Estate of Edward Valencia
Petition for Probate and Letters Testamentary
Motion type
Parties
Ruling
On January 20, 2026, Lisa Marie Valencia filed a Petition for Probate of Will and Letters Testamentary. On March 11, 2026, Rosalie Valencia filed an objection to the Petition of Lisa Marie Valencia. That objection was amended and filed on April 9, 2026, after a competing petition for Letters of Administration was filed on March 26, 2026. The Amended Objection of Rosalie Valencia plainly opposes both the appointment of Lisa Marie Valencia and the admission of the will offered by that petition to probate. The Probate Notes for the March 18, 2026, hearing on this matter outlined the procedural requirements to properly contest both appointment of personal representative and a will. Only one of those procedures has been followed by the submission of competing petition for Letters of Administration. A contest to a Petition for Probate and Letters Testamentary may involve a contest to the appointment of the personal representative, a contest to the will, or both. When appointment of a personal representative is contested, Probate Code section 8004 requires a written objection and competing petition be filed and served in accordance with Probate Code section 8110 [15 days, mail or personal service to all entitled to take by intestate, and each devisee, executor, and alternative executor]. (Prob. Code, § 8004, subd. (a).) The competing petition need not be published as long as publication of the first petition was completed according to statute. There is a competing petition on file, which places the appointment of a personal representative of the estate at issue, requiring evidentiary hearing to resolve. (In re Estate of Lensch (2009) 177 Cal.App.4th 667, 676; Conservatorship of Farrant (2021) 67 Cal.App.5th 370, 377.) HOWEVER, the procedure to contest the will has not been followed. When a will is contested, Probate Code section 8250 requires a written objection to probate of the will be filed, and a copy of the objection along with a summons be served to all those entitled to notice listed in section 8110 [all entitled to take by intestate, and each devisee, executor, and alternative executor]. The summons must be served according to the procedures in the Code of Civil Procedure Title 5, Part 2, Chapters 3 and 4 [§ 412.10 et seq]. The original petitioning party may file an answer to the objection, or demur, within 30 days after service of the summons. (Prob. Code, § 8250, subd(a) and 8251, subd. (a).) If a party fails to respond to a served summons within 30 days, the case is still at issue, but the non-responding party loses the right to further contest the appointment or the will. (Prob. Code, § 8251, subd. (c).) Contrary to the baffling claims in the objection that no original will was filed, and the proposed order and letters do not match the requests in the petition, Ms. Valencia submitted what is absolutely an original will on January 29, 2026, and proposed order and letters that matched the relief requested in the petition on February 25, 2026, and January 20, 2026, respectively. THEREFORE, the admission of the will is NOT at issue, and will not be placed at issue until the above outlined procedure to contest the will is followed. SANCTIONS. Both parties appear to have been aware that a dissolution case was pending upon the death of the decedent in this case.
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