Heggstad Petition Process: Filing, Evidence, Timeline
A Heggstad petition, filed under Probate Code section 850, is a request asking the probate court to confirm that an asset already belongs to a trust even though title was never formally transferred. If you’ve already decided this is the right fix for your situation, what you actually need next is the mechanics: what the petition has to say, what evidence carries weight with a judge, who gets to object, and how long it realistically takes from filing to a signed order.
This isn’t a form you fill out and mail in. It’s a formal court petition with notice requirements, and the difference between a clean two-month resolution and a contested slog usually comes down to how well the evidence is put together before you file.
What goes into the petition itself
The petition has to lay out three things clearly: the trust’s terms, the specific asset that’s missing from title, and the evidence showing the decedent intended that asset to be part of the trust. Courts want specificity, not a general assertion that “everything was supposed to go into the trust.” A schedule of assets that lists the parcel by address, an account by number, or a business interest by name gives the judge something concrete to confirm. A vague catch-all clause is a much harder sell.
The petitioner is usually the successor trustee, though a beneficiary or another interested party can file if there’s no acting trustee yet. The petition gets filed in the county with jurisdiction over the trust, typically where the trust is administered or where real property in the petition sits.
The evidence that actually moves a judge
Three categories of evidence carry the most weight in a Heggstad petition, and gathering them before you file is the single biggest thing you can do to keep the case uncontested.
The trust document and its schedules
This is the foundation. Courts are looking for language showing the decedent intended to hold the specific asset in trust at the time the trust (or an amendment) was signed. A trust that attaches a schedule of assets naming the house, the account, or the business interest gives the strongest support. Pull every version of the trust and every amendment. Sometimes the identifying language is in an amendment executed years after the original trust, not the original document itself.
A signed but unrecorded deed or assignment
If the decedent signed a deed transferring real property into the trust but never recorded it with the county, that document is powerful evidence of intent, even though it never became effective on its own. The same logic applies to an assignment of a business interest or a stock certificate endorsed over to the trustee but never formally reissued. Don’t assume a signed-but-unfiled document is worthless. It’s often exactly what tips a Heggstad petition toward approval.
Correspondence and contemporaneous statements
Emails to the estate planning attorney, letters to a financial advisor, or even the decedent’s own notes referencing the asset as part of the trust can support intent when the trust language alone is ambiguous. This category matters most when the primary documents leave room for doubt.
Who gets notice and what happens if someone objects
Every interested party has to receive formal notice of the petition: current beneficiaries, heirs who would inherit if the trust were invalid, and, in some cases, creditors with a claim against the estate. Notice has to go out a statutory number of days before the hearing date, giving recipients time to review the petition and decide whether to object.
If nobody objects and the judge is satisfied with the evidence, many Heggstad petitions resolve at the first hearing, sometimes without live testimony, on the strength of the petition and its supporting declarations. If a beneficiary objects, whether because they dispute the decedent’s intent, believe the asset should pass outside the trust, or have some competing claim, the matter can turn into a contested proceeding with discovery and a trial on the ownership question. That’s a materially different, and longer, process than an uncontested confirmation.
The realistic timeline
| Stage | Uncontested | Contested |
|---|---|---|
| Petition drafted and filed | 2-4 weeks | 2-4 weeks |
| Notice period | ~30 days | ~30 days |
| Hearing to order | 1-2 months | 6 months to over a year |
| Total, filing to order | 2-4 months | Varies widely, litigation-dependent |
Once the judge signs the order under Probate Code section 856, that order is recorded with the county recorder for real property, functioning the same way a deed would. For accounts and other personal property, the order itself is the proof of ownership the institution needs to retitle the asset into the trust’s name.
Where petitions go sideways
The most common reason a Heggstad petition stalls isn’t a hostile beneficiary. It’s incomplete evidence gathered after the petition was already filed, forcing a continuance while the trustee scrambles for documents that should have been pulled up front. The second most common reason is a family member who genuinely believes the decedent changed their mind about an asset after the trust was signed. That kind of factual dispute can’t be resolved on the papers, and pretending otherwise just delays the inevitable contested hearing.
What the petition costs, and who pays for it
A Heggstad petition is typically billed as its own discrete matter, either hourly or as a flat fee, separate from any broader trust administration work. Because it’s a single focused proceeding rather than a full probate case, the cost usually runs a fraction of what statutory probate fees would take out of the same asset. Filing fees, notice costs, and any required publication add modest expenses on top of attorney time. In most cases, these costs come out of the trust itself, treated the same as any other administration expense, though the trustee should document the basis for that decision in case a beneficiary later questions it.
What happens after the order is signed
Getting the order isn’t the last step. For real property, the order under Probate Code section 856 has to actually be recorded with the county recorder in the county where the property sits, the same way a deed would be. Skipping that recording step leaves the public record showing the old ownership, which will surface the moment anyone tries to sell, refinance, or transfer the property later. For accounts, business interests, or other personal property, the trustee typically presents a certified copy of the order to the financial institution or entity holding the asset, along with a certification of trust, to complete the retitling.
Once the asset is confirmed and retitled, it’s administered under the trust’s terms from that point forward, just like every other trust asset. Any distribution schedule, any specific bequest naming that property, and any tax reporting obligations attach to it the same way they would have if it had been properly funded into the trust from the start.
How this fits into a broader trust administration
A Heggstad petition rarely happens in isolation. It’s usually one piece of a larger trust administration where most assets were properly funded and one or two were missed. The trustee doesn’t need to pause the rest of the administration while the petition works its way through court. Accounts that are properly titled to the trust can be collected and managed, bills can be paid, and beneficiaries can be kept informed under the ordinary Probate Code section 16060 duty to inform, while the omitted asset works through its own track. The two processes run in parallel rather than one blocking the other.
The honest caveat
A Heggstad petition works when the paper trail is good. It doesn’t manufacture intent that was never documented, and a judge won’t confirm an asset into a trust on a family’s word alone. If your evidence is thin, weigh whether it’s worth filing and risking an objection, versus accepting that the asset may need to go through probate instead. An honest assessment before filing saves months compared to finding out at a contested hearing.
Talk to a real California estate attorney
If you’re a trustee or beneficiary trying to bring an omitted asset into a trust, I’ll review the trust document, the title history, and whatever evidence you’ve gathered, and tell you honestly whether a Heggstad petition is likely to go smoothly or turn into a fight.
Talk to Eric Ridley is a free 60-minute consultation by phone or Zoom, anywhere in California. Or call (805) 244-5291.
Related reading: The house was never put in the trust, now what · Probate Code section 850 explained · The complete guide to trust administration in California
Frequently asked questions
How long does a Heggstad petition take in California?
An uncontested Heggstad petition typically resolves in two to four months from filing to a signed order, depending on the county’s probate court calendar. Contested petitions take considerably longer.
What evidence do I need to file a Heggstad petition?
The trust document, any schedule of assets naming the specific property, and anything else showing intent, such as a signed but unrecorded deed. Specific descriptions carry far more weight than general catch-all language.
Who has to be notified when a Heggstad petition is filed?
All interested parties, generally beneficiaries and heirs who would inherit if the trust were invalid. They have the right to object before the court rules.
Can a Heggstad petition be denied?
Yes, if the trust never identifies the asset, the decedent didn’t own it when the trust was signed, or a beneficiary raises a genuine factual dispute about intent.
Do I need a lawyer to file a Heggstad petition?
Not required by law, but the pleading and notice requirements are specific, and a defective filing costs more time than it saves. Most trustees use an attorney.
This is general information about California law, not legal advice for your situation.
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