Filed 5/17/13 In re Tom E. Dixson Trust CA4/1
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
In re TOM E. DIXSON TRUST.
D062439
JULIE ANN DUEPNER-DIXSON,
Petitioner and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 37-2010-00150222-PR-
TR-NC)
v.
HARLEY M. DIXSON, et al,
Objectors and Respondents.
APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Richard G.
Cline, Judge. Affirmed.
Susan Stricklin Wilson and Barbara K. Meserve for Petitioner and Appellant.
Procopio, Cory, Hargreaves & Savitch and Mary V.J. Cataldo for Objectors and
Respondents.
Petitioner and appellant Julie Duepner-Dixson (Julie), was married to Tom E.
Dixson (Tom), although they had separated and he had filed a petition for dissolution of
their marriage before he died by his own hand in 2009. Tom's property was disposed of
by a will and trust, whose trustees, Harley M. Dixson and Rosella Jean Pelzer, are the
objectors and respondents on appeal (the trustees), concerning Julie's petition to share in
Tom's estate as an omitted spouse pursuant to Probate Code1 section 21600 et seq. Julie
appeals orders that deny her standing to pursue such claims and that settle the trustees'
account and report, and allow them compensation and fees.
Julie contends the evidence that was presented at bifurcated trial proceedings,
concerning her standing as a pretermitted spouse, was insufficient to support the probate
court's order denying her such standing and disallowing her objections to the trustees'
administration. She claims the trial court erred by ruling (A) she did not qualify under
section 78, subdivision (d) as a surviving spouse who retained inheritance rights; (B)
certain payments made to her by Tom were intended by him to amount to a transfer to her
"in lieu" of any recovery through his estate plan, within the meaning of section 21611,
subdivision (b); and (C), she effectively agreed to waive all her inheritance rights within
the meaning of section 140 et seq., and section 21611, subdivision (c).
We have examined Julie's arguments in light of the record and determine that the
probate court's rulings are well supported by the evidence and the law, and must be
affirmed.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Marriage; Tom's Estate Planning Documents; Separation
Julie and Tom were each mature businesspersons when they married in June 2008,
and Julie was Tom's sixth wife. In 1986, Tom executed a living trust, and he amended it
seven times. The Trustees are Tom's brother and sister, Harley M. Dixson and Rosella
1 All statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise specified.
2
Jean Pelzer. Generally, Tom's will provided that his assets would be poured over into the
Trust and allocated among his three children, one from a former marriage, and two with
his fifth wife, Christie Lange (Lange). Tom and Julie had no children from their
marriage.
Tom had psychiatric problems, including a bipolar condition, and he and Julie
quarreled and separated in March 2009. Tom's business was in financial trouble and he
wanted to get a loan against the marital residence to raise cash. Attorneys for Tom
(Christine Sickler) and Julie (John Anderson) negotiated a property settlement, and on
March 13, 2009, each party signed a memorandum of settlement (the memorandum).
Julie agreed to execute an interspousal grant deed (the deed) for her interest in the
residence, upon the receipt of a $40,000 payment from Tom and a debt forgiveness of
$8,200 on credit cards (mainly for her attorney fees in preparing for dissolution). The
deed was signed and the payments made, although the parties dispute whether the
payments were in the nature of support, a divorce property settlement and/or an
inheritance settlement.
The terms of the memorandum anticipated that an executed marital settlement
agreement (MSA) would follow, and it would include the standard "certified specialist"
provisions, such as inheritance waivers. The memorandum provided that Julie waived
"any and all rights she may have to receive" spousal support, community property
interests, or any of Tom's retirement assets. It also stated that if either party failed to sign
the MSA, the memorandum "shall be enforceable as a Judgment under Code of Civil
3
Procedure § 664.6." The parties exchanged preliminary declarations of disclosure of
their assets and liabilities.
On March 23, 2009, Tom filed a petition for dissolution of marriage to Julie.
Negotiations continued on finalizing the MSA terms and counsel exchanged drafts and
communications. As of July 2009, they were still debating the tax status of the $40,000
payment from Tom, but the attorneys believed that the deal was done. After the
separation, Tom told his brother (one of the trustees) that "it's all over." He told Lange
that Julie and he were incompatible.
Back in December 2004, when Tom was divorced from Lange, he executed the
pour-over will disinheriting her and amended the trust to exclude her from benefiting
from it. On April 10, 2009, Tom wrote on a copy of that will, "getting divorced from
Julie," and wrote in the name of Julie to replace Lange's name as the spouse to be
excluded from inheriting, and he initialed it and had it witnessed. At trial, the probate
court determined it was not an enforceable codicil to the will.
At some other point, Tom got a copy of the trust from his estate planning attorney,
and he wrote on the trust copy to identify Julie (not Lange) as his wife and to nominate
her as a successor trustee. Julie did not seek to replace the trustees, since Tom's attorneys
told her that copy of the trust was not complete.
The original 2004 will and trust documents were unavailable at the time of trial
and it appeared that they had been lost in a burglary of Tom's safe. The trustees found
copies of estate planning documents after Tom's death. Copies of the will and trust were
produced at trial.
4
On August 16, 2009, Tom killed himself. Julie helped get the death certificates
and told Tom's brother that she did not want anything more than she had received, except
for a few of Tom's personal possessions. The petition for dissolution was still pending,
and the MSA was never finalized.
B. Litigation
The trustees requested that Julie sign a waiver of rights regarding the trust, and in
response, she retained counsel. In October 2010, Julie filed a petition for an order
declaring she should share in Tom's estate as an omitted spouse pursuant to section 21600
et seq. (§§ 17200, subds. (b)(4), (7); 850, subd. (a)(3).) The trustees answered, alleging
that Tom had clearly shown his intent to provide for Julie outside the Trust, and she had
effectively waived any inheritance rights. Julie brought a motion for summary judgment,
which the trustees opposed, and they provided a declaration from Tom's family law
attorney, Ms. Sickler. The motion was denied.
The probate court bifurcated trial, to determine first whether Julie had standing to
object to the trustees' accounting as an omitted spouse. The court heard the testimony of
numerous witnesses and admitted into evidence numerous documents on those issues
(described as necessary in the discussion portion of this opinion).
In the court's statement of decision, the court set forth extensive background
information and ruled, in relevant part, on the contentions of the parties as follows. The
$40,000 and $7,500-plus payments made by Tom to Julie amounted to an in lieu transfer
to her in place of any inheritance rights, within the meaning of section 21611, subdivision
(b). The court relied, inter alia, on testimony about statements Tom had made to his
5
family law attorney, Ms. Sickler, his brother (trustee Dixson), and his ex-wife Lange.
Tom apparently believed and intended that those two payments, made in anticipation of
dissolution, would finally resolve all property rights between the parties, such as
inheritance rights.
The court determined that the memorandum of settlement was a binding written
agreement between Tom and Julie, entered into in anticipation of dissolution of the
marriage and completely settling their property disputes and relationships. The court
ruled that Julie had waived her right to inherit from Tom. Even though the MSA was
never completed, the evidence showed that the parties intended the memorandum to
amount to a binding, full and complete settlement of their property issues, made in
anticipation of dissolution, and operating to waive Julie's right to inherit as a surviving
spouse.
Moreover, the probate court found that Tom had provided a preliminary
declaration of disclosure of assets and liabilities, and that Julie was knowledgeable about
his financial status from the outset of the marriage. The court thus ruled that she had
waived any further requirement of disclosure of his assets and liabilities, she remained
bound by the memorandum, and the finalization of the MSA was not essential to the
agreement.
In response to Julie's argument at trial that Tom had violated his fiduciary duties to
her under Family Code section 721, subdivision (b), the court found that Probate Code
sections 143 and 144 separately provided that such a Family Code provision was not
applicable, when the alternative Probate Code criteria for enforceability of a waiver of
6
inheritance rights were satisfied. The court next ruled that the Probate Code requirements
of sections 143 and 144 had been satisfied, and Julie's waiver was enforceable. Thus,
both subdivisions (b) and (c) of section 21611 had been proven to apply, and they
provided exceptions to any inheritance rights of a surviving spouse. The trial court
denied Julie's petition. The trustees filed an amended accounting and request for
compensation and attorney fees, which the trial court approved.
Julie timely filed a notice of appeal of the order denying her standing to object,
and also filed a notice of appeal of the subsequent order settling the amended account.2
DISCUSSION
In the initial phase of the bifurcated proceedings, the probate court issued a
statement of decision determining that Julie had no standing as a pretermitted spouse to
contest the account of the trustees. This statement of decision included findings on all
those initial, material controverted issues. On appeal, Julie challenges the resulting
orders by contending that no sufficient evidence supports them, regarding: (A) whether
she, as a surviving spouse, retained inheritance rights under section 78 et seq.; (B)
whether the payments to her in connection with the deed amounted to a transfer by Tom
to her, in lieu of his estate plan, within the meaning of section 21611, subdivision (b); and
(C) whether she had effectively waived her inheritance rights within the meaning of
section 140 et seq., and section 21611, subdivision (c).
2 As part of the record in this case, Julie designated the lodged exhibits and the
declaration of Ms. Sickler that were filed in connection with her motion for summary
judgment. As explained in part I.C, post, she also requested judicial notice and additional
orders about those filings, which we granted in part and denied in part.
7
We first outline applicable legal principles and then address these arguments in
sequence.
I
APPLICABLE STANDARDS
A. Statement of Decision; Review
Julie initially argued in her opening brief for a de novo standard of review, based
upon her views on statutory and documentary interpretations. In her reply brief, she
seeks to have us apply a standard for mixed questions of law and fact. At trial, the parties
disputed the intent of both Tom and Julie in entering into the various settlement
documents and discussions. The probate court's statement of decision was issued after
the court heard testimony and reviewed documents to resolve the issues identified in the
trial briefs.
Because the key trust interpretation issues here were decided on such a record of
conflicting evidence, and by means of a statement of decision, "any conflict in the
evidence or reasonable inferences to be drawn from the facts will be resolved in support
of the determination of the trial court decision." (In re Marriage of Hoffmeister (1987)
191 Cal.App.3d 351, 358; Eisenberg, et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Appeals and Writs
(The Rutter Group 2012) ¶ 8:62, pp. 8-28 to 8-29; § 1000 [Code Civ. Proc. rules of
practice apply in probate proceedings].) The ultimate facts found in the court's statement
of decision necessarily include findings on the intermediate evidentiary facts that sustain
them. (Muzquiz v. City of Emeryville (2000) 79 Cal.App.4th 1106, 1125 (Muzquiz).)
8
Generally, "[w]hen the trial court has resolved a disputed factual issue, the
appellate courts review the ruling according to the substantial evidence rule. If the trial
court's resolution of the factual issue is supported by substantial evidence, it must be
affirmed." (Winograd v. American Broadcasting Co. (1998) 68 Cal.App.4th 624, 632.)
The substantial evidence standard of review involves two steps. "First, one must resolve
all explicit conflicts in the evidence in favor of the respondent and presume in favor of
the judgment all reasonable inferences. [Citation.] Second, one must determine whether
the evidence thus marshaled is substantial. While it is commonly stated that our 'power'
begins and ends with a determination that there is substantial evidence [citation], this
does not mean we must blindly seize any evidence in support of the respondent in order
to affirm the judgment. . . . [Citation.] '[I]f the word "substantial" [is to mean] anything
at all, it clearly implies that such evidence must be of ponderable legal significance.
Obviously the word cannot be deemed synonymous with "any" evidence. It must be
reasonable . . . , credible, and of solid value . . . .' [Citation.] The ultimate determination
is whether a reasonable trier of fact could have found for the respondent based on the
whole record." (Kuhn v. Department of General Services (1994) 22 Cal.App.4th 1627,
1632-1633, fns. omitted.)
"[T]he power of an appellate court begins and ends with the determination as to
whether, on the entire record, there is substantial evidence, contradicted or
uncontradicted, which will support the determination, and when two or more inferences
can reasonably be deduced from the facts, a reviewing court is without power to
substitute its deductions for those of the trial court. If such substantial evidence be found,
9
it is of no consequence that the trial court believing other evidence, or drawing other
reasonable inferences, might have reached a contrary conclusion." (Bowers v. Bernards
(1984) 150 Cal.App.3d 870, 873-874.) We may not reweigh the evidence and are bound
by the trial court's credibility determinations. (Ibid.; see Heller v. Pillsbury Madison &
Sutro (1996) 50 Cal.App.4th 1367, 1384.)
B. Extrinsic Evidence; Review
To the extent the probate court was required to interpret documents containing
ambiguous language, a de novo standard of review applies to the threshold determination
of the ambiguity of their provisions. (Winet v. Price (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 1159, 1165-
1166 (Winet).) The probate court correctly determined that these settlement and
testamentary documents were ambiguous on the status of Julie as a surviving spouse with
regard to inheritance matters, so the probate court appropriately considered the extrinsic
evidence offered. (Ibid.)
When required to consider extrinsic evidence as a means of clarifying an
ambiguous provision, the courts will follow accepted guidelines:
"The decision whether to admit parol evidence involves a two-step
process. First, the court provisionally receives (without actually
admitting) all credible evidence concerning the parties' intentions to
determine 'ambiguity,' i.e., whether the language is 'reasonably
susceptible' to the interpretation urged by a party. If in light of the
extrinsic evidence the court decides the language is 'reasonably
susceptible' to the interpretation urged, the extrinsic evidence is then
admitted to aid in the second step--interpreting the contract.
[Citation.]" (Winet, supra, 4 Cal.App.4th at p. 1165.)
Based on the conflicting evidence presented about the respective intentions of the
parties, the probate court interpreted the memorandum, and determined that the meaning
10
urged by the trustees was the most reasonable and appropriate. The court declined to rely
on the MSA as an enforceable document, since it was not executed, but nevertheless
considered the evidence about the negotiations and drafting efforts for the MSA. These
constructions of the documents by the trial court will be upheld on appeal, so long as they
are reasonable and supported by substantial evidence. (Winet, supra, 4 Cal.App.4th
1159, 1166.) This is not a case in which no parol evidence was introduced or there was
no conflict, such that this appellate court could or must independently construe the
writings. (Id. at pp. 1165-1166.)
C. Status of Record on Appeal
Julie brought a request for judicial notice on appeal, and for an order confirming
certain documents are part of this record. (Evid. Code, § 459.) The subject documents
are the petition for dissolution filed by Tom, and an opposing declaration filed in
connection with Julie's motion for summary judgment, giving the views of Tom's family
law attorney, Sickler. In those summary judgment proceedings, the trial court took
judicial notice of the petition for dissolution, and denied the motion.
On appeal, the trustees opposed Julie's motions to supplement the record,
contending that neither of the documents she identified had been admitted as an exhibit at
trial, although there was some general discussion at trial about the dissolution petition,
and it was not disputed that Tom had filed one and when.
On February 15, 2013, this court ruled upon the motion, granting it insofar as
judicial notice of the documents' filing was concerned, but denying the motion for an
order to confirm the documents are part of the record on appeal. In any case, we adhere
11
to the rule that judicial notice properly extends to the existence of the documents, but not
to the truth of the allegations contained in them. (Wolf v. CDS Devco (2010) 185
Cal.App.4th 903, 915.)
Further, Julie's second notice of appeal has challenged the final order settling the
accounting and report of the trustees. Substantial evidence review standards apply to
appellate examination of a probate court's decision to accept an accounting, and Julie, as
appellant, has the burden of showing error. (Estate of Bonaccorsi (1999) 69 Cal.App.4th
462, 471; Estate of Massaglia (1974) 38 Cal.App.3d 767, 774-778.) "[I]in the absence of
a challenge to findings it is assumed that they are supported by the evidence and that they
support the judgment. " (Id. at p. 778.) Mainly, Julie is challenging the initial order in
the bifurcated proceedings that determined she had no standing as a pretermitted spouse
to contest the account of the trustees, and we next address that dispositive issue.
II
SUBSTANTIVE LAW: SECTION 21600 ET SEQ., REGARDING OMITTED SPOUSES
Section 21600 states that "[t]his part shall apply to property passing by will
through a decedent's estate or by a trust . . . that becomes irrevocable only on the death of
the settlor." Section 21610 provides for omitted spouses to share in a decedent's estate
under certain circumstances, stating:
"Except as provided in Section 21611, if a decedent fails to provide
in a testamentary instrument for the decedent's surviving spouse who
married the decedent after the execution of all of the decedent's
testamentary instruments, the omitted spouse shall receive a share in
the decedent's estate, consisting of the following property in said
estate: [¶] (a) The one-half of the community property that belongs
to the decedent . . . [¶] (b) The one-half of the quasi-community
property that belongs to the decedent . . . [¶] (c) A share of the
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separate property of the decedent equal in value to that which the
spouse would have received if the decedent had died without having
executed a testamentary instrument . . . ." (Italics added.)
Julie argues the evidence is insufficient to support the trial court's finding that
section 21611 applied in this case, to provide one or more exceptions to the omitted
spouse provisions of section 21610. Under section 21611:3
"The spouse shall not receive a share of the estate under Section
21610 if any of the following is established: [¶] . . . [¶] (b) The
decedent provided for the spouse by transfer outside of the estate
passing by the decedent's testamentary instruments and the intention
that the transfer be in lieu of a provision in said instruments is
shown by statements of the decedent or from the amount of the
transfer or by other evidence. [¶] (c) The spouse made a valid
agreement waiving the right to share in the decedent's estate."
(Italics added.)
III
CONTENTIONS AND ANALYSIS
A. Surviving Spouse Status
Under section 78, subdivision (d), a " 'surviving spouse' for purposes of the
Probate Code does not include '[a] person who was a party to a valid proceeding
concluded by an order purporting to terminate all marital property rights.' " (In re Estate
of McDaniel (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 458, 461 (McDaniel).) In the Law Revision
Commission Comment to section 78, the reader is referred to sections 140 through 147,
regarding a surviving spouse's waiver of rights at death. (Cal. Law Revision Com. com.,
3 Section 21611, subdivision (a) additionally provides for no spousal inheritance
rights if "[t]he decedent's failure to provide for the spouse in the decedent's testamentary
instruments was intentional and that intention appears from the testamentary
instruments." This was not proven, due to lost originals of Tom's will and trust, and the
trial court's conclusion on that portion of the dispute is not challenged here.
13
52 West's Ann. Prob. Code (2002 ed.) foll. § 78, p. 74.) The trustees do not deny that
Julie was still married to Tom when he died, or that his dissolution petition was not
finally adjudicated, but they contend that she cannot rely on the pure language of this
section, due to the contractual interactions between the parties, even though there was
never any dissolution or legal separation judgment.
In a more common fact pattern, in McDaniel, supra, 161 Cal.App.4th 458, the
parties entered into a judgment dividing their marital property and they waived any rights
to appeal. That judgment became final before the husband died, even though their
marital status had not yet been terminated. Thus, the wife was prevented from inheriting
from his estate, due to the operation of the judgment, which precluded her status as a
surviving spouse who could inherit. The property settlement judgment reached before his
death made her into "a party to a valid proceeding concluded by an order purporting to
terminate all marital property rights" within the meaning of section 78, subdivision (d).
(McDaniel, supra, at p. 462; see Estate of Lahey (1999) 76 Cal.App.4th 1056 [a legal
separation judgment amounted to an order for termination of marital property rights,
under section 78, subdivision (d)].)
This trial involved the presentation of extrinsic evidence and testimony from
Tom's family law attorney Sickler, his ex-wife Lange, his brother and other witnesses,
about the terms and scope of the contractual settlement, as it was represented in the
memorandum. Julie and her family law attorney Anderson also presented evidence going
toward the appropriate purpose of illuminating all the circumstances under which the
documents, including the memorandum, were created. (See Wells Fargo Bank v.
14
Marshall (1993) 20 Cal.App.4th 447, 453.) The memorandum provided that Julie waived
"any and all rights she may have to receive" spousal support, community property
interests, or any of Tom's retirement assets, and allowed for enforcement under Code of
Civil Procedure section 664.6. The probate court determined that the memorandum was
proven to be a binding contract between the parties, even though no MSA was completed.
The court had to decide the scope of the settlement and the property rights covered,
according to the evidence, and it determined that its scope was broad and Julie's
inheritance rights were waived.
Although the court did not have the dissolution petition before it as an exhibit, it
was not disputed that Tom had filed one. Julie seeks to support her surviving spouse
status by citing to evidence suggesting that she hoped there would be a reconciliation and
the marriage would not eventually be terminated, and that she had received the $40,000
and debt forgiveness as support, not as a final payment, because she did not have a place
to live when they separated. She also points out that she was self-supporting and
knowledgeable about Tom's financial circumstances when they married, and thus she did
not marry him for his money and should not be viewed as a gold digger, but nevertheless,
she claims the assets he disclosed in April 2009 were greater than she expected.
However, she does not deny that she received timely disclosures of his assets and
liabilities, pursuant to the memorandum obligations, and she accepted the payments as
negotiated, and they were made in anticipation of dissolution. That the dissolution
petition remained pending and could have resulted in a different property allocation is not
dispositive, because the parties did not pursue the petition, and it can be inferred that
15
neither of them believed that it was necessary to do so, in view of the agreement they had
reached.
Moreover, when Julie points out portions of the evidence that might support her
view of things, that is not equivalent to demonstrating that there was no substantial
evidence in support of the trial court's conclusions that she did not qualify as a surviving
spouse for inheritance purposes. Instead, the extrinsic evidence showed there were
settlement negotiations about many different kinds of property rights, culminating in the
terms of an enforceable memorandum of agreement covering termination of all the usual
marital property rights, and Tom understood that this would include inheritance rights,
and did not hide his understanding from Julie. He sent her an e-mail on March 18, 2009,
telling her that with respect to signing the quitclaim deed, she had "taken a simple bank
formality and made it into a total divorce settlement."
As we interpret section 78, subdivision (d), it is not dispositive here that the
memorandum was contractual in nature, rather than a court filed "valid proceeding
concluded by an order purporting to terminate all marital property rights." (Ibid.) The
memorandum anticipated enforceability as a judgment under Code of Civil Procedure
section 664.6. In the current litigation, Julie was provided with an adequate opportunity
to attempt to prove that as a matter of law, she qualified as a surviving spouse in this trust
matter, as defined by statute. She was unable to do so, and the current orders confirm the
parties' previous contractual arrangements and serve to establish the termination of her
marital property rights, including inheritance. It would have been premature for the
probate court to cut off the inquiry as a simple matter of definition under section 78,
16
without considering the otherwise applicable provisions of section 21610 et seq., together
with sections 140 et seq.
Under all the circumstances shown at trial, it was not enough for Julie to rely on
section 78, subdivision (d), or to argue that neither the dissolution judgment nor MSA
was ever finalized. Instead, the court properly proceeded to determine whether the
statutory criteria of section 21611, subdivisions (b) or (c) were satisfied, such that the
memorandum was intended by the parties to accomplish a final adjudication of their
respective property rights, including a waiver of inheritance.
B. Transfer In Lieu of Estate Plan
Julie next argues there was no substantial evidence supporting a finding that under
section 21611, subdivision (b), her circumstances fell within an exception to section
21610's omitted spouse provisions. Specifically, the probate court found that Tom had
provided for Julie by transfers outside the trust and that he had intended those transfers to
be in lieu of providing for her under the trust. (§ 21611, subd. (b).) It is a different
question whether Julie intentionally waived her inheritance rights, as we shall discuss in
part III.C, post.
Julie claims that not all of the criteria of sections 140 through 147 were met here,
regarding the regulation of contractual arrangements about rights at death, which must be
in writing. (§ 142.) The purposes of these enactments are to provide standards of
enforceability of property settlements (usually prenuptial) that are intended to act as a
waiver of inheritance rights. (Estate of Gibson (1990) 219 Cal.App.3d 1486, 1492.) The
Legislature sought in these sections to ensure that the circumstances of such a waiver of
17
rights would be subject to evaluation by a court to determine enforceability. (Id. at
p. 1493.)
Under section 145, these standards regulating contractual dispositions of rights at
death also apply to a "written agreement" or a "property settlement" that was " 'entered
into after or in anticipation of separation or dissolution or annulment of marriage.' "
(Estate of Gibson, supra, 219 Cal.App.3d 1486, 1492.) "Probate Code section 145 thus
appears to be directed at two types of situations: (1) where the parties do not intend an
agreement to be merged into a dissolution judgment; and (2) where one party dies after
both have executed a marital settlement agreement but before the court has heard the
matter for the purpose of rendering a judgment incorporating the agreement." (Gibson,
supra, at p. 1492.) This section provides that a waiver of "all rights" or equivalent
language in the property or estate of a spouse is deemed to include, absent contrary
language, a waiver of rights listed in section 141, subdivision (a), which includes
inheritance rights.
An enforceable waiver of inheritance rights must comply with the requirements of
sections 143 or 144 (setting the criteria for enforceability of a waiver, e.g., adequate
disclosure being made of assets if disclosure was not waived, representation by counsel,
or possession of independent knowledge about such assets). (§§ 142, subd. (b); 143,
subd. (a)(1).) No such issues are argued on appeal about whether at the time of signing,
the decedent had violated any fiduciary duty to the spouse. (§ 144, subd. (a)(2); In re
Estate of Will (2009) 170 Cal.App.4th 902, 908; Fam. Code, § 721.)
18
Here, the memorandum of settlement is written, was signed by Julie, and it shows
compliance with the requirements of section 143 and 144 regarding his disclosures and
her knowledge of assets. The lack of a subsequently signed MSA does not make any
difference, because the extrinsic evidence about the circumstances under which this
memorandum was signed by both spouses, while represented by counsel, shows that it
was done in anticipation of dissolution, mentions "any and all rights she may have to
receive" different kinds of known property rights, expressly including spousal support,
community property, or retirement assets. Under all the relevant circumstances, this is a
complete enough list to satisfy the requirements of sections 143 through 145, and we can
find no requirement that inheritance rights must be more specifically mentioned in any
other type of writing, in order for an enforceable waiver to occur.
Further, Julie cannot claim any entitlement to a different type of writing, in
addition to the memorandum, on the basis that she and Tom did not exchange their
financial information until after the memorandum was signed, rather than before it. She
waived any right to demand an additional writing following up on such disclosures, by
agreeing that the disclosure could take place within 30 days of signing of the
memorandum. She also admitted that she knew and understood Tom's financial
condition during the marriage, and that after separation, she received disclosures as
agreed.
The court's findings of Tom's in lieu transfer are well supported by the testimony
regarding the purpose of the transfers and the context in which they were made. First,
Tom told Julie he had made the transfers outside the Trust because she made it clear to
19
him that she wanted to accomplish a complete property settlement. That these transfers
were to be in lieu of providing for her under the trust is also shown by the testimony from
Tom's attorney, Sickler, that she and Julie's attorney, Anderson, agreed that the
boilerplate provisions from "certified specialist" documents, about waiver of inheritance
rights, would be included in the MSA, and neither Tom nor Julie expressed any
opposition to that. In the opinion of Attorney Sickler, the $40,000-plus payment to Julie
was more than reasonable for a nine-month marriage, as an equalizing payment.
According to Tom's ex-wife Lange, he told her that his divorce from Julie was
final and that once he paid Julie the money, he assumed the dissolution matters were
concluded. Tom's intention to exclude Julie from his estate plan was also shown in the
handwritten additions he made to his copy of the will. The probate court had a
reasonable basis in the evidence to conclude that the payments were made and accepted
in lieu of provisions for Julie under the trust. (§ 21611, subd. (b).) Substantial evidence
was provided to support a reasonable inference that Tom had the intention his transfers to
Julie in connection with the dissolution, outside the trust, would prevent Julie from
sharing in the Trust's assets. (Ibid.)
C. Waiver
Under section 21611, subdivision (c), a spouse shall not receive a share of the
decedent spouse's estate under section 21610, if she has made a valid agreement waiving
that right. This section is read together with the requirements of sections 143 through
145, controlling the enforceability of a contractual waiver of inheritance rights (such as
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the making of adequate disclosures, representation by counsel, or independent knowledge
of the financial standing of the decedent).
To the extent that the probate court determined that the memorandum included
inheritance rights, even though it did not expressly list them, the court's conclusions were
legitimately based on express and implied findings that the memorandum language was
ambiguous, that extrinsic evidence was essential to resolve those issues, and that such
evidence supported a finding that the memorandum was intended to be a final settlement
of the parties' respective property rights, in anticipation of dissolution, and it would
terminate all of their responsibilities to each other. (§ 145; Estate of Gibson, supra, 219
Cal.App.3d at p. 1492; McDaniel, supra, 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 462; see Muzquiz, supra,
79 Cal.App.4th 1106, 1125.) The attorneys for the parties who were drafting the
documents testified they had reached that understanding, and nothing they heard from
their clients contradicted it, so they thought that the deal was complete. Julie cannot now
contend that any additional writings were required, pursuant to section 142, once Tom
had changed his position by paying the money to her and forgiving the credit card debt,
under the demonstrated understanding that these were equalizing payments.
Without reweighing the evidence, and accepting the substantial evidence in the
record, "contradicted or uncontradicted, which will support the determination, and when
two or more inferences can reasonably be deduced from the facts," this reviewing court is
entitled to accept the trial court's resolution of the disputed factual and legal issues.
(Bowers v. Bernards, supra, 150 Cal.App.3d at pp. 873-874.) Julie has not shown how or
why the trial court's conclusions that she waived her inheritance rights in return for other,
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in lieu compensation are lacking in any substantial evidence support. (Winograd v.
American Broadcasting Co., supra, 68 Cal.App.4th at p. 632.)
DISPOSITION
The orders are affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to Respondents.
HUFFMAN, J.
WE CONCUR:
McCONNELL, P. J.
HALLER, J.
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