This matter stems from a dispute over whether a child born out of wedlock is a beneficiary to his biological grandparents' trust. The trial court found the trust instrument ambiguous and that his grandparents did not intend for him to be a beneficiary under their trust. We reverse because we find the terms of the trust are unambiguous and remand with instructions.
The facts in this matter are generally undisputed and taken from a joint trial statement submitted to the trial court below. Charles and Serena Papaz created the Papaz Family Trust on August 2, 1966. Charles and Serena had one child, Christopher.
Christopher met Jonathan's mother, Kathy Carrano, when he was shot in the leg in 1984. She was Christopher's physical therapist while he was in the hospital and she continued to care for him during his recovery at his parents' home. One night, Christopher gave Kathy a drug and had sex with her without her knowledge. Jonathan was conceived that night. Kathy was married to another man at the time. Jonathan was born in August 1985. Kathy
Christopher, however, appeared to be aware that Jonathan was his son from the beginning. He bragged to his friend, Vahe Tatoian, when Kathy was pregnant that, "I know this is my kid." He again acknowledged Jonathan as his son to Vahe in 2004, but refused to tell his father, Charles. Serena also appeared to know that Christopher had fathered a child. At or around the time of Jonathan's birth, she mentioned to her sister that Christopher may have had a child with a nurse. Serena's sister understood that the nurse she referred to was the one who cared for Christopher while he was recovering from his gunshot wound. In any event, it is undisputed that Jonathan is Christopher's biological son.
Charles and Serena did not approve of Christopher's behavior, particularly his relationships with women and fathering children out of wedlock. They also did not trust Christopher with money and did not want to leave their entire fortune to him outright, believing he would squander it.
As a result, they amended their trust in 1988 (the Eighth Amendment) to, among other things, enable him to receive income from the trust but not the assets themselves. An attorney revised the trust each time. Under the Eighth Amendment to the trust, Christopher's "issue" would receive the trust assets in the event Christopher did not survive his parents. "Issue" was defined in the Eighth Amendment as follows: "As used in this trust, the term `issue' shall refer to lineal descendants of all degrees and the terms `child,' `children' and `issue' shall include persons adopted into the Trustors' bloodline and shall exclude persons adopted out of the Trustors' bloodline. As used in this trust, the term `then-living issue' shall include any issue that has been conceived prior to and is born after the time such issue acquires an interest in this trust." In 1991, Charles and Serena amended the trust a ninth time to redefine the term "issue" to expressly exclude "persons adopted into the Trustors' bloodline" and "persons adopted out of the Trustors' bloodline." If Christopher had no issue, then one-half of the trust assets would go to Charles's heirs—his sister's children—and one-half to Serena's heirs—her sister.
In February 2008, Citizens Business Bank, as trustee of the Papaz Family Trust, filed a petition for an order ascertaining beneficiaries and determining entitlement to distribution. In a bench trial, the trial court heard testimony consistent with the facts stated above from Kathy, Jonathan, Vahe Tatoian, Serena's sister and the other potential beneficiaries. In an order dated March 9, 2009, the trial court found that "Jonathan is not considered a child of Christopher."
To reach this decision, the trial court held that "[t]he trust is not specific concerning the rights of someone in Jonathan's circumstances. The trust does not in its language suggest whether Christopher's child born out of wedlock and into an extant family that does not include Christopher should be included as a lineal descendant under the trust." As a result of the ambiguity, the court considered extrinsic evidence to determine the trustors' intent. The court ascertained Charles and Serena's intent was to restrict who might be considered Christopher's issue. The court concluded: "it appears that Jonathan is excluded from distribution under the trust as he does not fall within the definition of issue as the trustors intended. The trustors seem to have intended issue to be children who are biologically related to Christopher and for whom Christopher was legally a parent. As Jonathan was conclusively presumed to be the child of another man pursuant to Family Code section 7540, Jonathan's biological connection to Christopher is insufficient under the trust to fall within its definition of issue." Jonathan appeals from the resulting final order dated April 3, 2009.
The ultimate question in this case is whether the Papaz Family Trust's definition of "issue" includes Jonathan. Jonathan argues that the term "issue"
The Estate of Russell court further explained the prohibition against extrinsic evidence where the instrument is clear: "`The rule is well established that where the meaning of the will, on its face, taking the words in the ordinary sense, is entirely clear, and where no latent ambiguity is made to appear by extrinsic evidence, there can be no evidence of extrinsic circumstances to show that the testatrix intended or desired to do something not expressed in the will.' However, this ancient touchstone has not necessarily uncovered judicial material of unquestioned purity." (Estate of Russell, supra, 69 Cal.2d at p. 208, fn. omitted, quoting Estate of Willson (1915) 171 Cal. 449, 456 [153 P. 927].)
The Supreme Court rejected the trial court's interpretation of the will. The Estate of Russell court found that the terms of the will were not reasonably susceptible to the meaning proffered by Quinn because no words of the trust actually stated that Quinn was to receive the entire sum provided he care for the dog. (Estate of Russell, supra, 69 Cal.2d at pp. 214-215.) Instead, the only meaning to which the will reasonably could be susceptible was that the decedent intended to leave the dog and Quinn her estate in equal shares as tenants in common. Because the dog was unable to recover under the will, its portion would pass to the decedent's heirs at law. (Id. at p. 216.)
Likewise, Estate of Dye (2001) 92 Cal.App.4th 966 [112 Cal.Rptr.2d 362], is instructive. The will provided that the estate be given to his wife as her "`sole and separate property.'" An adopted-in son claimed the phrase "sole and separate property" was ambiguous thereby requiring the introduction of extrinsic evidence. The son attempted to introduce evidence to show that his adopted-out brothers should not receive anything under the will. The Court of Appeal held that the phrase was not a latent ambiguity. The court rejected the son's contention finding that he was seeking to inject new language and ideas into the will. (Id. at p. 979; see also Vincent v. Security-First Nat. Bk. (1945) 67 Cal.App.2d 602, 610 [155 P.2d 63].)
In contrast, the Supreme Court found ambiguity in Estate of Dominici (1907) 151 Cal. 181 [90 P. 448]. There, the trial court found a latent ambiguity where the decedent's will identified a beneficiary by name but described a completely different person. The decedent bequeathed his estate to "`Heinrich Schluter, and to his sister, my niece, whose name is Marie Kohler, and whose residence is Salzwedel, Altmark, Germany, share and share alike.'" (Id. at p. 183.) Extrinsic evidence revealed that Marie Kohler was not Heinrich Schluter's sister and she had never lived in Salzwedel,
Instead, respondents contend that "[t]he text of the trust does not address the special case of an out of wedlock child who was born into a different family, who was legally the child of another man, and who was unknown to the family until the final months of his grandfather's, the surviving trustor's life." As a result, they argue a latent ambiguity exists whether Serena and Charles intended this "special case" to be the primary beneficiary of their trust. According to respondents, the term "issue" is fairly susceptible of two or more constructions because Charles and Serena intended to restrict the meaning of "issue." They argue that it is reasonable to interpret "that a person born out of wedlock, and legally a member of another family should be treated as outside the class of `issue.'" We disagree.
Just as in Estate of Russell, we are not at liberty to rewrite the Papaz Family Trust to attach restrictions to the term "issue" that Serena and Charles did not expressly include. (Estate of McAuliffe (1955) 132 Cal.App.2d 476, 480 [282 P.2d 541] [court will not impute ambiguity to otherwise "simple, clear and specific" language evidencing testator's intent].) Here, Serena and Charles, through their lawyers, chose to define the term "issue" as a class of people who were lineal descendants of Christopher and who had not been adopted out of the bloodline.
Neither is this a case where the critical terms are undefined and we are left to interpret the trust by statutory means, as urged by respondents. In Newman v. Wells Fargo Bank, supra, 14 Cal.4th 126, a case relied upon by respondents, the term "issue" was not defined. As a result, the question facing the court was, given an ambiguous provision in the will, which law should apply to determine whether a child adopted out of the family was among the "issue" of the testator—the law in effect at the time the will was executed or at the time of the testator's death. (Id. at p. 129; see also Estate of Dodge (1971) 6 Cal.3d 311, 318 [98 Cal.Rptr. 801, 491 P.2d 385] [no definition of "`personal property'"]; In re Estate of DeLoreto (2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 1048, 1052 [13 Cal.Rptr.3d 513] [no definition of "grandchildren" and it was undisputed the testator had no relationship with and did not intend to benefit any grandchildren adopted as adults]; Estate of Furia (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 1, 3 [126 Cal.Rptr.2d 384] [no definition of "issue" in will so court looked to definition in Prob. Code].)
The order ascertaining beneficiaries and determining entitlement to distribution dated April 3, 2009, is reversed insofar as it applies to Jonathan Carrano. The matter is remanded for entry of a new order instructing the trustee to distribute the trust assets to Jonathan Carrano as the issue of Christopher Papaz within the meaning of the trust. Each party to bear his or her own costs on appeal.
Rubin, Acting P.J., and Flier, J., concurred.