Filed 3/23/17
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
JOHN M. CARMACK, as Trustee, etc., )
et al., )
)
Plaintiffs and Respondents, )
) S224985
v. )
) 9th Cir. No. 12-60068
RICK H. REYNOLDS, )
) BAP No. CC-11-1433-HPaD
Defendant; )
) C.D. Cal. Bankr. Nos.
TODD A. FREALY, as Trustee in ) 09-14039-MJ, 09-01205-MJ
Bankruptcy, etc., )
)
Claimant and Appellant. )
____________________________________)
Under the terms of a spendthrift trust established by his parents, defendant
Rick H. Reynolds is entitled to receive over a million dollars, all to be paid out of
trust principal. Reynolds filed for bankruptcy before the trust‘s first payment, and
the bankruptcy trustee seeks to determine what interest the bankruptcy estate has
in the trust. The trust is governed by California law, and as the United States
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit observed, the relevant statutory provisions
are ―opaque.‖ (Frealy v. Reynolds (9th Cir. 2015) 779 F.3d 1028, 1029 (Frealy).)
Probate Code section 15306.5 appears to limit the bankruptcy estate to 25 percent
of the beneficiary‘s interest; other provisions of the Probate Code suggest no such
limitation. The Ninth Circuit asked us whether the Probate Code limits a
bankruptcy estate‘s access to a spendthrift trust to 25 percent of the beneficiary‘s
interest, where the trust pays the beneficiary entirely out of principal. We hold
that the Probate Code does not impose such an absolute limit on a general
creditor‘s access to the trust. With limited exceptions for distributions explicitly
intended or actually required for the beneficiary‘s support, a general creditor may
reach a sum up to the full amount of any distributions that are currently due and
payable to the beneficiary even though they are still in the trustee‘s hands, and
separately may reach a sum up to 25 percent of any payments that are anticipated
to be made to the beneficiary.
I.
Reynolds‘s parents established the Reynolds Family Trust in 2005. The
trust contains a spendthrift clause, providing that ―no interest in the income or
principal of any trust created under this instrument shall be voluntarily or
involuntarily anticipated, assigned, encumbered, or subjected to creditor‘s [sic]
claim or legal process before actual receipt by the beneficiary.‖ Reynolds‘s
mother Patsy died in 2007. Following her death, Reynolds‘s father Freddie
received all the trust‘s distributions until Freddie died in 2009.
The trust provides that at Freddie‘s death, Reynolds is entitled to $250,000
from the trust if he survives Freddie by 30 days. In addition, Reynolds is entitled
to receive $100,000 a year for 10 years and then one-third of the remainder. All
payments are expected to be made from principal; the trust‘s assets are in
undeveloped real estate that do not produce income. Those assets are estimated to
be worth several million dollars, although their exact value will not be known until
the trust assets are liquidated.
The day after his father died, Reynolds filed for voluntary bankruptcy under
chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. The trustees of the Reynolds
Family Trust sought a declaratory judgment on the extent of the bankruptcy
2
trustee‘s interest in the trust. The bankruptcy court held that under the California
Probate Code, the bankruptcy trustee standing as a hypothetical lien creditor could
reach 25 percent of Reynolds‘s interest in the trust. The bankruptcy appellate
panel affirmed. The bankruptcy trustee appealed to the Ninth Circuit, which asked
us to clarify if Probate Code section 15306.5 caps a bankruptcy estate‘s access to a
spendthrift trust at 25 percent of the beneficiary‘s interest where the trust pays
entirely from principal. We granted the Ninth Circuit‘s request.
II.
A spendthrift trust is a trust that provides that the beneficiary‘s interest
cannot be alienated before it is distributed to the beneficiary. Creditors of the
beneficiary generally cannot reach trust assets while those assets are in the hands
of the trustee, even if they have secured a judgment against the beneficiary.
Rather, creditors must wait until the trustee makes distributions to the beneficiary.
The law permits such trusts because donors have ―the right to choose the object of
[their] bounty‖ and to protect their gifts from the donees‘ creditors. (Canfield v.
Security-First Nat. Bank (1939) 13 Cal.2d 1, 11 (Canfield).) Providing donors
some measure of control over their gifts encourages donors to make those gifts, to
the benefit of the donor, the beneficiary, and ultimately the beneficiary‘s creditors.
Under the Probate Code, spendthrift provisions are generally valid as to
both trust income and trust principal. (Prob. Code, §§ 15300 [trust income],
15301, subd. (a) [trust principal]; all statutory references are to the Probate Code
unless otherwise noted.) Yet creditors need not always wait for distributions to
reach the debtor‘s hands. Spendthrift provisions are invalid when grantors name
themselves beneficiaries. (§ 15304, subd. (a).) When a trust includes a valid
spendthrift provision, certain creditors may reach into the trust. Such creditors
include those with claims for spousal or child support (§ 15305) and those with
restitution judgments (§ 15305.5). In addition, a state or local public entity can
3
reach trust assets when the beneficiary owes money for public support (§ 15306,
subd. (a)) unless distributions from the trust are required to care for a disabled
beneficiary (§ 15306, subd. (b)).
Even general creditors, including a bankruptcy trustee standing as a
hypothetical lien creditor, have some recourse under three provisions: section
15301, subdivision (b) (section 15301(b)), section 15306.5, and section 15307.
The question here is how much access to trust principal a general creditor has
under these provisions.
This is a question of statutory construction. We seek to ―ascertain the
intent of the lawmakers so as to effectuate the purpose of the statute.‖ (Day v. City
of Fontana (2001) 25 Cal.4th 268, 272.) ―[W]e begin by looking to the statutory
language. [Citation.] We must give ‗the language its usual, ordinary import and
accord[ ] significance, if possible, to every word, phrase and sentence in pursuance
of the legislative purpose. A construction making some words surplusage is to be
avoided. The words of the statute must be construed in context, keeping in mind
the statutory purpose, and statutes or statutory sections relating to the same subject
must be harmonized, both internally and with each other, to the extent possible.‘
[Citation.] If the statutory language is susceptible of more than one reasonable
interpretation, we must look to additional canons of statutory construction to
determine the Legislature‘s purpose. [Citation.] ‗Both the legislative history of
the statute and the wider historical circumstances of its enactment may be
considered in ascertaining the legislative intent.‘ ‖ (McCarther v. Pacific Telesis
Group (2010) 48 Cal.4th 104, 110.)
In construing the provisions at issue, we are mindful that the Reynolds
Family Trust is distinctive in directing all disbursements to be made from
principal. In other trusts, productive assets produce periodic income payments
during the life of the trust, and preserving principal is one of the trustee‘s
4
paramount duties. (See 76 Am.Jur.2d (2016) Trusts, § 429.) It is common for
trusts to specify that the principal may not be distributed for many years, and
liquidating principal may signal that the trust‘s purpose has been fulfilled. We are
also mindful that this case arises out of a bankruptcy proceeding. Ordinarily, a
judgment creditor who is unable to satisfy all of the judgment out of the
beneficiary‘s trust interest may continue to attempt to collect on the balance of the
judgment from whatever other assets the beneficiary may have. Here, however,
the amount Reynolds‘s creditors will receive depends on the reach of the
bankruptcy trustee. Any remaining debts after the bankruptcy process will be
extinguished, and any further distributions will be unencumbered. (11 U.S.C.
§ 541(c)(2).) That spendthrift provisions can work to beneficiaries‘ advantage in
bankruptcy in this way has long been recognized as a characteristic of such
provisions. (See Rest.3d Trusts, § 58, com. a [―An important byproduct of the
limited spendthrift protection, however, is the again limited but nevertheless
important insulation that may result from a discharge in bankruptcy.‖].)
A.
We begin with section 15301(b), which provides in pertinent part: ―After
an amount of principal has become due and payable to the beneficiary under the
trust instrument, upon petition to the court under Section 709.010 of the Code of
Civil Procedure by a judgment creditor, the court may make an order directing the
trustee to satisfy the money judgment out of that principal amount.‖ Section
709.010 of the Code of Civil Procedure (section 709.010) sets forth the procedure
for a judgment creditor to petition a court to satisfy the judgment out of the
debtor‘s trust interests.
As the Ninth Circuit observed, the statute does not define ―due and
payable.‖ (Frealy, supra, 779 F.3d at p. 1033.) The phrase is used in other
provisions such as section 15305, which provides that creditors with judgments for
5
child or spousal support may petition a court to satisfy their judgments out of
disbursements of either income or principal ―as they become due and payable,
presently or in the future.‖ (§ 15305, subd. (b).) Any disbursement from the trust
would appear to be due and payable in the sense the phrase is used in section
15305. But, as the Ninth Circuit recognized, applying such a reading to section
15301(b) could mean that creditors have ―immediate access to all of a
beneficiary‘s trust principal,‖ which would eliminate spendthrift protections as to
principal entirely. (Frealy, at p. 1033.)
We do not think the Legislature intended to remove all protections from
trust principal immediately after specifying that spendthrift provisions are
generally valid as applied to principal. (§ 15301, subd. (a).) Instead, the
Legislature provided the limiting principle in the introductory clause of section
15301(b): ―After an amount of principal has become due and payable . . . .‖
(Italics added.) This clause indicates that timing is critical: section 15301(b)
reaches only those amounts which are presently set to be paid to the beneficiary.
The provision thus requires an amount of principal to ―ha[ve] become‖ due to the
beneficiary, at which point upon a creditor‘s petition the court may enter an order
―directing the trustee to satisfy the money judgment out of that principal amount.‖
(§ 15301(b), italics added.) In other words, under this provision creditors may
reach the principal already set to be distributed and only up to the extent of that
distribution. Such principal has served its trust purposes, and in many (but not all)
cases, the distribution may signal that the trust is ending. Section 15301(b) makes
these assets, and these assets only, fair game to creditors.
In this light, section 15301(b) is properly viewed not as an exception to the
general spendthrift protections but as a corollary. The general rule is that principal
held in a spendthrift trust may not be touched by creditors until it is paid to the
beneficiary. (§ 15301, subd. (a).) Section 15301(b) adds that once an amount of
6
principal has become due and payable, the court can order the trustee to pay that
amount directly to the beneficiary‘s creditors instead. A distribution of principal
is reasonably understood to signify that the amount distributed has satisfied its
trust purposes. Because the beneficiary‘s interest in those assets has effectively
vested, the law no longer has any interest in protecting them (except as provided in
section 15302, as explained below).
The legislative history points the same way. The provisions at issue date
from the Law Revision Commission‘s 1986 proposed revisions to the Probate
Code. (See Selected 1986 Trust and Probate Legislation (Sep. 1986) 18 Cal. Law
Revision Com. Rep. (1986) pp. 1321–1479 (1986 Report); Stats. 1986, ch. 820,
§ 40, as reenacted by Stats 1990, ch. 79, § 14.) The revisions were designed to
remedy the patchwork nature of the prior statutory framework while largely
continuing existing law. (1986 Report, supra, at pp. 1221–1222, 1302–1306.)
Prior California statutes had not made clear that spendthrift provisions were valid
as applied to principal, though case law generally suggested they were. (Id. at
p. 1302; see Seymour v. McAvoy (1898) 121 Cal. 438, 444; San Diego Trust etc.
Bank v. Heustis (1932) 121 Cal.App. 675, 683–684.) The Commission‘s report, to
which we give ―substantial weight‖ (Van Arsdale v. Hollinger (1968) 68 Cal.2d
245, 249, overruled on other grounds in Privette v. Superior Court (1993) 5
Cal.4th 689), notes that the drafters sought to codify the validity of spendthrift
provisions as applied to trust principal in section 15301, subdivision (a) (section
15301(a)). (1986 Report, supra, at p. 1302.) But the drafters also sought to clarify
that once principal was due and payable, creditors could reach it both ―in the
hands of the trustee and after payment to the beneficiary.‖ (Id. at pp. 1302–1303.)
In other words, spendthrift protections do not apply to section 15301(b) assets.
7
Importantly, creditors‘ access under section 15301(b) is not unlimited.
Section 15302 explains that where the trust instrument specifies that a distribution,
whether from income or principal, is for the beneficiary‘s support or education, the
amount the beneficiary actually needs for either purpose may not be reached by
creditors until in the hands of the beneficiary. Section 15302 explicitly provides
that it does not apply where creditors seek access under sections 15304 through
15307, but section 15302 does not exclude orders under section 15301(b). Section
15302 thus provides limited continued protection to former trust assets where the
donor specifically intended the distribution to support the beneficiary. This
protection encourages donors to provide for beneficiaries‘ support and helps to
prevent beneficiaries from becoming public charges. (See Canfield, supra, 13
Cal.2d at p. 11.)
B.
We now turn to sections 15306.5 and 15307. Both provisions are
exceptions to the general validity of spendthrift provisions as applied to trust
principal established by section 15301(a). Section 15306.5, subdivision (a)
(section 15306.5(a)) provides that any judgment creditor can petition a court to
order the trustee to satisfy the judgment out of payments to which the beneficiary
is entitled. But those orders are limited to ―25 percent of the payment that
otherwise would be made to, or for the benefit of, the beneficiary‖ (§ 15306.5,
subd. (b)), and they cannot cut into any amount required to support the beneficiary
or the beneficiary‘s dependents (§ 15306.5, subd. (c)). Section 15307, for its part,
provides: ―Notwithstanding a restraint on transfer of a beneficiary‘s interest in the
trust under Section 15300 or 15301, any amount to which the beneficiary is
entitled under the trust instrument . . . in excess of the amount that is or will be
necessary for the education and support of the beneficiary may be applied to the
satisfaction of a money judgment against the beneficiary. Upon the judgment
8
creditor‘s petition under Section 709.010 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the court
may make an order directing the trustee to satisfy all or part of the judgment out of
the beneficiary‘s interest in the trust.‖
Section 15307 thus appears to allow any creditor to access all of a
beneficiary‘s interest in a spendthrift trust besides what is necessary for the
beneficiary‘s education and support, whereas section 15306.5 limits creditors to
only 25 percent of the same interest. How are these two provisions to be
reconciled?
One possibility is that section 15307 is only meant to apply to income, not
principal. It is true that the Law Revision Commission titled this provision
―Income in excess of amount for education and support subject to creditors‘
claims.‖ (1986 Report, supra, 18 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. at p. 1340; see
also Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 54 West‘s Ann. Prob. Code (1991 ed.) foll.
§ 15307, p. 562 (West‘s Annotated Code) [―Section 15307 permits an ordinary
creditor to reach income under limited circumstances.‖]; 13 Witkin, Summary of
Cal. Law (10th ed. 2005) Trusts, § 155 [―Under the Trust Law, surplus income
may be reached to satisfy creditors‘ claims.‖].) But this title was not part of the
official legislative enactments (see Stats. 1986, ch. 820, § 40) and therefore cannot
have any bearing on the interpretation of the statute (58 Cal.Jur.3d (2017) Statutes,
§ 177). Moreover, section 15301(a), which applies only to principal, specifically
refers to section 15307, and section 15307 provides that it applies
―[n]otwithstanding . . . [section] 15301.‖ Both references would be unnecessary if
section 15307 only applied to income. (See also 1986 Report, supra, at p. 1305
[§ 15307 applies ―notwithstanding a restraint on transfer of income or principal in
the trust instrument‖ (italics added)].) In any event, excluding principal from
section 15307 would not resolve the tension between sections 15306.5 and 15307
9
for income. We thus conclude that section 15307 applies to both income and
principal, as its text plainly says.
The bankruptcy trustee suggests that section 15307 serves a different
purpose from section 15306.5 by setting a higher bar for creditors than section
15306.5. Under this theory, general creditors have ―automatic‖ access to 25
percent of beneficiaries‘ trust interest under section 15306.5, with the burden on
the beneficiaries to prove that this should be reduced in light of their support needs
and those of their dependents. But in exceptional circumstances, the argument
goes, general creditors can turn to section 15307 to reach beyond the 25 percent
cap if they can show that exceeding the cap would be equitable and would not cut
into the beneficiaries‘ support or education needs.
The bankruptcy trustee‘s theory might reflect sensible policy and may find
some support in the Law Revision Commission‘s unelaborated comment that
section 15307 applies ―under limited circumstances.‖ (West‘s Ann. Prob. Code,
supra, at p. 562.) However, nothing in the statutes suggests that obtaining an
order under section 15307 involves any different burden or standard of proof than
obtaining an order under any other section. On the contrary, section 15307
contains the same reference to section 709.010 of the Code of Civil Procedure as
does section 15306.5(a). Section 709.010, for its part, does not specify any special
burdens or procedures for orders under section 15307. The bankruptcy trustee
does not cite any authority in support of its theory.
Instead, the more likely answer is that section 15307 reflects a drafting
error. Before the 1986 revisions, spendthrift trusts were governed by three key
provisions. The first was former section 867 of the Civil Code, which generally
permitted spendthrift provisions as applied to income. (Recommendation
Proposing the Trust Law (Dec. 1985) 18 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. (1985)
p. 596 (1985 Report).) The second provision was former section 859 of the Civil
10
Code, which allowed creditors to reach the ― ‗surplus‘ ‖ beyond the beneficiary‘s
education and support in the limited instances where the trust instrument did not
specify what to do with accumulating income. (1985 Report, supra, at p. 597, fn.
390, quoting Civ. Code, former § 859; see Estate of Lawrence (1968) 267
Cal.App.2d 77, 82 [trust provision specifying that ― ‗[a]ll unexpended portions of
the net income . . . shall be accumulated, added to, and become a part of the
principal‘ ‖ is valid direction for the accumulation of income].) Moreover, former
section 859 said it applied ― ‗as provided in Section 709.010 of the Code of Civil
Procedure,‘ ‖ the third key provision governing spendthrift trusts. (1985 Report,
supra, at p. 597, fn. 390.) At the time, former section 709.010 applied by
reference the principles of the wage garnishment statute to periodic trust
payments, capping payments at 25 percent for general creditors and 50 percent for
support creditors. (1985 Report, supra, at pp. 597–599, fn. 392, quoting former
§ 709.010.) So, where former section 859 applied, general creditors were capped
at 25 percent of periodic payments to beneficiaries.
The Commission‘s original proposal reworked those provisions into the
current framework. Former section 867 of the Civil Code was the basis for
proposed section 15300. (1985 Report, supra, 18 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. at
p. 625.) Former section 859 of the Civil Code formed the basis for proposed
section 15307, though section 15307‘s scope is much broader as it seemingly
applies to all trust assets and not just undirected accumulations of income. (See
1985 Report, supra, at p. 633.) And although section 15307, like former section
859, retained a reference to section 709.010 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that
reference would have been to a much changed provision, for the proposal also
contemplated amending former section 709.010 to remove its references to the
wage garnishment statute. (1985 Report, supra, at p. 766.) Some of the removed
provisions were given new homes; for example, the provision giving preferred
11
access to support creditors became proposed section 15305, which also removed
the 50 percent cap. (1985 Report, supra, at pp. 630–631.) The 25 percent cap that
had applied to general creditors was not retained anywhere; if the 1985 proposal
had been enacted as written, the new law would have dramatically increased the
reach of general creditors.
But the revised draft of the Trust Law in 1986, which was ultimately
enacted, included for the first time section 15306.5. (1986 Report, supra, 18 Cal.
Law Revision Com. Rep. at p. 1339; see Stats. 1986, ch. 820, § 40.) This new
section drew on former section 709.010 and the wage garnishment statute to create
an explicit 25 percent cap on trust interests comparable to the cap protecting
wages. (1986 Report, supra, at p. 1339.) In the process, the Commission did not
meaningfully revise its proposal for section 15307 (compare 1985 Report, supra,
18 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. at p. 633, with 1986 Report, supra, at p. 1340),
nor did the Commission clarify the role of section 15307 in light of section
15306.5. The result is that unlike Civil Code former section 859, which it
purportedly replaced, section 15307 refers to a version of section 709.010 that no
longer imposes a cap on general creditors, even as it follows a new provision,
section 15306.5, that reestablishes that same cap. In light of this history, we
decline to adopt an interpretation of section 15307 that simply undoes the
limitations on general creditors that section 15306.5 sets forth in a set of specific
and carefully calibrated provisions. We conclude instead that the ultimate
enactment of section 15307 without apparent limitations on the reach of general
creditors was inadvertent. The Legislature plainly intended general creditors to be
limited to 25 percent of distributions from the trust.
12
C.
The final issue we must address is whether the 25 percent limitation of
section 15306.5 applies to section 15301(b). Section 15306.5, subdivision (f)
(section 15306.5(f)) provides: ―Subject to subdivision (d), the aggregate of all
orders for satisfaction of money judgments against the beneficiary‘s interest in the
trust may not exceed 25 percent of the payment that otherwise would be made to,
or for the benefit of, the beneficiary.‖ Unlike section 15306.5(b)‘s reference to
―[a]n order under this section,‖ the language of section 15306.5(f) — ―all orders
for satisfaction of money judgments‖ — is not limited to orders under section
15306.5. One possibility, therefore, is that section 15306.5(f)‘s cap extends to all
orders under any provision of the Probate Code.
We need not decide the full reach of the 25 percent cap under 15306.5(f) as
this case involves only the scope of sections 15301(b) and 15306.5. Whatever
other orders may be subject to section 15306.5(f)‘s cap, we conclude that the cap
does not apply to orders under section 15301(b). As explained above, section
15306.5 was modeled on the wage garnishment statute then in force (Code Civ.
Proc., former § 706.050 et seq., as enacted by Stats. 1982, ch. 1364, § 2) and
provides creditors a limited exception to spendthrift protections on the
beneficiary‘s continuing interest in the trust. As the use of the conditional in
section 15306.5(f) suggests, ―the payment that otherwise would be made to‖ the
beneficiary is best understood as referring to ongoing payments the beneficiary
stands to receive. (Italics added.) The cap thus operates to limit the sum of orders
subject to section 15306.5(f)‘s cap to 25 percent of any individual expected
distribution.
13
By contrast, section 15301(b) makes clear that spendthrift protections do
not apply to distributions of principal that have become due and payable. Where
trust assets are not protected by a spendthrift provision, the default rule is that
creditors may reach those assets. (See § 709.010, subd. (b).) By crafting a
specific rule for this narrow class of assets, the Legislature indicated its intent that
those assets be treated differently. (See Miller v. Superior Court (1999) 21 Cal.4th
883, 895 [― ‗ ―A specific provision relating to a particular subject will govern in
respect to that subject, as against a general provision, although the latter, standing
alone, would be broad enough to include the subject to which the more particular
provision relates.‖ ‘ [Citation.]‖].) Applying section 15306.5(f)‘s cap to section
15301(b) assets would defeat the Legislature‘s specific intent to treat due and
payable principal ―in the hands of the trustee‖ on par with such principal ―after
payment to the beneficiary.‖ (See 1986 Report, supra, 18 Cal. Law Revision
Com. Rep. at pp. 1302–1303.)
In sum, after an amount of principal has become due and payable (but has
not yet been distributed), a creditor can petition to have the trustee pay directly to
the creditor a sum up to the full amount of that distribution (§ 15301(b)) unless the
trust instrument specifies that the distribution is for the beneficiary‘s support or
education and the beneficiary needs the distribution for those purposes (§ 15302).
If no such distribution is pending or if the distribution is not adequate to satisfy a
judgment, a general creditor can petition to levy up to 25 percent of the payments
expected to be made to the beneficiary, reduced by the amount other creditors
have already obtained and subject to the support needs of the beneficiary and any
dependents. (§ 15306.5.)
14
As an illustration, suppose a trust instrument specified that a beneficiary
was to receive distributions of principal of $10,000 on March 1 of each year for 10
years. Suppose further that a general creditor had a money judgment of $50,000
against the beneficiary and that the trust distributions are neither specifically
intended nor required for the beneficiary‘s support. On March 1 of the first year,
upon the creditor‘s petition a court could order the trustee to remit the full
distribution of $10,000 for that year to the creditor directly if it has not already
been paid to the beneficiary, as well as $2,500 from each of the nine anticipated
payments (a total of $22,500) as they are paid out. If the creditor were not
otherwise able to satisfy the remaining $17,500 balance on the judgment, then on
March 1 of the following years, upon the general creditor‘s petition the court could
order the trustee to pay directly to the creditor a sum up to the remainder of that
year‘s principal distribution ($7,500), as the court in its discretion finds
appropriate, until the judgment is satisfied.
15
CONCLUSION
We conclude that a bankruptcy trustee, standing as a hypothetical judgment
creditor, can reach a beneficiary‘s interest in a trust that pays entirely out of
principal in two ways. It may reach up to the full amount of any distributions of
principal that are currently due and payable to the beneficiary, unless the trust
instrument specifies that those distributions are for the beneficiary‘s support or
education and the beneficiary needs those distributions for either purpose.
Separately, the bankruptcy trustee can reach up to 25 percent of any anticipated
payments made to, or for the benefit of, the beneficiary, reduced to the extent
necessary by the support needs of the beneficiary and any dependents.
LIU, J.
WE CONCUR:
CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
WERDEGAR, J.
CHIN, J.
CORRIGAN, J.
CUÉLLAR, J.
KRUGER, J.
16
See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
Name of Opinion Carmack v. Reynolds
__________________________________________________________________________________
Unpublished Opinion
Original Appeal
Original Proceeding XXX on request pursuant to rule 8.548, Cal. Rules of Court
Review Granted
Rehearing Granted
__________________________________________________________________________________
Opinion No. S224985
Date Filed: March 23, 2017
__________________________________________________________________________________
Court:
County:
Judge:
__________________________________________________________________________________
Counsel:
Finlayson Toffer Roosevelt & Lilly, Jesse S. Finlayson and Matthew E. Lilly for Claimant and Appellant.
Law Offices of David W. Meadows and David W. Meadows for Defendant.
The Eroen Law Firm and Robert C. Eroen for Plaintiffs and Respondents.
Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
Jesse S. Finlayson
Finlayson Toffer Roosevelt & Lilly LLP
15615 Alton Parkway, Suite 250
Irvine, CA 92618
(949) 759-3810
Robert C. Eroen
The Eroen Law Firm
10100 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 1700
Los Angeles, CA 90067
(310) 201-4977