Petrie v. Petrie

19 P.3d 443, 105 Wash. App. 268
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 5, 2001
DocketNo. 45573-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 P.3d 443 (Petrie v. Petrie) 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
Petrie v. Petrie, 19 P.3d 443, 105 Wash. App. 268 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Appelwick, J.

David Petrie appeals a superior court order removing him as trustee of his children’s real estate [271]*271trust and as custodian of the children’s investment accounts. The trial court concluded that Petrie breached his fiduciary duty by mishandling funds within the custodial accounts. Even though there was no direct evidence that Petrie mishandled assets within the real estate trust, the court was entitled to consider Petrie’s behavior in relation to the custodial funds when determining that he should be removed as trustee of the real estate trust. We therefore affirm.

FACTS

David Petrie and Meenakshi Sharma were married in May 1981. They have two sons, Rahul Petrie, born December 13,1981, and Arvind Petrie, born July 25,1983. Sharma filed for divorce from Petrie in October 1995.

The marriage dissolution action was consolidated with a civil lawsuit that Sharma brought in October 1996. The civil lawsuit concerned a trust that Petrie had earlier established for the parties’ two children, with himself as trustee. The assets in the trust include several parcels of real estate. Petrie had also created investment accounts in trust for the children under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act, with himself as custodian.

The parties entered a settlement agreement in February 1997. Pursuant to the agreement, the trust was reformed, with Petrie remaining as trustee of the real estate trust and custodian of the investment accounts. The settlement agreement requires both Petrie and Sharma “to account and report fully to the beneficiaries and each other for all trust and Custodial Account activities as required by law, and make all records available for review by the [sic] each other, the beneficiaries or any other person as ordered by the court or the arbitrator.” In addition, the trust agreement requires the trustee to secure a bond in the amount of $200,000 to indemnify the trust. The settlement agreement provides that if either party fail [s] to comply with the terms [272]*272of the trust agreement or any provision of law or court order, the Husband’s or Wife’s right to serve as Trustee or Custodian shall be terminated.”

Shortly after entry of the agreed-upon orders and establishment of the new trust, Sharma applied for enforcement of the settlement. In May 1998, the trial court entered a supplemental judgment against Petrie in favor of Sharma. In addition, the court ordered each party to provide the other, within 10 days of receipt, “any document related to any asset or liability of the trust or any custodial account administered by the party.” The court stated that if either party failed substantially to comply with the requirement to exchange information, “such failure to comply shall be a basis for application to the court for removal of the party from further administration of the children’s assets.”

In 1998, Petrie purchased a 1997 Lincoln Continental with funds from the custodial account he administered for Arvind. Petrie did not notify Sharma of the purchase of the asset with custodial funds, as required by the court’s order and the parties’ settlement. In November 1998, Sharma, attempting to collect her judgment against Petrie, executed and levied upon the car as an asset of Petrie’s.

Petrie moved under chapter 6.19 RCW to establish an adverse claim of Arvind for ownership of the car. The trial court held a hearing on the issue, and made a series of findings. The court found that Petrie exercised exclusive control over the car, and that there was no evidence that the car could be considered an investment on behalf of Arvind. The court concluded that the purchase of the car violated the court’s orders regulating the use of the children’s custodial funds, as well as Washington State law regarding proper fiduciary investment of funds. The court denied Petrie’s motion and ordered the sheriff’s sale of the car to proceed.

In March 1999, the trial court entered supplemental findings of fact, conclusions of law and an order. The court found that Petrie had not complied with the court’s orders in relation to his duty to report to Sharma regarding the use [273]*273of the children’s custodial assets. The court appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL) to investigate and report to the court regarding Petrie’s use of the children’s custodial funds.

The GAL completed and filed her report with the court. The GAL reported that, in addition to purchasing the Lincoln with custodial funds, Petrie had deposited his pension checks into the custodial accounts and had used custodial funds to pay his maintenance obligation to Sharma and his own attorney fees. Petrie had also used custodial funds to make credit card payments, which were not established as expenditures on behalf of the children. Additionally, over $31,000 had been deposited into Arvind’s account, and the source of the deposit was unknown. The GAL concluded that Petrie was “treating these accounts like his personal checking account.” Clerk’s Papers at 15. The GAL recommended that the court appoint someone other than Petrie to serve as custodian for the children’s investment accounts.

In September 1999, Sharma filed a motion to remove Petrie as custodian of the investment accounts and as trustee of the children’s trust. The court, without oral argument, entered an order removing Petrie as custodian and as trustee. The court relied upon the reasons supplied by the GAL as well as its own additional findings. The court appointed a successor trustee who was unrelated to the children.

Petrie moved for reconsideration of the court’s order, trying to limit the scope of the order to his removal as custodian of the investment accounts, but not as trustee of the real estate trust. The court denied the motion. In a letter attached to the order denying reconsideration, the court stated that it removed Petrie as trustee of the real estate trust because he had failed to perform his fiduciary duties as custodian of the investment accounts. As the court explained, it had no confidence that Petrie would perform at a higher level of competence in regard to the real estate trust.

[274]*274In December 1999, Petrie filed a motion requesting the appointment of a discovery master, and to submit additional evidence regarding the nature of the real estate trust assets and his fitness to act as trustee. The trial court denied the motion. Again, the court attached a letter to the order denying Petrie’s motion. In the letter, the court explained:

Let me reiterate again, . . . the primary reason for the removal of Mr. Petrie as trustee was not his complete failure to comply with the provisions of the trust but rather his failure to act in the best interest of the children. His expenditure of funds to buy an expensive car for a child who was not of driving age clearly illustrates his inability or unwillingness to act in their best interests. I believe it most improbable that a man who is not acting in the children’s best interests in mind when it concerns their money would act in their best interest when it concerns their real estate.

Petrie appeals.

ANALYSIS1

Petrie essentially argues that the trial court abused its discretion in removing him as trustee of the trust containing real estate assets, rather than merely as custodian of the children’s investment accounts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 P.3d 443, 105 Wash. App. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petrie-v-petrie-washctapp-2001.