Probate Litigation in Orange County & LA County
Top Ranked Trust & Probate Lawyers in California☰ Quick Facts About This Page
- Probate issues can delay inheritances
- Will challenges have strict deadlines
- Executors owe fiduciary duties
- Beneficiaries can demand information
- Hidden assets require fast action
- Accountings can expose financial issues
- Creditor claims can reduce inheritance shares
- Court orders can stop improper transfers
- Mediation can lower legal fees
- Local probate practice matters
Litigating Probate Disputes in California
Probate litigation involves legal disputes about an estate after someone dies, including who should serve as executor or administrator, whether a will is valid, how assets should be managed, and who is entitled to receive distributions.
Many probate cases begin with a petition asking the court to open the estate, appoint a personal representative, and, when applicable, admit a will to probate under Probate Code section 8000. In California, probate disputes are handled in probate court and can carry serious financial and family consequences when they are not addressed early and correctly.
In Orange County and Los Angeles County, probate litigation often starts when beneficiaries feel shut out, when there is suspicion about missing property, or when the personal representative makes decisions that do not make sense. Sometimes the conflict is about the will itself. Other times it is about how the estate is being managed.
An experienced probate litigation attorney from Max Alavi, Attorney at Law, APC, helps heirs, beneficiaries, and personal representatives protect their rights in California probate court, including high value estate disputes throughout Orange County and Los Angeles County.
Our Trust Litigation Case Process
1. Case Evaluation
We begin with a full review of the trust, will, financial records, and family history. Our legal team will identify your rights, deadlines, and the best legal path before anything is filed.
2. Court Filings
The case formally begins when a probate petition or trust lawsuit is filed in California probate court, often in Orange County Superior Court. This step sets the legal issues, brings all parties into the case.
3. Discovery and Settlement
Both sides exchange documents, take depositions, and file motions to address disputes. Many trust and probate cases resolve here through settlement discussions or court ordered mediation.
4. Trial and Resolution
If no agreement is reached, the case proceeds to trial before a probate judge. After a ruling, the court orders distributions, removals of fiduciaries, or financial recovery, and we handle enforcement or appeals if needed.
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Common Types of Probate Disputes We Handle
Probate litigation can take many forms. Our law firm and legal staff regularly represents clients in matters involving issues like:
- Will contests, including undue influence and capacity claims
- Objections to the appointment of an executor or administrator
- Removal of a personal representative for misconduct
- Failure to disclose information, delays, and missed deadlines
- Disputes over estate accountings, expenses, and distributions
- Claims that property belongs to the estate, or does not
- Conflicts over real estate sales, buyouts, or occupancy
- Creditor claim disputes that reduce inheritance shares
- Disputes involving omitted heirs or competing family claims
- High conflict estates with business interests or complex assets
If the dispute is about the validity of a will after it has already been admitted to probate, there may be a narrow window to act. Probate Code section 8270 allows certain interested persons to petition to revoke the probate of a will within 120 days after the will is admitted.
We also aggressively pursue bad actors, a term used for those acting in bad faith, who took property from the decedent before they died. Using a petition under California Probate Code section 850, we ask the probate court to determine the true title of the property and order the immediate return of those stolen assets to the estate.
Top FAQs About Probate Litigation
When should I speak with a probate litigation attorney?
If you suspect a will problem, missing assets, conflicts of interest, or stonewalling by the executor or administrator, it is smart to speak with counsel early. Waiting often makes the case harder, and certain challenges have strict time limits.
Can I contest a will in California?
Yes. A will can be challenged on recognized grounds, and timing matters. Probate Code section 8270 includes a 120 day window after a will is admitted to probate for certain petitions to revoke probate.
Can the court remove an executor or administrator?
Yes. If the facts support it, the probate court can remove a personal representative. Probate Code section 8502 lists grounds that include mismanagement, fraud, and waste of estate assets.
What if estate property is in someone else’s name?
The probate court has procedures to address title disputes and recover property when the evidence supports the claim. Probate Code section 850 is commonly used to request orders determining ownership and requiring transfers in appropriate cases.
How do creditor claims affect an inheritance?
Valid creditor claims can reduce what beneficiaries receive. Probate Code section 9000 defines a “claim” in probate and helps frame how creditor demands are handled during the administration.
Do probate disputes always go to trial?
No. Many probate cases resolve through early disclosures, accountings, and mediation once the facts are on the table. The key is having a strategy that puts you in a strong position whether the dispute settles or proceeds to contested hearings, that is where the knowledge and experience of OC Trusts Lawyer is used to push the case toward a fair result.
Court Issues and Remedies in Probate Litigation
Probate litigation requires more than knowing the rules. It takes courtroom experience, strong evidence, and a practical plan for how to present the dispute to a probate judge.
In Orange County and Los Angeles County probate courts, many disputes are decided through petitions, objections, accountings, and contested hearings.
The court can issue orders that force transparency, stop harmful transactions, correct mismanagement, and, when necessary, remove a fiduciary.
When the conflict is about ownership, such as when a decedent’s property is held in someone else’s name or transferred shortly before death, a Probate Code section 850 petition can be used to ask the probate court to determine title and order a transfer where the facts support it.
When the personal representative is the issue, the court can remove an executor or administrator for serious misconduct. Probate Code section 8502 lists grounds for removal, including waste, embezzlement, mismanagement, or fraud on the estate.
Estate debts can also become an issue. Probate Code section 9000 defines what counts as a creditor claim in a probate estate and sets the stage for how those claims get handled in the case.
Common Issues in Probate |
Possible Remedies in Probate Court |
| No communication from the personal representative, calls ignored, vague updates, long delays | Court orders to provide information, deadlines, status hearings |
| No inventory or accounting, beneficiaries cannot see assets, expenses, or payments | Order compelling disclosures, accounting objections, transaction review |
| Suspicious expenses or reimbursements, large payments, unclear withdrawals, cash activity | Surcharge request, restitution, restrictions on future spending |
| Self dealing or conflicts of interest, estate assets used for personal benefit | Removal, damages, orders unwinding improper transactions when possible |
| Questionable will or late changes, sudden revisions, isolation, new beneficiaries | Will contest procedures, evidentiary hearing, orders on validity |
| Dispute over who inherits, unclear family relationships, omitted heirs, competing claims | Court determinations of entitlement, instructions to fiduciary, distribution orders |
| Property held outside the estate, title issues, transfers, assets in another person’s name | Probate Code section 850 petition, orders confirming ownership and transfer |
| Real estate conflict, sale disputes, occupancy fights, buyout disagreements | Sale order, buyout structure, accounting for rent, credits, and expenses |
| Creditor pressure, disputed debts, late claims, attempts to drain estate value | Objections to claims, court rulings on validity, structured payment orders |
| Failure to act in the estate’s best interest, missed opportunities, avoidable losses, poor decisions | Court supervision, corrective orders, removal in serious cases |
How Attorney Max Alavi Helps With Probate Litigation
Probate litigation requires more than technical legal knowledge. It demands courtroom experience, strategic judgment, and a clear understanding of how California probate judges evaluate fiduciary conduct, evidence, and competing family claims. You need a litigator who can untangle complex financial records, expose bad actors, and present a compelling case to a judge. Max Alavi, Attorney at Law, APC, has decades of experience handling complex probate disputes throughout California. The firm represents clients in contested estate matters involving significant assets, business interests, and long-standing family conflict.
Recognized as a Super Lawyer from 2024 to 2026 and honored with the Client’s Choice Award from AVVO, Max Alavi brings formidable courtroom experience to every case. Our firm has successfully handled high stakes matters, including a case where we represented a surviving wife in a three year intestate probate dispute against stepchildren. We secured a final judgment granting our client 100 percent of the contested property.
We leverage our deep understanding of the psychology of theft to protect vulnerable estates from financial manipulation. Whether you need to remove a corrupt executor, challenge a forged will, or defend your rightful inheritance, we provide aggressive, client centered representation across Orange County and Los Angeles County.
Probate Litigation
Areas We Serve
At Max Alavi, Attorney at Law, we have decades of experience in dealing with complex probate litigation matters throughout California. When you hire our legal team, you are bringing on the best and toughest litigators around to aggresively fight on your behalf.
Probate Litigation
Areas We Serve
At Max Alavi, Attorney at Law, we have decades of experience in dealing with complex probate litigation matters throughout California. When you hire our legal team, you are bringing on the best and toughest litigators around to aggresively fight on your behalf.
What Our Amazing Clients Have To Say
Why Clients Choose Max Alavi, APC
- Super Lawyers recognition based on peer review
- Extensive experience in California probate law
- Millions recovered in trust and probate litigation
- Strategic handling of trust and estate disputes
- Proven advocacy for surviving spouses and heirs
- Clear guidance through complex probate matters
- Outstanding dedication to every one of our clients
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At Max Alavi, Attorney at Law, APC, we understand the complexities of California probate law and are committed to providing solutions for trust and estate disputes. Contact us today to speak with one of our legal staff.
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Understanding Fiduciary Duties Owed by Trustees in California
Under California Probate Code § 16000, once a trustee accepts the position, the trustee has a legal duty to administer the trust in accordance with the terms of the trust instrument and, unless the trust provides otherwise, in compliance with California trust law. This statute establishes the foundational obligation that governs all trustee conduct during trust administration.
While § 16000 does not itself define specific fiduciary duties, it serves as the gateway provision that subjects trustees to the broader fiduciary framework.
Those additional statutes impose duties of loyalty, care, and impartiality that guide how a trustee must manage trust assets and interact with beneficiaries.
In practice, this means a trustee must first look to the trust document for direction and then ensure their actions comply with statutory fiduciary requirements. When a trustee fails to administer the trust in accordance with these governing authorities, a breach of fiduciary duty may occur, exposing the trustee to liability and court-ordered remedies.
What Is a Breach of the Duty of Loyalty Under California Law?
Under California Probate Code § 16002, a trustee has a fiduciary duty to administer the trust solely in the best interest of the beneficiaries. This duty of loyalty requires the trustee to place the beneficiaries’ interests above all others when managing trust assets and making decisions during trust administration.
A breach of the duty of loyalty occurs when a trustee acts in a manner that benefits themselves or another party at the expense of the beneficiaries. California law addresses these situations directly in § 16004, which provides that transactions involving a conflict of interest or self-dealing are presumed to constitute a breach of fiduciary duty unless the trustee can prove that the transaction falls within a statutory exception.
Notably, a trustee’s intent is not determinative. Even well-meaning conduct may violate the duty of loyalty if it places the trustee in an adverse position or results in personal gain. Because of this strict standard, courts closely scrutinize loyalty violations and often impose remedies without requiring proof of bad faith.
What Is a Breach of the Duty of Care by a Trustee?
The duty of care requires trustees to manage trust assets prudently and competently. Under California Probate Code § 16040, a trustee must administer the trust with reasonable care, skill, and caution under the circumstances.
A breach of care often involves poor investment decisions, failure to diversify assets, or neglecting trust administration responsibilities. Unlike a violation of duty of loyalty, a breach of care focuses on the quality of conduct rather than personal benefit.
California courts evaluate whether the trustee acted as a prudent person would in managing another’s property. Negligence, not dishonesty, is the key issue in these breaches of fiduciary duty.
How Courts Distinguish Between These Trustee Breaches
Courts typically begin by identifying which fiduciary duty the trustee allegedly violated, because a breach of loyalty is evaluated differently from a breach of care.
For a duty of loyalty claim, the analysis often turns on whether the trustee engaged in self-dealing or a conflict of interest—conduct that can constitute a breach even where the trustee claims good intentions. The Probate Code reflects this stricter posture: California Probate Code § 16004 frames conflicted transactions as presumptively improper in key situations, shifting the focus to whether the trustee can justify the transaction under the statute. Courts applying these principles have emphasized that when a trustee obtains an advantage through conflicted conduct, the trustee may face increased scrutiny and potential liability.
By contrast, when the claim is framed as a breach of the duty of care, the inquiry is usually about competence and prudence—whether the trustee administered the trust with reasonable care, skill, and caution under the circumstances. That standard is grounded in California Probate Code § 16040, and the remedial focus becomes whether the breach occurred and whether it caused harm. A trustee may be held liable for losses or depreciation in the trust estate arising from a breach, which is why care-based claims are commonly litigated based on evidence of imprudent management, missed deadlines, or improper administration. California courts have long evaluated trustee investment and administration decisions through this prudence lens in surcharge disputes.
Practically, this distinction matters to every beneficiary and trust litigation attorney because the remedies and proof themes often diverge. Loyalty cases (especially those involving self-dealing) frequently emphasize unjust advantage and corrective treatments. In contrast, care cases emphasize whether the trustee met the statutory standard and the resulting financial impact on the trust or estate. That is why, throughout California, disputes over trustee behavior are often pleaded as breach of fiduciary duty claims but then litigated with different evidentiary priorities depending on whether the trustee’s conduct is framed as disloyalty versus mismanagement—two separate violations of fiduciary obligations.
Who Can Enforce Trustee Fiduciary Duties and When a Claim May Be Brought
In California, the primary parties entitled to enforce trustee fiduciary duties are trust beneficiaries and other interested persons with a legal interest in the trust.
Under California Probate Code § 17200, the probate court has broad jurisdiction over trust matters, including proceedings to compel a trustee to perform their duties, to redress a breach of fiduciary duty, or to determine whether a trustee has violated their obligations under the trust or the Probate Code.
A claim may be brought while the trust is actively being administered or after misconduct is discovered, depending on the nature of the trustee’s actions. Beneficiaries do not need to wait until the trust terminates if the trustee has already breached their fiduciary duties. Courts routinely hear petitions alleging self-dealing, mismanagement, or failure to comply with the trust document when such acts place trust assets or beneficiaries' interests at risk during administration.
Timing is often critical. Delays in addressing trustee misconduct can compound losses or make it harder to unwind conflicted transactions. Because probate courts have authority to issue instructions, impose remedies, or remove a trustee when appropriate, early legal review can help preserve evidence and protect the trust estate. For beneficiaries, understanding when and how enforcement is available is an essential step in responding effectively when a trustee may have breached their fiduciary obligations.
Remedies Available When a Trustee Breaches Fiduciary Duties
When a trustee has breached their fiduciary duty, California Probate Code § 16420 authorizes broad remedies, including:
- Removal of the trustee
- Surcharge for losses to the trust
- Disgorgement of profits
- Appointment of a successor trustee
In cases involving intentional misconduct, courts may also award punitive damages, particularly when self-dealing or bad faith is proven.
When Breach of Loyalty or Care Leads to Trust Litigation
Trust litigation often arises when beneficiaries discover financial irregularities, unexplained losses, or conflicts of interest. Trustees who breach their fiduciary duties face personal liability under California Probate Code § 16440.
A trust litigation attorney can evaluate whether the trustee breached their fiduciary duty, identify the proper remedy, and initiate probate court proceedings if necessary.
Frequently Asked Questions About Breach of Loyalty vs. Breach of Care Under California Trust Law
1. What is the difference between breach of loyalty and breach of care in California?
A breach of loyalty involves self-dealing or conflicts of interest, while a breach of care involves negligence or poor management of trust assets under California Probate Code §§ 16002 and 16040.
2. Can a trustee be liable even if they did not intend to harm beneficiaries?
Yes. Intent is not required for a breach of loyalty. Even unintentional conflicts of interest can lead to liability under California law.
3. What are common examples of a breach of the duty of loyalty?
Examples include using trust assets for personal benefit, entering into conflicted transactions, or favoring one beneficiary unfairly.
4. What are common examples of a breach of the duty of care?
Failing to diversify investments, mismanaging trust property, or neglecting administrative duties can all constitute a breach of care.
5. Who can bring a claim against a trustee for breach of fiduciary duty?
Trust beneficiaries and other interested parties can file a petition in probate court under California Probate Code § 17200.
6. What remedies are available if a trustee breaches their fiduciary duty?
Remedies may include removal of the trustee, financial damages, repayment of losses, or appointment of a new trustee under Probate Code § 16420.
7. How do California courts evaluate these types of breaches?
Courts apply strict scrutiny to loyalty violations and a reasonableness standard to care violations, focusing on prudence and financial impact.
8. Can a trustee be removed for a single breach?
Yes, depending on the severity. Serious misconduct, especially involving self-dealing, can justify immediate removal.
9. Is there a time limit to bring a claim against a trustee?
Yes. Statutes of limitation apply, often based on when the beneficiary discovered or should have discovered the breach.
10. How can Max Alavi, Attorney at Law, APC help in these cases?
The firm evaluates trustee conduct, builds strong legal claims, and represents beneficiaries in California probate courts to protect their interests.







