Estate Of Larry Capps

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 5, 2013
Docket42078-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate Of Larry Capps (Estate Of Larry Capps) 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 Larry Capps, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED COUNT OF APPEALS DIVISI it

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE U S STATA GT ON STATE OF WASMNGTOd DIVISION II

4In - re the Estate of. BY E UTY No. 42078 3 II - -

LARRY CAPPS,

Deceased.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

PENOYAR, J. — After Larry Capps's death, his children from a previous marriage

petitioned the trial court for a declaratory judgment that his home remained separate property and belonged to them under his will. Despite a lengthy marriage to Linda Capps, the trial court

concluded that the family home remained Mr. Capps's separate property until his death. The

trial court also rejected Mrs. Capps's claim for reimbursement of expenses related to the home and concluded that the marital community owed rent to Mr: Capps during his lifetime and that

the rental obligation continued for Mrs. Capps during the time she resided in the home following Mr. Capps's death. Because Mr. Capps purchased the home before his marriage to Mrs. Capps,

the trial court did not err by concluding that it was his separate property. Additionally, the trial

court did not err by denying Mrs. Capps's reimbursement claims because she failed to prove that

community funds were used to improve the home. We affirm. 42078 3 II - -

Mr. Capps's estate's personal representative (PR) advised Mr. Capps's children, Larry

and Kimberly, and Mrs. Capps that the North Huson Street home's separate character had been

commingled with the community over the course of 30 years such that it had become a

community asset that Mrs. Capps would inherit under the terms of Mr. Capps's will,which left

his separate property to his children and all community property to Mrs. Capps. The children

filed a declaratory judgment action, asking the trial court to establish the home as their father's

separate property. The trial court ruled on summary judgment that the home was Mr. Capps's separate property. Following the adverse summary judgment ruling, Mrs. Capps filed a formal creditor's claim, which the estate rejected.

Eventually, the trial court conducted a full trial on Mrs. Capps's reimbursement claims, which the trial court rejected for lack of sufficient evidence. The trial court also imposed rent for

the months Mrs. Capps resided in the home after Mr. Capps's death, offset this rent against the expenditures she made on the home during that same post death period, and awarded attorney - fees to the children. This appeal stems from the trial court's rulings relating to the character,

disposition, and settlement of claims involving Mr. Capps's estate.

1 For clarity, we refer to Mr. Capps's children from his first marriage Larry A. Capps and — Kimberly Scaleraby their first names. We intend no disrespect. — 2 While the 2007 probate action was still pending, Mrs. Capps's second attorney filed a separate action directly against the estate's PR and Mr. Capps's children in 2010, seeking equitable reimbursement for personal monies she had contributed to the home. The trial court consolidated Mrs. Capps's new reimbursement claim action with the 2007 probate action; this consolidation appears to have been the source of much confusion. In March 2011, the trial court entered an order stating that the trial would focus on Mrs. Capps's equitable reimbursement claim, which was not a creditor's claim. The trial proceeded in the probate action with Mrs. Capps pursuing her claim against the estate for reimbursement of sums she claimed the estate owed her for contributions to the home. When the trial. nded, the e trial court dismissed Mrs. Capps's 2010 equitable reimbursement action because. she had not supported her reimbursement claims with sufficient evidence. 2 42078 3 II - -

Contending that the trial court was biased against her, Mrs. Capps argues on appeal that

the trial court erred by ( ) 1 granting partial summary judgment to Larry and Kimberly on grounds

that the home was Mr. Capps's separate property; 2) ( denying her motion for reconsideration of

the court's characterization of the home as Mr. Capps's separate property; ( )denying her 3

motion for leave to litigate the separate property issue at trial; 4) ( concluding that, as a surviving

spouse, (a)she must file a creditor's claim against the estate before pursuing a claim for

equitable reimbursement from the estate assets and (b) could not pursue a "direct action"for she

equitable reimbursement against the estate PR and estate beneficiaries; ( )failing to consider 5

applicable community property presumptions when ruling on her equitable reimbursement claim;

6)imputing rental value to her for the period she had lived in the home during her marriage to Mr. Capps and using this imputed rental value to offset her equitable reimbursement claim; 7) ( determining that her trial testimony was not credible; 8)admitting expert testimony about the (

home's value; and (9)awarding Larry and Kimberly attorney fees and costs for the trial court

proceedings.. Mrs. Capps also challenges several of the trial court's findings of fact and conclusions of law, and she requests that, if we reverse and remand for a.new trial,we order that

her case be assigned to a different trial judge.

3 Because we affirm the trial court's rulings below and see no indication that the trial court was prejudiced against Mrs. Capps, we deny her request for remand to a different judge. 3 42078 3 II - -

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Mr. Capps and his previous wife had purchased a Tacoma residence on North Huson

Street in July 1975. When they divorced a year later, Mr. Capps was awarded the home as his

sole and separate property." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 67. They had two children, Larry and

Kimberly.

In August 1976, Mr. Capps's future wife, Linda Capps, began living with him in the North Huson Street home. They married in February 1977, after which they comingled their

funds in joint bank accounts. They lived together in the home for 30 years until Mr. Capps's

death in January 2007, at which point all their bank accounts were jointly owned, with Mrs.

Capps designated as the sole surviving joint tenant.

A. Prenuptial Agreement and Quitclaim Deed

On February 22, 1977, Mr. Capps and Mrs. Capps signed a prenuptial agreement, which

provided that (1) person's then -existing separate property would remain his or her separate each property after marriage and (2)all property acquired after marriage would be considered community property. Section four of this prenuptial agreement, however, further explained that

all rents, issues, profits, income, and proceeds of separate property would be characterized as

community property:

Except for gifts and inheritances[,] rents, issues, profits, income or proceeds of all property, including separate property owned before the marriage, and property acquired jointly or as community property, shall be regarded as community property. The products of the parties' labor and their incomes shall be community property.

CP at 199 ( emphasis added). 42078 3 II - -

According to the prenuptial agreement, at the time of their . arriage, Mrs. Capps owned m

only personal property. Mr. Capps had (1)over $ 000 in separate bank accounts and an 80,

account receivable and (2) interest in a real estate contract involving the North Huson Street an

home, valued at $ 000, on which he still owed $ 000. About two months after marrying 50, 15,

Mrs. Capps, on April 21, 1977, Mr.

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