Estate of Mary Teresa Maiuri ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    JANUARY 18, 2018
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    In the Matter of the Estate of                 )
    )         No. 34749-4-III
    MARY TERESA MAIURI,                            )
    )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Deceased.                 )
    SIDDOWAY, J. — When a will is admitted for probate and a personal representative
    is appointed, known heirs, legatees and devisees are entitled to notice. A party who is
    entitled to notice but does not receive it may move to set aside orders that affect him or
    her and, because those orders are void, may do so at any time. But the curing of the
    jurisdictional defect does not require all probate proceedings to start over.
    After reopening this estate at the petitioners’ request, ordering an accounting, and
    conducting a trial, the trial court concluded that the additional relief being requested by
    the petitioners was not warranted. It reclosed the estate. While one of the reasons for its
    actions was in error, the others were not. Because its only error was harmless, we affirm.
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On December 24, 1995, Mary Teresa Maiuri passed away. She was survived by
    three sons, Robert, Michael, and Charles Maiuri, and two grandsons, Jay and Marcus
    Maiuri. 1 Jay and Marcus are Robert’s sons. Charles was developmentally disabled and
    at the time of Mary’s death was living in the College Place home with her and Michael.
    Mary’s will was admitted to probate on December 29, 1995. Robert and Michael
    were appointed co-personal representatives. The most substantial assets of Mary’s estate
    were two pieces of real estate: her College Place home and the five acres on which it was
    located, valued at a total of $155,000 in the inventory filed in October 1996, and property
    in Walla Walla valued at $130,000 at that time. Mary’s will devised the Walla Walla
    property to Robert. It devised the College Place home, its contents, and an acre of the
    land on which it was located one-half to Michael and the other half in trust for Charles,
    with Robert to serve as trustee. It devised the remainder of her estate—the four acres of
    farmland adjoining her College Place home and what was later inventoried to be
    approximately $3,000 in value of furniture and bank account holdings—one-third to
    Robert, one-third to Michael, and one-third in trust for Charles, with Robert to serve as
    trustee. (The inventory also revealed approximately $48,500 in nonprobate assets: bank
    accounts jointly held for the most part with Charles.)
    1
    Given the common surnames of the parties, first names are used throughout for
    the purpose of clarity. No disrespect is intended.
    2
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    The terms of Mary’s testamentary trust provided that upon Charles’s death, any
    interest in the trust’s half of the College Place home, the acre of land on which it was
    located, and its contents would pass to Michael. It provided that any remaining trust
    assets would pass in equal (one-fourth) shares to Robert, Michael, and grandsons Jay and
    Marcus.
    The assets of the testamentary trust were not kept separate and designated as
    property of the trust even though Robert and Michael had the assistance of attorney R. F.
    Monahan 2 in carrying out their duties. Approximately 10 months after being issued
    letters testamentary, Robert and Michael, as co-personal representatives, conveyed the
    College Place home and the one-acre parcel to Michael, subject to a life estate in Charles.
    As co-personal representatives, they also conveyed to Michael the full 4 acres of
    farmland that was supposed to have been distributed 1-1/3 acre to Robert, 1-1/3 acre to
    Michael, and 1-1/3 acre in trust for Charles, with Robert as trustee. The conveyances
    took place on the day before Robert and Michael filed the inventory and filed a
    declaration closing the estate. The quit claim deed was prepared and recorded by the
    Roach & Monahan law firm. Michael and Charles continued to live together in the
    College Place home, and Michael and Robert together attended to Charles’s personal,
    medical, and financial needs until Charles passed away in 2002.
    2
    The Roach & Monahan firm also appears to have prepared Ms. Maiuri’s will; it
    was witnessed by William Roach and by Geraldine Lyons, a secretary at the law firm.
    3
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    Grandsons Jay and Marcus had not been identified as heirs, legatees or devisees in
    the petition for probate, were not served with notice of the pendency of probate, and were
    not served with notice when the probate was completed in October 1996. Jay and Marcus
    were about 28 and 24 years old, respectively, at the time of Mary’s death.
    Upon Charles’s death, Mr. Monahan recognized that Jay and Marcus had rights
    under the testamentary trust created by Mary’s will. The one and one-third acre of
    farmland that was supposed to have been held in trust for Charles and should have been
    available (or the proceeds of which should have been available) for distribution to Robert,
    Michael, Jay, and Marcus had been conveyed to Michael, however. Jay and Robert
    spoke with a new attorney during the 2003 time frame and notified Mr. Monahan that
    they now believed something was amiss with the estate distribution.
    It was evidently agreed that to address the failure to properly administer the trust,
    $54,552.47 from two certificates of deposit that Charles had owned outside the
    testamentary trust, and that would have passed to Michael and Robert, would be shared
    with Jay and Marcus instead. 3 So instead of receiving the one-third acre of farmland that
    Jay and Marcus would each have received had the trust’s one and one-third acre of
    farmland not been conveyed to Michael, each grandson received $13,184.15. Coincident
    3
    Michael received $15,000, and the remainder was divided equally between
    Robert, Jay, and Marcus. It is reported that Michael received slightly more because he
    had not wanted to incur the penalty that was incurred by cashing in the certificates.
    4
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    with the payments, Jay and Marcus signed documents acknowledging receipt of their
    “full distributive share” of Mary’s estate. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 33-34.
    In the trial below, Marcus explained why he signed the acknowledgment despite
    concern he had not received what he believed was his entitlement to part of his
    grandmother’s farmland by recounting a conversation he had with attorney Monahan
    around April 2003:
    [THE COURT]: . . . [W]hat did the conversation consist of? What was it
    about?
    A. Dick, Mr. Monahan, basically said this is what you get, there is no
    ground to distribute. Mike took it. Your dad signed for it. Mike signed for
    it. There is nothing for you to get other than this little bit of money. Do
    you want the money or do you want to go get an attorney? This is all you
    get as your share, period. Sign the paper or don’t.
    Q. Sign the paper or go get an attorney?
    A. Yeah.
    Report of Proceedings (RP) at 60. The distributions were completed in April 2003.
    In February 2015—19 years after Mary’s death and 12 years after Charles’s
    death—Jay and Marcus filed a petition asserting they were entitled to, but never received
    notice of the probate or its alleged completion. They asked the court to (1) reopen the
    estate, (2) set aside the declaration of completion, (3) remove Michael and Robert as co-
    personal representatives, (4) appoint Jay and Marcus as successor co-personal
    representatives, (5) order Michael and Robert to file an accounting, (6) order Michael and
    Robert to disgorge estate assets unlawfully received and compensate the estate for assets
    5
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    wasted, and (8) award Jay and Marcus attorney fees and costs to be paid by Michael and
    Robert.
    Following a show cause hearing at which only Michael appeared to resist the
    requested relief, the trial court set aside the declaration of completion of probate and
    reopened the estate. In a letter decision, it found that “the Declaration should be deemed
    void as a final decree for lack of proper notice to the Petitioners both at the beginning and
    at the conclusion of the probate (CR 60(b)(5)), and for equitable reasons arising from the
    wrongful distribution (CR 60(b)(l l)).” CP at 199. But it reappointed Robert and Michael
    as co-personal representatives, with Michael to serve alone if Robert took no action to be
    reappointed. It also ordered them to file an accounting of their administration of the
    estate, and stated, “Following the submission of the accounting and supporting
    documentation, the Court upon motion by any party will consider whether a trial is
    necessary to address the equitable issues and to determine whether and to what extent the
    additional relief requested by the Petitioners is appropriate.” CP at 52.
    Michael filed an accounting a couple of months later, which the court described as
    “obviously made difficult by the passage of time and transfer of assets.” CP at 199. Mr.
    Monahan had passed away by this time. After reviewing the accounting, the court found
    that a trial was necessary to determine whether Jay and Marcus were entitled to relief
    beyond what the court had already ordered.
    6
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    Trial took place over two days. Only Marcus, Michael, and Geraldine Lyons, who
    was Mr. Monahan’s secretary when the estate was being distributed, testified. Shortly
    following the hearing, the trial court issued a seven-page letter decision. Among its
    findings were that Marcus was sophisticated about real estate and believed in 2003 that
    he should have received a portion of the College Place farmland from his grandmother’s
    estate but he and Jay nonetheless accepted distributions and signed acknowledgments of
    receipt of their shares of her estate. The court also found that Michael was not
    sophisticated and relied to a great extent on his brother Robert and on his attorney, Mr.
    Monahan.
    Among the court’s key conclusions were the following:
    2. The rather obvious mistakes that were made in the handling of this Estate
    were not the result of extrinsic fraud but were rather the result of ignorance
    on the part of the copersonal representatives combined with overreliance on
    their attorney to fulfill their duties and to give effect to their mother’s
    directions as set forth in her Last Will and Testament.
    ....
    4. While not provided formal notice of the pendency of the Estate, by 2003
    Jay and Marc had actual notice that an estate had been opened and that they
    had an interest in the estate. While the Court is particularly concerned
    about the noncompliance with the notice requirements of the statute the
    Court is equally concerned about the passage of time since then. Even
    [Pitzer v. Union Bank, 
    141 Wash. 2d 539
    , 
    9 P.3d 805
    (2000)] recognizes that
    while not absolute, “the interest of finality is of paramount concern.”
    According to CR 60(b), even when a judgment was procured by fraud
    (whether intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation or other misconduct
    (Subsec.(4)), or when a judgment is void (Subsec. (5)), a motion to set
    aside the judgment “shall be made within a reasonable time.” CR 60(b);
    See 
    Pitzer, 141 Wash. 2d at 551-52
    . Thirteen years is not a reasonable time.
    7
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    . . . Having heard the testimony and reviewed the evidence adduced at trial,
    and based upon the extent to which the Petitioners already had knowledge
    of the defects in the handling of the estate but chose to do nothing about the
    problem in 2003, the Court’s decision is that this estate should be re-closed
    and the petition dismissed with prejudice.
    CP at 201-02.
    Jay and Marcus appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    Jay and Marcus make seven assignments of error that we reframe and reorder. At
    issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred by:
            Retaining Michael Maiuri as personal representative after reopening the
    probate of Mary’s estate (assignment of error 3),
            Entering a finding of fact that Jay and Marcus “chose in April of 2003 to
    accept the cash distribution, keep the peace, and do nothing to challenge the
    handling of their grandmother’s estate”; implicitly ruling that Jay and
    Marcus waived any right to challenge the handling of Mary’s estate; and
    failing to require Michael to disgorge estate assets and pay damages
    (assignments of error 4, 5 and 6);
            Ruling that the estate be reclosed (assignment of error 1);
            Ruling that the petition to reopen the estate was time barred (assignment of
    error 2); and
            Denying Jay and Marcus’s motion for attorney fees and expenses
    (assignment of error 7).
    See Br. of Appellants at 3-4. We address the issues in this order.
    8
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion when it reappointed Michael
    Maiuri as personal representative
    RCW 11.28.237 requires the personal representative of an estate to cause written
    notice of the appointment and the pendency of the probate proceeding to be served
    personally or by mail on each “heir, legatee and devisee of the estate and each beneficiary
    or transferee of a nonprobate asset” whose names and addresses are known to the
    personal representative. 4 The failure of a personal representative to provide the notice
    required by RCW 11.28.237 deprives the parties who are not notified of procedural due
    process and “amounts to a jurisdictional defect as to them, rendering the decree of
    distribution void.” Hesthagen v. Harby, 
    78 Wash. 2d 934
    , 942, 
    481 P.2d 438
    (1971).
    Having found following the show cause hearing that Robert and Michael failed to
    give required notice to Jay and Marcus, the trial court properly set aside the 1996
    declaration of completion of probate as void for lack of proper notice.
    The trial court was cautious in its findings of fact in light of the limited
    information available to it at that time. Its letter ruling noted that Michael testified at the
    show cause hearing that “[h]e relied on legal counsel as to how things should go in the
    4
    Although the court concluded that the mention of the farmland in Mary’s will
    “was not in the form of a specific devise,” CP at 201, it found elsewhere that the co-
    personal representatives failed to give required notice to Jay and Marcus. Because
    Michael did not dispute their right to receive notice, we assume without deciding that
    notice was required to be given not only to the trustee of the testamentary trust but also to
    trust beneficiaries.
    9
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    estate,” and produced copies of acknowledgments by Jay and Marcus of receipt of their
    full distributive share of Mary’s estate. CP at 51. The court’s findings entered in support
    of the show cause decision stated that Robert and Michael “allegedly” transferred assets
    that should have been held in trust for Charles’s benefit and that assets “allegedly”
    transferred “may have been” assets in which Jay and Marcus had a vested interest. CP at
    64. It ordered Robert and Michael to submit an accounting, including a description and
    documentation of disposition of any real property of the testamentary trust.
    Although Jay and Marcus asked the trial court to appoint them as co-personal
    representatives, the court reappointed Robert and Michael, although Robert declined to
    serve. Jay and Marcus argue that this was error after the trial court “had reopened the . . .
    estate on grounds that [Michael] and the co-personal representative had failed to name
    [them] beneficiaries, had failed to give them adequate notice, had acted in a manner
    permitting an inference of extrinsic fraud and had procured a void declaration of
    completion of probate.” Br. of Appellants at 3.
    RCW 11.28.250 authorizes the superior court to revoke a personal representative’s
    letters testamentary following notice and hearing whenever it has reason to believe that
    the personal representative
    has wasted, embezzled, or mismanaged, or is about to waste, or embezzle
    the property of the estate committed to his or her charge, or has committed,
    or is about to commit a fraud upon the estate, or is incompetent to act, or is
    permanently removed from the state, or has wrongfully neglected the estate,
    10
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    or has neglected to perform any acts as such personal representative, or for
    any other cause or reason which to the court appears necessary.
    RCW 11.68.070 provides that such removal is “in the discretion of the court.” Grounds
    for removal must be valid and supported by the record. In re Estate of Beard, 
    60 Wash. 2d 127
    , 132, 
    372 P.2d 530
    (1962). A court abuses its discretion when its decision is
    manifestly unreasonable or based on untenable grounds or untenable reasons. In re
    Marriage of Katare, 
    175 Wash. 2d 23
    , 35, 
    283 P.3d 546
    (2012).
    Jay and Marcus show no abuse of discretion by the trial court. It is the general
    rule that if a fiduciary exercised due care in the selection and employment of an attorney
    or other agent to assist him in the management of his trust, he is not absolutely bound by
    the dereliction of such agent or attorney. See 
    Hesthagen, 78 Wash. 2d at 942
    . It was not
    clear to the trial court at the show cause stage whether Jay and Marcus had been damaged
    by any wrongdoing by Michael and Robert.
    The trial court’s challenged finding of an implicit waiver of notice
    and refusal to require Michael to disgorge estate assets and pay
    damages are supported by the evidence
    Following Michael’s delivery of an accounting in May 2015, the trial court set the
    disputed issues that remained for trial. Following the trial, the court supplemented its
    findings and conclusions from the show cause hearing with additional findings, including
    the following:
     After Mary’s death, no testamentary trust was established for Charles.
    11
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
     When Charles died, there was no probate of his estate because any funds
    Charles owned were jointly held with Michael and/or Robert with right of
    survivorship.
     It can be inferred from the evidence that following Charles’s death Mr.
    Monahan realized that Jay and Marcus were interested parties with whom there
    needed to be a settlement. Mr. Monahan’s records included a notation that
    “‘Mike will come up with funds to pay them off - so we need to figure out what
    each is owed.’” Accounts in which Michael and/or Robert had an interest were
    divided between Jay, Marcus, Robert, and Michael. CP at 201 (Finding of Fact
    10).
     Upon division of the accounts belonging to Michael and Robert, signed receipts
    for the money received were signed by Jay and Marcus. The receipts were in
    evidence and bore the court caption of Mary’s probate. Each stated, “The
    undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of his full distributive share of the
    above entitled estate.” CP at 33-34.
     The court’s impression was that Marcus was a highly educated and
    sophisticated businessman, particularly knowledgeable about real estate and
    when he was offered $13,000 after Charles’s death in 2002, he was aware that
    his grandmother’s estate had been probated and he had the option to consult and
    attorney about challenging the handling of the estate. The court inferred that
    Jay was similarly knowledgeable. “Both chose in April of 2003 to accept the
    cash distribution, keep the peace, and do nothing to challenge the handling of
    their grandmother’s estate.” CP at 201 (Finding of Fact 14).
    The trial court’s challenged finding that Jay and Marcus “chose in April of 2003 to
    accept the cash distribution, keep the peace, and do nothing to challenge the handling of
    their grandmother’s estate,” is supported by substantial evidence: Michael’s and
    Marcus’s testimony and the receipts.
    In challenging the trial court’s implicit finding of a waiver, Jay and Marcus rely on
    breach of contract cases and the showing required to prove the waiver by a party of a
    contractual right. Br. of Appellants at 20-21, (citing Mid-Town P’ship v. Preston, 
    69 Wash. 12
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    App. 227, 233, 
    848 P.2d 1268
    (1993) and Fulle v. Boulevard Excavating, 
    20 Wash. App. 741
    , 744, 
    582 P.2d 566
    (1978)). But this case does not involve parties who negotiated
    and gave consideration for a contract right they are alleged to have waived. The relevant
    law is case law dealing with a party’s waiver of statutorily-required notice of a
    proceeding. Where notice of a proceeding is statutorily required but not provided, the
    right to notice is waived by appearing in court and participating in proceedings. Friese v.
    Adams, 
    44 Wash. 2d 305
    , 308, 
    267 P.2d 107
    (1954); In re Marriage of Steele, 
    90 Wash. App. 992
    , 997-98, 
    957 P.2d 247
    (1998) (lack of personal jurisdiction for failure to give notice
    is waived where a party impliedly consents to the exercise of jurisdiction).
    Jay and Marcus signed receipts that were apparent on their face as
    acknowledgments in the probate of Mary’s estate that they received their full distributive
    share. This appearance and participation in the probate of Mary’s estate was sufficient to
    operate as a waiver of the statutory notice requirement.
    Jay and Marcus devote no argument to their assignment of error to the trial court’s
    failure to require Michael to disgorge assets or pay damages. Assignments of error that
    are neither briefed nor argued are deemed abandoned. RAP 10.3(a)(5); Hollis v.
    Garwall, Inc., 
    137 Wash. 2d 683
    , 689 n.4, 
    974 P.2d 836
    (1999). We also observe that Jay
    and Marcus’s more direct claim was against their father; it was the duty of Robert as
    trustee of the testamentary trust to identify and segregate the assets of the trust and keep
    the beneficiaries reasonably informed about its administration and material facts
    13
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    necessary for them to protect their interest. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TRUSTS § 179
    (Am. Law Inst. 1959), 5 (cited with approval by Wilkins v. Lasater, 
    46 Wash. App. 766
    ,
    779, 
    733 P.2d 221
    (1987)); RCW 11.98.072(1). And Robert was, of course, a co-
    personal representative.
    The court did not err in ordering that the estate be reclosed
    Following trial, the court concluded that Mary’s estate should be reclosed. In an
    order entered in August 2016, it ordered the estate closed, canceled a lis pendens that had
    been filed, discharged Michael as personal representative, and dismissed with prejudice
    Jay and Marcus’s petition and a cross claim by Michael.
    Jay and Marcus assign error to the order reclosing the estate, which they contend
    “reinstat[ed] a declaration of completion of probate that had been properly set aside as
    void.” Br. of Appellants at 3. They mischaracterize the effect of the court’s order. In
    March 2015, following the show cause hearing, the trial court set aside the declaration of
    completion filed in October 1996 and ordered the estate reopened. It determined
    following trial that seven years after that declaration of completion, Jay and Marcus
    chose to accept funds and acknowledge receipt of their full distribution from the estate. It
    determined that nothing more needed to be done in the probate proceeding. Its order did
    5
    “The trustee is under a duty to the beneficiary to keep the trust property separate
    from his individual property, and, so far as it is reasonable that he should do so, to keep it
    separate from other property not subject to the trust, and to see that the property is
    designated as property of the trust.”
    14
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    not reinstate the 1996 declaration of closing but recognized that the probate could be
    reclosed.
    The court’s only error was in ruling that the petition to reopen the
    estate was time barred, but the error was harmless
    The trial court’s only error was in stating in its conclusions following trial that
    even when a judgment is void, a motion to set aside the judgment shall be made within a
    reasonable time. It relied on an unfortunate statement in Pitzer, following a discussion of
    CR 60(b)(4) and (5), that “[i]n all cases, a motion under CR 60 must be brought within a
    ‘reasonable 
    time.’” 141 Wash. 2d at 552
    . In the immediately prior paragraph, the Pitzer
    court discussed the fact that void decrees have no force, and quoted a law review article
    by Professor Trautman for the proposition that “‘[t]here is no time limit’” for vacating
    void judgments “‘as a judgment entered without jurisdiction is void.’” 
    Id. (quoting Philip
    A. Trautman, Vacation and Correction of Judgments in Washington, 35 WASH. L.
    REV. 505, 530 (1960)).
    CR 60(b) has long included the language that a motion for relief from a judgment
    or order “shall be made within a reasonable time and for reasons (1), (2) or (3) not more
    than 1 year after the judgment, order, or proceeding was entered or taken.” Washington
    courts have long held, however, that based on the very concept of voidness, a party can
    move to set aside a void judgment at any time. E.g., In re Marriage of Leslie, 
    112 Wash. 2d 612
    , 618, 
    772 P.2d 1013
    (1989); Servatron, Inc. v. Intelligent Wireless Prod., Inc., 186
    15
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    Wn. App. 666, 679, 
    346 P.3d 831
    (2015) (“There is no time limit to bring a motion to
    vacate a void judgment.”); Allstate Ins. Co. v. Khani, 
    75 Wash. App. 317
    , 323-24, 
    877 P.2d 724
    (1994); Brenner v. Port of Bellingham, 
    53 Wash. App. 182
    , 188, 
    765 P.2d 1333
    (1989)
    (“motions to vacate under CR 60(b)(5) are not barred by the ‘reasonable time’ or the 1-
    year requirement of CR 60(b)” (footnote omitted)). Courts have a nondiscretionary duty
    to vacate void judgments. In re Marriage of Markowski, 
    50 Wash. App. 633
    , 635, 
    749 P.2d 754
    (1988).
    The court’s misstatement of the law was harmless, because it was only one basis
    for the actions taken by the court. The court’s actions were all proper.
    The trial court did not err in denying Jay and Marcus’s motion for
    attorney fees and expenses
    Both parties requested an award of attorney fees in the trial court, and both
    requests were denied. Jay and Marcus argue that the denial of an award of their fees was
    error because their actions benefitted the estate. Inasmuch as we affirm virtually all of
    the trial court’s actions that caused it to find no benefit to the estate, we affirm its denial
    of fees as well.
    FEES ON APPEAL
    Both parties request an award of attorney fees and costs on appeal. RAP 18.1,
    together with RCW 11.96A.150, authorize this court to make a fee award in its discretion.
    We exercise our discretion to deny fees to both parties.
    16
    No. 34749-4-III
    In re Estate of Maiuri
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    Siddoway, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Fearing, C.J.
    Lawrence-Berrey, J.
    j
    17