further delay in the settlement of Jesus’s estate affairs would
undermine the purpose of section 48.
                                 DISPOSITION

      The January 13, 2022 spousal property order is affirmed. Respondent
Maria Avina shall recover her costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
8.278(a)(1) & (2).)

                                                                             DO, J.

      WE CONCUR:

      HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.

      BUCHANAN, J.

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