A. Shane Roeser v. Estate Of Kimberly Ann Blowers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 2, 2017
Docket74932-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of A. Shane Roeser v. Estate Of Kimberly Ann Blowers (A. Shane Roeser v. Estate Of Kimberly Ann Blowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Shane Roeser v. Estate Of Kimberly Ann Blowers, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

- IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON c=, (n

--1 In the Matter of Estate of ) No. 74932-3-1 —I c• wri KIMBERLY ANN BLOWERS, ) N) ) DIVISION ONE Deceased. ) :CP wrnC ) CIL?) ALEXANDER SHANE ROESER, ) Z** , Cr1 ) Appellant, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) V. ) ) ESTATE OF KIMBERLY ANN ) BLOWERS, ) ) Respondent. ) FILED: October 2, 2017

SCHINDLER, J. — Florida resident Kimberly Ann Blowers died intestate in a car

accident in Washington. The only asset of the estate is a wrongful death action and the

sole beneficiary is her minor daughter Layla Leininger. Blowers' father filed an intestate

probate action in Florida. Without notice to Blowers' father or Layla, Blowers' fiancé

Alexander Shane Roeser filed an intestate probate action in Snohomish County

Superior Court to pursue a wrongful death action on behalf of Layla and requested

appointment as personal representative of the estate of Blowers with nonintervention

powers without bond. The court entered an order appointing Roeser as the personal

representative of the estate and issued letters testamentary. Meanwhile, the Florida

court appointed Layla's father Daniel Leininger as the personal representative of the No. 74932-3-1/2

estate of Blowers. After learning about the Washington court order, Leininger filed a

motion to dismiss the probate administration in Washington. A Snohomish County

Superior Court commissioner dismissed the probate and cancelled the letters of

administration. The superior court adopted the order of the commissioner and denied

the motion to revise. Roeser appeals the order denying revision. Leininger moves to

dismiss the appeal for lack of standing. Because Roeser is not an aggrieved party

entitled to review, we grant the motion and dismiss the appeal for lack of standing.

Car Accident

Kimberly Ann Blowers and Daniel Leininger married. Their daughter Layla was

born in 2005. Blowers and Leininger separated in 2007 and later divorced.

In 2007, Alexander Shane Roeser moved from Washington to Tampa, Florida to

operate Trans Marine Propulsion Systems. In 2012, Blowers and Roeser were involved

in a romantic relationship and lived together in Tampa, Florida. Layla lived with her

father in Casselberry, Florida and attended Sterling Park Elementary School. Layla

spent time with her mother in Tampa on the weekends.

In June 2015, 32-year-old Blowers and 10-year-old Layla went on a road trip with

Roeser to visit her brothers and Roeser's family and friends in Washington. Blowers

and Roeser planned to get married when they returned to Florida.

At the end of the road trip, they visited Roeser's friend Jonathan Scholz near

Colfax, Washington. They planned to leave to return to Florida on July 15. Roeser and

Layla went to bed early the night before. Blowers and Scholz stayed up and later went

for a drive in his Mercedes. According to the police report, at approximately 2:00 a.m.

on July 15, the Mercedes left the road, "traveled through the ditch, launched and struck

2 No. 74932-3-1/3

a sign post[,] then started rolling and tumbling until it impacted a cluster of trees and

caught fire." Blowers and Scholz died in the crash.

Probate Proceedings

Blowers died intestate. The only asset of the estate was a wrongful death claim

and the sole heir is her daughter Layla Leininger.

On August 20, 2015, Blowers' father Timothy Blowers filed a probate action and

petition for admission of the Estate of Kimberly Ann Blowers (Estate) in Hillsborough

County Circuit Court, Florida.

On September 30, 2015, Roeser filed a petition in Snohomish County Superior

Court for "Appointment of Personal Representative; Grant of Non-Intervention Powers

Without Bond; and Issuance of Letters Testamentary." The petition states Blowers was

a resident of Tampa, Florida and identifies "those most closely related to the decedent"

as:

Alexander Shane Roeser — fiancé, 4313 W. Vasconia Street, Tampa, FL 33629 Layla Leininger — minor daughter, Tampa, FL Timothy Blowers — father, 657 Brookedge Terrace, Sebastian, FL 32958 Christopher Scott Blowers — brother, 50 Worcester Road, Oxford, MA 01540 Travis Cody Whittle — brother, 3509 Texas Topaz Drive, Austin, TX 78728.

The petition notes Timothy Blowers opened a Florida probate but states Roeser

is filing the petition in Washington in order to pursue the wrongful death claim on behalf

of the Estate "for the sole benefit of Layla."

I am aware that under Washington and Florida laws Kimberly's father would receive nothing under intestacy laws. My petition contemplates being able to commence legal action in Washington to prosecute claims for the sole benefit of Layla.

3 1 No. 74932-3-1/4

Roeser requested the court enter an order "establishing the intestate probate of

Kimberly Ann Blowers," appoint him as the personal representative of the Estate with

full nonintervention powers and without bond, issue "Letters Testamentary," and

authorize him to pursue the wrongful death action on behalf of the Estate.

On October 5, 2015, a court commissioner issued an order appointing Roeser as

personal representative of the Estate without bond and with full nonintervention powers

and authorized him to "pursue any wrongful death or survival actions" on behalf of the

Estate fo6he sole benefit of Layla. The October 5 order states, in pertinent part:

1. The Court appoints Alexander Shane Roeser as Personal Representative of the Estate, to serve without bond, and he is given full non intervention powers subject to the distribution approval referenced below; 2. The Clerk of the Court is directed to issue Letters Testamentary to petitioner; 3. The petitioner is authorized to pursue any wrongful death or survival actions permissible under the law for the benefit of the Estate; and, 4. In the event that such actions are successfully undertaken, petitioner shall thereafter petition this Court to obtain a final order authorizing any distribution of the proceeds of such action solely for the benefit of Ms. Blower's [sic] minor child Layla, such distribution shall be used solely for the benefit of Layla and such proceeds shall be secured by the Personal Representative to assure that they are solely utilized for the health, safety, welfare and upbringing of minor child, Layla, decedent's only intestate beneficiary.

Roeser did not provide notice to Layla or to Layla's grandfather Timothy Blowers

about the probate action in Washington and the October 5 order appointing him as

personal representative of the Estate without bond and with nonintervention powers.

Meanwhile, on October 5, Layla's father Daniel Leininger filed a petition in

Hillsborough County Circuit Court, Florida to appoint him as the personal representative

of the Estate. In the petition, Leininger states he is the father and guardian of the "sole

intestate beneficiary and wrongful death survivor of the decedent." The petition states

4 No. 74932-3-1/5

that under Florida law, Leininger is "entitled to preference in appointment as personal

representative" and is "qualified under the laws of the State of Florida to serve as

personal representative." The petition states, "Domiciliary probate proceedings are not

known to be pending in another state" and the "nature and approximate value of the

assets in this estate are wrongful death claims by the Personal Representative."

Timothy Blowers filed a waiver and consent to appoint Leininger as personal

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