Kenneth Bryant, V. William Bryant

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 17, 2025
Docket87222-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kenneth Bryant, V. William Bryant (Kenneth Bryant, V. William Bryant) 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
Kenneth Bryant, V. William Bryant, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

KENNETH D. BRYANT, a single man, No. 87222-2-I

Appellant,

v.

WILLIAM G. BRYANT and KAREN F. BRYANT a/k/a KAREN F. HAMMERSMITH, et ux.; KRISTIN M. UNPUBLISHED OPINION BRYANT and DELWIN ELDER, et ux.; THOMAS W. BRYANT and JENNIFER A. BRYANT, et ux.; MARIE S. FIELDHOUSE, a single woman and as Administrator of the DARRELL R. BRYANT ESTATE; and JOHN DOES 1-5,

Respondents.

BOWMAN, A.C.J. — Kenneth Bryant appeals the trial court’s order

dismissing with prejudice his lawsuit against several family members over

ongoing property disputes. Because the trial court dismissed the lawsuit after

compelling the parties to arbitrate their claims, it exceeded its legal authority and

abused its discretion. We vacate the judgments in favor of the defendants,

reverse the trial court’s dismissal order, and remand for the court to stay its

judicial proceedings pending arbitration. No. 87222-2-I/2

FACTS

William Bryant died on April 15, 2008. William1 left an estate that included

several parcels of real property. At the time of his death, William had four

surviving children—Kenneth Bryant, William “Bill” Bryant, Russell Bryant, and

Darrell Bryant. For several years, the children fought over the division of the

estate’s real property.

Darrell died on March 23, 2019 and his wife, Marie Fieldhouse, assumed

his interest in the estate. On October 4, 2023, Kenneth, Bill, Russell, Bryant

Motors Inc., and Fieldhouse settled their dispute. They signed a settlement

agreement outlining how to distribute the property that included the following

dispute resolution clause:

Quick and binding arbitration by first available arbitrator from Judicial Dispute Resolution, to resolve any disputes regarding interpretation or implementation of this Settlement. Each side will advance ½ of estimated cost of the arbitration. Arbitration covers all disputes, including those regarding who owns what. Arbitration is not bound by rules of evidence—the intent here is a brief and inexpensive process. Prevailing party entitled to reasonable fees; non-prevailing party pays for the arbitrator (therefore returns to the prevailing party any amount advanced for arbitration). Arbitrator in his/her discretion may conclude that there is no prevailing party.

On November 1, 2023, Kenneth and Bill entered a separate written

contract. Under the contract, Bill agreed to give Kenneth his interest in five

parcels of real property that he would receive under the settlement agreement,

and Kenneth agreed to pay 50 percent of certain legal fees that Bill incurred.

1 We refer to parties with the last name “Bryant” by their first names for clarity

and mean no disrespect by doing so.

2 No. 87222-2-I/3

On April 5, 2024, Kenneth sued Bill and Bill’s wife, Karen Bryant; Bill’s

daughter Kristen Bryant and Kristen’s husband, Delwin Elder; Bill’s son Thomas

Bryant and Thomas’ wife, Jennifer Bryant; and Fieldhouse as the administrator of

Darrell’s estate. Kenneth asserted several causes of action, including breach

and repudiation of contract, tortious interference, and the unauthorized practice

of law.2 Each defendant answered and asserted affirmative defenses.

On August 8, 2024, Fieldhouse moved to compel arbitration under RCW

7.04A.070 based on the October 4, 2023 settlement agreement’s dispute

resolution provision. On August 9, the other defendants joined Fieldhouse’s

motion. Kenneth opposed the motion. On August 26, the trial court granted the

defendants’ motion to compel arbitration. It found that “the Arbitration Clause in

the parties’ [October 4, 2023] Settlement Agreement is enforceable” and ordered

that Kenneth “must submit this matter to arbitration within 14 days of the date of

this Order.”

But Kenneth did not submit his claims to arbitration. Instead, on August

29, 2024, Kenneth moved the court to voluntarily dismiss his lawsuit without

prejudice under CR 41(a)(1)(B). In response, the defendants asked the court to

dismiss the action with prejudice. They argued that the lawsuit “was frivolous

and advanced without reasonable cause” because the claims were subject to

mandatory arbitration. They also argued that Kenneth conceded his claims were

2 Kenneth also alleged contribution and common fund and unjust enrichment,

and he requested an order quieting title to several parcels of property, a declaratory judgment, specific performance, and restitution.

3 No. 87222-2-I/4

futile and that he has “demonstrated a propensity for abusing the litigation

process.”3

On September 27, 2024, the trial court dismissed Kenneth’s lawsuit with

prejudice. The court concluded that Kenneth’s case was “futile, frivolous, and

advanced without reasonable cause” and that dismissal without prejudice would

be “pointless.” It reasoned that Kenneth “should never have . . . filed” the case in

the trial court because it was “subject to mandatory, binding arbitration” under the

October 4, 2023 settlement agreement. It determined that Kenneth “failed to

present any evidence” and made a “concession of futility and frivolity.” And that

Kenneth “has demonstrated a propensity for abusing the litigation process as

evidenced by [his] scheme of avoiding arbitration, obfuscating his discovery

duties, and coercing one or more of the defendants to procure a behind-the-

scenes settlement favorable to [him].”

On September 30, 2024, the defendants moved the trial court for an

award of attorney fees and costs. The court granted the motion, awarding

$27,205 to Bill and Karen, Kristen and Elder, and Thomas and Jennifer and

$15,132 to Fieldhouse.

On October 7, 2024, Kenneth moved for reconsideration of the dismissal

order. He argued that the court should not have dismissed his case with

prejudice because he did not concede that any of his claims were meritless or

3 Before the trial court ruled on Kenneth’s motion to dismiss, the defendants

moved to compel discovery, alleging that some of Kenneth’s responses were conclusory. On September 18, 2024, the court granted the motion to compel, ordering Kenneth to serve complete, proper responses within 10 days.

4 No. 87222-2-I/5

engage in litigation misconduct. On October 18, the court denied the motion for

reconsideration.

On October 30, 2024, on the defendants’ joint motion, the trial court

entered judgments against Kenneth. It entered a judgment for Bill and Karen,

Kristen and Elder, and Thomas and Jennifer in the amount of $27,405. And it

entered a judgment for Fieldhouse in the amount of $15,332.

Kenneth appeals.

ANALYSIS

Kenneth argues the trial court erred by dismissing his lawsuit with

prejudice because he did not file a frivolous lawsuit, engage in litigation

misconduct, or concede any of his claims. We decline to reach that issue

because the trial court had no authority to dismiss Kenneth’s claims after it

compelled arbitration.

We review a trial court’s order on a motion to dismiss under CR 41(a) for

manifest abuse of discretion. Escude ex rel. Escude v. King County Pub. Hosp.

Dist. No. 2, 117 Wn. App. 183, 190, 69 P.3d 895 (2003). A trial court abuses its

discretion when its ruling is manifestly unreasonable or based on untenable

grounds. Id.

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