Filed 4/28/21
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Nevada)
----
In re the Marriage of ELIZABETH ANNE WENDT C084083
and WILLIAM NICHOLAS PULLEN.
ELIZABETH ANNE WENDT, (Super. Ct. No. TFL135547)
Respondent,
v.
WILLIAM NICHOLAS PULLEN,
Appellant;
WINDHAM BREMER, as Trustee, etc.,
Respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Nevada County, Robert Lynn
Tamietti, Judge. Reversed.
Law Office of Leslie J. Shaw and Leslie J. Shaw for Appellant.
Gutierrez Marca and William F. Gutierrez for Respondent Windham Bremer, as
Trustee, etc.
No appearance for Respondent Elizabeth Anne Wendt.
1
Under the law governing dissolution proceedings, a wealthier party to the
proceeding may be compelled to pay another party’s attorney fees. (See Fam. Code,
§ 2030.)1 Here, appellant William Nicholas Pullen appeals from the family court’s denial
of his section 2030 motion to compel respondent Windham Bremer, the trustee of the
Elizabeth Anne Wendt Trust, to pay his attorney fees stemming from his successful
motion to join the trustee as a third party to the dissolution action involving Pullen and
his ex-wife Elizabeth Anne Wendt.
Pullen contends the family court’s ruling was an abuse of discretion as it was
based on legal error, and that it effectively precludes him from further litigating the
matter.
Bremer counters that under California law a trustee cannot be compelled to
disburse money absent a showing of bad faith. He argues that Pullen’s claim is subject to
Probate Code restrictions on claims against spendthrift trusts. He also claims that
payment was barred under Indiana and Illinois law, and that appellant’s underlying claim
is specious.
Since the question before us involves the administration of the trust rather than
interpreting its terms, Indiana law may apply, and Illinois law is inapplicable. However,
choice of law is immaterial as both Indiana and California follow the modern
interpretation regarding the liability of trusts and trustees to third parties. This modern
approach allows third parties to obtain relief from the trust for matters arising out of the
trust’s administration, and is not limited by spendthrift provisions. Section 2030 provides
for the award of attorney fees against parties other than spouses, like the trustee. Since
the award of attorney fees stems from the administration of the trust and does not involve
a claim against the beneficiary, payment from a spendthrift trust is not contingent on the
1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code.
2
bad faith of the trustee. It was an abuse of discretion for the family court to make the
award of fees contingent on such a showing and we shall reverse and remand for
additional proceedings.
BACKGROUND
On December 29, 1989, William Wendt (grantor) created the Elizabeth Anne
Wendt Trust as an irrevocable spendthrift trust, with respondent Bremer as the trustee and
his daughter Elizabeth Anne Wendt (Wendt) as the current beneficiary. Both the grantor
and the trustee lived in LaPorte, Indiana at the time the trust was created and at all times
since. Respondent has administered the trust exclusively in Indiana. The trust, which
was drawn up by attorneys in Chicago, has choice of law provisions designating Illinois
as the choice of law for interpreting the trust document, and all other questions “shall be
governed by the law of the state in which the principal place of administration of that
trust is located at the time of reference.” In 1995, Wendt agreed to relinquish her rights
to compel distributions to her in exchange for her father paying her money and putting
more money in the trust. The trust has extensive assets that include stock and funds from
the family business and real property in California.
Wendt and appellant married on September 13, 1997. Wendt filed a petition for
dissolution of the marriage on August 8, 2013. The issues to be decided include child
custody, division of property, child and spousal support, and attorney fees. Appellant and
Wendt had three minor children when the petition was filed.
On January 21, 2015, Wendt made a written request of respondent to disburse trust
funds to meet her support needs, which respondent denied on January 27, 2015.
On February 8, 2016, appellant filed a motion to join the trust and trustee to the
dissolution action and to compel the trustee to disburse funds to Wendt as necessary to
ensure payment of spousal or child support orders and for attorney fees. The family court
granted the motion to join on February 16, 2016. It also ordered appellant to pay $73 a
month in child support to Wendt. Finding the parties’ net incomes were substantially
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similar and that Wendt did not have access to the spendthrift trust’s assets, it declined to
order any spousal support to appellant, and denied appellant’s request for attorney fees
from Wendt.
On May 24, 2016, respondent filed a motion to quash for lack of jurisdiction
and/or dismiss for forum non conveniens, which the family court denied on July 15,
2016. We denied respondent’s petition for a writ of mandate on August 25, 2016.
Respondent filed a demurrer to the joinder on September 6, 2016, which the family court
overruled on August 28, 2017.
On September 16, 2016, appellant filed a section 2030 request for $76,141 in
attorney fees and costs from the trustee for expenses incurred in bringing the successful
motion to join the trust and trustee. The family court denied the request, finding it was
precluded from making an award absent a finding of bad faith by the trustee. Appellant
filed a petition for writ of mandate, prohibition, or other appropriate relief, which we
denied on January 12, 2017.
DISCUSSION
I
We begin by examining the basis of appellant’s claim, section 2030 and the law
regarding spendthrift trusts upon which the family court’s decision rests.
A. Section 2030
A party’s ability to recover attorney fees and other expenses and costs in a
dissolution proceeding is governed by section 2030,2 which provides in pertinent part:
“In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage, nullity of marriage, or legal
separation of the parties, and in any proceeding subsequent to entry of a related judgment,
the court shall ensure that each party has access to legal representation, including access
2 Section 271 also provides for attorney fees as a sanction against one party. No
such sanction was ordered in this case.
4
early in the proceedings, to preserve each party’s rights by ordering, if necessary based
on the income and needs assessments, one party, except a governmental entity, to pay to
the other party, or to the other party’s attorney, whatever amount is reasonably necessary
for attorney’s fees and for the cost of maintaining or defending the proceeding during the
pendency of the proceeding.” (§ 2030, subd. (a)(1).)
Parties to the dissolution proceeding other than spouses can be required to pay
under this statute. “Any order requiring a party who is not the spouse of another party to
the proceeding to pay attorney’s fees or costs shall be limited to an amount reasonably
necessary to maintain or defend the action on the issues relating to that party.” (§ 2030,
subd. (d).) A spouse does not have to demonstrate the likelihood of success or establish a
prima facie case linking the third party to the dissolution proceeding. (In re Marriage of
Bendetti (2013) 214 Cal.App.4th 863, 865.) The spouse is entitled to relief so long as the
matter underlying the fees was not specious. (In re Marriage of Siller (1986) 187
Cal.App.3d 36, 53.)
California has a strong public policy of ensuring a level playing field between the
parties to a dissolution proceeding. “ ‘California’s public policy in favor of expeditious
and final resolution of marital dissolution actions is best accomplished by providing at
the outset of litigation, consistent with the financial circumstances of the parties, a parity
between spouses in their ability to obtain effective legal representation.’ ” (Droeger v.
Friedman, Sloan & Ross (1991) 54 Cal.3d 26, 41, fn. 12.) Accordingly, “[t]he purpose of
section 2030 is to ensure that the overall cost of litigating a proceeding for the dissolution
of marriage, nullity of marriage, or legal separation (§ 2030, subd. (a)) is apportioned
equitably depending on what is ‘just and reasonable under the relative circumstances of
the respective parties.’ [Citations.]” (In re Marriage of Perry (1998) 61 Cal.App.4th
295, 310-311.)
Since a party does not have to prevail or even establish a prima facie claim to get
attorney fees from a third party brought into the litigation, conditioning section 2030
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relief on the third party’s bad faith, as the family court did here, is inconsistent with that
statute. The family court’s reasons for this approach is found in the other body of law
relevant to this case, the law of trusts.
B. Trusts
“ ‘A spendthrift trust is created where the settlor gives property in trust for
another, and provides that the beneficiary cannot assign or otherwise alienate his or her
interest, and that it shall not be subject to the claims of the beneficiary’s creditors.’
[Citations.]” (Chatard v. Oveross (2009) 179 Ca.App.4th 1098, 1104.) “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. [Citation.] 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.” (Carmack v. Reynolds (2017)
2 Cal.5th 844, 849.)
California generally follows the common law of trusts, except as modified by
statute. (Estate of Giraldin (2012) 55 Cal.4th 1058, 1074.) The law regarding spendthrift
trusts is stated as follows:
“Under the Probate Code, spendthrift provisions are generally valid as to both trust
income and trust principal. [Citations.] Yet creditors need not always wait for
distributions to reach the debtor’s hands. Spendthrift provisions are invalid when
grantors name themselves beneficiaries. [Citation.] 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 [citation] and those with restitution
judgments [citation]. In addition, a state or local public entity can reach trust assets when
the beneficiary owes money for public support [citation] unless distributions from the
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trust are required to care for a disabled beneficiary [citation].” (Carmack v. Reynolds,
supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 849.)
The family court relied on a spendthrift trust case, Ventura County Dept. of Child
Support Services v. Brown (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 144 (Ventura), to find section 2030
fees could be awarded only upon a finding of bad faith by the trustee. Ventura involved
an application of the provision allowing spendthrift trusts to be accessed for child support
payments, Probate Code section 15305, subdivision (c).3 (Ventura, at p. 149.) The issue
in Ventura was “whether a court may order a trustee to exercise its discretion to satisfy a
support judgment (from trust income or principal) when the trustee has chosen not to
make a payment to the beneficiary.” (Id. at p. 152.) The Court of Appeal found the
trustee could not frustrate Probate Code section 15305 in this way. Recognizing that
courts generally do not interfere with a trustee’s discretion in the absence of bad faith
(see Ventura, at p. 154), such restraint did not apply in light of the strong public policy
advanced by Probate Code section 15303.
The Ventura court noted California has a strong public policy favoring payment of
child support (Ventura, supra, 117 Cal.App.4th at p. 154) and, “[b]y enacting section
15305, the Legislature intended to allow a support creditor to satisfy court-ordered child
support obligations where the parent is a trust beneficiary. The statute was crafted to
preclude a beneficiary’s efforts to avoid a support obligation. The fact that the statute
refers to payments made by the trustee demonstrates legislative intent that the trustee
make distributions from the trust. Although a trustee may be given broad discretion, it
3 Probate Code section 15305, subdivision (c) states: “Whether or not the
beneficiary has the right under the trust to compel the trustee to pay income or principal
or both to or for the benefit of the beneficiary, the court may, to the extent that the court
determines it is equitable and reasonable under the circumstances of the particular case,
order the trustee to satisfy all or part of the support judgment out of all or part of future
payments that the trustee, pursuant to the exercise of the trustee’s discretion, determines
to make to or for the benefit of the beneficiary.”
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may not exercise its discretion with an improper motive.” (Id. at p. 155.) Contrary to the
family court’s ruling here and the arguments of respondent in this case, Ventura does not
require a finding of trustee bad faith to compel payment of child support from a
spendthrift trust. Rather, the act of declining to pay child support owed by the
beneficiary was the requisite “improper motive” that justified court ordered disbursement
of child support payments. “Under [Probate Code] section 15305, even if the trust
instrument contains a spendthrift clause applicable to claims for child support, ‘it is
against public policy to give effect to the provision.’ [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 154.)
Although the attorney fees sought here were in support of litigation for potential
child support payments from the spendthrift trust, any potential tension between section
2030 and Probate Code section 15305 is irrelevant to the resolution of this case because
the dispute is about subject matter not covered by the spendthrift provisions of Probate
Code section 15305. Ventura is nonetheless instructive as it shows it is possible that the
trustee of a spendthrift trust can be compelled to disburse assets in light of countervailing
public policies.
II
No Conflict
As the trust document contains choice of law provisions designating Illinois law
for interpretation and the state where the trust is primarily administered, and Indiana for
all other questions, it is necessary to determine which state’s law applies here. Since the
question here involves administration of the trust rather than its interpretation, Illinois
law is inapplicable. Whether California or Indiana law applies regarding the trust’s
administration is immaterial to our analysis as both Indiana and California follow the
modern interpretation regarding the liability of trusts and trustees to third parties.
Spendthrift trusts are valid in both California and Indiana. (See Ind. Code § 30-4-
3-2.) As in California, a court applying Indiana law generally will not intervene in the
administration of a spendthrift trust absent a showing of bad faith. (Sisters of Mercy
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Health Corp. v. First Bank of Whiting (Ind. App. 1993) 624 N.E.2d 520, 522.) Also, like
California, Indiana allows a claim of spousal or child support to overcome a trust’s
spendthrift provision. (Clay v. Hamilton (1945) 116 Ind.App.214, 224; Sisters of Mercy
Health Corp., at p. 522, citing Clay.)
California and Indiana law also follow the same approach to the aspect of the law
of trusts that determines the question here, the liability of the trust and trustee to third
parties with claims arising out of the trust’s administration. California and Indiana both
recognize the common law principle that an express trust is not a person or legal entity
separate from the trustees, but is instead a fiduciary relationship regarding property.
(Presta v. Tepper (2009) 179 Cal.App.4th 909, 914; see Baugher v. Hall (1958) 238 Ind.
170, 171 [“An estate, a receivership, a trusteeship are not parties to the judgment in the
lower court because they are not legal entities. A trust is represented by the fiduciary,
who is the party to the judgment.”], disapproved on other grounds in Jasper & Chicago
Motor Express, Inc. v. Ziffrin Truck Lines, Inc. (1961) 241 Ind. 643.)
This common law rule had potentially harsh consequences, as it left the trustee
personally liable for any liability arising out of the trust’s administration.
“Commentators have long criticized the traditional approach as unfair to trustees . . . .
Reacting to these concerns, most American states [] no longer follow the traditional rules.
Under the modern approach adopted in this chapter, third parties may proceed against a
trustee in the trustee’s fiduciary (‘representative’) capacity whether or not the trustee is
also personally liable, with the trustee shielded from personal liability insofar as the
trustee acted properly.” (Restat.3d of Trusts, ch. 21, intro. note (Restatement).) This part
of the Restatement has been cited favorably in Witkin (see 11 Witkin Summary of Cal.
Law (11th ed. 2017) Trusts, § 2009, p. 612) and by an Indiana appellate court (Kesling v.
Kesling (Ind. App. 2012) 967 N.E.2d 66, 81).
The Restatement summarizes the modern reaction to the common law rule.
“Technically, the trust is still not generally recognized as a legal ‘entity,’ but it is
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generally for federal tax purposes, and in practice trustees act on behalf of their trusts and
are sued as trust representatives. Indeed, in this Chapter and elsewhere in this country,
the trust is treated as an entity to such an extent that it is no longer inappropriate to refer
to claims against or liabilities of a ‘trust’ (as in the title and content of this Chapter) and
to the liability or debt of a beneficiary to a ‘trust’ (as in Chapter 20), or to refer to and
treat trusts, in law and in practice, as if they were entities in numerous other contexts.”
(Restatement, supra, ch. 21, intro. note.)
California and Indiana take the modern approach and allow third parties to recover
from the trust for liabilities arising from the trust’s administration. California provides as
follows:
“A claim based on a contract entered into by a trustee in the trustee’s
representative capacity, on an obligation arising from ownership or control of trust
property, or on a tort committed in the course of administration of the trust may be
asserted against the trust by proceeding against the trustee in the trustee’s representative
capacity, whether or not the trustee is personally liable on the claim.” (Prob. Code,
§ 18004.)
Indiana’s statute takes a different form, but still allows third parties to recover
from the trust in certain circumstances:
“(a) Unless the terms of the contract or other non-negotiable obligation expressly
provide otherwise, the trustee is not personally liable on a contract or other non-
negotiable obligation with a third person made by him in the administration of the trust.
“(b) When a third person is entitled to compensation for injury suffered in the
course of the administration of the trust:
“(1) If the injury is the result of the trustee’s personal act or omission as trustee,
the trustee will be personally liable and the injured party will be entitled to satisfaction of
his claim from the trustee’s individual property first and then, to the extent the claim is
yet unsatisfied, from the trust estate.
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“(2) If the injury is the result of the act or omission of an agent of the trustee, and
the agent was properly selected and supervised and there was no improper delegation of
authority to the agent, the injured party will be entitled to satisfaction of his claim from
the trust estate first and then, to the extent that the claim is yet unsatisfied, from the
trustee’s individual property.
“(3) If the injury is the result of the act or omission of the settlor or his agent, and
not that of the trustee or his agent, the injured party will be entitled to satisfaction of his
claim from the trust estate and not from the trustee’s individual property.
“(4) The question of ultimate liability as between the trust estate and the trustee
individually, if it is to be determined, shall be determined in a proceeding for accounting,
surcharge or indemnification.” (Ind. Code 30-4-3-10.)
There is no decision in either state holding a spendthrift trust is immune from
paying debts related to the administration of the trust, and we see no reason for
recognizing such an exemption. The purpose of a spendthrift trust is to prevent
dissipation of the trust’s assets by the beneficiary or the beneficiary’s creditors. “It is the
essence of a spendthrift trust that it is not subject to voluntary alienation by the cestui, nor
subject to involuntary alienation through attachment or other process at the suit of his
creditors. [Citations.]” (Kelly v. Kelly (1938) 11 Cal.2d 356, 362; see Brosamer v. Mark
(Ind. App. 1989) 540 N.E.2d 652, 654-655 [“a spendthrift trust is one in which the
beneficiary is unable to transfer, assign, or alienate his right to future payments of income
or principal, and which provides the beneficiary’s creditors are unable to subject the
beneficiary’s creditors are unable to subject the beneficiary’s interest to the payment of
their claims while in the hands of the trustee”].) It does no damage to the purpose of a
spendthrift trust to allow creditors to reach the trust’s assets for payment of debts arising
out of the trust’s administration.
Notwithstanding respondent’s claims to the contrary, the request for fees and costs
under section 2030 by appellant Pullen is not contingent on claims against the trust by the
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trust’s beneficiary, Wendt. Rather, it is a claim against the trust for a debt arising due to
the trust’s administration, the litigation regarding appellant’s successful efforts to bring
the trustee and trust into the dissolution proceeding. It is therefore exempt from the
trust’s spendthrift provision, and the family court erred in finding it could not award fees
absent a showing of bad faith by the trustee.4
The family court’s erroneous failure to determine whether appellant is entitled to
relief under section 2030 is an abuse of discretion. (David v. Hernandez (2014) 226
Cal.App.4th 578, 592 [legal error is abuse of discretion].) Since an award of fees and
costs under section 2030 involves factual issues not yet addressed, we shall reverse the
family court’s order and remand for additional proceedings.
DISPOSITION
The order denying appellant’s section 2030 motion is reversed and the matter
remanded for additional proceedings consistent with this opinion. Appellant is entitled to
recover his costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a).)
/s/
BLEASE, Acting P. J.
We concur:
/s/
HULL, J.
/s/
RENNER, J.
4 We also reject respondent’s contention that section 2030 fees are improper here
because the underlying claim is specious. Respondent incorrectly assumes the claim’s
merit is measured by the possibility of his obtaining child support from the trust. Not so.
Appellant seeks compensation for the costs and fees associated with successful efforts to
join the trustee and trust. Appellant’s success belies any claim of its speciousness.
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