CALIFORNIA
I had a hearing to remove the Trustee. He said he quit.
The Trustee nor his attorney appeared.
The judge told me he would grant the petition and he agreed to appoint me, as I am the sole beneficiary, as successor Trustee.
The judge instructed me to give him an ORDER to sign, but he instructed,
to give a copy to the Trustee's attorney. After 5 days of notice to the Trustee, the judge said he would sign the ORDER.
I had a terrible time locating an order form to make one so I have ordered one made. Today I received a copy of a letter to the judge from the trustees attorney.
He informs the judge he "intended to appear at the hearing, but was unable to do so"; that, his "staff had called the Court at 8:30am" [hearing was set for 8:30am] "to inform them of this circumstance."
The atty goes on to state the petition should have been denied and instructs the judge to follow Calif. Probate Code 8004(a) which the attorney says is "instructive."
In a second email, the Trustee's attorney sent me this:
Q1: If I "won the hearing" because the opponent failed to show or give good cause, why would the Court instruct me to give the opponent 5 days notice of the Order of his ruling in the matter—before he signs it?
It is evident the attorney will object to the order, which I assume means the judge will not then sign it.
That either totally reverses his ruling or gives the opponent a second chance to be heard on the issue.
Q2: what am I missing here? Certainly a simple objection because they changed their mind cannot reverse a lost case—can it?
I had a hearing to remove the Trustee. He said he quit.
The Trustee nor his attorney appeared.
The judge told me he would grant the petition and he agreed to appoint me, as I am the sole beneficiary, as successor Trustee.
The judge instructed me to give him an ORDER to sign, but he instructed,
to give a copy to the Trustee's attorney. After 5 days of notice to the Trustee, the judge said he would sign the ORDER.
I had a terrible time locating an order form to make one so I have ordered one made. Today I received a copy of a letter to the judge from the trustees attorney.
He informs the judge he "intended to appear at the hearing, but was unable to do so"; that, his "staff had called the Court at 8:30am" [hearing was set for 8:30am] "to inform them of this circumstance."
The atty goes on to state the petition should have been denied and instructs the judge to follow Calif. Probate Code 8004(a) which the attorney says is "instructive."
In a second email, the Trustee's attorney sent me this:
The minute order for the hearing states that you are required to comply with Cal. Rules of Court No. 3.1312, which states:
Rule 3.1312. Preparation of order
(a) Prevailing party to prepare
Unless the parties waive notice or the court orders otherwise, the party prevailing on any motion must, within five days of the ruling, mail or deliver a proposed order to the other party for approval as conforming to the court's order. Within five days after the mailing or delivery, the other party must notify the prevailing party as to whether or not the proposed order is so approved. The opposing party must state any reasons for disapproval. Failure to notify the prevailing party within the time required shall be deemed an approval. Code of Civil Procedure section 1013, relating to service of papers by mail, does not apply to this rule.
Based on the above, please submit a copy of your proposed order to me, so that I can respond to it, as allowed by the Rule.
My questionsRule 3.1312. Preparation of order
(a) Prevailing party to prepare
Unless the parties waive notice or the court orders otherwise, the party prevailing on any motion must, within five days of the ruling, mail or deliver a proposed order to the other party for approval as conforming to the court's order. Within five days after the mailing or delivery, the other party must notify the prevailing party as to whether or not the proposed order is so approved. The opposing party must state any reasons for disapproval. Failure to notify the prevailing party within the time required shall be deemed an approval. Code of Civil Procedure section 1013, relating to service of papers by mail, does not apply to this rule.
Based on the above, please submit a copy of your proposed order to me, so that I can respond to it, as allowed by the Rule.
Q1: If I "won the hearing" because the opponent failed to show or give good cause, why would the Court instruct me to give the opponent 5 days notice of the Order of his ruling in the matter—before he signs it?
It is evident the attorney will object to the order, which I assume means the judge will not then sign it.
That either totally reverses his ruling or gives the opponent a second chance to be heard on the issue.
Q2: what am I missing here? Certainly a simple objection because they changed their mind cannot reverse a lost case—can it?