Estate Of Hung Nguyen, V Franciscan Health System

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 9, 2015
Docket73931-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate Of Hung Nguyen, V Franciscan Health System (Estate Of Hung Nguyen, V Franciscan Health System) 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
Estate Of Hung Nguyen, V Franciscan Health System, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

ESTATE OF HUNG NGUYEN, No. 73931-0-1 by and through GABRIELLE NGUYEN-ALUSKAR, ooc

Appellant,

I v.

FRANCISCAN HEALTH SYSTEM; GILBERT JOHNSTON, M.D., d/b/a vjO

ST. JOSEPH CARDIOTHORACIC SURGERY ASSOCIATES AT ST. JOSEPH; FRANCISCAN MEDICAL GROUP, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Respondents. FILED: November 9, 2015

Verellen, J. — "Every action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in

interest."1 The real party in interest for a wrongful death claim is the personal

representative of the estate, not a child of the decedent.2 The lack of a real party in

interest is a basis to dismiss an action unless, within a reasonable time after an

objection to the lack of a real party in interest, there is a motion to substitute the real

party in interest.3 If the substitution is a change only in representative capacity and the

1CR 17(a). 2 Beal v. City of Seattle. 134 Wn.2d 769, 776, 954 P.2d 237 (1998). 3 CR 17(a); Nw. Indep. Forest Mfrs. v. Dep't of Labor & Indus.. 78 Wn. App. 707, 716, 899P.2d6(1995). No. 73931-0-1/2

defendant is not prejudiced, a trial court should grant a motion to substitute the real

party in interest.4

This wrongful death action was filed by an adult daughter on behalf of her

father's estate (the Estate). The daughter filed the action knowing she was not and

could not be personal representative because of her felony conviction. Although the

surviving spouse had been appointed personal representative and moved to substitute

within a few weeks of the defendant's objection to the lack of a real party in interest, the

trial court denied her motion to substitute as the real party in interest on the Estate's

behalf. The court expressed its concern with a fraud on the court and dismissed the

action both for lack of a real party in interest and as a CR 11 sanction.

We conclude the trial court should have granted the motion to substitute. The

proposed substitution of the surviving spouse was the equivalent of a change in

representative capacity, and the defendant Franciscan Health System (FHS) was not

prejudiced as contemplated by CR 17(a).

To the extent the conduct and filings by the daughter and the surviving spouse

were in bad faith, dismissal may be an appropriate CR 11 sanction. But there are no

findings regarding the surviving spouse's conduct and the inadequacy of less severe

sanctions.

We reverse the denial of the motion to substitute and remand for further

proceedings related to CR 11 sanctions.

4 Beal, 134Wn.2dat783. No. 73931-0-1/3

FACTS

In December 2008, Hung Nguyen had severe postoperative complications from

heart surgery and died intestate. Nguyen was survived by his spouse Phuoc Nhu and

five adult children, including Gabrielle Nguyen-Aluskar.

On April 30, 2010, the daughter Nguyen-Aluskar filed a petition for letters of

administration intestate in King County Superior Court. That petition listed six heirs of

the decedent, including the daughter and surviving spouse, Nhu. The King County

Superior Court initially appointed the daughter as personal representative, but revoked

her status three days later, finding that she "is disqualified from serving as personal

representative because of her conviction of a felony crime."5 At the 2010 hearing, the

court clearly explained to the daughter that her prior felony conviction prevented her

from serving as the Estate's personal representative.

In December 2012, the daughter filed a wrongful death action in Pierce County

Superior Court with the caption "Estate of Hung Nguyen, by and through Gabrielle

Nguyen-Aluskar."6 On November 22, 2013, the daughter and the surviving spouse

signed and filed an ex parte petition "for letters of administration and nonintervention

5 Clerk's Papers (CP) at 53. Persons "who have been convicted of (a) any felony or (b) any crime involving moral turpitude" are "not qualified to act as personal representatives." RCW 11.36.010(1). In 2006, Nguyen-Aluskar was convicted of cocaine possession. 6 CP at 1 (emphasis added). Nguyen-Aluskar also filed an amended complaint in February 2013, adding several defendants. No. 73931-0-1/4

powers" with the caption "Estate of Hung T. Nguyen."7 The petition recites under the

"heirs" section that there are "none."8 The petition also recites:

No Bond should be required of me because I am Decedent's surviving spouse and I have appointed my daughter Gabrielle Nguyen-Aluskar to the estate with me since I do not speak fluent English language. . . .

. . . Nonintervention Powers should be granted to me because I am Decedent's surviving spouse, as I have appointed my daughter Gabrielle Nguyen-Aluskar to handle all estate matter[s]. Decedent's estate consists only of community property, and all of the then, living or gestating issue of Decedent are also the issue of mine [sic].[9]

The petition requested the appointment of "Personal Representative Phuoc Nhu[ ] to

serve with Nonintervention Powers."10 The surviving spouse signed the petition. The

trial court noted in the minutes of proceeding that the daughter "comes before the court

seeking to be appointed personal representative."11 In the transcript of the November 2013 hearing, "Gabrielle Nguyen-Aluskar" is the

only name listed under "appearances," but the record indicates that the surviving

spouse was also present:

COURT: All right. . . . Your name, please?

NGUYEN-ALUSKAR: Gabrielle Nguyen-Aluskar and my mother.

COURT: Okay. Do you have-okay, so you're both asking to be made personal representative?

7CPat63.

8]d, 9CPat64.

10 CP at 64. 11 CP at 67. No. 73931-0-1/5

NGUYEN-ALUSKAR: Urn, yes, but more (inaudible) for me because my mom doesn't speak fluent English.

COURT: And are there any other heirs besides you?

NGUYEN-ALUSKAR: NoJ12'

When asked, the daughter acknowledged to the court that she had siblings.

COURT: Okay. Do they know that you are asking to be made personal representative?

NGUYEN-ALUSKAR: Yes, um-hum. Yes.

COURT: And do you both live in Pierce County?

NGUYEN-ALUSKAR: Yes.

[PHUOC] NGUYEN: Yes.™

The court declined to appoint the daughter as personal representative:

And before I would make this appointment, I request that you set a motion . . . and give notice to all the children, your brothers and sisters, because there are some issues with your background and I do not know if the court will approve you as the personal representative. But I think all the potential heirs are entitled to notice. . . . Your background!,] there's issues of fact, forgery, a DUI, those types of things cause the court concern.[14l

At some point, the daughter crossed out her signature and references to herself in the

petition. After a recess, the daughter sought to have only her mother appointed as

personal representative. The court declined to appoint her without a motion and notice

to all heirs:

12 CP at 220. 13 CP at 221 (emphasis added). 14 CP at 221-22. No. 73931-0-1/6

COURT: Ma'am, I told you [that] you had to file a motion.

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