In Re Estate Of: Eddie Kanyer: Kevin Kanyer, App. v. Mary Ellen Kanyer, Resp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 8, 2013
Docket68109-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Estate Of: Eddie Kanyer: Kevin Kanyer, App. v. Mary Ellen Kanyer, Resp. (In Re Estate Of: Eddie Kanyer: Kevin Kanyer, App. v. Mary Ellen Kanyer, Resp.) 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.

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In Re Estate Of: Eddie Kanyer: Kevin Kanyer, App. v. Mary Ellen Kanyer, Resp., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

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2013 JUL -8 A;:ilG:l*t*

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In Re the Estate of NO. 68109-5-1

EDDIE KANYER DIVISION ONE

Deceased.

KEVIN KANYER, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant, v. FILED: July 8, 2013

MARY ELLEN KANYER,

Respondent.

Lau j —This case involves a son's challenge to a trial court order confirming his

mother's actions taken as trustee and sole beneficiary of two trusts that held marital

community assets. Where, as here, a trust agreement's meaning and intent are

unambiguous, the court enforces it as written. We affirm the trial court and award fees under RCW 11.96A.150 subject to compliance with RAP 18.1.

FACTS

The Trust Agreement

Eighty-six-year-old Mary Ellen Kanyer is Eddie Kanyer's surviving spouse. Eddie passed away on August 9, 2000. They have three surviving adult sons—Kevin, Jeffrey, and Robert.1

1For clarity, we refer to the Kanyer family members by their first names. Afourth son, Rodney, passed away in 1992. 68109-5-1/2

In April 2000—about 4 months before Eddie died—he and Mary Ellen created a

revocable living trust. Its terms are governed by the "Joint Revocable Living Trust

Agreement of the Kanyer Living Trust" ("Trust Agreement"). Eddie and Mary Ellen were

named grantors and trustees of the trust.

The Trust Agreement provides that upon either spouse's death, the surviving

spouse shall divide the trust estate into a Family Trust and a Survivor Trust.2 Article IX directs the survivor (here Mary Ellen) to fund the Family Trust with "an amount of

property" equal to the deceased spouse's (here Eddie's) separate property and his half interest in any community property. No specific assets were required to fund the Family Trust. The trustee was authorized to fund the Family Trust by allocating "property in

cash or in kind (including undivided interests), or part in cash and part in kind" equal to Eddie's half interest in community property. Article IX also directs Mary Ellen to fund the Survivor Trust with her own separate property and her half interest in community

property.

Article X provides that as the surviving spouse, Mary Ellen is the primary beneficiary of the Survivor Trust and its purpose is "to provide for. .. her health, education, support, and maintenance." The Trust Agreement permits herto use, distribute, and deplete the Survivor Trust's assets even if such use exhausts the trust. Similarly, under Article XI, Mary Ellen is the Family Trust's sole beneficiary with the right to use its assets for her "health, education, support, and maintenance" during her

2The Trust Agreement also contemplated a third trust (the Marital Trust) to be funded if there was a tax advantage in doing so. Because there was no tax advantage, the Marital Trust was never funded. -2- 68109-5-1/3

lifetime. Upon Mary Ellen's death, any assets remaining in the Survivor Trust become

Family Trust assets to be divided between Mary Ellen and Eddie's children.

As trustee of both the Survivor and Family Trusts, Mary Ellen is authorized under

Paragraph 18.1 to "sell, dispose of, invest, reinvest, exchange and manage the assets

of the trust estate . . . ." Paragraph 18.3 authorizes her to dispose of property for cash

or credit on any terms she deems advisable and "to manage, develop, improve,

exchange, partition, change the character of, abandon property or any interest therein,

or otherwise deal with property." Paragraph 19.1.7 authorizes her to consolidate or

merge the Family and Survivor Trusts.

The Trust Agreement provides, "Every action made in good faith by Trustee in

the exercise of any power, authority, judgment or discretion conferred hereunder

(including without limitation, disclaimers, releases, or elections with respect to taxes)

shall be conclusive and binding upon all persons interested in the assets of any trust

established hereunder." The Trust Agreement also provides for revocation and

amendment:

4.1. Revocation/Withdrawals. We reserve the right by written instrument signed by us as Grantors and filed with our Trustee to revoke this Agreement at any time or to withdraw from the trust estate, discharged of the trust, all or any part of the principal and accumulated income of the trust upon satisfying all sums due to our Trustee and indemnifying our Trustee to our Trustee's reasonable satisfaction against liabilities lawfully incurred in the administration of this trust. 4.2. Amendment. We reserve the right to alter or amend this Agreement at any time, by written instrument signed by us as Grantors and accepted by our Trustee. 4.3. Rights Personal to Us. The rights of revocation, withdrawal, alteration and amendment reserved by us must be exercised solely by us and may not be exercised by any other person, including any agent, guardian or conservator. However, ifone of us is deceased or ifduring our joint lifetime one of us is incapacitated to the extent that he or she is unable to manage business affairs, the other Grantor acting alone may exercise the foregoing rights of 68109-5-1/4

revocation, withdrawal, alteration and amendment but only and solely as to his or her granted and contributed share of community and separate property.

The Dispute

Mary Ellen and Eddie owned an Alki condominium in West Seattle where Mary

Ellen currently resides and a small cabin built on beach property in Indianola,

Washington. When Eddie died in 2000, the condominium's value was $260,000 and the

Indianola property's assessed value was $273,850.3 Eddie had no separate property when he died. Mary Ellen funded the Family

Trust with the condominium as the equivalent of Eddie's half interest in the community

property. Mary Ellen funded the Survivor Trust with the remaining community

property—a $158,408 brokerage account—and the Indianola property. At the time, Mary Ellen believed the Indianola property was her separate property because she held title in her name only since inheriting it in 1974 from her mother. Mary Ellen and Eddie later executed a community property agreement in 1965. This agreement directed that

any property then owned or after acquired would be considered community property. In March 2000, shortly before executing the Trust Agreement, Mary Ellen and

Eddie allowed their son Kevin to move into the Indianola beach cabin. They allowed

Kevin to live in the cabin because a recent divorce left him "essentially homeless and in

need of help." Mary Ellen and Eddie executed the Trust Agreement shortly after Kevin moved into the cabin. The Trust Agreement's article XI granted a first right of refusal to

Kevin:

3The tax assessment was the only evidence before the trial court as to the Indianola property's value. At summary judgment, Kevin disputed the valuation but provided no evidence to the contrary. -4- 68109-5-1/5

After our death, and after the payment and distributions authorized in the preceding Articles, the remaining assets of the trust shall be referred to as the Family Trust.

We give the rest and remaining property of the Family Trust to our children as their separate property when they each attain the age of twenty-one (21) or when they complete their second year of college. To our son, KEVIN B. KANYER, we give the right of first refusal to receive our cabin as his fair share. Such right shall be personal to our son and shall not pass per stirpes. . ..

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