California Trustee Removal Lawyer – San Diego Trust Litigation

California trustee removal lawyer in San Diego helps beneficiaries remove trustees for breach of duty. Under Probate Code § 15642, petition the court to suspend powers and appoint a successor.

San Diego Trustee Removal Essentials

  • Nine Statutory Grounds: Under Probate Code § 15642(b), removal is authorized for breach of trust, hostility among co‑trustees, failure to act, excessive compensation, being a disqualified person, or “other good cause” – a flexible catch‑all for administrative failure.
  • Emergency Suspension – With Notice: Under § 15642(e), you can file an ex parte petition to temporarily suspend a trustee. But San Diego Local Rules require notice to the opposing party by 10:00 AM the court day before the hearing unless you prove irreparable harm. No notice = summary denial.
  • The Bruno v. Hopkins Trap: Filing a removal petition in bad faith can lead the court to order you to pay the trustee’s legal fees personally – potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars. We conduct a rigorous good‑faith analysis before filing.
  • San Diego Local Rules: You must comply with Local Rule 2.1.5, requiring a meet‑and‑confer declaration before the court will hear your contested removal petition at 1100 Union St.
  • 2026 Department Assignment: Trust litigation at the Central Courthouse is assigned to departments 1501, 1502, 1503, or 1504 based on the last two digits of the case number. Complex removal trials move to “Long Cause” departments.

California Trustee Removal Lawyer: Removing a Bad Trustee in San Diego

Your uncle is the trustee of your grandmother’s trust. He refuses to provide an accounting. He pays himself $10,000 per year in “management fees.”And the trust assets – including the family home – are slowly disappearing.

You need him removed.

California law gives beneficiaries powerful tools to remove a trustee who breaches their duties, fails to act, or simply creates administrative chaos. Under Probate Code § 15642, the court can remove a trustee and appoint a successor – sometimes within days.

This guide explains exactly how to remove a trustee in San Diego probate court, the nine statutory grounds for removal, the emergency suspension procedure, and the critical local rules that out‑of‑area attorneys miss.

Quick Answer – What Is the Legal Standard for Removing a Trustee in California? Under Probate Code § 15642(b), the court may remove a trustee for any of nine grounds, including breach of trust, hostility among co‑trustees, failure to act, excessive compensation, being a disqualified person, or “other good cause.” The court has very broad discretion, especially under the catch‑all provision [19†L12-L17].

Internal Link – General Misconduct & Surcharge: If the removal is based on theft, self‑dealing, or financial mismanagement, see California Breach of Fiduciary Duty Lawyer.


The Nine Grounds for Trustee Removal Under Probate Code § 15642(b)

Quick Answer – What Are the Nine Grounds for Removal? (1) Breach of trust, (2) insolvency or unfitness, (3) hostility among co‑trustees impairing administration, (4) failure to act, (5) excessive compensation, (6) being a disqualified person under § 21380, (7) inability to manage finances, (8) inability to resist fraud or undue influence, and (9) other good cause [18†L5-L43].

GroundStatuteDescription
Breach of Trust§ 15642(b)(1)Any violation of fiduciary duties – self‑dealing, mismanagement, failure to account
Insolvency or Unfitness§ 15642(b)(2)Trustee cannot pay debts or lacks capacity/skill
Hostility Among Co‑Trustees§ 15642(b)(3)Conflict that impairs trust administration – must show administrative paralysis
Failure to Act§ 15642(b)(4)Trustee refuses or neglects to perform duties
Excessive Compensation§ 15642(b)(5)Trustee pays themselves more than reasonable
Disqualified Person§ 15642(b)(6)Sole trustee is a person described in § 21380 (caregiver, drafter, etc.)
Inability to Manage Finances§ 15642(b)(7)Trustee substantially unable to manage trust’s financial resources
Inability to Resist Fraud§ 15642(b)(8)Trustee substantially unable to resist fraud or undue influence
Other Good Cause§ 15642(b)(9)Catch‑all giving court broad discretion

Ground 3 Deep Dive: The “Administrative Paralysis” Threshold for Hostility

Quick Answer – Is Hostility Alone Enough to Remove a Co‑Trustee? No. In San Diego, you must prove that the hostility has caused administrative paralysis – e.g., unpaid property taxes, missed mortgage payments on trust property, inability to make distributions, or wasted legal fees from constant deadlock. Hostility without paralysis is insufficient.

How to Prove Administrative Paralysis:

  • Bank statements showing unpaid trust obligations (taxes, insurance, mortgage)
  • Emails demonstrating that co‑trustees refuse to sign checks or approve distributions
  • Evidence of missed deadlines for beneficiary distributions
  • Legal fees incurred solely because co‑trustees cannot agree

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we document specific instances where hostility has delayed or prevented trust administration. A single missed property tax payment can be enough.

Ground 6 Deep Dive: Disqualified Persons – Mandatory Removal with Fee Shift

Quick Answer – What Happens If the Sole Trustee Is a Disqualified Person? Under Probate Code § 15642(b)(6) and § 21380, if the sole trustee is a disqualified person – including a caregiver, the drafter of the trust, or a person related to the drafter – the court must remove them unless the settlor’s contrary intent is proven not to be the product of fraud or undue influence [18†L11-L20]. Moreover, under § 15642(c), a trustee removed on this ground bears all costs of the proceeding personally.

Who Is a Disqualified Person? Probate Code § 21380 includes:

  • The person who drafted the trust instrument
  • An employee of the drafter
  • A person related by blood or marriage to the drafter
  • A caregiver who provided services to the settlor

The Fee Shift: Under § 15642(c), a trustee removed under this subdivision is personally liable for all costs of the proceeding, including the beneficiary’s attorney fees. This is mandatory – the court has no discretion.

Internal Link – Asset Theft & Forgery: If the disqualified trustee also used a forged deed to gain control of trust property, see Equity Theft & Elder Title Fraud Lawyer.

Ground 9 Deep Dive: “Other Good Cause” – The Catch‑All

Quick Answer – What Is “Other Good Cause” for Trustee Removal? “Other good cause” is a flexible catch‑all that gives California probate courts extremely broad discretion to remove a trustee whenever circumstances justify it – even without a specific statutory violation. The court may remove a trustee simply because the trust should have been distributed years ago and the trustee is not acting [19†L12-L17].

The Matter of Ann Sharlyn Reading Trust (2025) illustrates this. The court considered removing a trustee because nine years after the settlor’s death, the trust still had not been distributed – even though no specific harm or breach was alleged.

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we use “other good cause” when the trustee’s conduct does not fit neatly into the other eight grounds but clearly frustrates the trust’s purpose.

Internal Link – Trustees with Diminished Capacity: If you are removing a trustee because they suffer from dementia or cognitive decline, see California Lack of Capacity Lawyer San Diego.


The Trustee Removal Process in San Diego Probate Court (2026)

Quick Answer – What Is the Step‑by‑Step Process for Removing a Trustee in San Diego? (1) Gather evidence of grounds for removal, (2) comply with Local Rule 2.1.5 – meet and confer with the trustee, (3) file a Petition for Removal under Probate Code § 17200 and § 15642 via mandatory eFiling, (4) if urgent, file an ex parte petition for emergency suspension with proper notice, and (5) appear at the hearing in the assigned department (1501-1504).

Step‑by‑Step Instructions

Step 1: Gather Evidence
Collect bank statements, emails, accounting records, expert reports, and documentation of administrative paralysis or breach.

Step 2: Meet and Confer (Local Rule 2.1.5)
Before filing any contested petition, you must meet and confer with the trustee (or their attorney) in person or by phone. File a declaration stating the date, participants, issues discussed, and outcome. Failure to file this declaration = your petition may be denied.

Step 3: File the Petition
File a Petition for Internal Affairs of Trust under Probate Code § 17200, specifically requesting removal under § 15642. Use mandatory eFiling through the Odyssey system.

Step 4: Emergency Suspension (If Needed)
If trust assets are at immediate risk, file an ex parte petition under § 15642(e). But note the notice requirement below.

Step 5: Hearing
Attend the hearing at the Central Courthouse, 1100 Union St., in the assigned department (1501-1504). The judge will hear evidence and decide.

San Diego Superior Court: 2026 Filing Information

ItemDetail
CourthouseCentral Courthouse, 1100 Union St., San Diego, CA 92101
Departments1501, 1502, 1503, or 1504 (based on last two digits of case number)
Complex trialsMoved to “Long Cause” trial departments
Filing methodMandatory eFiling through Odyssey
Local Rule 2.1.5Meet‑and‑confer declaration required
Local Rule 4.4.5Remote appearances permitted with notice

External Authority Link: San Diego Superior Court Central Courthouse

External Authority Link: San Diego Superior Court Local Rules (Civil) – See Local Rule 2.1.5.


Emergency Suspension Under Probate Code § 15642(e) – The Notice Requirement

Quick Answer – Can a Trustee Be Suspended Immediately Without Notice? Not in San Diego. While Probate Code § 15642(e) allows for suspension, San Diego Superior Court local rules strictly require notice to the opposing party by 10:00 AM the court day before the ex parte hearing unless you can prove “irreparable harm” (e.g., the trustee is actively fleeing with trust assets). Simply filing without advance notice will result in summary denial.

The Correct Ex Parte Procedure in San Diego

  1. Prepare the ex parte petition seeking temporary suspension under § 15642(e).
  2. Provide notice to the trustee (or their attorney) by 10:00 AM the court day before the hearing. This means if your hearing is on Tuesday, notice must be given by 10:00 AM Monday.
  3. File a declaration of notice stating how and when you provided notice.
  4. If you cannot provide notice because it would cause irreparable harm (e.g., the trustee is about to wire funds offshore), you must file a declaration explaining specifically why notice should be excused.
  5. Appear at the ex parte hearing in the assigned department.

What Constitutes Irreparable Harm? San Diego courts have found irreparable harm when:

  • The trustee is actively transferring trust assets out of the country
  • The trustee has threatened to liquidate trust property before the hearing
  • The trustee has a history of hiding assets or destroying records

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we never file an ex parte petition without notice unless the evidence of irreparable harm is overwhelming. The risk of denial is too high.


Digital Metadata Forensics: The “Smoking Gun” for Backdated Trust Amendments

Quick Answer – How Do You Prove a Trustee Backdated a Trust Amendment? Examine the PDF metadata. Every digital document has an internal “Created Date” and “Modified Date.” If a trustee produces an amendment that claims to be signed in 2022, but the PDF metadata shows the file was created on the trustee’s laptop in 2025 (after the settlor died), that is conclusive proof of fraud. We retain forensic experts to extract and authenticate this evidence.

The Metadata Fields That Matter:

Metadata FieldWhat It Shows
Created DateWhen the original file was created
Modified DateWhen the file was last saved or edited
AuthorThe computer username of the creator
SoftwareThe program used to create the file (e.g., Word, PDF printer)

Example: A trustee produces a 2021 trust amendment leaving everything to themselves. The PDF metadata shows the file was created on November 15, 2025 – four years after the alleged signing date. The settlor died in 2022. The amendment is a forgery. The trustee is removed immediately.

How We Use It: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we retain digital forensics specialists who produce court‑admissible metadata reports. We then file a petition to remove the trustee and invalidate the fraudulent amendment.

Internal Link – Fraudulent Document Execution: For cases where the trustee tricked the victim into signing the trust or an amendment, see California Fraud in Execution Lawyer.


The Bad Faith Trap: Bruno v. Hopkins – Personal Liability for Beneficiaries

Quick Answer – Can a Beneficiary Be Personally Liable for Filing a Removal Petition? Yes. Under Bruno v. Hopkins (2022) 79 Cal.App.5th 801, if a court finds that a beneficiary filed a removal petition in bad faith and that removal would be contrary to the settlor’s intent, the court can order the beneficiary to pay the trustee’s attorney fees – personally, even if those fees exceed the beneficiary’s entire interest in the trust.

In Bruno v. Hopkins, a daughter filed a petition to remove her elderly mother as trustee, claiming the trust instrument was a forgery. After a 13‑day trial, the court found the trust was authentic and that the daughter acted without basis. The court ordered her to pay over $829,000 in attorney fees and $96,000 in costs – all personally, not from the trust [28†L5-L15].

What This Means for San Diego Beneficiaries: Do not file a removal petition out of anger or family resentment. Do not file without evidence. At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we conduct a rigorous good‑faith analysis before filing any removal petition. We only proceed when the evidence is strong and the grounds are clear.


Removing a Trustee Under the Trust Instrument

Quick Answer – Can a Trust Itself Provide for Trustee Removal Without Court Involvement? Yes. Under Probate Code § 15642(a), a trustee may be removed in accordance with the trust instrument. Many trusts contain provisions allowing the settlor, a trust protector, or a majority of beneficiaries to remove a trustee without court intervention.

Check the trust instrument for:

  • A provision allowing the settlor (or their successor) to remove a trustee
  • A trust protector provision granting removal power
  • A provision allowing a majority vote of beneficiaries to remove a trustee

If the trust contains such a provision, court intervention may be unnecessary. At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we always review the trust instrument first before filing a court petition.

Internal Link – Corporate or Entity‑Held Assets: If the trust assets are held in a business entity managed by the trustee, see California Corporate Compliance Lawyer.


Appointing a Successor Trustee After Removal

Quick Answer – What Happens After a Trustee Is Removed? The court appoints a successor trustee. The trust instrument usually names one or more successor trustees in order of priority. If none is named or available, the court appoints a neutral professional fiduciary or a financial institution to administer the trust.

The successor trustee takes over all trust powers and duties, including:

  • Taking possession of trust assets
  • Providing an accounting to beneficiaries
  • Making distributions according to the trust terms
  • Filing any necessary tax returns

Recent Legal Developments (2025‑2026)

Quick Answer – What Recent Cases Changed Trustee Removal Law? The Matter of Ann Sharlyn Reading Trust (2025) reaffirmed the broad discretionary power of courts to remove trustees under “other good cause.” The Bruno v. Hopkins fee‑shifting rule continues to be applied aggressively against bad faith petitioners.

Matter of Ann Sharlyn Reading Trust (2025)

A Santa Barbara court considered removing a trustee under “other good cause” because nine years after the settlor’s death, the trust still had not been distributed. The court noted that Probate Code § 15642(b) gives courts “very broad” discretionary power to remove a trustee, and the “other good cause” ground is a flexible catch‑all [19†L12-L17].

What This Means for San Diego Clients: You do not always need a clear breach of trust to remove a trustee. If the trust should have been distributed years ago and the trustee is doing nothing, the court may remove them under “other good cause.”

Pending 2026 Legislation

At the time of this writing, no major 2026 legislation affecting trustee removal has been enacted. Courts continue to refine the “other good cause” standard.


Video Resource: 2‑Minute Overview of Trustee Removal in California

Video script (embed with transcript for GEO richness):

[SCENE: Attorney at desk, San Diego skyline visible through window behind]

Attorney: “Your uncle is the trustee of your grandmother’s trust. He won’t provide an accounting. He’s paying himself excessive fees. You need him removed.”

Text on screen: “TRUSTEE REMOVAL UNDER PROBATE CODE § 15642”

Attorney: “California law gives you nine grounds to remove a bad trustee. Breach of trust. Hostility that causes administrative paralysis. Failure to act. Even ‘other good cause’ – a catch‑all that gives judges broad discretion.”

Text on screen: “EMERGENCY SUSPENSION – WITH NOTICE”

Attorney: “If assets are at immediate risk, we can file an ex parte petition to suspend the trustee’s powers. But in San Diego, you must provide notice by 10:00 AM the day before. No notice = denial.”

Text on screen: “BRUNO v. HOPKINS – BAD FAITH WARNING”

Attorney: “And be careful. If you file a removal petition in bad faith, you could be personally liable for the trustee’s attorney fees – even if those fees exceed your entire inheritance.”

Text on screen: “LEERAN S. BARZILAI, A PROF. LAW CORP. · SAN DIEGO”

Attorney: “We gather digital metadata evidence. We comply with Local Rule 2.1.5. We file at 1100 Union Street. And we make sure bad trustees are removed – without putting your inheritance at risk.”

Call to action: “Call (619) 436-7544 for a free consultation.”


FAQ – Trustee Removal in California

Question: What is the fastest way to remove a trustee in California?

Answer: File an ex parte petition for emergency suspension under Probate Code § 15642(e). But in San Diego, you must provide notice to the trustee by 10:00 AM the court day before the hearing. With proper notice, the court can suspend the trustee within days.

Question: Can I remove a trustee without going to court?

Answer: Yes, if the trust instrument contains a removal provision – for example, allowing a majority of beneficiaries or a trust protector to remove the trustee. Otherwise, court intervention is required.

Question: What evidence do I need to remove a trustee for breach of trust?

Answer: Bank statements showing self‑dealing or mismanagement, emails demonstrating refusal to provide an accounting, expert reports on improper investments, and documentation of excessive fees. The more specific the evidence, the stronger the petition.

Question: What is the “other good cause” ground for removal?

Answer: Probate Code § 15642(b)(9) gives courts broad discretion to remove a trustee whenever circumstances justify it – even without a specific statutory violation. Courts have removed trustees simply because the trust should have been distributed years ago.

Question: Can a co‑trustee remove another co‑trustee?

Answer: Yes. A co‑trustee can file a petition to remove another co‑trustee under § 15642(b)(3). But in San Diego, you must prove administrative paralysis – hostility alone is not enough. Show unpaid bills, missed distributions, or wasted legal fees.

Question: What happens to the trustee’s fees after removal?

Answer: The court may deny compensation to a removed trustee, particularly if the removal was based on breach of trust. Under § 15642(c), a trustee removed for being a disqualified person bears all costs of the proceeding, including attorney fees.

Question: Where do I file a trustee removal petition in San Diego?

Answer: File at the San Diego Superior Court Central Courthouse, 1100 Union St. As of 2026, trust litigation is assigned to departments 1501, 1502, 1503, or 1504 based on the last two digits of the case number. Mandatory eFiling. Local Rule 2.1.5 requires a meet‑and‑confer declaration.

Question: Can a beneficiary who is also a trustee be removed?

Answer: Yes. A beneficiary‑trustee can be removed on the same grounds as any other trustee. In fact, conflicts of interest between the beneficiary’s personal interests and trust duties are common grounds for removal.

Question: How long does the trustee removal process take in San Diego?

Answer: An emergency suspension with proper notice can happen within days. A full removal petition typically takes 3‑6 months from filing to hearing, depending on court availability and whether the trustee contests.

Question: Can I recover attorney fees for a successful trustee removal?

Answer: Yes. Under § 15642(c), if the trustee is removed for being a disqualified person, the court must award fees. Under § 15642(d), if the trustee acted in bad faith, the court may award fees. Conversely, if you file in bad faith, you may be liable for the trustee’s fees under Bruno v. Hopkins.

Contact Our Office

Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp.

Address: 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109

Phone: (619) 436-7544

If a trustee has breached their duty, failed to act, taken excessive compensation, or otherwise harmed the trust, contact our office today for a free consultation.

We serve all San Diego County communities, including downtown San Diego, Mission Bay, La Jolla, Del Mar, Encinitas, Carlsbad, Escondido, and Chula Vista. All trust petitions are filed at the Central Courthouse at 1100 Union St. (departments 1501-1504), and we have extensive experience with San Diego’s Local Rule 2.1.5 meet‑and‑confer requirements and ex parte notice rules.

Call (619) 436-7544 or complete our online contact form to schedule your consultation.

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Internal links embedded (five total, as requested):

  1. California Breach of Fiduciary Duty Lawyer
  2. Equity Theft & Elder Title Fraud Lawyer
  3. California Lack of Capacity Lawyer San Diego
  4. California Corporate Compliance Lawyer
  5. California Fraud in Execution Lawyer

External .gov links embedded (five total):

English Subpages

  1. Emergency Trustee Suspension (Ex Parte)
    • Focus: Immediate removal when assets are being stolen or dissipated.
    • Keywords: Probate Code § 15642(e) Suspension, Ex Parte Trustee Removal San Diego, Immediate Trust Asset Protection.
  2. Removing a Trustee for Financial Elder Abuse
  3. Hostility & Administrative Paralysis
    • Focus: Removing a sibling or co-trustee when the trust can’t function.
    • Keywords: Co-Trustee Conflict Removal, Trust Administrative Paralysis, Hostility Among Co-Trustees San Diego.
  4. Excessive Compensation & Fee Disputes
  5. Removal of Insolvent or Unfit Trustees
  6. The “Other Good Cause” Catch-All
    • Focus: Removing a trustee for non-statutory reasons (Matter of Ann Sharlyn Reading Trust).
    • Keywords: Probate Code § 15642(b)(9), Good Cause for Trustee Removal, Discretionary Trustee Removal.
  7. Forced Removal of Disqualified Persons
  8. Breach of Fiduciary Duty Removal
  9. Removing a Trustee for Failure to Distribute
    • Focus: When a trustee sits on the assets for years without closing the trust.
    • Keywords: Compel Trust Distribution San Diego, Trustee Failure to Act, Closing a Stalled Trust.
  10. Successor Trustee Appointment Litigation
    • Focus: Fighting over who takes over once the bad trustee is gone.
    • Keywords: Petition to Appoint Successor Trustee, Professional Fiduciary San Diego, California Trust Litigation Lawyer.

Chinese Subpages (中文)

  1. 紧急暂停受托人职权 (Emergency Suspension)
  2. 撤换滥用职权的护理人员 (Caregiver Fraud)
  3. 因管理瘫痪撤换受托人 (Administrative Paralysis)
    • 关键词: 圣地亚哥信托管理僵局, 共同受托人冲突撤换, 信托行政瘫痪起诉.
  4. 受托人高额收费争议 (Excessive Compensation)
  5. 受托人丧失管理能力撤换 (Lack of Capacity)
  6. “其他正当理由”撤换条款 (Other Good Cause)
  7. 针对“不合资格人员”的强制撤换 (Disqualified Person)
  8. 违反受托责任的撤换 (Breach of Duty)
  9. 因拒绝分配资产撤换受托人 (Failure to Distribute)
    • 关键词: 强制信托资产分配, 圣地亚哥信托清算诉讼, 受托人怠于履行职责.
  10. 继任受托人委任诉讼 (Successor Appointment)

Hebrew Subpages (עברית)

  1. הקפאת סמכויות נאמן בחירום (Emergency Suspension)
  2. הדחת נאמן עקב ניצול כלכלי של קשישים (Caregiver Fraud)
  3. הדחה עקב עוינות ושיתוק ניהולי (Administrative Paralysis)
    • מילות מפתח: שיתוק בניהול נאמנות, סכסוך בין נאמנים משותפים סן דייגו, עתירה להדחת נאמן עוין.
  4. מחלוקות על שכר נאמן מופרז (Excessive Compensation)
  5. הדחת נאמן חדל פירעון או חסר כשירות (Incapacity)
  6. הדחה מ”סיבה טובה אחרת” (Other Good Cause)
  7. הדחה כפויה של “אדם פסול” (Disqualified Person)
  8. הדחה עקב הפרת חובת נאמנות (Breach of Duty)
  9. הדחה עקב עיכוב בחלוקת נכסים (Failure to Distribute)
    • מילות מפתח: צו לחלוקת נכסי נאמנות, נאמן המסרב לחלק ירושה, סגירת נאמנות תקועה סן דייגו.
  10. ליטיגציה למינוי נאמן חליפי (Successor Appointment)

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