ITMO the Estate of Wayne Colyer Fields v

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 2017
DocketS16180
StatusUnpublished

This text of ITMO the Estate of Wayne Colyer Fields v (ITMO the Estate of Wayne Colyer Fields v) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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ITMO the Estate of Wayne Colyer Fields v, (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

NOTICE Memorandum decisions of this court do not create legal precedent. A party wishing to cite such a decision in a brief or at oral argument should review Alaska Appellate Rule 214(d).

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

In the Matter of the Estate of ) ) Supreme Court No. S-16180 WAYNE COLYER FIELDS ) ) Superior Court No. 4FA-91-00041 PR ) ) MEMORANDUM OPINION ) AND JUDGMENT* ) ) No. 1655 – November 15, 2017 )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Fourth Judicial District, Fairbanks, Michael P. McConahy, Judge.

Appearances: James M. Hackett, Law Office of James M. Hackett, Fairbanks, for Appellant Charles L. Fields, Personal Representative of the Estate of Wayne Colyer Fields. Robert A. Sparks, Law Office of Robert A. Sparks, Fairbanks, for Appellees Elizabeth Cook, Wayne Fields, and Joseph Fields.

Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger, and Carney, Justices.

I. INTRODUCTION The personal representative of Wayne Colyer Fields’s estate challenges an October 2015 superior court order providing for the closure of the estate. The order directed that certain property was to be distributed to Fields’s children and that the personal representative was to receive the remainder of the estate as reimbursement for

* Entered under Alaska Appellate Rule 214. administrative expenses. The personal representative challenges the court’s determination that he was not entitled to reimbursement for appellate attorney’s fees. He also argues that the court erred in failing to include in the estate inventory a piece of property held in trust for the benefit of Fields’s descendants. Because the trust containing the property does not belong to the estate, this argument is without merit. And because the personal representative is already entitled to the entire remaining value of the estate, he was not prejudiced by the court’s failure to award him appellate attorney’s fees. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS This appeal is the most recent chapter of an extended effort to settle the estate of Wayne Colyer Fields. Fields executed his Last Will and Testament in 1980, making specific bequests to each of his four children, to his son-in-law, and to the Fairbanks North Star Borough Library. The will also contained a residuary clause bequeathing the remainder of Fields’s estate to the Wayne Colyer Fields Trust. Fields appointed his son Charles as the estate’s personal representative. In 1987, before his death, Fields conveyed a piece of property in Washington to his four children; the property had been used by the family for recreational purposes for many years.1 After Fields’s death in 1990, the four children disputed whether the Washington property had been conveyed with the intent that they would place it in trust for Fields’s descendants, and they brought the matter before the probate court.2

1 In re Estate of Fields (Fields I), 219 P.3d 995, 999 (Alaska 2009). 2 Id. at 999-1000.

-2­ 1655 The court determined that Fields had conveyed the Washington property to his children with the intent to create an inter vivos trust that was never formalized.3 Accordingly, the court imposed a constructive trust4 over the property: It directed Charles to establish an express trust for the management of the property, and it ordered all four children to convey their interests in the property to the trust set up by Charles.5 Charles’s three siblings (the siblings) appealed to this court, and we upheld the superior court’s decision.6 Despite our ruling affirming the imposition of the constructive trust, the siblings refused to sign quitclaim deeds conveying their interests in the Washington property to the trust. Charles ultimately obtained clerk’s deeds for the property.

3 Id. at 1001-02. 4 A constructive trust is not a trust in the ordinary sense of the word; it is an equitable remedy intended to convey property to “a claimant [who] has a better right to certain property than the person who has legal title to it.” Constructive Trust, BLACK ’S LAW D ICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014). As Black’s Law Dictionary explains: The obligation of the constructive trustee is simply to turn the property over to the constructive beneficiary; the device does not create a “trust” in any usual sense of that word. The name of the remedy came about because early cases applying it involved trustees who wrongfully appropriated funds from trusts, making it convenient to say that they remained constructive trustees of whatever they had wrongfully acquired. Id. 5 Fields I, 219 P.3d at 1002. 6 Id. at 1002, 1016.

-3- 1655 The current appeal pertains to the proceedings arising out of Charles’s petition to close the estate.7 In December 2012 the superior court ordered Charles to submit a final inventory of the estate. The order required Charles to file “a proposed final inventory setting out in detail as per AS 13.16.365-375 all property of the estate at the time of the death of decedent and any property subsequently acquired by the estate.” The court also required Charles to file an updated petition for approval of accounting, final settlement and distribution, and closing of the estate. The court stated that the updated petition “shall resolve all issues the Personal Representative believes should be fully resolved so that this estate can be fully closed and the Personal Representative discharged. Any issue not raised by the Personal Representative in this pleading will be deemed waived or admitted.” Charles submitted his proposed final inventory of the estate in January 2013, stating that he was “relying on the Inventory and Appraisement previously filed with the Court on August 30, 1991.” This inventory did not include the Washington property. In his reply to the siblings’ objections to his filing, Charles again indicated that he had provided a full and accurate accounting of the estate and that “the Washington [p]roperty and the Trust itself are not properly a part of the remaining matters to be resolved in the Probate Court.” He further stated that “[t]he matters and business of the Trust are not at issue in the probate court.”

7 Additional proceedings in this probate matter involved Fairbanks property that was administered as part of Fields’s estate; reimbursement for taxes paid on the Washington property before it was conveyed to the trust, In re Estate of Fields (Fields III), No. S-15539, 2016 WL 1612877, at *1 (Alaska Apr. 20, 2016); Charles’s actions as personal representative, Fields I, 219 P.3d at 1000; and the provision of adequate notice in certain proceedings, Fields v. Fields (Fields II), No. S-13851, 2012 WL 2477895 (Alaska June 27, 2012). None of those proceedings are at issue in this appeal, except to the extent that Charles seeks reimbursement for attorney’s fees incurred throughout the probate process.

-4- 1655 A hearing to close the estate was held in November 2014. In his opening statement before the standing master Charles reiterated that the superior court, in its order requiring a final petition for settlement and distribution of the estate, had been explicit that the court will not entertain any issues relating to the administration of the trust in this estate action. Therefore, no evidence related to the trust should be heard with regards to the closing of this estate. The final account, as submitted in 2007 and 2014, should be accepted by the court. Charles testified at the hearing about the fees and expenses he sought to have reimbursed from the estate. He stated that he had expended more than $100,000 defending the estate in legal proceedings. At the close of the hearing the standing master asked the parties to submit their lists of issues for the court to resolve. In this list Charles only mentioned the Washington property in connection with an unrelated issue.

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