In Re Estate of Burks
This text of 100 P.3d 328 (In Re Estate of Burks) 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.
Opinion
In re the ESTATE OF Catherine M. BURKS, Deceased;
Charlene Popplewell, Personal Representative; and Robert Bisom, Appellants,
v.
Terry KIDD, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.
Stuart Charles Morgan, Attorney at Law, Tacoma, WA., John Theodore Robson, Attorney at Law, University Place, WA., for Respondent.
Douglas N. Kiger, Blado Stratton & Kiger PS, Tacoma, WA., for Appellants.
ARMSTRONG, J.
Two payable-on-death account beneficiaries appeal a superior court ruling that the payable-on-death accounts were probate assets to be distributed under the decedent's will rather than to the beneficiaries named on the accounts. The death beneficiaries argue that the decedent failed to comply with RCW 11.11.020, which allows a person to change the beneficiaries of payable-on-death accounts by specifically referring to the accounts and specifically naming the new beneficiaries. We agree that Catherine Burks failed to meet the specific requirements of the statute and, accordingly, we reverse.
*329 FACTS
On July 12, 2000, Catherine M. Burks opened two certificates of deposit with payable-on-death (POD) beneficiary designations. Account XXXXXXXXXXXXX (6050) named Burks's niece, Charlene Popplewell, as the POD beneficiary; account XXXXXXXXXXXXX (6051) named Robert Bisom as the POD beneficiary.
Burks executed her Last Will and Testament on May 9, 2001, in Twin Falls, Idaho.[1] Paragraph IV-B of the will provided:
I have certain bank accounts and savings accounts and may in the future have other evidences of property which are or may be in the joint name of myself and one of my children. Such designation is for business convenience only and is not intended as a gift to such child.
Clerk's Papers (CP) at 45.
Paragraph III of the will made a general residuary gift to Burks's son, Robert F. Bisom, and her two stepdaughters, Terry L. Kidd and Janice Klier.
Burks died on January 6, 2003, in Tacoma, Washington.
Among other assets, the estate inventory included a joint checking account Burks and Bisom owned, a joint savings account with a right of survivorship that Burks and Popplewell owned, and a certificate of deposit account XXXXXXXXXXXXX (7230). The inventory listed account 7230 as a probate asset and as being in Burks and Bisom's names, with Bisom as the POD beneficiary. But the documents in the record pertaining to account 7230 list only Burks as the owner and do not designate a POD beneficiary. And Bisom claimed that he did not know why the bank treated him as a joint owner of this account.
While acting in his capacity as personal representative, Bisom distributed account 6051 to himself and account 6050 to Popplewell. Bisom subsequently resigned and the court appointed Popplewell personal representative with non-intervention powers. The inventory she prepared listed accounts 6050 and 6051 as nonprobate assets. On November 14, 2003, Terry Kidd petitioned for a determination that the accounts were actually probate assets that should be distributed under the general residuary gift clause of Burks's will.
The superior court concluded that the accounts were probate assets subject to distribution under the will, ordered Bisom to return two-thirds of the funds he distributed to himself from account 6051, and ordered Popplewell to return the funds from account 6050. The court did not award attorney fees to Kidd. Bisom and Popplewell appeal.
ANALYSIS
I. The Disputed Accounts
Bisom and Popplewell offer several arguments why accounts 6050 and 6051 are not probate assets, subject to distribution under the residuary clause of Burks's will. We discuss only the controlling issue, whether Burks changed the POD beneficiaries on accounts 6050 and 6051 by the language in paragraph IV-B of her will.
The trial court found that the disputed accounts were probate assets subject to distribution under Burks's will. Bisom challenges this characterization. Kidd reasons that the characterization was proper and that nonprobate assets disposed of by a will are probate assets by operation of law.
The definition of "nonprobate asset" under RCW 11.11.010(7) is, except for some inapplicable exceptions, the same as the definition under RCW 11.02.005(15), which provides that "nonprobate asset" means "those rights and interests of a person having beneficial ownership of an asset that pass on the person's death under a written instrument ... other than the person's will," including payable on death bank accounts. The POD accounts are not probate assets; nonetheless, RCW 11.11.020 specifically refers to nonprobate assets and allowed Burks to change the death beneficiary of each account. What matters is not whether the accounts are probate assets, but whether Burks's will satisfied *330 the specific requirements of RCW 11.11.020 to change the death beneficiaries of the accounts.
We review a trial court's interpretation of a will de novo. In re Estate of Curry, 98 Wash.App. 107, 112-13, 988 P.2d 505 (1999). In doing so, we seek to ascertain the testator's intent. RCW 11.12.230; In re Estate of Long, 82 Wash.App. 609, 613-14, 918 P.2d 975 (1996) (citing In re Estate of Niehenke, 117 Wash.2d 631, 639, 818 P.2d 1324 (1991)). This intent must, if possible, be determined from the four corners of the will. Long, 82 Wash.App. at 614, 918 P.2d 975 (citing McDonald v. Moore, 57 Wash. App. 778, 780, 790 P.2d 213 (1990)).
RCW 11.11.020 allows individuals to dispose of certain types of nonprobate assets through their wills. Under RCW 11.11.020(1),
[s]ubject to community property rights, upon the death of an owner the owner's interest in any nonprobate asset specifically referred to in the owner's will belongs to the testamentary beneficiary named to receive the nonprobate asset, notwithstanding the rights of any beneficiary designated before the date of the will.
A "general residuary gift" does not entitle the devisees or legatees to the owner's nonprobate assets. RCW 11.11.020(2). But a testamentary disposition of an owner's interest in "`all nonprobate assets' or of all of a category of nonprobate asset ...
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