In Re The Estate Of Marguerite Sammann

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 20, 2023
Docket83355-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Estate Of Marguerite Sammann (In Re The Estate Of Marguerite Sammann) 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 The Estate Of Marguerite Sammann, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In re the Estate of: No. 83355-3-I

MARGUERITE SAMMANN, DIVISION ONE

Deceased. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

ANDRUS, C.J. — Nadene Sammann appeals several trial court orders

concerning the closing of the estate of her mother, Marguerite Sammann (the

Estate). The primary focus of her appeal is an order appointing a commissioner

to execute real property documents on Nadene’s 1 behalf in accordance with the

provisions of an agreed order dated September 17, 2019. Nadene’s appeal

consists of dozens of assignments of error, none of which have any basis in fact

or law. Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTS

Marguerite Sammann died testate in April 2017. Her will named Nadene—

the sole beneficiary of the Estate—as personal representative. Nadene filed a

petition to probate the will in King County Superior Court under cause number 17-

4-03288-1 SEA. In July 2017, the estate of Robert White (White Estate),

Marguerite’s brother, filed a creditor’s claim against the Estate for $150,935.57,

1 Marguerite and Nadene Sammann are referred to by their first names to avoid confusion. No disrespect is intended.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. 83355-3-I/2

based on judgments the White Estate had obtained against Marguerite and

Nadene. Nadene rejected the creditor’s claim, and in response, Anna Armstrong,

personal representative of the White Estate, petitioned to remove Nadene as

personal representative of the Estate. The trial court approved the petition in

October 2017, finding that Nadene had “misrepresented the solvency status of the

estate and failed to disclose the judgments which are described in this petition.” It

appointed Barbara Coster as successor administrator of the Estate.

Armstrong then filed suit against the Estate on the White Estate’s creditor

claim in King County Superior Court under cause number 17-2-23380-3 SEA. In

February 2018, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the White

Estate, entering judgment for $160,839.79 and postjudgment interest at the rate of

12 percent per annum.

The primary asset of the Estate is a piece of residential property in northeast

Seattle where Marguerite and Nadene resided and where Nadene continued to

reside following her mother’s death. Marguerite and Nadene had taken steps to

cloud title to the property by executing several quit claim deeds and trust

documents between 1986 and 2003. On August 30, 2019, in an attempt to clear

title to the property and close the Estate, Coster petitioned the court for an order

authorizing the execution of a quit claim deed transferring any interest that the

Estate may have to Nadene. Armstrong, on behalf of the White Estate, objected

to the petition and asked the court to order Coster to quit claim the property to the

White Estate for $5,000.

-2- 83355-3-I/3

The parties, including Nadene, resolved the dispute by settlement on

September 17, 2019. The settlement agreement was entered by the court that

same day. Under the agreement, the Estate agreed to quit claim its interest in the

property to Nadene, subject to Nadene’s execution of a promissory note and deed

of trust in favor of the White Estate representing the amount owed on the 2018

judgment. The promissory note set an interest rate of 6 percent, rather than the

12 percent interest imposed in the judgment. In addition, the court approved the

fees and costs that Coster incurred as administrator of the Estate between October

2017 and September 2019—a total of $20,857.88.

Nadene refused to sign the promissory note and deed of trust and moved

to vacate the agreed order, arguing that it was illegal. A probate court

commissioner denied Nadene’s motion to vacate and the trial court denied her

motion to revise the commissioner’s order. This court affirmed on appeal. In re

Estate of Sammann, No. 81072-3-I, slip op. (Wash. Ct. App. April 26, 2021)

(unpublished). 2 The court held that the agreed order was not procedurally

unconscionable and Nadene failed to present any evidence to support her request

that the order be vacated. Id. at *10. The court rejected the White Estate’s request

for attorney fees under RAP 18.9. Id. at *12. Coster, however, did not ask this

court for an award of attorney fees. Id. at *13, fn. 10.

After losing the appeal, Nadene continued to refuse to execute the

documents necessary to effectuate the settlement agreement. In September

2021, Coster filed two petitions with the probate court, one for the appointment of

2 https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/810723.pdf, noted at 17 Wn. App. 2d 1030, 2021 WL

1700849 (2021).

-3- 83355-3-I/4

a commissioner pursuant to CR 70 and chapter 6.28 RCW to execute the

promissory note and deed of trust on Nadene’s behalf, and another for the entry

of an order approving $48,338.48 in fees and costs that Coster had incurred in

representing the Estate through August 2021. On October 12, 2021, the probate

commissioner granted both petitions and entered an order approving Coster’s

fees, appointing a commissioner to execute the real property documents Nadene

had agreed to execute, giving Nadene 30 days to execute the documents and

authorizing the commissioner to do so if she refused, directing distribution of the

Estate’s assets, and allowing the Estate to be closed when those tasks were

completed.

A few weeks later, Nadene filed a motion for revision of the October 12,

2021 order, as well as a motion to continue any hearings until January 10, 2022

on the grounds that the COVID-19 pandemic had impacted her ability to litigate the

case. The trial court denied both motions.

After 30 days, the appointed commissioner, Daniel Kellogg, executed the

promissory note and deed of trust, and the White Estate moved for court approval

of the documents. Because Coster was retiring at the end of 2021, she filed a

motion to withdraw and to have the court appoint a successor administrator to

replace her. After a January 3, 2022 hearing, the court approved the deed of trust

executed by Kellogg, discharged Coster as administrator of the Estate, and

appointed the attorney then representing the administrator, Colleen Cook, to

replace her.

-4- 83355-3-I/5

Nadene filed several motions for reconsideration of the January 3, 2022

orders, all of which were denied. Nadene now appeals the trial court’s orders of

October 12, 2021 and January 3, 2022, as well as the orders denying revision and

reconsideration of those orders.

ANALYSIS

Nadene’s appellate briefs do not comply with RAP 10.3(a). Her arguments

and assignments of error are scattered, difficult to discern, and largely unsupported

by argument, citations to legal authority, and citations to the record. As best we

could perceive, Nadene argues on appeal that:

1) The trial court erred in granting Coster’s motions because this court retained jurisdiction over the case, had not issued its mandate before the court granted her motions, and did not authorize the court to take the actions it took.

2) The trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the matter because the creditor’s claim against the Estate was legally invalid.

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