Filed 6/20/2016
                                CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

             IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                               SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                          DIVISION SIX


KIM BUTLER et al.,                                             2d Civil No. B259534
                                                           (Consolidated with B263752)
     Plaintiffs and Respondents,                             (Super. Ct. No. 1383524)
                                                              (Santa Barbara County)
v.

JOHN F. LEBOUEF,

     Defendant and Appellant.



                  An ethical estate planning attorney will plan for his client, not for himself.
(See Estate of Moore (2015) 240 Cal.App.4th 1101, 1103.) A license to practice law is
not a license to take advantage of an elderly and mentally infirm client. As we shall
explain, the factual findings of the trial court compel the conclusion that appellant used
his license to take advantage of an elderly and mentally infirm person to enrich himself.
The trial court factual findings are disturbing, fatal to appellant's contentions, and suggest
criminal culpability.
                  John F. LeBouef, an attorney, appeals a probate judgment invalidating a
will and living trust purportedly executed by John Patton on December 22, 2006. Probate
                        1
Code section 21380 (formerly 21350) provides in pertinent part: "A provision of an
instrument making a donative transfer to any of the following persons is presumed to be
the product of fraud or undue influence: [¶] (1) The person who drafted the instrument;


1
      All statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise stated.
[¶] (2) A person in a fiduciary relationship with the transferor who transcribed the
instrument or caused it to be transcribed." Patton's will and trust name appellant as the
principal beneficiary to a $5 million estate. After five weeks of testimony, the trial court
factually found that appellant, acting as Patton's attorney and fiduciary, drafted or
transcribed the 2006 will and trust. (See Rice v. Clark (2002) 28 Cal.4th 89, 97
[discussing former section 21350, subd. (a)]; Graham v. Lenzi (1995) 37 Cal.App.4th
248, 255.) In a Supplemental Statement of Decision, the trial court factually found that
appellant caused the loss of the original trust instrument, which made it impossible for
the court to determine the true terms of the trust. The trial court declared the will and
trust invalid and removed appellant as trustee. Appellant was ordered to turn over the
trust assets and pay $1,256,971 attorney fees pursuant to section 21380, subdivision (d).
We affirm this judgment.
              In a postjudgment order, the trial court approved appellant's trust
accounting but denied his request for trustee fees, attorney fees, and reimbursement for
out-of-pocket expenses and property management services. It ruled that an award for
fees, costs, services, and out-of-pocket expenses would be inequitable and reward
appellant for his misconduct. We affirm this order.
                               Facts and Procedural History
              Kim Butler and Julie Butler Black are the nieces and last known heirs-at-
law of John A Patton. After Patton passed away in 2011, Butler, Black, and Carol Archer
filed a petition to invalidate a $5 million donative transfer to appellant (Prob. Code,
§§ 17200, 6104, 15642) and remove appellant as trustee of the John A. Patton Revocable
Trust, dated December 22, 2006. Respondents claimed that appellant, an attorney,
drafted or transcribed Patton's will and trust to enrich himself.
              John Patton, a renowned interior designer, died in Santa Barbara on June
18, 2011. He was 73 years old, in poor health, and suffering from depression, alcohol
abuse, hepatitis, diabetes, high blood pressure, gout, and incontinence. Patton's
housekeeper testified that he was more often drunk than sober during the last six months
of his life. He would drink heavily, howl like a dog, and fall down and injure himself.


                                              2
Neighbors had to pick him off the floor, help him out of his car, and shower him. Patton
grieved the 2004 death of his domestic partner, Leo Duval, and, by the end of his life,
was often emotionally out of control.
              Appellant was Patton's social acquaintance. After Duval died, appellant
took an active interest in Patton and frequently drove up from Los Angeles to visit and
stay the night. Appellant's life partner, Mark Krajewski, accompanied appellant on many
of the visits. Krajewski was also appellant's business partner. They owned property in
Los Angeles and Buenos Aires, maintained joint checking and investment accounts,
shared a cell phone plan, and used the same post office box.
              As Patton's health deteriorated, appellant and Krajewski visited more
frequently. Patton complained that appellant was overbearing and visited too often. In
2010, Patton told his assistant, Neely Bermant, that he was losing control of his finances
and that appellant had moved his money around.
              On December 22, 2006, Patton allegedly changed his will and created a
trust naming appellant principal beneficiary. He gifted a vintage car to Donald Pooler,
appellant's friend. It was a radical change in Patton's estate plan. In 1994 and 2000
Patton executed wills gifting his estate to his nieces and Wendy Greenstein, Patton's
friend for 20 years.
                   Prior Questionable Estate Plans and Administrations
              Respondents argued that it was not the first time that appellant befriended
an elderly person and drafted a will or trust naming himself or his partner, Krajewski,
principal beneficiary. Respondents claimed there were eight prior incidents. Pursuant to
Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (b), the trial court exercised its discretion and
limited the prior acts evidence to two trust matters (the Irene Grant Trust and Audrey
Cook Trust). Appellant drafted both trust instruments.
              In 1999, appellant helped Irene Grant inherit $2.5 million from Walter Pick.
Grant was Pick's caretaker. Pick's will, which was drafted by appellant, gifted the estate
to Grant. After Pick died, appellant married Grant who was 20 years older and managed
the inheritance. Before Grant passed away in 2006, appellant drafted Grant's trust


                                             3
naming himself principal beneficiary. Appellant received the bulk of the estate on
Grant's death and gave $800,000 to $1 million to Grant's niece in Buenos Aires. The
niece was told that Grant wanted her to receive the entire estate but appellant kept some
estate assets. Appellant also collected Grant's social security benefits for the next seven
years.
              In 2003, appellant befriended Audrey Cook, an elderly widow, and wrote
four amendments to the Audrey Cook Trust. The fourth trust amendment, written in
August 2006, left most of Cook's estate to Krajewski and named appellant's friend,
Donald Pooler, as successor trustee. When 90-year old Cook passed away in 2007,
Pooler sold the house and distributed the $1.3 million sale proceeds to Krajewski. Family
members sued, contending that the house was not a trust asset. Krajewski settled, paying
more than $1 million to the family.
              Rick Jong, Cook's friend and accountant, testified that Cook did not know
Krajewski and would have never gifted $1 million to a stranger. Jong was Cook's trustee
and learned about the trust amendment removing him as trustee after Cook died.
Appellant told Cook that Pooler was a retired judge who specialized in trustee work.
Pooler was actually an insurance investigator and good friends with appellant and
Krajewski. Pooler lived next door to appellant for a number of years and before that,
lived in an apartment building owned by Krajewski. The building was gifted to
Krajewski pursuant to the James Gravett Trust that was drafted by appellant.
              Sandra Homewood, a forensic document examiner, testified that the same
idiosyncrasies (misspelled words, unusual sentence structure, grammatical and
punctuation errors, font irregularities) were in the Cook and Patton Trust instruments.
Homewood opined that it was virtually certain that the Patton trust was produced by the
same "entity" that produced the Cook trust.
                   Staged Burglary - Loss of Original Trust Document
              Appellant defended on the theory that Patton's will and trust were drafted
by an attorney whose identity was unknown. Alice Bennett, an attorney and Los Angeles
Superior Court mental health referee, was a friend of both appellant and Patton. Patton


                                              4
asked her to prepare estate planning documents but Bennett recommended that he use a
Santa Barbara attorney. In 2009, Patton mailed Bennett some estate planning documents
for safekeeping. Bennett received the will, abstract of trust, and original trust instrument
and was surprised that the trust named Bennett as successor trustee. After Patton died,
Bennett turned the documents over to appellant and received a $500 check drawn on
Patton's bank account. Appellant claimed that the original trust document was lost in a
burglary just before his deposition. But the trial court rejected this theory.
                                    Trial Court Findings
               In a 56-page statement of decision, the trial court rejected the defense
theory at trial based upon appellant's testimony. It factually found: 1. appellant
"participated in the [trust] instrument's physical preparation by either drafting or
transcribing it within the meaning of Probate Code section 21380," 2. that the donative
transfers were drafted by appellant or subject to some form of tampering, and that section
21380 disqualified appellant as a beneficiary, 3. that the loss of the original trust
instrument was "intentional," making it impossible for the court to determine the true
terms of the trust, and 4. that the December 22, 2006 trust, to the extent it otherwise
exists, was invalid.
               As to the "missing trust" document, the trial court said that it was "key
evidence" and instrumental in understanding appellant's involvement in Patton's estate
plan. Examination of the original Trust "could have laid considerable concerns to rest,
including one of particular importance: whether a single page . . . containing the
disposition of the assets in the trust, had at some point been substituted." It said that the
trust document and appellant's laptop "went missing in the course of a very peculiar
burglary from a house filled with valuable objects, wherein only a handful of random
items were taken, including said laptop, and an unsecured plastic box of random
documents, that just happened to include the items necessary to a full understanding of
the facts of this matter."




                                              5
                                  Prior Bad Acts Evidence
              Appellant contends that the trial court erred in receiving evidence
concerning the Grant and Cook Trusts to show common plan or scheme. (Evid. Code, §
1101, subd. (b).) In each trust matter, appellant befriended an elderly person and drafted
or helped draft a trust that benefited himself or his associates. Prior bad acts evidence is
admissible to show a common plan or scheme if the probative value of the evidence
outweighs the potential for prejudice. (Evid. Code, §§ 1101, subd. (b); 352; People v.
Hovarter (2008) 44 Cal.4th 983, 1002; Hassoldt v. Patrick Media Group, Inc. (2000) 84
Cal.App.4th 153, 165, fn. 11 [rule applies in civil and criminal cases].)
              In Estate of Zalud (1972) 27 Cal.App.3d 945 (Zalud), a will contest,
defendant was named as the principal beneficiary on a printed will executed by an elderly
woman, Pearle Zalud. Although defendant was not related to Zalud, the will was
witnessed by defendant's brother and nephew. (Id., at p. 949.) None of Zalud's prior
wills were written on a printed form or named defendant as a beneficiary. (Id., at p. 953.)
Over defendant's objection, evidence was received that defendant and his brother were
principal beneficiaries in wills executed by two other elderly women, Winifred Wells and
Florence Sammons. (Id., at p. 955.) Defendant denied knowing how the wills were
prepared even though they were typed on the same Wolcott form used by Zalud. One
will was actually typed on defendant's typewriter. The trial court found: "We have got
preparation, plan, knowledge. I think this is admissible both on the question of
credibility of the witness and also under Section 1101 of the Evidence Code." (Id., at
p. 956.) The Court of Appeal held that the prior wills were admissible to impeach
defendant's testimony that he had no knowledge about the preparation of Zalud's will.
(Ibid.) "Irrespective of whether [defendant] had committed any wrong insofar as either
the Wells will or the Sammons will was concerned, his connection with each will
supported the inference that he had knowledge of the availability of the Wolcott forms
which could readily be used in the preparation of a will without recourse to the services
of a lawyer. It was an unusual circumstance that in three instances he would have some
relationship to a will which was prepared on such a form, the named testator in each


                                              6
instance not being related to the principal beneficiary and provisions having been inserted
in each form which contain striking similarities to provisions so inserted in one or both of
the other will forms." (Id., at p. 956-957.)
              Like Zalud, the Pick and Cook trusts were admissible to show a common
plan or scheme and to impeach appellant's testimony that he did not know who drafted
Patton's will and trust. The Patton trust, like the Grant and Cook trusts, named appellant
or Krajewski primary beneficiary. Pick's will, which was drafted by appellant, named
Grant (Pick's caregiver) as the beneficiary and appellant as executor. Appellant married
Grant, managed her finances, and drafted Grant's trust naming himself beneficiary.
Appellant's long time friend, Donald Pooler, assisted in the administration of the Pick
estate and received Grant's Mercedes Benz after Grant passed away.
              Pooler and Krajewski were key players in the Cook trust. The fourth trust
amendment, which was drafted by appellant, named Krajewski as principal beneficiary
and Pooler as successor trustee. Before Pooler and Krajewski were sued by the family,
Pooler sold the Cook family residence and distributed the sale proceeds ($1.3 million) to
Krajewski.
              Appellant used other friends to witness and safe keep Patton's will and
trust. Appellant's friend, Miriam Olivares, stated that she just happened to drive up from
Los Angeles and witness Patton's will on December 22, 2006. The trial court found that
Olivares' testimony had a rehearsed quality and the whole scenario of Olivares making a
spontaneous trip to Santa Barbara to witness the will was "rather improbable. . . ."
              Appellant continued to utilize friends and associates in his estate planning.
Patton allegedly signed the trust the same day (December 22, 2006) but his signature was
not acknowledged by a notary until July 25, 2008, 19 months later. Alice Bennett,
another of appellant's associates, purportedly kept the original will and trust until Patton
died. The trial court found "this case paints a picture of a group of people whose paths
crossed an unusual number of times in matters concerning the testamentary estates of
others. While the prior estate incidents occurred over a 25 year or more period, they do
represent an unusual confluence of estate activity in this group. . . . [T]he two most


                                               7
recent [incidents], concerning the estates of Irene Grant and Audrey Cook, offered
probative information."
              The trial court reasonably concluded that the probative value of the prior
acts evidence substantially outweighed the potential for prejudice. "The weighing
process under [Evidence Code] section 352 depends upon the trial court's consideration
of the unique facts and issues of each case, rather than upon the mechanical application of
automatic rules. [Citations.] We will not overturn or disturb a trial court's exercise of its
discretion under section 352 in the absence of manifest abuse, upon a finding that its
decision was palpably arbitrary, capricious and patently absurd. [Citations.]" (People v.
Jennings (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 1301, 1314; see also Estate of Gilkison (1998) 65
Cal.App.4th 1443, 1448-1449 [abuse of discretion standard on appeal].) Appellant
makes no showing that the prior acts evidence, as a matter of law, were remote in time, or
inflammatory, or denied him a fair trial. (See e.g., Estate of Zalud, supra, 27 Cal.App.3d
at p. 955 [similar wills dating back nine years].)
              2006 was a busy year for appellant marked by an unusual confluence of
estate planning. The Grant Trust came to fruition in 2006 when Grant died and appellant
was gifted the trust money. Appellant also drafted Cook's fourth trust amendment in
2006, naming Krajewski as principal beneficiary. Patton's will and trust were written and
purportedly signed in 2006, "gifting" the bulk of the estate to appellant. The physical
similarities between the Cook Trust and Patton Trust were striking. The trial court found
that the Patton Trust was drafted "much in the image of the Audrey Cook Trust."
              Even without the admission of the facts relating to the Grant and Cook
prior acts evidence, it is not reasonably probable that appellant would have received a
more favorable result. (Taylor v. Nabors Drilling USA, LP (2014) 222 Cal.App.4th 1228,
1244-1246.) This is so because the forensic document examiner, Homewood,
considered, without objection, the Cook Trust as an exemplar of appellant's work.
Homewood was "virtually certain" that the Cook and Patton Trusts were prepared by the
same person. Homewood explained that the degree of certainty was equivalent to the
"beyond a reasonable doubt" standard used in criminal cases. Because it was


                                              8
uncontroverted appellant drafted the Cook Trust, it took no leap in logic for the trial court
to factually find that appellant drafted or transcribed the Patton Trust. We are bound by
this "adverse factual finding." (In re Marriage of Greenberg (2011) 194 Cal.App.4th
1095, 1099.)
                                    Substantial Evidence
               Appellant argues that the evidence does not support the finding that Patton's
will and trust was the product of fraud or undue influence. The power of the appellate
court begins and ends with a determination as to whether there is any substantial
evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, that supports the judgment. (Bowers v.
Bernards (1984) 150 Cal.App.3d 870, 873-874; see also In re Marriage of Martin (1991)
229 Cal.App.3d 1196, 1200.)
               Section 21380 prohibits donative transfers to broad categories of persons
who, because of their relationship with the settlor/trustor, might exercise undue influence.
Undue influence is presumed where the donative transfer is in favor of the person who
drafted the instrument or where the person who transcribed it or caused it to be
transcribed had a fiduciary relationship with the settlor/trustor. (§ 21380, subd. (a)(1)-
(2).) The presumption may be rebutted by clear and convincing evidence that the
donative transfer was not the product of fraud or undue influence. (§ 21380, subd. (b).)
Where the donative transfer is to the person who drafted the donative instrument, the
presumption is conclusive. (§ 21380, subd. (c); see Rice v. Clark, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p.
98 [discussing former section 21351; "if an attorney drafted a client's will so as to benefit
himself, he would . . . be conclusively disqualified"].)
               Substantial evidence supports the finding that appellant drafted or
transcribed Patton's Trust even though the original trust document was "lost" in a
         2
burglary. Respondents argued that appellant switched a trust page to make himself


2
   On April 24, 2012, appellant reported that Patton's house was burglarized and that the
burglar took the original trust document and a laptop computer used by appellant to
prepare trust documents. The burglary occurred just before appellant was scheduled to
produce the document for his deposition and a forensic examination. The police

                                              9
trustee and residuary beneficiary. The trial court drew the inference that the burglary was
staged to thwart a forensic document examination. Appellant denied it but the trial court
found that appellant's "credibility is seriously tainted. . . . [T]he court concludes that yes,
[appellant] worked with PATTON on the December 22, 2006 trust, and/or tampered with
the document at some point, which necessitated the burglary."
              The trial court credited Homewood's expert testimony that it was "virtually
certain" that the Cook and Patton Trusts were prepared by the same entity. Homewood
was "absolutely certain" appellant wrote the certificate of trust and was "positive" that
appellant filled out Patton's Fidelity account application and the American Express
beneficiary designation form. Homewood was virtually certain that the Cook and Patton
abstracts of trust were produced by the same source, as was Patton's will. Homewood
opined that the signature on Patton's will was "non-genuine" and that the staple holes in
the upper left corner of the document were caused by someone stapling and unstapling
the will numerous times. Homewood stated that the witness page (i.e., the page signed
by appellant's friend, Miriam Olivares) had an extra set of staple holes and was added to
the will "but was not originally with those first three pages."
              Expert testimony also linked appellant to the grant deeds used to fund the
                       3
trust. (See ante, p. 4). This was strong circumstantial evidence that appellant drafted or


suspected it was a staged burglary because nothing else was taken and the house was
made to look like it was ransacked. Expensive watches and art work were in plain sight
but were not taken.

   Discrepancies also existed as to when appellant called 911 to report Patton's death.
Krajewski testified that he and appellant drove to Santa Barbara in Krajewski's BMW
that afternoon, Patton's neighbor, however, testified that appellant arrived in the morning
and was driving a Ford Expedition. Appellant was deposed and admitted arriving at
Patton's house at 8:30 in the morning. The trial court found the time discrepancies
troubling because it suggested that appellant spent hours in Patton's house before
reporting the death.
3
   Homewood opined that appellant prepared the following documents and forms which
were used to fund Patton's trust: a December 22, 2006 grant deed transferring Patton's
Santa Barbara house and rental property to the trust; certificates of trust for various

                                              10
transcribed the trust to enrich himself. Appellant had a fiduciary relationship with Patton
and represented him in a felony DUI case in 2008. Patton told his housecleaner that
appellant was his lawyer.
              Before his death, Patton told friends and neighbors who was getting what
when he died. Wendy Greenstein, a close friend, telephoned Patton daily. Patton said
that he was leaving one of his Santa Barbara homes to Greenstein. Patton made similar
statements to his assistant, Neely Bermant, who worked for Patton in 2008 and 2009. In
2009, Patton told Bermant that he had "just signed documents" gifting his home to
appellant and everything else to Bermant, Butler, and Greenstein. "Everything else"
included two other homes, bank and stock accounts, and valuable jewelry and art. In
March 2010, Patton asked Bermant to make a list of all the property in the house and told
her who would get what. Bermant prepared the list and Patton signed it.
              Patton's June 18, 2011 death was unexpected. Appellant spent hours in
Patton's house before calling 911 to report the death. The trial court drew the inference
that appellant looked for and tampered with the will and trust before making the 911 call.
(See ante, p. 10, fn. 2.) More suspect, was the purported theft of the original trust
document and appellant's laptop computer after Patton's death. Nothing else was taken
even though expensive art and watches were in open sight. The trial court found that the
loss of the original trust document was "intentional" and that appellant's testimony was
obstructive. "[T]he aroma of mendacity permeated this matter. . . . [I]t was the testimony
of LEBOUEF that created the greatest concern."



banks; a Fidelity account application; an American Express form designating appellant as
Patton's beneficiary and authorizing appellant to withdraw money on Patton's death; the
$500 check drawn on Patton's account for Bennett; a Discover Bank signature card with a
pay on death provision in favor of appellant. The trial court noted that there were two
abstracts of trust, both purportedly signed by Patton on December 22, 2006. "One is
silent as to the identity of the successor trustee, the other names [appellant]. The same
signature page, bearing the identically erroneous notary acknowledgment, is attached to
each. Both [abstracts] were, according to expert Homewood, virtually certain to have
been produced by the preparer of the Audrey Cook Trust."


                                             11
              Appellant's claim that another attorney drafted Patton's will and trust was
refuted in other ways. Like Sherlock Holmes' "dog in the night" that failed to bark (2
Doyle, Silver Blaze, The Annotated Sherlock Holmes (Baring-Gould, ed. 1967) pp. 277,
280), the absence of estate planning documents showed that something was amiss. (See
e.g., Gentry v. City of Murrieta (1995) 36 Cal.App.4th 1359, 1380.) Assuming that
Patton hired another lawyer to draft the will and trust, one would expect to see billings,
correspondence, a check for legal services, an estate planning questionnaire, and the
lawyer's name on the estate planning documents. Lawyers who draft trusts typically put
page numbers on the trust instrument. Patton's trust, like the Cook trust amendment, was
not paginated and contained the same misspellings and punctuation errors.
              Because the gift to appellant would have been disallowed under the Probate
Code, any competent attorney drafting the trust would have had a second attorney review
the trust and talk to Patton, and sign a certificate of independent review. (§21384, subd.
(a); see Jenkins v. Teegarden (2014) 230 Cal.App.4th 1128, 1137.) Appellant's probate
expert, Attorney Marilyn Anticouni, testified that a certificate of independent review "is a
simple solution to a problem with big consequences."
              Appellant testified at his deposition that he did not know what a certificate
of independent review was. This bolstered respondents' claim that appellant drafted
Patton's trust. At trial, appellant altered his testimony and said he was familiar with
certificates of independent review. The trial court found the testimony "disingenuous"
and concluded that appellant had a significant hand in the preparation of Patton's will and
trust. If appellant "was aware of the concept . . . , why would he be filling out beneficiary
designation forms, direct testamentary documents, without independent review? If
[appellant] was aware, it bolsters the likelihood that the clumsy jumble that is the Patton
Trust needed to appear self-drafted by PATTON."
                               Implied vs. Express Findings
              Appellant complains that the statement of decision contains no express
findings that respondents made a prima facie showing to shift the burden of proof under
section 21380. (See Bernard v. Foley (2006) 39 Cal.4th 794, 800 [statutory presumption


                                             12
of fraud/undue influence shifts the burden of proof].) Appellant did not object and is
precluded from raising the issue for the first time on appeal. (Code Civ. Proc., § 634;
Golden Eagle Ins. Co. v. Foremost Ins. Co. (1993) 20 Cal.App.4th 1372, 1380.) Code of
Civil Procedure "'[s]ection 634 clearly refers to a party's need to point out deficiencies in
the trial court's statement of decision as a condition of avoiding such implied
findings . . . .' [Citation.]" (Fladeboe v. American Isuzu Motors Inc. (2007) 150
Cal.App.4th 42, 59.) Waiver aside, the substantial evidence standard of review applies to
express and implied findings of fact in a statement of decision. (Citizens Business Bank
v. Gevorgian (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th 602, 613.)
                                        Attorney Fees
              Appellant argues that the trial court erred in awarding respondents
$1,256,971 attorney fees. Section 21380, subdivision (d) provides that "[i]f a beneficiary
is unsuccessful in rebutting the presumption, the beneficiary shall bear all costs of the
proceeding, including reasonable attorney fees." Subdivision (c) provides that the
presumption of fraud or undue influence is conclusive where the donative transfer is to
the person who drafted the will or trust.
              Appellant argues that he is not liable for fees because the presumption is
conclusive for "drafters" and he had no opportunity, as a matter of law, to rebut the
presumption. (§ 21380, subd. (c).) The argument fails because a presumption is not
evidence and is not operative until basic facts are established that give rise to the
presumption. (Evid. Code, § 600, subd. (a).) "'A conclusive presumption is in actuality a
substantive rule of law.' [Citation.]" (People v. Dillon (1983) 34 Cal.3d 441, 474.)
              The trial court found that appellant either drafted or transcribed the estate
                                              4
planning documents and beneficiary forms. Appellant could have negated or rebutted


4
    A person who drafts a will or trust is not the same as a person who causes it to be
transcribed. "Causing a document to be transcribed means directing a drafted document
to be written out in final form." (14 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law, Wills and Probate
(10th ed. 2005) § 303, pp. 389-390.) One who directs or causes the drafted document to
be written out, like the [drafter], is in a position to subvert the true intent of the testator

                                               13
the presumption of undue influence a number of ways. He could have produced a
certificate of independent review which trumps the section 21380 presumption.
(§ 21384, subd. (a); Jenkins v. Teegarden, supra, 230 Cal.App.4th at p. 1137.) In the
alternative, appellant could have presented evidence that he did not draft or transcribe the
will and trust or beneficiary forms. The fact that the trial court discredited appellant's
testimony that some other attorney drafted Patton's will and trust does not mean that
appellant was denied the opportunity to rebut the presumption of undue influence.
              Appellant contends that "drafters" are not liable for attorney fees but that
would undermine section 21380, subdivision (d). The drafter who benefits from a
donative transfer is held to the strictest standard because he or she has the greatest
opportunity to exercise undue influence. Former 21350, subdivision (e) provided that the
fee provision did not apply to a person who drafts the donative instrument but the rule
changed in 2011 with the enactment of section 21380. (Stats. 2010, ch. 620, § 7.)
Subdivision (d) states, without exception, that a beneficiary who is unsuccessful in
rebutting the presumption, "shall bear all costs of the proceeding, including reasonable
attorney fees." It matters not whether the presumption affecting the burden of proof is
rebuttable or conclusive. In construing the statute, we "apply reason, practicality, and
common sense to the language at hand. If possible, the words should be interpreted to
make them workable and reasonable. [Citations.]" (Halbert's Lumber, Inc. v. Lucky
Stores, Inc. (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th 1233, 1239.)
                                       Excessive Fees
              Appellant claims that the $1,256,971 fee award is excessive because two
attorneys on respondents' trial team were inexperienced and billed for duplicative work.
The trial court reduced the fees by 20 percent to account for duplicated services and
services that could have been done by a paralegal. Appellant makes no showing that the
trial court erred in not reducing the fee award further. The case was complicated and


and is subject to section 21380, subdivision (b). (See Estate of Swetmann (2000) 85
Cal.App.4th 807, 819-820 [discussing former section 21350].)


                                              14
contentious, involved three years of litigation, a five week trial, more than thirty-five
witnesses, and two statements of decision.
               Appellant complains that co-counsel, attorney Andrea Hurd, was a new
attorney and billed at the rate of $250 an hour. The trial judge had ample opportunity to
observe Hurd's performance and gauge the value of her services. Appellant cites no
specific evidence that a 20 percent reduction in fees is too little or that Hurd's services
were not worth $250 an hour. (See e.g., Premier Medical Management Systems, Inc. v.
California Ins. Guarantee Assn. (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 550, 562.) Because an
experienced trial judge is in a much better position that an appellate court to assess the
value of legal services rendered in his or her court, the fee award will not be set aside
absent a showing that it is manifestly excessive. (Loeffler v. Medina (2009) 174
Cal.App.4th 1495, 1509.) "'The only proper basis of reversal of the amount of an
attorney fees award is if the amount awarded is so large or small that it shocks the
conscience and suggests that passion and prejudice influenced the determination.'"
(Ibid.) Appellant makes no showing that the fee award is excessive or shocks the
conscience.
              Appellant's Trustee Fees, Attorney Fees and Out-of-Pocket Costs
               Appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his
request for trustee's fees and attorney fees and not reimbursing him for out-of-pocket
costs. Although the trust provides for the payment of reasonable trustee's fees, the trust is
void. Section 15681 provides that "[i]f the trust instrument does not specify the trustee's
compensation, the trustee is entitled to reasonable compensation under the
circumstances." Where the trustee commits a breach of trust, the trial court may deny the
trustee all compensation. (Estate of Gump (1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 582, 597, fn. 16;
Conservatorship of Lefkowitz (1996) 50 Cal.App.4th 1310, 1314-1315.) Even when fees
and costs are well-documented, they are only chargeable against the trust when they
benefit the trust. (Whittlesey v. Aiello (2002) 104 Cal.App.4th 1221, 1227.) "[L]itigation
seeking to remove or surcharge a trustee for mismanagement of trust assets would not
warrant the trustee to hire counsel at the expense of the trust. Such litigation would be


                                              15
for the benefit of the trustee, not the trust." (Ibid.) The same principle applies to void
wills in which the executor/beneficiary opposes a will contest to enrich himself. (See
e.g., In re Estate of Higgins (1910) 158 Cal. 355, 358.) An award of fees and costs to the
executor would be inequitable. (Ibid.; Whittlesey v. Aiello, supra, 104 Cal.App.4th at p.
1228.)
              The evidence shows that appellant enriched himself at the expense of the
trust and pursued litigation to promote his own self-interest. (See e.g., Estate of Vokal
(1953) 121 Cal.App.2d 252, 259-260.) As trustee, appellant used Patton's home rent free
for three years (a $200,000 loss in rental value), failed to maintain property insurance on
three houses, ran up gardening and repair costs ($50,000), spent $14,000 of trust money
to pay his own utility bills, and spent $503,000 of estate funds on his own defense. When
Patton's assistant, Neely Bermant, made a creditor's claim for unpaid services and offered
to settle for $20,000, appellant spent $119,698 in defense fees and costs before settling
for $20,000. "Such a spare-no-expense strategy calls for close scrutiny on questions of
reasonableness, proportionality and trust benefit. 'Consequently, where the trust is not
benefited by litigation, or did not stand to be benefited if the trustee had succeeded, there
is no basis for the recovery of expenses out of the trust assets.' [Citation.]" (Donahue v.
Donahue (2010) 182 Cal.App.4th 259, 273; see e.g., Estate of Moore, supra, 240
Cal.App.4th at p. 1105 [trustee may only incur fees and expenses that are reasonable in
amount and for the appropriate benefit of the trust].)
              The trial court reasonably concluded it would be inequitable to award
appellant trustee fees and attorney fees for services that benefited no one other than
appellant. (See e g., Terry v. Conlan (2005) 131 Cal.App.4th 1455, 1461.) The fees,
costs, and expenses spring from appellant's fraud, concealment, and misconduct. "No
one can take advantage of his own wrong." (Civ. Code, § 3517.)
              Appellant complains that the trial court erred in not reimbursing him for
out-of-pocket expenses and property management services. None of the expenses were
documented with billings, invoices, canceled checks, or specific check account numbers.
(Estate of McCabe (1950) 98 Cal.App.2d 503, 505 [any doubt arising from trustee's


                                             16
failure to keep proper records, or from the nature of the proof he produces, must be
resolved against trustee].) The out-of-pocket expenses include $1,961.16 in funeral costs
purportedly paid in cash, $3,800+ in "Sea Grass uppers" (carpet) for an unknown address,
the $854.21 cash purchase of a dishwasher, and a $622.29 gas range. Appellant
requested $15,519.75 for managing two rental properties over a three year period and
$5,400 for the "management" of Patton's residence ($150 per month x 36 months).
Appellant used the house rent free for three years. The trial court did not err in
disallowing the claim for out-of-pocket expenses and property management services.
(Estate of Vokal (1953) 121 Cal.App.2d 252, 260-261 [award for fees for services to a
trust will not be disturbed absent a showing of a palpable abuse of discretion].) A trustee
"is strictly prohibited from engaging in transactions in which the trustee's personal
interests may conflict with those of the beneficiaries without the express authorization of
either the trust instrument, the court, or the beneficiaries. [Citation.] It is no defense that
the trustee acted in good faith, that the terms of the transaction were fair, or that the trust
suffered no loss or the trustee received no profit." (Uzyel v. Kadisha (2010) 188
Cal.App.4th 866, 905-906.)




                                              17
                                        Conclusion
              Appellant's remaining arguments have been considered and merit no further
discussion. The judgment, and the postjudgment order, are affirmed. Respondents are
awarded costs on appeal and reasonable attorney fees in an amount to be determined, on
noticed motion, by the trial court. The clerk is directed to forward a copy of this opinion
to the California State Bar (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6103.6) and the district attorney for the
County of Santa Barbara. We express no opinion on discipline and/or the decision to
initiate criminal prosecution.
              CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION.



                                                        YEGAN, J.
We concur:


              GILBERT, P. J.


              PERREN, J.




                                            18
                                 Colleen K. Sterne, Judge

                         Superior Court County of Santa Barbara

                           ______________________________

               Law Offices of Michael P. Ring & Assoc., Michael P. Ring; Weldon &
Hass, Scott B. Fooks, for Defendant and Appellant.
               The Law Office of John Derrick, John Gregory Derrick, for Plaintiffs and
Respondents.
