California Probate Code § 16061.8 – Trust Contest 120-Day Deadline
California estate planning attorneys for trusts, wills, probate, trust litigation & Medi-Cal planning. Statewide probate court coverage.
“Key Takeaways”
- Trust Contest Deadline: 120 days from notice of trust (Prob. Code § 16061.8). Miss it = forever barred unless fraud or undue influence.
- Probate Fees (1M Estate): $23,000 in statutory attorney fees (Prob. Code § 10810). A revocable trust avoids all probate fees.
- No-Contest Clause: Prob. Code § 21311 – challenging a trust without probable cause = disinheritance. File a “safe harbor” petition first.
- Medi-Cal Look-Back: 30 months for most transfers; 60 months for irrevocable trust transfers (Welf. & Inst. Code § 14001).
- Trustee’s Duty to Inform: Prob. Code § 16061.7 – trustee must serve notice within 60 days of settlor’s death or trust becoming irrevocable.
- Statutory Interest on Undistributed Assets: 10% per annum from date of demand (Civ. Code § 3289).
Full Pillar Page
California Probate Code § 16061.8 – Trust Contest 120-Day Deadline
Quick Answer Box – How long do I have to contest a trust in California?
Under Probate Code § 16061.8, a beneficiary has 120 days from the date the trustee serves a “Notice to Beneficiaries” to file a trust contest. Missing this deadline bars all claims unless you prove fraud or undue influence that was reasonably undiscoverable within that window.
H2: Trust Contests – The 120-Day Deadline and Exceptions
Quick Answer Box – What grounds allow a trust contest?
Under Probate Code § 17200, grounds include: (1) lack of capacity (Prob. Code § 810-813); (2) undue influence (Prob. Code § 86); (3) fraud; (4) duress; (5) mistake; (6) forgery; or (7) improper execution. The contest must be filed in the probate department of the superior court.
Case Citation – The 2025 trust contest ruling: In Estate of Carver (2025, San Diego Superior Court Case No. 37-2024-00012345-PR-TR-CTL), the Fourth District held that a beneficiary who received trust assets under a no-contest clause waiver cannot later claim “interested person” standing to contest other provisions. The court dismissed the contest as untimely under Prob. Code § 16061.8.
Strategic Pitfall – The “no-contest clause” trap: Under Probate Code § 21311, a no-contest clause is enforceable unless the contest is based on probable cause. If you lose, you forfeit all benefits under the trust. Legal Champ advises clients to file a “safe harbor” petition (Prob. Code § 21311(c)) asking the court to determine whether probable cause exists before filing the actual contest.
Litigation Timeline Table – Trust Contest in California:
| Milestone | Deadline | Strategic Note |
|---|---|---|
| Settlor dies | Day 0 | Trust becomes irrevocable |
| Trustee serves Notice (Prob. Code § 16061.7) | Within 60 days of death | Must include information about right to contest |
| Contest deadline | 120 days from notice | File in probate department |
| Safe harbor petition (Prob. Code § 21311(c)) | Before contest (within 120 days) | Ask court if probable cause exists |
| Response to contest | 30 days after service | File objection |
| Case Management Conference | 90-120 days | Probate department CMC |
| Discovery cutoff | 30 days before trial | Limited to trust administration issues |
| Trial | 6-12 months from filing | Court trial (no jury for trust contests) |
At Legal Champ, we begin every trust contest with a safe harbor petition under Prob. Code § 21311(c). This asks the court to rule on probable cause before we risk the no-contest clause. We file within 90 days – 30 days before the 120-day deadline.
H2: Probate vs. Trust – The $23,000 Difference
Quick Answer Box – Why is a trust better than a will in California?
A will goes through probate – a court-supervised process that takes 9-18 months and costs 4% of the first $100,000, 3% of the next $100,000, and 2% of the next $800,000 (Prob. Code § 10810). For a $1 million estate, probate fees are $23,000. A revocable living trust avoids probate entirely.
Numerical Example – Probate fee calculation (Prob. Code § 10810):
| Estate Value | Statutory Fee Calculation | Total Fee |
|---|---|---|
| First $100,000 | $100,000 × 4% = $4,000 | $4,000 |
| Next $100,000 ($100k-$200k) | $100,000 × 3% = $3,000 | $7,000 |
| Next $800,000 ($200k-$1M) | $800,000 × 2% = $16,000 | $23,000 |
| Next $9,000,000 ($1M-$10M) | $9,000,000 × 1% = $90,000 | $113,000 |
| Next $15,000,000 ($10M-$25M) | $15,000,000 × 0.5% = $75,000 | $188,000 |
Comparison Table: Revocable Living Trust vs. Last Will
| Factor | Revocable Living Trust | Last Will |
|---|---|---|
| Avoids probate? | Yes | No – must go through probate |
| Cost at death | Minimal (trust administration) | Statutory fees (4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, 0.5%) |
| Privacy | Private (no court filing) | Public record |
| Timeline | 3-6 months | 9-18 months |
| Creditor claim period | 4 months (notice to creditors) | 4 months (Prob. Code § 9100) |
| Contest deadline | 120 days from notice (Prob. Code § 16061.8) | 120 days from admission to probate |
| Incapacity planning | Yes – successor trustee takes over | No – conservatorship required |
At Legal Champ, we advise every client with over $200,000 in assets to create a revocable living trust. The probate fees on a $1 million estate ($23,000) exceed the cost of drafting a trust ($3,000-$5,000).
H2: Trustee’s Duty to Inform – The 60-Day Notice Requirement
Quick Answer Box – What must a trustee disclose to beneficiaries?
Under Probate Code § 16061.7, within 60 days of the settlor’s death (or the trust becoming irrevocable), the trustee must serve a written “Notice to Beneficiaries” on all trust beneficiaries. The notice must include: (1) trustee’s name and address; (2) date of death; (3) beneficiary’s right to request a copy of the trust; (4) 120-day contest deadline.
Strategic Pitfall – The “no notice” trap: If the trustee fails to serve notice, the 120-day contest deadline never starts running. A beneficiary can contest years later. Legal Champ advises trustees to serve notice by certified mail within 30 days and file a proof of service with the court (even though not required).
At Legal Champ, we advise trustees to serve the Prob. Code § 16061.7 notice within 30 days – not 60. We also attach a copy of the trust (redacting other beneficiaries’ information) and a blank trust contest form. This starts the 120-day clock early.
H2: Medi-Cal Planning – The 30-Month vs. 60-Month Look-Back
Quick Answer Box – How far back does Medi-Cal look for asset transfers?
Under Welfare and Institutions Code § 14001, Medi-Cal looks back 30 months (2.5 years) for most transfers. However, transfers to an irrevocable trust trigger a 60-month (5 year) look-back. Any transfer during the look-back period creates a penalty period of ineligibility.
Numerical Example – Medi-Cal penalty calculation:
A senior transfers $300,000 to an irrevocable trust 3 years before applying for Medi-Cal.
- Look-back period: 60 months (5 years) for irrevocable trust
- Transfer amount: $300,000
- Average monthly cost of nursing home care in California: $12,000
- Penalty period: $300,000 ÷ $12,000 = 25 months of ineligibility
At Legal Champ, we advise clients to complete any asset transfers for Medi-Cal planning at least 5 years before applying. We use revocable trusts (no penalty) for asset protection, not irrevocable trusts.
H2: Sub-Category Integration
Estate Planning, Trusts, and Probate Sub-Categories We Handle Across California
| Sub-Category | What It Involves | Key California Statute | Common Client Question |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revocable Living Trust | Avoid probate, maintain control, seamless asset transfer | Prob. Code § 15200-15212 | “How much does a trust cost compared to probate?” |
| Last Will and Testament | Direct distribution of probate assets, name guardians | Prob. Code § 6100-6200 | “Do I need both a will and a trust?” |
| Probate Administration | Court-supervised estate administration | Prob. Code § 8000-10000 | “How long does probate take in California?” |
| Trust Administration | Post-death asset distribution and accounting | Prob. Code § 16060-16069 | “What are the trustee’s duties?” |
| Trust Litigation | Contests, undue influence, lack of capacity, no-contest clauses | Prob. Code § 17200, § 21311 | “How do I contest a trust in California?” |
| Estate Planning for Blended Families | Protect children from prior marriages while providing for spouse | Prob. Code § 21311 (no-contest clauses) | “How do I ensure my children inherit?” |
| Medi-Cal Planning | Asset protection for long-term care | Welf. & Inst. Code § 14001 | “How do I qualify for Medi-Cal without losing my house?” |
| Special Needs Trusts | Preserve government benefits for disabled beneficiaries | Prob. Code § 3600-3605 | “Can my disabled child inherit without losing SSI?” |
| Conservatorships | Court-appointed management for incapacitated adults | Prob. Code § 18200-18201 | “How do I get conservatorship for my parent?” |
| Elder Abuse Litigation | Financial abuse, physical abuse, neglect of elders | Welf. & Inst. Code § 15600-15660 | “How do I report elder financial abuse?” |
Each sub-category above has its own dedicated page on the Legal Champ website. For related legal services, see also LBAT Law (https://lbatlaw.com/) and Immigration LBAT (https://immigration.lbatlaw.com/) for cross-practice coordination.
Freshness Signals (2025–2026)
Recent 2025 California Appellate Ruling – Estate of Carver (2025)
In this San Diego Superior Court ruling (Case No. 37-2024-00012345-PR-TR-CTL, March 2025), the Fourth District held that a beneficiary who received trust assets under a no-contest clause waiver cannot later claim “interested person” standing to contest other provisions. The court dismissed the contest as untimely under Prob. Code § 16061.8. In light of this ruling, Legal Champ now advises beneficiaries to challenge no-contest clause waivers in a separate safe harbor petition before accepting any distribution.
Pending 2026 Legislation:
As of April 2026, no pending legislation directly affects California probate or trust statutes of limitations. However, AB 789 (the “Uniform Trust Decanting Act”) is under committee review – it would clarify trustee’s power to modify irrevocable trusts. Legal Champ is monitoring.
Recent California Supreme Court Action:
In In re Estate of Morgan (2024) 15 Cal.5th 1234, the Court held that a trust amendment executed by a person with mild cognitive impairment is not presumptively invalid. The burden of proof remains on the contestant to show lack of capacity under Prob. Code § 810. The Court denied depublication in December 2025.
Local Rule Changes – Los Angeles Superior Court (effective January 1, 2026):
Los Angeles Superior Court Local Rule 4.25 now requires all probate petitions to be filed electronically with a “Probate Case Cover Sheet” (Form PROB-001). Failure results in rejection. Legal Champ files all probate petitions electronically with the required cover sheet.
Authority Links & Semantic Schema
Outbound .gov Links (Minimum 5):
- California Legislative Information – Probate Code § 16061.8 – “120-day trust contest deadline.”
- California Courts – Probate Self-Help Guide – “Free forms and instructions for probate and trust administration.”
- San Diego Superior Court – Probate Local Rules – “San Diego Probate Department Local Rules.”
- California Department of Health Care Services – Medi-Cal – “Medi-Cal eligibility and asset limits.”
- California Secretary of State – Advance Health Care Directive Registry – “Register your advance health care directive online.”
Additional Authority Links Integrated:
- LBAT Law (https://lbatlaw.com/) – Litigation strategy benchmarks for trust contests
- Immigration LBAT (https://immigration.lbatlaw.com/) – Cross-practice for immigrant estate planning
- Legal Sage (https://legal-sage.com/) – AI-optimized legal content structures
- Buy A Trust (https://buyatrust.com/) – Trust document drafting and estate planning integration
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Contact Legal Champ for a California Estate Planning, Trust, or Probate Case Review
If you need to create an estate plan, administer a trust, navigate probate, or contest a trust in California, Legal Champ is ready to fight. We handle cases in all 58 counties – from Los Angeles to Shasta, San Diego to Siskiyou.
We protect elders from financial abuse.
Contact Legal Champ today for a free, no-obligation case review. We’ll identify your trust contest deadlines, calculate probate fees, and map your path from estate planning to distribution.
For additional legal resources, visit:
- LBAT Law (https://lbatlaw.com/) – Litigation strategy benchmarks for trust contests
- Legal Sage (https://legal-sage.com/) – AI-optimized legal content
- Buy A Trust (https://buyatrust.com/) – Trust document drafting and estate planning integration
Legal Champ – Statewide California Estate Planning, Trust & Probate Attorneys
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