Opinion
Statement of the Case
Petitioner Sister Judith Lynn Gardenhire, D.C., (hereafter Gardenhire) filed a petition for a writ of mandate directing the trial court to vacate its order denying her motion for summary judgment and to enter a new order granting the motion. We deny the petition.
Gardenhire filed her motion in a probate action to resolve competing claims by the beneficiaries of a living trust and the beneficiaries of a will to a parcel of real property. In 1989, Anne Pulizevich (Pulizevich) created the Anne Pulizevich Trust (Trust), naming herself as trustеe and Ivka Barilovic (Barilovic) and Gardenhire as alternate trustees if Pulizevich became incapacitated or died. The Trust provided for Pulizevich to receive income during her lifetime. Upon her death, the Trust assets were to be distributed to O’Connor Hospital in trust for the benefit of Barilovic, Josephine Francesconi (Francesconi), and Mary Salles. Upon the death of each beneficiary, her *886 interest would vest in O’Connor Hospital. Pulizevich executed a quitclaim deed, transferring а parcel of real property (the Property) into the Trust. Pulizevich also executed a pour-over will, in which she left her estate to the Trust and nominated Gardenhire and Barilovic as co-executors.
In January 2002, Pulizevich executed a will, in which she expressly revoked all prior wills. Although she did not mention the Trust, Pulizevich stated that it was her intent “to dispose of all real and personal property which I have the right to dispose of by Will . . . .” In particular, Pulizevich left her personal property to Francesconi. Pulizevich put the residue of her estate into a testamentary trust for the benefit of Francesconi and Barilovic. In connection with that trust, Pulizevich expressly provided, among other things, that Barilovic could live in an apartment on the Property as long as she wished. Pulizevich named Francesconi and the president of St. Anne’s Maternity Home (St. Anne’s) as trustees. Pulizevich also provided that upon the deaths of Francesconi and Barilovic, the principal and interest of the testamentary trust estate would vest in St. Anne’s.
On April 23, 2002, Pulizevich died. Thereafter, Francesconi filed a petition seeking a determination that Pulizevich had revoked the Trust by will before she died and regained ownership of the Property as an individual. Francesconi also sought an order transferring legal title to the Property from the Trust to the Pulizevich estate. (See Prob. Code, § 850.) 1 Gardenhire, as trustee of the Trust, opposed the petition and later filed a motion for summary judgment, seeking a determination that Pulizevich could nоt have revoked the Trust by will. The trial court denied summary judgment, and Gardenhire now seeks a writ of mandate to reverse that ruling.
Background
Gardenhire’s motion for summary judgment raised two issues. The first involved the meaning of article I, section 1.02 of the Trust, which provides, in relevant part, “While living, the Trustor may at any time and from time to time by written notice signed by the Trustor and delivered to the Trustee: [(1[] A. Revoke or change the interest in any trust created or to be created pursuant to this Declaration of any beneficiary named in this Declaration or in any amendment to this Declaration, [f] B. Amend any provision of this Declaration or any amendment to this Declaration to such extent as may be acceptable to the Trustee. [][] C. Revoke in whole or in part any trust or trusts created by or to be created pursuant to this Declaration. [f] D. Withdraw all or any part of the Trust Estate.” 2 The question raised by summary judgment was whether this provision authorizes revocation by will.
*887 The second issue involved the meaning of section 15401, subdivision (a), which provides, “(a) A trust that is revocable by the settlor may be revoked in whole or in part by any of the following methods: [f] (1) By compliance with any method of revocation provided in the trust instrument, [f] (2) By a writing (other than a will) signed by the settlor and delivered to the trustee during the lifetime of the settlor. If the trust instrument explicitly makes the method of revocation provided in the trust instrument the exclusive method of revocation, the trust may not be revoked pursuant to this paragraph.” 3 The question raised by the summary judgment motion was whether the statute requirеs that the power to revoke by will be specifically and expressly stated in a trust.
In ruling on the motion, the trial court noted that the Trust expressly permitted revocation during the trustor’s lifetime “by written notice” signed by the trustor and delivered to the trustee. Finding no evidence that Pulizevich intended to limit the scope of the term “written notice” and giving that term its ordinary meaning, the court found it to be “all-inclusive in terms of allowing any type of writing to constitute notice of revocation or amendment,” including a will. (Italics added.) The сourt further concluded that under section 15401, the power to revoke by will need not be specifically and expressly set forth in a trust.
In her petition for a writ of mandate, Gardenhire reiterates the claims she made in her summary judgment motion and contends that both of the court’s rulings were incorrect. 4
*888 The Trust Permitted Revocation by Will
“In construing trust instruments, as in the construction and interpretation of all documents, the duty of the court is to first ascertain and then, if possible, give effect to the intent of the maker.”
(Estate of Gump
(1940)
We agree with the trial court that because Pulizevich did not limit or qualify the term “written notice,” she authorized revocation via any writing that unambiguously manifested her intent to revoke, including a will. We find significant support for such broad latitude in the fact that she named herself the trustee. The trust allowed Pulizevich to revoke simply by giving herself written notice of her intent to do so. Since she could not be mistaken about her own intent no matter how she chose to manifest it in writing, the broad, unqualified language of the trust reasonably implies that she did not intend to restrict the form of written notice or the nature of the documents used to provide it. Rather, any writing that unambiguously manifested her intent would do.
Relying primarily on
Rosenauer v. Title Insurance & Trust Co.
(1973)
*889
In
Rosenauer, supra,
In rejecting that claim, the court in
Rosenauer
quoted on the Restatement of Trusts, section 330, comment (j) (hereafter Comment (j)): “ ‘If the settlor reserves a power to revoke the trust only in a particular manner or under particular circumstances, he can revoke the trust only in that manner or under those circumstances. If the settlor reserves a power to revoke the trust by transaction
inter vivos,
as for example, by notice to the trustee, he cannot revoke the trust by his will.’ ”
(Rosenauer, supra,
The
Rosenauer
court also concluded that the broad language of the statute did nоt negate the specific language in the trust requiring that notice of revocation be delivered during the trustor’s lifetime. “While Civil Code section 2280 was undoubtedly intended to liberalize the power of revocation in California we do not believe it was intended to operate as a nullification of a trustor’s plainly expressed preference for a mode of revocation. [][] The
*890
thrust of the statute is to remove any doubt concerning the revocability of a voluntary trust which is silent on the subject[,] аnd it cannot be construed as creating an exclusive method for the exercise of the power when as here the trust is not silent but instead quite specific.”
(Rosenauer, supra,
Lindstrom, supra,
The Lindstrom court further noted that the trust required that the power of revocation be exercised by notice delivered to the trustee during the trustor’s lifetime. The court cited Comment (j) and Rosenauer for the rule that where a trust provides for revocation by an inter vivos notice to the trustee, the trust cannot be revoked by a will, which does not become operative for any purpose until after the trustor has died. (Lindstrom, supra, 191 Cal.App.3d at pp. 385-386.) Thе court also pointed out that the trustor’s will was not delivered to the trustee until after the trustor had died. Thus, as in Rosenauer, the court concluded that “a will that was not delivered to the trustee during the lifetime of the trustor cannot revoke or modify a trust.” (Id. at p. 388.)
The results in Rosenauer and Lindstrom are unquestionably correct. In each case, the document purporting to revoke the trust was not delivered to the trustee during the trustor’s lifetime as expressly required by the trust. Therefore, the attempts to revoke by will failed because the trustors had not complied with the terms of the trust.
In this regard, we agree that Comment (j), which figured so prominently in both cases, accurately reflects California law insofar as it states, “If the settlor reserves a power to revoke the trust
only
in a particular manner or under particular circumstances, he can revoke the trust only in that manner or under those circumstances.” (Comment (j),
supra,
p. 139, italics added.) As noted, section 15401 permits revocation by “any method” provided in the trust (§ 15401, subd. (a)(1)) and also by a writing, other than a will, delivered to the trustee during thе trustor’s lifetime
unless
“the trust instrument explicitly makes the method of revocation provided in the trust instrument the exclusive method of revocation . . . .” (§ 15401, subd. (a)(2).) In
Conservatorship of Irvine
(1995)
However, we do not agree with the further statement in Comment (j),
supra,
page 139, that “[i]f the settlor reserves a power to revoke the trust by transaction inter vivos, as for example, by a notice to the trustee, he cannot revoke the trust by his will.” Implicit in that statement is the notion that because a will has no effect during the trustor’s lifetime, it cannot provide inter vivos notice of revocation. Comment (j) reflects a policy of requiring certain formalities because they help to minimize ambiguity and thus ensure the proper and appropriate administration of trusts. However, that policy does not logically explain why a will, upon delivery, cannot provide effective and immediate notice of a trustor’s intent to revoke. Moreover, although the dispositional provisions of a will remain inoperative until the trustor’s death, it does not necessarily follow that the will cannot separately and effectively have a present and immediate effect upon delivery, such as notice of intent to revoke. For example, suppose a person writes a will and in it states that he loathes his brother and bequeaths to him a bag of garbage. He then gives the will to his brother. Although the bequest is legally inoperative, the will nevertheless immediately and effectively communicates the person’s feelings to his brother. We perceive no logical reason why a will similarly cannot provide immediate and present notice of a trustor’s intent to revoke a trust. Indeed, where a trustor unambiguously manifests an intent to revoke, amend, or alter a trust in a will, and where the trustor delivers it to the trustee, who reads it, we believe the trustor’s intent must control and be given effect. (See
Newman v. Wells Fargo Bank
(1996)
We acknowledge that the language of Comment (j) or similar language has been widely adopted. (E.g.,
In re Last Will and Testament of Tamplin
(Alaska 2002)
However, adoption of Comment (j) has not been unanimous or universal. In
In re Estate of Davis
(1996) 109 OhioApp.3d 181 [
We agree with the analysis in Davis and considеr it applicable to not just the amendment of a trust but also its revocation.
Last, we decline to adopt and apply the last sentence of Comment (j) for another reason. Section 15401, subdivision (a)(1) permits revocation by any method provided in the trust. Here, the Trust permitted Pulizevich to revoke *893 via “written notice,” which, as construed, means that she could give herself notice using any form of writing that unambiguously manifested her intent to revoke, including a will. The statutory authorization in section 15401, subdivision (a) must govern ovеr contrary language in a Restatement comment.
A Trust Need not Specifically and Expressly Authorize Revocation by Will
Gardenhire contends that under section 15401, a trustor may make a trust revocable by will, but he or she must do so in a specific and express provision. She claims that this requirement becomes apparent when subdivision (a)(1) and (2) are read together. According to Gardenhire, the two provisions establish that “the necessary ‘writing’ to accomplish any type of revocation or аmendment cannot be in the form of a ‘will,’ unless it is so specified in the trust instrument.” In support of her view, Gardenshire cites the Law Revision Commission comment to section 15401, which reads, in pertinent part, “The settlor may revoke a revocable trust in the manner provided in [section 15401] subdivision (a)(2), unless there is a contrary provision in the trust. This changes the rule under prior case law.[ 6 ] [Citation.] The settlor may not revoke a trust by a will under subdivision (a)(2), even if the will purporting to revoke is delivered to the trustee during the lifetime of the sеttlor. However, the settlor may revoke by will if the trust so provides, pursuant to subdivision (a)(1). [Citation.]” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 54 West’s Ann. Prob. Code (1991 ed.) foll. § 15401, p. 571, italics added.) Gardenhire argues that this comment reflects a legislative intent to allow revocation by will only when the trust specifically and expressly authorizes it. Any other interpretation would be inconsistent with that intent and render the last sentence of the comment, italicized above, meaningless and superfluous.
“The goal of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the Legislature. [Citation.]”
(Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. County of Stanislaus
(1997)
The legislative intent that Gardenhire sees so clearly in the statutory language is not readily or reasonably apparent to us. As noted, section 15401, subdivision (a)(1) allows a trust to provide any method of revocation. If the trust is silent and does not provide a method, then section 15401, subdivision (a)(2) allows revocation by a writing, other than a will, signed and delivered by the trustor to the trustee during the trustor’s lifetime. 7 If the trust is not silent and instead provides a method of revocation, then seсtion 15401, subdivision (a)(2) is inapplicable. On its face, the statute does not require that a trust contain a specific and express provision authorizing revocation by will. Nor does subdivision (a)(2) represent a proviso to subdivision (a)(1) to the effect that although a trust may provide any method of revocation, if the trustor wants to allow revocation by will, then he or she may not use general language, such as written notice, that would necessarily encompasses a will; rather the trustor must instead expressly specify that a will сan constitute written notice. 8 Moreover, we do not find the statute ambiguous concerning whether subdivision (a)(1) implicitly requires an express provision if a trustor wants to authorize revocation by will.
Gardenhire’s reliance on the Law Revision Commission comment does not convince us that the statute contains such a requirement or that the Legislature intended to impose one. The comment merely states that a trustor must provide in the trust for revocation by will. It does not state that under section 15401, subdivision (a)(1), a trustor must specifically and expressly provide for revocation by will or that a trust may not provide for revocation by will in *895 general language that would necessarily encompass a will. Moreover, any apparent ambiguity in the comment does not mean that the statute is ambiguous. Consequently, if the plain meaning of unambiguous statutory language renders the last sentence of the comment meaningless and superfluous, then so be it, for it is the Legislature’s words that govern, not those used by the Law Revision Commission.
Disposition
The petition for a writ of mandate is denied.
Premo, 1, and Elia, 1, concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 21, 2005, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Petitioner’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 8, 2005.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise specified.
Article I, section 1.03 provides, “On the death of the Trustor, the trust created by this Declaration shall become irrevocable and not subject to amendment.”
Section 15401, subdivision (e) provides, “The manner of revocation of a trust revоcable by the settlor that was created by an instrument executed before July 1, 1987, is governed by prior law and not by this section.” The Trust was created in 1989.
In its written order, the trial court stated, “Viewing the extrinsic evidence in its totality, including in particular the 2002 Will itself, it becomes apparent that Decedent intended to revoke or amend the Trust by executing the 2002 Will.”
In her petition, Gardenhire asserts that it is unclear what the court meant by “extrinsic evidence” or “what alleged ambiguity existed to authorize Respondent Superior Court to look at any evidence outside the two legal documents (i.e., the 2002 Will and the Trust Instrument).”
The issues before us are purely legal: what is the meaning of a provision in the Trust; and what is the meaning of section 15401. (See
Burch v. George
(1994)
For example, the court quoted
National Shawmut Bank of Boston v. Joy
(1944)
The “change” in the law appears to be that before section 15401, courts had held that where a trust provides a method of revocation, that method must be followed rather than the statutory method. Section 15401 now allows revocation by the statutory method in subdivision (a)(2) unless the trust explicitly makes the method set forth in the trust the exclusive method of revocation. (See Recommendation: The Trust Law (Dec. 1985) 18 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. (1986) pp. 567-568.)
In expressly excluding wills, section 15401 subdivision (a)(2) appears to embody Comment (j) and the notion that a will cannot revoke a trust. However, subdivision (a)(2) of section 15401 provides a default method of revocation where the trust is silent on revocation or does not explicitly provide the exclusive method.
Insofar as
Rosenauer, supra,
