DANIEL UKKESTAD, as Cotrustee, etc., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. RBS ASSET FINANCE, INC., Defendant and Respondent.
No. D065630
Fourth Dist., Div. One.
Mar. 16, 2015.
156
Niddrie Fish & Addams, David A. Niddrie and John S. Addams for Plaintiff and Appellant.
No appearance for Defendant and Respondent.
OPINION
IRION, J.—Daniel Ukkestad, who is a cotrustee of the Larry Gene Mabee Revocable Trust (the Trust), appeals from the probate court’s order denying his petition to confirm that two parcels of real property are part of the Trust’s assets. We conclude that the probate court erred in denying the petition, and we accordingly reverse the probate court’s order and remand with directions that the probate court enter an order granting the petition.
I
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Larry Gene Mabee, who died on December 16, 2012, executed a first amendment and complete restatement of the Trust on December 7, 2012 (the Trust Instrument), appointing himself as the trustee. On that same date,
Mabee owned two parcels of real estate that are the subject of this appeal: (1) a parcel at 1025 East Bobier Drive, in Vista, California, and (2) a parcel known as 80501 Avenue 48, Space 114, in Indio, California (collectively, the Two Parcels). According to the grant deeds, title to the Two Parcels was held by Mabee as an individual.
The Trust Instrument does not describe the Two Parcels by reference to any specific identifying information unique to those properties, such as the address or legal description of the Two Parcels. Although not specifically identifying the Two Parcels, the Trust Instrument generally states that Mabee assigns the ownership of all of his real property to the trustees of the Trust effective immediately. The Trust Instrument states: “The Grantor [(i.e., Mabee)], by the execution of this instrument, hereby assigns, grants and conveys to the Trustees of this instrument all of the Grantor’s right, title and interest in and to all of his real and personal property, including all Tangible Personal Property, stocks, bonds, cash, mutual funds and promissory notes, all amounts on deposit from time to time at any bank, savings and loan association or investment institution, real property, leases on real property, interests in business entities and all other property owned by the Grantor, wherever situated. . . . The Grantor intends this assignment to be effective as of the date of this instrument even though other documents may be necessary to perfect title to such property in the name of the Trustees.”
Ukkestad, with the express agreement of the two other trustees of the Trust (Mabee’s wife and one adult child), filed a petition under
A potential creditor of the estate, RBS Asset Finance, Inc. (RBS), filed a creditor’s claim against the estate and also filed a response and opposition to the petition for an order confirming trust assets.2 RBS argued that the
On January 14, 2014, the probate court denied with prejudice Ukkestad’s petition for an order confirming trust assets. The hearing on the petition was not reported, but a settled statement approved by the probate court explained that the court had ruled that the Trust was valid and had become irrevocable, but that the Two Parcels were not assets of the Trust, as the Trust Agreement did not satisfy the statute of frauds with respect to the Two Parcels.
Ukkestad appeals from the order denying the petition. RBS and Ukkestad have resolved the dispute giving rise to RBS’s potential creditor’s claim, and RBS has therefore withdrawn its opposition to the petition and has not filed a respondent’s brief.4
II
DISCUSSION
It is well established that if two specific requirements are met, real property may be made part of a trust’s assets without a separate deed transferring property to the trust. (Estate of Heggstad (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th 943, 947-950 (Heggstad).)
The first requirement is that the owner of real property is the settlor creating the trust with himself or herself as the trustee. (Heggstad, supra, 16 Cal.App.4th at pp. 947-950; see
Second, because a conveyance of real property is at issue, the other requirement for transferring real property to a trust is compliance with the statute of frauds. (Heggstad, supra, 16 Cal.App.4th at p. 948 [“Where the
We apply a de novo standard of review in determining whether the statute of frauds has been satisfied to make the Two Parcels part of the Trust’s assets. (See Kucker v. Kucker (2011) 192 Cal.App.4th 90, 93 (Kucker) [applying de novo standard of review on undisputed facts to the issue of whether the Civ. Code’s statute of frauds was satisfied in conveying certain personal property to a trust]; Sterling v. Taylor (2007) 40 Cal.4th 757, 772 (Sterling) [“it is a question of law whether a memorandum, considered in light of the circumstances surrounding its making, complies with the statute of frauds“].)
Most of the case law on the issue of whether a description of real property is specific enough to satisfy the statute of frauds has developed in contexts other than probate actions involving trusts or wills. The case by our Supreme Court that sets forth the applicable rule is Beverage v. Canton Placer Mining Co. (1955) 43 Cal.2d 769 (Beverage). Beverage arose in the context of a contract of sale in which the real property at issue could not be identified based solely on information in the contract. As Beverage explained, “[t]o satisfy the statute of frauds, the memorandum affecting the sale of real property must so describe the land that it can be identified with reasonable certainty. Preferably, the writing should disclose a description which is itself definite and certain. Alternatively, however, a description fulfills the test of reasonable certainty if it furnishes the ‘means or key’ by which the description may be made certain and identified with its location on the ground.” (Id. at p. 774, citations omitted & italics added.)5
An instructive case that demonstrates the applicable rule is Alameda Belt Line v. City of Alameda (2003) 113 Cal.App.4th 15 (Alameda). In Alameda, the court decided that language in a 1924 option to repurchase railroad property complied with the statute of frauds despite uncertain language describing the applicable real property. Although the option agreement vaguely referred to the real property as the ” ‘belt line railroad including all extensions thereof ’ ” (id. at p. 19), the court held that the language was sufficiently certain to satisfy the statute of frauds because the parties could consult extrinsic evidence, in the form of legal documentation of the original railroad property and of all of the subsequently acquired property for the extensions, to make the description of the real property more certain (id. at pp. 22-23). Relying on the approach established in Beverage, supra, 43 Cal.2d at page 774, Alameda explained that the contractual language was a “sufficient ‘means or key’ by which extrinsic or parol
In contrast, the type of case in which a description of real property was not sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds is illustrated in Osswald v. Anderson (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 812, 818 (Osswald). In Osswald, the trustors signed a declaration of trust, apparently intending to make their home an asset of the trust. The trust document failed to adequately describe the home or any other real property as being part of the trust assets, as the trust document purported to identify the trust property by referring to an attached schedule A, but then neglected to attach any schedule A. Under those circumstances, as no property whatsoever was described in the trust document, there was no writing identifying the trustors’ real property that could be made more certain by reference to extrinsic evidence. (Ibid.)
In this case, unlike in Osswald, the Trust Instrument contains language that identifies which of Mabee’s real property is being conveyed to the trust. Specifically, in the Trust Instrument, Mabee refers to “all of his real and personal property, including . . . real property . . . wherever situated.” (Italics added.) Further, as in Beverage and Alameda, the language of the Trust Instrument provides a “sufficient ‘means or key’ by which extrinsic or parol evidence could be used to define the property” that is part of the Trust’s assets. (Alameda, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th at p. 22.) As is shown by the declaration of Ukkestad’s counsel in the probate court and the real estate title documents lodged by Ukkestad in support of the petition, it is a simple matter of referring to publicly available records to determine Mabee’s real estate holdings. Referring to publicly available documents to establish a party’s real estate holdings is the same method that Alameda used to make an otherwise incomplete description of real property certain enough that it could be reliably identified and to conclude that the description complied with the statute of frauds.7
We therefore conclude that because the Trust Instrument states that all of Mabee’s “right, title and interest” to “all of his real property” is included in the Trust’s assets, and it is possible by resorting to extrinsic evidence to determine that Mabee held title to the Two Parcels, the statute of frauds creates no bar to Ukkestad’s petition for an order confirming that the Two Parcels are part of the Trust’s assets. The probate court accordingly erred by concluding that the statute of frauds was not satisfied and by denying the petition on that ground.
DISPOSITION
We reverse the probate court’s order denying the petition for an order confirming trust assets, and we remand with directions that the probate court enter an order granting the petition.
Benke, Acting P. J., and McDonald, J., concurred.
