In Re Estate Of Arla Mae L. Rohatsch, Mary Peterson, V. Kathy Norsworthy

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 29, 2022
Docket82861-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Estate Of Arla Mae L. Rohatsch, Mary Peterson, V. Kathy Norsworthy (In Re Estate Of Arla Mae L. Rohatsch, Mary Peterson, V. Kathy Norsworthy) 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
In Re Estate Of Arla Mae L. Rohatsch, Mary Peterson, V. Kathy Norsworthy, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON In the Matter of the Estate of ARLA MAE L. ROHATSCH No. 82861-4-I

MARY PETERSON, heir and DIVISION ONE beneficiary of the Estate of Arla Mae Rohatsch, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent, v.

KATHY NORSWORTHY, a married woman and personal representative of the Estate of Arla Mae Rohatsch,

Appellant.

COBURN, J. — Kathy Norsworthy appeals a trial court’s ruling that, as the

personal representative of her mother’s estate, she breached her fiduciary duties

to the estate and her co-heirs, her two sisters, by mismanaging estate funds and

assets. Kathy 1 primarily challenges the trial court’s findings of fact that she

intentionally misrepresented the value of the estate’s main asset, a Kenmore

property, in order to justify an expensive renovation project designed to enrich

1 For clarity and consistency, we refer to each family member by their first name.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 82861-4-I/2

herself and deprive her sisters of their inheritance. We affirm the trial court.

FACTS

Arla Mae Rohatsch had a stroke in May 2016 and gave Kathy, one of her

three daughters, power of attorney over medical and financial decisions. After

Arla moved out of the home and into an assisted-living facility in May, Kathy

initiated renovations on Arla’s home. Kathy hired herself, her husband Joe, a

carpenter, her son Michael, an electrician, as well as her daughter-in-law Ashley.

Kathy stated she had hired her husband and son because Arla had paid them in

the past to perform work on the house. However, this time, according to Kathy,

Joe and Michael agreed not to be paid until the house was sold and so no bills

for their work were presented to Kathy during the renovations.

By the time Arla had moved back into her home in August of 2016, the

house had been cleaned, the living room, dining room, and hallway had been

painted, and the upstairs floors had been refinished. Renovations were paused

when Arla had returned to the home. Arla passed away on August 3, 2017.

Arla was survived by three daughters: Kathy, Annette Ferrin, and Mary

Peterson. In October 2017, Arla’s will was admitted to probate and the court

appointed Kathy as personal representative of the estate, granting her

nonintervention powers. Arla’s will had appointed Kathy as executor and trustee

of her estate, but she had bequeathed all of her property at her time of death “in

2 No. 82861-4-I/3

equal shares” to her living children.

The main asset of Arla’s estate was her 1966 Kenmore home. The sisters

disagreed about how to manage the house. Mary wished to immediately sell the

home, but Kathy wanted to make more improvements before selling it. Though

Mary objected, Kathy elected not to list the property in 2017 and instead perform

more renovations at the expense of the estate.

Kathy quickly changed the locks on the Kenmore home, preventing Mary

from accessing it. Kathy then began her renovations a week after Arla died.

More than a year later, in September 2018, Kathy listed the home for sale. The

house did not sell until June 2019, at which time it sold for $575,000.

After the sale of the home, Mary obtained legal counsel and requested

that Kathy provide an accounting of the estate. In November 2019, Kathy

provided Mary with an inventory of the estate under penalty of perjury. Kathy

stated that the home had been in “deplorable condition,” and covered in tobacco,

blood, urine, fecal matter, and black mold. She noted that she had received four

appraisals from realtors (Jacqueline Owens, Bunsong Pumma, Marco De

Olivera, and Logan Smith) in 2017 and all of them valued the property at

$200,000. She said that three of the four realtors were not interested in the

listing and told Kathy to sell it for the value of the land, as the property was a

“complete tear down in their opinions.” Kathy indicated that the home

3 No. 82861-4-I/4

renovations—performed by herself, husband, and son—totaled $301,000.

Mary continued to request additional information. By stipulated order,

Kathy agreed to provide a certified accounting of the estate which would include

written evidence of expenses Kathy spent renovating the house. In Kathy’s May

2020 certified accounting of the estate, she declared that the estate included,

among other items, $19,595.76 in savings bonds, a $4,200 gun collection, and

two items that were distributed to Annette as an inheritance distribution: a $5,000

coin collection, and a $5,000 oil painting. Kathy also alleged that Annette had

stolen $9,657 from Arla’s bank account, which she considered a preliminary

distribution of Annette’s inheritance. She again declared that at the time of Arla’s

death, the value of the Kenmore home as a “tear down” was worth only $200,000

in “land value only.” Kathy listed her “[r]epairs in prep[aration] for [s]ale” as

$280,386.02. She declared $13,495 in separate expenses for staging the home

for sale.

In June 2020, Kathy attempted to close probate by filing a Declaration of

Completion of Probate. In July 2020, Mary filed a Trust and Estate Dispute

Resolution Act (TEDRA) petition to remove Kathy as the personal representative

of the estate and prevent her from seeking final reimbursements, noting that

there were “significant accounting and probate administration irregularities” in the

managing of the estate that needed to be reviewed. Mary filed an amended

4 No. 82861-4-I/5

petition in September 2020 specifically alleging that Kathy had breached her

fiduciary duties to the estate by falsely representing the condition of the Kenmore

property, performing unnecessary renovations, and charging the estate improper

charges. Mary alleged that Kathy had insufficient documentation to justify estate

expenses. Mary also claimed that Kathy failed to fully account for $89,000 in

savings bonds, health care costs incurred prior to Arla’s death, a gun collection,

and several other items of value.

In response to Mary’s petition, Kathy admitted that some of the house

repairs had happened prior to their mother’s death, but reiterated her claims that

the house was in disrepair and the property was worth only $200,000 in August

2017, and that Mary’s allegations regarding the breach of fiduciary duty were

unsupported. Kathy asked the court to dismiss Mary’s TEDRA petition.

The court certified the case for a bench trial.

At trial, Mary presented evidence that the Kenmore property was worth

significantly more than $200,000 at the time of Arla’s death in August 2017 and

that Kathy knew the true value.

Realtor Bunsong Pumma testified that he visited the Kenmore property in

mid-August 2017. He stated that while the home contained a lot of clutter, he did

not see any mold (something he “would have seen or noticed”) or dirty walls. He

told Kathy that she could do some renovations to update the property into

5 No. 82861-4-I/6

“turnkey condition,” if she did some repairs such as electrical work, painting

siding, and a sewer scope. But Pumma testified that he told Kathy the fair value

of the home was $480,000 without renovations, and $100,000 spent in

renovations would simply increase the value of the home by the same amount

spent, that is, only to $580,000. Pumma testified he never told Kathy the home

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In Re Estate Of Arla Mae L. Rohatsch, Mary Peterson, V. Kathy Norsworthy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-arla-mae-l-rohatsch-mary-peterson-v-kathy-norsworthy-washctapp-2022.