Filed 2/26/16 Prichard v. Pergiovanni CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THERESA BROWN PRICHARD,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E062203
v. (Super.Ct.No. PROPS1200335)
NICHOLAS PERGIOVANNI, JR., OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Raymond L.
Haight III, Judge. Affirmed.
Nicholas Pergiovanni, in pro. per. for Defendant and Appellant.
Law Offices of Donald L. Prichard and Donald L. Prichard for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
Defendant and appellant Nicholas Pergiovanni, Jr., appeals in propria persona
from the probate court’s order that, among other things, removes him as cotrustee of the
Pergiovanni Family Trust (the Trust), established by his now-deceased parents, and
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appoints his sister, plaintiff and respondent Theresa Brown Prichard, as the sole trustee.
The order also authorizes the liquidation of all the assets of the trust, including the house
where defendant resides, with proceeds to be divided between defendant, plaintiff, and
their brother Frank Pergiovanni. We find no abuse of discretion by the probate court, and
therefore affirm.
I FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiff, defendant, and Frank Pergiovanni are siblings who, after the death of
their parents, became cotrustees of the Trust. The Trust documents include handwritten
“Minutes of Trust” (minutes), which are to be “construed as instructions to the successor
trustee” regarding the “allocation and distribution of specific trust assets.” Among these
specific trust assets is a house in Fontana, California. The minutes instruct that the house
“goes to” plaintiff, defendant, and their brother, and that the “house and furnishings
should be shared equally,” but with the caveat that defendant “is entitled to live in it as
long as he resides there.” The minutes further state that “[i]n the event that the house is
to [be] sold, all three children are to agree upon its sale.”
Disputes arose among the siblings as to how to interpret the minutes, including as
to whether only defendant should have access to the property, and whether defendant
alone had the right to control whether additional boarders or renters should be placed
there. Plaintiff initiated these proceedings on May 8, 2012, seeking to remove defendant
as a cotrustee of the Trust, an accounting, and appointment of a successor trustee.
Defendant filed a petition of his own, requesting either a finding that his cotrustees had
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“breached the trust” or, in the alternative, to remove them as cotrustees. On August 29,
2013, after a trial, the probate court entered a judgment regarding the proper distribution
of the assets of the Trust, without removing or replacing any of the siblings in their roles
as cotrustees.
The probate court’s August 29, 2013 judgment, among other things, directs
plaintiff and Frank Pergiovanni to deed their respective interests in the property to
defendant. Defendant, in turn, now as sole owner, is to execute a reverse mortgage on the
property, and distribute one third of the proceeds to each of his siblings. The judgment
provides additional instructions regarding distribution of the remaining Trust assets, and
declares that when the distribution of assets in accordance with the judgment has been
completed, the Trust shall be deemed dissolved.
The probate court held several hearings regarding the status of the reverse
mortgage to be obtained by defendant. Plaintiff and Frank Pergiovanni apparently
performed their obligations under the August 29, 2013 order to deed their interest in the
property to defendant.1 Defendant, however, failed to obtain a reverse mortgage as
required. The court rejected one reverse mortgage transaction that was approved by a
bank, because the terms were inconsistent with its prior orders allocating expenses of
1 The deeds do not appear in our record, but the probate court refers to defendant
as “the owner of the property” in the course of a discussion with defendant as to why he,
and not plaintiff or plaintiff’s attorney, is required to obtain the reverse mortgage.
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repairing and maintaining the house to defendant.2 Several other applications submitted
by defendant were denied by the banks, apparently because of the condition of the house.
After the August 29, 2013 judgment, the probate court held several hearings with
respect to the status of the reverse mortgage, among other issues. Finally, on April 30,
2014, the probate court heard argument on plaintiff’s “Motion for Sanctions Against
Nicholas Pergiovanni, Jr.,” filed December 23, 2013, asking that the court remove
defendant as trustee, appoint plaintiff as the sole trustee, and order the assets of the Trust
to be liquidated. The probate court granted the motion, ordering that plaintiff be
appointed as sole trustee of the Trust, and granting her authority to liquidate all the Trust
assets, including the house, which defendant was ordered to vacate. The probate court
ordered that proceeds of the liquidation be divided among the siblings, with 50 percent to
defendant, 25 percent to plaintiff, and 25 percent to Frank Pergiovanni. The probate
court explained that the higher percentage to defendant was in recognition of the
additional rights to the house defendant had been granted under the terms of the Trust,
even though defendant’s failure to obtain a reverse mortgage made it impossible to “save
the house.”
2Those orders do not themselves appear in our record, but the probate court
makes reference to them in the portion of the reporter’s transcript that was designated by
defendant for inclusion in the record on appeal.
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II. DISCUSSION
Defendant contends, among other things, that the probate court erred in removing
him as cotrustee of the Trust, appointing a new trustee, and authorizing the Trust assets,
including and especially the house, to be liquidated. We disagree.
A probate court has “general power and duty to supervise the administration of
trusts.” (Schwartz v. Labow (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 417, 427.) The probate court “may
apply general equitable principles in fashioning remedies and granting relief.” (In re
Estate of Kraus (2010) 184 Cal.App.4th 103, 114.) The probate court’s supervisory
power includes the authority to remove a trustee, based either on a party’s motion or on
its own motion. (Prob. Code, § 17200, subds. (a) & (b)(10).) Probate Code section
15642 sets forth the statutory grounds for removing a trustee (§ 15642, subd. (a)). These
grounds include “[w]here hostility or lack of cooperation among cotrustees impairs the
administration of the trust” (subd. (b)(3)), “[w]here the trustee fails or declines to act”
(subd. (b)(4)), and “[f]or other good cause” (subd. (b)(9)). A judgment removing a
trustee is reviewed for abuse of discretion. (Schwartz, supra, at p. 430.)
There is no doubt that defendant, in his role as cotrustee, failed or declined to
perform an act required of him by the probate court, namely, to obtain a reverse mortgage
and distribute the proceeds equally among the three siblings. Moreover, it is apparently
undisputed that there is hostility and a lack of cooperation between defendant and the
other cotrustees that has impaired the administration of the trust, making even the
simplest distribution of minor portions of the assets of the estate a fraught and sometimes
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impossible exercise. The probate court acted well within the scope of its discretion in
removing defendant as a cotrustee of the Trust, and appointing a sole trustee with the
responsibility of making a final distribution of the Trust assets in accordance with the
probate court’s orders.
Defendant objects that the probate court’s ruling effectively “strip[s]” him of his
“life estate” in the property, to which he was entitled under the terms of the Trust. The
August 2013 judgment entered by the probate court, however, amounts to a ruling that
defendant was not entitled to a life estate, but rather to 100 percent ownership of the
property in fee simple, subject to a reverse mortgage, with a portion of the proceeds from
the reverse mortgage distributed to his siblings.3 Defendant did not timely appeal that
judgment, so the probate court’s ruling became the final word on the issue. (See Shultz v.
Harney (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 1611, 1619 [“The doctrine of res judicata gives conclusive
effect to a final judgment rendered upon the merits by a court having jurisdiction of the
cause.”].) Given that defendant was unable or unwilling to obtain a reverse mortgage as
ordered, the probate court had no choice but to devise a remedy appropriate to the
circumstances. Defendant has not demonstrated that the remedy the probate court chose
was beyond the bounds of reason, so we find no abuse of discretion.
3 The probate court, as well as the parties, have loosely referred to the interest
granted to defendant by the Trust, entitling him “to live in [the house] as long as he
resides there,” as a “life estate.” The probate court’s August 2013 judgment in effect
determined, however, that the trustors’ intent was not to give defendant a life estate, in
the strict sense of the term, as discussed in the text above. (See 12 Witkin, Summary of
California Law (10th Ed. 2005) Real Property, § 24, pp. 78-79, § 29, pp. 82-83
[discussing nature of life estate].)
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Defendant further argues that the probate court erred in failing to order plaintiff
and Frank Pergiovanni to return certain funds withdrawn from a bank account that was
part of the trust assets. Again, however, this is a matter that was litigated by the parties
and was resolved by the probate court’s August 2013 judgment; the probate court ruled
defendant was entitled to the funds remaining in the account, and (implicitly) not entitled
to return of the funds previously withdrawn from the account. Defendant failed to timely
appeal that judgment, so we will not revisit the issue.
Defendant also contends that plaintiff “deceive[d] the court wherein she failed to
attach the entire trust agreement in her initial Petition filing in the probate court . . . .”
Defendant failed to include plaintiff’s “initial Petition filing” as part of the record on his
appeal, so we cannot judge the truth of this assertion. In any case, however, it is apparent
from the record that the probate court was well aware of the purportedly omitted portion
of the Trust documents at all times relevant to the present appeal. Defendant’s assertion,
even if true, does not demonstrate any error by the probate court.
Finally, defendant asserts that plaintiff, by bringing her petition seeking his
removal as cotrustee, in effect contested the Trust, in violation of the Trust’s no contest
clause. Not so. Plaintiff did not “contest[] or attack[] [the Trust] or any of its
provisions,” but rather contended defendant had breached his duties as cotrustee of the
Trust, and sought remedies for that alleged breach. Generally, a pleading challenging a
trustee’s exercise of his or her fiduciary power does not violate a no contest clause,
regardless of the precise terms of the instrument, as a matter of public policy. (Bradley v.
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Gilbert (2009) 172 Cal.App.4th 1058, 1071.) We need not address plaintiff’s argument
that the issue of the no contest clause was not properly raised in the probate court;
assuming the argument was raised below and adequately preserved for appeal, it is
nevertheless without merit.
III. DISPOSITION
The order appealed from is affirmed. Plaintiff is awarded her costs on appeal.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
HOLLENHORST
J.
We concur:
RAMIREZ
P. J.
CODRINGTON
J.
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