Filed 9/26/16 Dagodag v. Dagodag CA2/1
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.


              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION ONE

MELISSA DAGODAG,
                                                                     B264192
         Plaintiff and Appellant,
                                                                     (Los Angeles County
         v.                                                          Super. Ct. No. SC122503)

CHRISTINE DAGODAG et al.,

         Defendants and Respondents.


FREDERICK A. PEASLEY,                                                B264667

         Plaintiff and Appellant,                                    (Los Angeles County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. SC122042)
         v.

CHRISTINE DAGODAG et al.,

         Defendants and Respondents.



         APPEAL from orders and judgments of the Superior Court of Los Angeles
County, Lawrence H. Cho, Judge. Reversed with directions.
         The Boesch Law Group, Philip W. Boesch, Jr., and Annie Ksadzhikyan for
Plaintiff and Appellant Melissa Dagodag.
         Rick Peasley, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
         Joseph A. Hearst for Defendants and Respondents.
                                  ——————————
       This dispute among the children Frederick Peasley (Rick) and Christine Dagodag
(Christine) and grandchildren Melissa Dagodag (Melissa) and Trista Bernato (Trista) of
the deceased Betty Peasley (Betty)1 concerning the distribution of her estate is before us
for the second time.
       In the prior appeal, we affirmed the probate court’s denial in part of Rick and
Melissa’s (collectively, Appellants) anti-SLAPP motion to dismiss all claims in Christine
and Trista’s (collectively, Respondents) November 15, 2013 complaint (LP017194).
(Bernato v. Peasley (Mar. 22, 2016, B256486) [nonpub. opn.].) Respondents’ complaint
alleged causes of action for financial elder abuse, constructive fraud based on breach of
fiduciary duty, undue influence or coercion, conversion, and quiet title—all stemming
from Appellants’ allegedly improper actions in procuring estate-planning documents
from Betty. Among other relief, the complaint sought a declaration that Appellants have
forfeited any inheritance from Betty and a constructive trust placed upon the assets in
Betty’s estate.
       The two current consolidated appeals concern separate complaints: a complaint
filed by Rick on February 7, 2014 which initiated a separate action in the superior court
(SC122042, initially assigned to Judge Richard A. Stone); and a complaint filed by
Melissa on May 5, 2014 which also initiated a separate action in the superior court
(SC122503, initially assigned to Judge Lisa Hart Cole). Mirroring Respondents’ 2013
complaint, Rick and Melissa’s 2014 complaints allege causes of action including elder
abuse, breach of fiduciary duty and conversion—and assert that Respondents attempted
to prevent Betty from changing her estate plan in favor of Appellants. Among other
relief, the complaints seek a declaration that Respondents cannot receive an inheritance
from Betty and/or a constructive trust placed upon the assets in Betty’s estate.



       1  We refer to all the parties and deceased by their first names for the sake of
clarity, intending no disrespect.


                                              2
        Appellants appeal from the judgments of dismissal with prejudice that followed
orders (by Judge Lawrence H. Cho) that sustained, without leave to amend, Respondents’
demurrers to Appellants’ complaints based on the compulsory cross-complaint statute.
The compulsory cross-complaint rule requires parties to litigate all conflicting claims
between them that arise out of the same transaction or occurrence, or series of
transactions or occurrences, in a single action or proceeding. Although we agree with the
superior court that the claims in Appellants’ 2014 complaints are sufficiently related to
the claims in Respondents’ 2013 complaint to bring them within the compulsory cross-
complaint rule, we conclude that an order designating the two underlying cases as related
to the pending probate proceeding, rather than dismissal of the complaints, is the
appropriate outcome based on the unique facts here. We leave to the probate court to
determine in the first instance whether consolidation of the cases is appropriate.
                                      BACKGROUND
I.      Facts of the case
        In Bernato v. Peasley, supra, B256486, we provided a detailed recitation of the
parties’ conflicting factual allegations which concern the events before Betty’s death
related to her estate planning.
        Here, it is sufficient to note as follows: (1) in 1998, Betty executed a will and trust
that directed the manner of distribution of the assets of her estate and she later amended
the trust in 2001 and 2003 (2003 Trust) and (2) in 2009, Betty executed a handwritten
trust revocation that revoked the 2003 Trust and she also executed a handwritten will
(2009 Will). The parties dispute the validity of the competing 2003 Trust and 2009 Will:
Respondents are proponents of the 2003 Trust; Appellants are proponents of the 2009
Will.
        A.     The first complaint (LP017194)
        After Betty’s death in February 2013, Respondents began administering the 2003
Trust; however, on March 4, 2013, Rick filed in the probate court a petition for probate of
the 2009 Will. In September 2013, Respondents filed a motion to revoke the probate of
the 2009 Will and for “transfer of assets to trustee,” a petition for an order to confirm the

                                               3
validity of the 2003 Trust “and confirm assets to revocable trust,” and a “contest and
grounds of objection to probate of purported will.”
         On November 15, 2013, in the same probate proceeding, Respondents filed a
complaint against Appellants and Anne Peasley (Rick’s wife) which alleged causes of
action for, inter alia, financial elder abuse, breach of fiduciary duty and conversion
(Respondents’ 2013 complaint). By way of relief, they sought, inter alia, damages, a
determination of invalidity of the 2009 Will, a declaration that Appellants “have forfeited
any interest under the Estate of Betty E. Peasley and any valid estate plan of Betty E.
Peasley,” a declaration that “the true owner of the said property is the [2003 Trust]” and
“the persons lawfully entitled to distribution thereof including [Respondents],” and the
imposition of a constructive trust over the assets in Betty’s estate.
         In response, Rick filed an anti-SLAPP motion pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
section 425.16 but did not file a cross-complaint. According to Respondents’
representation on appeal, Melissa filed a “‘joinder’ in Rick’s anti-SLAPP motion”;
although Respondents did not include a citation to the record in support of that
contention, Appellants’ reply brief did not dispute that joinder or that Melissa also failed
to file a cross-complaint.
         Judge David S. Cunningham, III granted the anti-SLAPP motion only as to
claim 5 for conversion; Rick appealed the trial court’s denial as to the remaining claims 1
to 4 and 6 to 8; Respondents did not file a cross-appeal; and we affirmed the trial court’s
ruling. (Bernato v. Peasley, supra, B256486.)
         B.    The second complaint (SC122042, initially assigned to Judge Richard A.
Stone)
         On February 7, 2014, Rick filed a civil complaint against Respondents on theories
of elder abuse, breach of fiduciary duty and conversion. The complaint sought various
relief including damages, the imposition of a constructive trust over “the monies and
property wrongfully taken from Decedent [Betty]” by Respondents, and a declaration that
Respondents “shall not receive any property, damages, or costs that are awarded to the



                                              4
Decedent’s estate, regardless whether that person’s entitlement is under a will, a trust, or
the laws of intestacy.”
        On June 9, 2014, Respondents filed a demurrer to the complaint on multiple
grounds including that Rick’s claims were related to those claims asserted in the pending
2013 probate proceeding and hence his claims should have been filed as a compulsory
cross-complaint in that proceeding.
        Rick did not file an opposition to Respondents’ demurrer.
        C.    The third complaint (SC122503, initially assigned to Judge Lisa Hart
Cole)
        The third complaint is Melissa’s civil complaint against Respondents and Daniel
Bernato (Trista’s husband) filed on May 5, 2014. Melissa’s complaint alleges causes of
action for, inter alia, financial elder abuse, breach of fiduciary duty and conversion. The
complaint seeks, among other things, monetary damages and “a constructive trust be
imposed upon all assets and property converted and received by [Respondents].”
        On June 18, 2014, Respondents filed a demurrer to the complaint and argued, inter
alia, that the compulsory cross-complaint rule barred the entire action.
        On March 9, 2015, Melissa filed an opposition to the demurrer.
II.     Procedural history
        In the two 2014 actions,2 Judge Lawrence H. Cho issued a single tentative ruling
that sustained Respondents’ demurrers to Appellants’ two complaints without leave to
amend on the ground that the compulsory cross-complaint rule barred the claims alleged




        Respondents represent that they “had the separately-filed complaints coordinated
        2
under Los Angeles Superior Court local rules.” The tentative ruling identifies in the
header two complaints filed on “5/5/14 [and] 2/17/14” (corresponding to Rick and
Melissa’s two complaints) and the following two numbers corresponding to Rick and
Melissa’s two actions: “SC122503 (R/T SC122042) [¶] SC122042 (R/T SC122503).”
The tentative ruling states, “Demurrers are SUSTAINED WITHOUT leave to amend.”


                                              5
in those complaints.3 The court found that the three complaints all concerned disputes
over the disposition of Betty’s estate and one side’s allegations that the other side
committed elder abuse and exercised undue influence over Betty to procure favorable
estate-planning documents. Because the pending actions and proceeding concerned
overlapping factual and legal issues, the court found that the logical relation test had been
met.4
        On April 8, 2015, Judge Cho entered two separate orders in the respective cases
that dismissed with prejudice, and without leave to amend, Melissa’s action against
Respondents and Rick’s action against Respondents.
        Melissa and Rick filed separate notices of appeal; Respondents made a motion to
consolidate the two appeals; and we granted the request and consolidated the appeals.
Rick and Melissa filed separate opening briefs; Respondents filed a single consolidated
brief; and only Melissa filed a reply brief.5
        The parties filed three separate requests for judicial notice. On October 23, 2015,
Rick requested judicial notice of Respondents’ 2013 complaint, his anti-SLAPP motion
and supporting declarations, the order granting in part and denying in part the anti-
SLAPP, and his notice of appeal from that order. We deny Rick’s request for judicial
notice of the 2013 complaint because it is duplicative of documents already in the
appellate record. (See Bravo Vending v. City of Rancho Mirage (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th
383, 406, fn. 12.) We deny Rick’s request for judicial notice of his anti-SLAPP motion
because the version of the exhibits he submitted is missing several pages. We grant

        3
       It is unclear from the appellate record when or how the cases became assigned to
Judge Cho.
        4The court stayed the remaining claims (Melissa’s claims against Daniel, who
was not a moving party to the demurrer) and ordered Appellants to file notices of related
cases that assert those remaining claims and the pending probate proceeding are related.
        5We note that Melissa frequently failed to include point page citations in her
citations to legal authority. (See Cal. Style Manual (4th ed. 2000) § 1:1[E], pp. 5–6; Del
Real v. City of Riverside (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 761, 768.)


                                                6
Rick’s request to take judicial notice of the order granting in part and denying in part the
anti-SLAPP motion. We deny Rick’s request for judicial notice of his notice of appeal as
it is already part of the appellate record as submitted by Melissa in her appellant’s
appendix.
       Because Melissa’s November 9, 2015 request for judicial notice of the 2013
complaint is duplicative of documents already in the appellate record, we deny her
request. (See Bravo Vending v. City of Rancho Mirage, supra, 16 Cal.App.4th 383, 406,
fn. 12.)
       On January 22, 2016, Respondents asked us to take judicial notice of their 2013
complaint, Rick’s anti-SLAPP motion and supporting exhibits, Respondents’ opposition
to that motion, and Rick’s reply in support of the anti-SLAPP motion. On February 9,
2016, we granted Respondents’ request as to the 2013 complaint. We now grant
Respondents’ request for judicial notice of Rick’s anti-SLAPP motion, their opposition to
Rick’s anti-SLAPP motion, and Rick’s reply in support of the motion.
                                      DISCUSSION
I.     Standard of review
       “We perform an independent review of a ruling on a demurrer and decide de novo
whether the challenged pleading stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”
(Align Technology, Inc. v. Tran (2009) 179 Cal.App.4th 949, 958 (Align Technology).)
       When reviewing a demurrer, we “treat the demurrer as admitting all material facts
properly pleaded, but not contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law.” (Blank
v. Kirwan (1985) 39 Cal.3d 311, 318.) We also consider matters subject to judicial
notice. (Ibid.) To determine whether the trial court should have granted leave to amend,
we consider whether on the pleaded and judicially-noticed facts there is a reasonable
possibility of an amendment that would cure the legal defects in the complaint. (Ibid.)
       A.     Respondents’ 2013 complaint concerns a “special proceeding,” not an
“action.”
       Code of Civil Procedure section 426.30, subdivision (a) sets forth the compulsory
cross-complaint rule in civil actions: “Except as otherwise provided by statute, if a party

                                              7
against whom a complaint has been filed and served fails to allege in a cross-complaint
any related cause of action which (at the time of serving his answer to the complaint) he
has against the plaintiff, such party may not thereafter in any other action assert against
the plaintiff the related cause of action not pleaded.” Section 426.10, subdivision (c)
defines a “‘[r]elated cause of action’” as “a cause of action which arises out of the same
transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences as the cause of action
which the plaintiff alleges in his complaint.”
       The purpose of the compulsory cross-complaint statute is to prevent piecemeal
litigation. (Align Technology, supra, 179 Cal.App.4th at p. 959.) In discussing the
predecessor of Code of Civil Procedure section 426.30, the California Supreme Court
explained “that because ‘[t]he law abhors a multiplicity of actions . . . the obvious intent
of the Legislature . . . was to provide for the settlement, in a single action, of all
conflicting claims between the parties arising out of the same transaction. [Citation.]
Thus, a party cannot by negligence or design withhold issues and litigate them in
successive actions; he may not split his demands or defenses; he may not submit his case
in piecemeal fashion.’” (Ibid.)
       In order to advance the statute’s purpose of avoiding a multiplicity of actions, we
liberally construe the statute to encourage the joining of claims when appropriate.
(Ranchers Bank v. Pressman (1971) 19 Cal.App.3d 612, 619–620 [discussing
predecessor statute]; Align Technology, supra, 179 Cal.App.4th at pp. 959–960.)
       When a defendant has failed to allege a related cause of action in a cross-
complaint in a prior action, the bar of the compulsory cross-complaint rule can form the
basis of a demurrer in the subsequent action. (See, e.g., AL Holding Co. v. O’Brien &
Hicks, Inc. (1999) 75 Cal.App.4th 1310, 1313–1314.)
       Code of Civil Procedure section 426.60, subdivision (a) provides that article 2
governing compulsory cross-complaints applies only to civil actions and does not apply
to special proceedings. An “action” is “an ordinary proceeding in a court of justice by
which one party prosecutes another for the declaration, enforcement, or protection of a



                                               8
right, the redress or prevention of a wrong, or the punishment of a public offense.” (Code
Civ. Proc., § 22.) “Every other remedy is a special proceeding.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 23.)
       Appellants are correct that probate proceedings are special proceedings, not civil
actions. (Coberly v. Superior Court (1965) 231 Cal.App.2d 685, 690.) The probate court
is a department of the superior court that exercises its jurisdiction in proceedings that
concern the administration of a decedent’s estate including proceedings to probate a will
and will contests as well as proceedings to determine entitlement to distribution of a
decedent’s estate and the subsequent distribution thereof. (Prob. Code, §§ 7050, 8200,
11600, 11700; Estate of Bowles (2008) 169 Cal.App.4th 684, 695.) “The jurisdiction of
the probate court is in rem and the res is the decedent’s estate.” (Estate of Kampen
(2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 971, 1003.) “At any time after a decedent’s death, an interested
person may commence proceedings for administration of the estate of the decedent” and
petition to the probate court for an order for probate of the decedent’s will. (Prob. Code,
§ 8000.) Thus, a petition for the probate of a will is “the first step in a special
proceeding,” not a civil action where one party prosecutes another. (Estate of Raymond
(1940) 38 Cal.App.2d 305, 307.)
       As a court with general subject matter jurisdiction over the decedent’s property,
however, the probate court has the power to “resolve competing claims over the title to
and distribution of the decedent’s property.” (Estate of Heggstad (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th
943, 952; Estate of Kraus (2010) 184 Cal.App.4th 103, 114.) When the probate court
“has jurisdiction over one aspect of a claim to . . . property, [it] can determine all aspects
of [that] claim.” (Estate of Baglione (1966) 65 Cal.2d 192, 196-197; Estate of Bowles,
supra, 169 Cal.App.4th at pp. 695–696.)
       Here, after Rick initiated the 2013 probate proceeding by filing a petition to
probate the 2009 Will, Respondents prosecuted their elder abuse, breach of fiduciary
duty, conversion, and related claims that concerned the distribution of Betty’s estate in




                                               9
the same probate proceeding. Respondents’ 2013 complaint therefore concerned a
“special proceeding.”6
       Respondents do not dispute that probate proceedings generally are special
proceedings rather than civil actions; they nevertheless argue that only matters within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the probate court (e.g., a proceeding to administer a trust or a
will contest) are “special proceedings” and that matters within the concurrent jurisdiction
of the probate court are “actions.” Respondents fail to cite any legal authority supporting
this contention.
       Indeed, the California Supreme Court has disapproved of a similar argument when
determining whether, in a probate proceeding initiated by a petition to probate a will, a
subsequently-filed will contest (due to its adversarial component, seemingly in the nature
of a civil action where one party prosecutes another) is a “special proceeding” or an
“action.” In Estate of Joseph (1897) 118 Cal. 660, the Supreme Court explained, “We
think, without doubt, a petition to probate a will is the beginning of a special
proceeding. . . . We cannot see how the filing of grounds of opposition to the probate of
the will, or, later, the filing of a petition to contest the probate, can change the nature of
the proceeding. . . . In all subsequent stages, the contest is but a part of the proceeding to
probate the will, and is not a new and distinct proceeding. . . . [I]t receives all its vitality
from, and has its origin in, the original petition to probate the will and the statutory
provisions governing the proceedings.” (Id. at p. 662.)
       Similarly here, Respondents’ 2013 complaint was part and parcel of the pending
special proceeding (initiated by a petition to probate a will) in which Respondents filed it.
(See Estate of Joseph, supra, 118 Cal. at p. 662.) The complaint did not and could not
have “change[d] the nature” of the special proceeding. (Ibid.) Respondents do not claim


       6 Rick and Melissa’s two civil complaints initiated “actions.” Although Rick
argues that he filed his complaint as a “probate proceeding”, the first page of the
complaint describes the document as “Unlimited Civil” and contains a civil case number
(SC122042).


                                               10
that they initiated a “new and distinct proceeding” from the special proceeding.7 (Ibid.)
Rather, their complaint “receive[d] all its vitality from, and has its origin in, the original
petition to probate the will.” (Ibid.)
       Nevertheless, our analysis does not end there because, as discussed below, the
Probate Code incorporates the compulsory cross-complaint rule set forth in Code of Civil
Procedure section 426.30, subdivision (a).
       B.     The Probate Code incorporates the compulsory cross-complaint rule set
forth in Code of Civil Procedure section 426.30, subdivision (a).
       Probate Code section 1000 provides, “Except to the extent that this code provides
applicable rules, the rules of practice applicable to civil actions, including discovery
proceedings and proceedings under Title 3a (commencing with Section 391) of Part 2 of
the Code of Civil Procedure, apply to, and constitute the rules of practice in, proceedings
under this code. All issues of fact joined in probate proceedings shall be tried in
conformity with the rules of practice in civil actions.”
       Thus, the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure apply in circumstances where
the Probate Code provides no special or inconsistent rule. (Swaithes v. Superior Court
(1989) 212 Cal.App.3d 1082, 1088–1089.) The California Supreme Court has explained
that probate proceedings “are to conform only ‘as nearly as is consistently possible, to
those for civil actions.’” (Estate of Neilson (1962) 57 Cal.2d 733, 747–748, italics
omitted.)
       Many sections of the Code of Civil Procedure have been held applicable to
probate proceedings pursuant to Probate Code section 1000 or its predecessor statute.
(See, e.g., Katzenstein v. Chabad of Poway (2015) 237 Cal.App.4th 759 [§ 581d, written
order signed by court]; Mota v. Superior Court (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 351 [discovery:
depositions, interrogatories, requests admission]; Swaithes v. Superior Court (1989) 212



       7
       Rick and Respondents filed their respective petition for probate of the 2009 Will
and 2013 complaint in the same case (LP017194).


                                              11
Cal.App.3d 1082 [§ 36, preference to party who reached the age 70 years]; Voyce v.
Superior Court (1942) 20 Cal.2d 479 [§ 387, intervention]; Estate of Morrison (1932)
125 Cal.App. 504 [former § 583, dismissal of action not brought to trial within 5 years].)
       The parties have not directed us to any provision in the Probate Code that
precludes a compulsory cross-complaint rule.8
       Indeed, these consolidated appeals exemplify the public policy reasons for
applying in probate proceedings the compulsory cross-complaint rule in Code of Civil
Procedure section 426.30, subdivision (a). Appellants have disregarded this court’s and
the trial court’s limited resources in filing not one but two duplicative actions identical to
the one they are defending in the probate court. A separate trial, or trials, subsequently
conducted before a different court would entail a pointless duplication of time and effort.
Whether Appellants have attempted to forum shop or to obtain second and third bites at
the apple is not material to our decision; regardless of their underlying motives, they tried
to litigate in separate forums the same issues pending before the probate court. We can
discern no reason why persons should be able to advance multiple identical actions and
proceedings simply because they are defendants originally sued in the probate court
rather than in a civil action on the general civil calendar of the superior court.
Accordingly, we agree with the trial court and Respondents that the compulsory cross-
complaint rule applies here.


       8  Although Melissa relies on Assembly Bill No. 1893 (2011–2012 Reg. Sess.) to
argue that the bill provided for an exemption from complying with the compulsory cross-
complaint rule in probate court, she represents that the bill died in committee. We attach
little value to a bill that the Legislature failed to pass. (Martin v. Szeto (2004) 32 Cal.4th
445, 451; Ingersoll v. Palmer (1987) 43 Cal.3d 1321, 1349–1350.) Further, because
Melissa failed to provide any substantive legal argument or citation of authorities, we
treat as forfeited her one-sentence conclusory argument comprised entirely of the
following incomplete sentence: “Moreover, other rules and deadlines already exist and
suffice to ensure that all issues concerning the administration and distribution of a
decedent’s estate.” (See People v. Stanley (1995) 10 Cal.4th 764, 793 [party waives issue
not supported by legal argument with citation of authorities]; Multani v. Witkin & Neal
(2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1428, 1457–1458.)


                                              12
          C.     Rick and Melissa’s 2014 actions are logically related to Respondents’
2013 complaint.
          We now apply the compulsory cross-complaint rule to the facts in this case. As
explained below, Appellants’ argument that the causes of action asserted herein are not
sufficiently related is without merit.
          The test is whether the subsequent cause of action “arises out of the same
transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences,” as the previous cause of
action. (Code Civ. Proc., § 426.10, subd. (c).)
          In order to effectuate the purpose of the statute to prevent piecemeal litigation and
to avoid a multiplicity of actions, we apply the logical relation test expansively and
construe the statutory term “transaction” broadly to encourage the joining of claims as
appropriate. (Align Technology, supra, 179 Cal.App.4th at pp. 959–960; Ranchers Bank
v. Pressman, supra, 19 Cal.App.3d at p. 619 [discussing predecessor statue].) Rather
than limiting a transaction to “a single, isolated act or occurrence,” for example, a
contract, a lease, or an automobile collision, we construe a transaction to include a series
of “logically interrelated” acts or occurrences. (Align Technology, supra, 179
Cal.App.4th at p. 960; Saunders v. New Capital for Small Businesses, Inc. (1964) 231
Cal.App.2d 324, 336 [discussing predecessor statute].) The test for whether two causes
of action arise out of the same transaction does not require the claims to have an identical
factual background but rather they need only have a logical relationship. (Currie Medical
Specialties, Inc. v. Bowen (1982) 136 Cal.App.3d 774, 777.) The rationale is a practical
one: when separate resolution of the claims would require an unnecessary duplication of
time and effort due to overlapping factual or legal issues, the logical relation test is likely
met. (Ibid.)
          Here, the superior court correctly found that the series of transactions at the
foundation of Respondents’ 2013 complaint and Appellants’ 2014 complaints were the
competing estate-planning documents executed by Betty and the distribution of Betty’s
estate.



                                                13
       For example, Respondents’ 2013 complaint alleges that Appellants improperly
procured the 2009 Will and that such actions constituted financial elder abuse and a
breach of Appellants’ fiduciary duty to Betty. The allegations continue that, as a result of
the improperly-procured 2009 holographic will, the property of Betty’s 2003 Trust was
“transferred” to a special administrator (Rick) pursuant to the 2009 Will rather than the
trustee (Christine) pursuant to the 2003 Trust and that such actions constituted
conversion. The complaint requests the imposition of a constructive trust upon the
property of Betty’s estate pursuant to the 2003 Trust and a declaration that Appellants
“have forfeited any interest under the Estate of Betty E. Peasley and any valid estate plan
of Betty E. Peasley, pursuant to the provisions of Probate Code section 259.” The
ultimate result, if Respondents are successful on their claims, is to affect the distribution
of Betty’s estate in Respondents’ favor.
       Likewise, Appellants’ 2014 claims arose out of the same estate planning
documents allegedly executed by Betty and the distribution of Betty’s estate.
Specifically, Melissa’s complaint pleaded various allegations of elder abuse and breach
of fiduciary duty including that Respondents “attempt[ed] to prevent [Betty] from
consulting with an attorney or making desired changes to her estate plan” but that Betty
was ultimately successful in executing the 2009 Will and “plac[ing] it with [Melissa] for
safe-keeping.” The complaint also alleged that Rick, after filing a petition to probate the
2009 Will and subsequently investigating Betty’s assets in his role as special
administrator, discovered the actions by Respondents that formed the basis of Melissa’s
elder abuse claim. The allegations continued that because of Respondents’ allegedly
wrongful taking of Betty’s assets (including by using the funds in Betty’s bank account
for Respondents’ personal benefit) thus “depriving [her rightful] heirs—including
[Melissa]—of their full inheritance,” Respondents committed conversion and “have been
unjustly enriched.” The complaint therefore sought, inter alia, an imposition of a
constructive trust upon the assets “converted and received by” Respondents—effectively,
the assets of Betty’s estate at the center of the dispute between the parties over the
competing estate-planning documents.

                                              14
       Similarly, Rick’s complaint alleged that Respondents committed elder abuse,
conversion, and breach of fiduciary duty, related to Betty’s estate planning and the final
distribution of the assets in her estate. For example, the complaint alleged that Betty
“wanted to change her estate plan to a testamentary scheme that . . . would result in a
reduced inheritance to [Respondents,]” but Respondents attempted to prevent Betty from
doing so, specifically by confiscating Betty’s checkbook when Respondents discovered
that Betty “had written a retainer check to a new estate-planning attorney.” The
complaint also alleged that Respondents improperly used Betty’s assets and property
including by writing checks to withdraw funds from Betty’s bank accounts in order to use
the money for their personal benefit rather than for Betty’s benefit. The complaint
therefore sought an imposition of a constructive trust upon “whatever monies and
property held by [Respondents] . . . that have their source traceable to the proceeds from
the monies and property wrongfully taken from Decedent, or otherwise rightfully
belonging to Plaintiff” (again, effectively the assets of Betty’s estate at the center of the
parties’ dispute over the competing 2003 Trust and 2009 Will).
       Importantly, Probate Code section 259 restricts the inheritance from a decedent by
a person who has abused the decedent. If Appellants prevail on their elder abuse claims,
that would affect the distribution of Betty’s estate in their favor. Relying on this
prohibition, Rick’s complaint seeks a declaration that Respondents “shall not receive any
property, damages, or costs that are awarded to [Betty’s] estate.”
       The superior court has correctly concluded that the claims of Appellants and
Respondents involve common issues of law and fact: their respective actions in their
treatment of Betty (e.g., procuring, or precluding the other parties from procuring, estate-
planning documents in their favor), Betty’s state of mind and intention for the distribution
of her estate, and the validity of the competing estate-planning documents executed by
Betty (that determines the distribution of Betty’s estate). The ultimate distribution of
Betty’s estate is central to the claims of Appellants and Respondents. Further, the
majority of Appellants’ causes of action are identical to the ones alleged earlier by



                                              15
Respondents in their 2013 complaint—elder abuse, breach of fiduciary duty and
conversion. (See Align Technology, supra, 179 Cal.App.4th at p. 962.)
       Finally, the relief sought by both Rick and Melissa in transferring the assets of
Betty’s estate to a separate constructive trust is in obvious conflict with the pending
proceeding in the probate court tasked with distribution of Betty’s estate. Similarly, as a
result of their respective elder abuse claims, both sides seek a declaration that prohibits
the other side from receiving an inheritance from Betty. In sum, the claims are
sufficiently related to bring them within the compulsory cross-complaint rule.
       For the above reasons, we also reject Appellants’ arguments that their 2014
complaints allegedly only concern “monetary issues,” specifically Respondents’ alleged
“taking of money in the years leading up to Mrs. [Betty] Peasley’s death,” and therefore
their complaints allegedly are not logically related to Respondents’ 2013 complaint.
       However, Respondents concede that even if we affirmed the superior court’s
ruling that dismissed Appellants’ complaints, Appellants may ask leave of the probate
court to file cross-complaints in the probate proceeding.9 Rather than dismissal of the
complaints, an order designating the two underlying cases as related to the pending
probate proceeding is the appropriate outcome here. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.300;
Super. Ct. L.A. County, Local Rules, rules 3.3, 4.22.) The goals of these rules are to
promote judicial efficiency, to prevent parties from “judge shopping,” and to avoid the
possibility of conflicting rulings. Thus, we reverse the judgment with directions to
designate the two underlying actions as related to the pending probate proceeding. We
leave to the probate court to determine in the first instance whether consolidation of the
cases is also appropriate. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.350; Super. Ct. L.A. County,
Local Rules, rule 4.21.) Further, as the superior court did not reach the other issues
raised in Respondents’ demurrers because it concluded that the compulsory cross-



       9
       Respondents further stated that if the superior court did not sustain their
demurrers, they intended to bring a motion to consolidate.


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complaint rule applied and ordered dismissal of the two complaints, Respondents may
raise those issues before the probate court for a determination of those issues in the first
instance.
                                      DISPOSITION
       The orders and judgments are reversed. The superior court is directed to designate
Nos. SC122042 and SC122503 as related to No. LP017194. The parties are to bear their
own costs on appeal.
       NOT TO BE PUBLISHED.


                                                  JOHNSON, J.


We concur:


              ROTHSCHILD, P. J.


              CHANEY, J.




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