Roy A. Ames, et ux v. Wesley B. Ames

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 9, 2014
Docket31661-1
StatusPublished

This text of Roy A. Ames, et ux v. Wesley B. Ames (Roy A. Ames, et ux v. Wesley B. Ames) 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
Roy A. Ames, et ux v. Wesley B. Ames, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED DEC 9, 2014 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

ROY A. AMES and RUBYE M. AMES, ) husband and wife ) No. 31661-1-111 ) (consolidated with Respondents, ) 31825-7-111) ) vs. ) ) WESLEY B. AMES; AMES ) PUBLISHED OPINION DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, an ) Oregon Corporation; and STANLEY R. ) AMES, individually; and MERITA ) DYSART, individually, ) ) Appellants. )

FEARING, J. In 1997, Roy and Rubye Ames sold, without a written agreement,

their property, consisting of farmland and timber, to their two oldest sons, Stanley and

Wesley Ames. The parents retained a life estate. After another son moved to the

property, the two oldest sons and their parents grew estranged. Roy and Rubye filed this

action, asking the court to exercise its authority in equity to order title in the property

returned to them. In the alternative, the parents sought recognition of their life estate and

an unlimited right to control the property during their lives. The trial court awarded Roy

and Rubye a life estate in the property, including a limited right to harvest timber. No. 31661-1-111; 31825-7-111 Ames v. Ames

Stanley and Wesley Ames appeal the timber award. We affirm the trial court.

FACTS

The Ames brothers do not challenge the trial court's findings of fact on appeal.

We extensively rely on the findings in our recitation of facts.

Roy Ames and Rubye Ames are respectively 92 and 84 years old. They have been

married for 67 years. The couple has five children: Wesley Ames, Stanley Ames, Merita

Dysart, Randy Ames, and Arleta Parr.

The parents love their children, but in recent years and as a result of this lawsuit,

have become estranged from the three older children, Wesley, Stanley, and Merita, who

live in other states. The two younger children are presently close to Roy and Rubye.

Despite their age, Roy and Rubye are fully competent and display a clear understanding

of their financial affairs.

In 1966, Roy and Rubye Ames acquired a quarter section of farm and timber land

in Stevens County. They have farmed the property and made improvements to the land

since 1966, and have lived there continuously since 1976. They have managed the timber

with occasional small scale logging. Their present income consists of a modest Social

Security payment, occasional logging proceeds, limited farm income, and payments from

Wesley and Stanley for the purchase of the property.

In 1997, Roy and Rubye needed income to supplement their farm income. They

considered a reverse mortgage, but wanted the farm kept within the family. The youngest

No. 31661-1-III; 31825-7-II1 Ames v. Ames

son, Randy Ames, and his family had moved to Lithuania. The parents conferred with

their other children, and Wesley and Stanley were willing and financially able to help

their parents.

After careful discussions, Roy and Rubye Ames reached an agreement with sons

Wesley and Stanley. Under the agreement, Wesley and Stanley would pay $216,000 over

30 years, with no interest, payable at $600 per month. If both Roy and Rubye died before

full payment, the remaining payments would go to the other three children. Wesley and

Stanley would then receive title to the real property, improvements, timber, and farm

equipment. Roy and Rubye reserved a life estate, defined as including full possession,

management, and control of the real property, improvements, timber, and farm

equipment. The parties did not reduce the agreement to writing, but the agreement was

restated in two e-mails from Stanley to Randy, on March 27 and March 29, 2009. Roy

and Rubye Ames retained title to the property in their names.

At trial, Roy Ames testified he always "intended to control the farm, or have

somebody else do it" during his lifetime. He declared: "I'm on the farm, all aspects of

the farm, until I die." Clerks Papers (CP) at 416. Both Wesley and Stanley Ames

anticipate living on the Stevens County property upon their respective retirements. Each

will have limited income at retirement.

Since the 1997 agreement, Roy and Rubye Ames have continued in possession,

management, and control of the real property along with the farm operation and the

No. 31661-I-III; 3 I 825-7-III Ames v. Ames

timber. On January 11,2006, Roy and Rubye deeded the land to Wesley Ames and

Ames Development Corporation "in consideration of love and affection." CP at 886.

The deed reserved no life estate. The accompanying real estate excise tax affidavit

declared that the transfer was a gift without consideration. All parties understood the

2006 conveyance was intended to insulate the property from creditors and, in particular,

from the State for any future medical care.

Beginning in 2009, Roy and Rubye Ames physically struggled to maintain the

farm on their own. Roy and Rubye invited son Randy and his family, who had returned

from Lithuania, to live on the farm so that Randy could help. The Ames family discussed

building a house on the farm for Randy and his family. Wesley and Stanley, on the one

hand, and Randy, on the other hand, negotiated a farm lease for Randy.

On September 6, 2010, Stanley, as President of Ames Development Corporation,

entered both a rental agreement and a cash farm lease with Randy and his wife, Darlene.

The farm lease allowed the "owners," Stanley and Ames Development Corporation, to

"enter the property at any time for any purpose" and it partially limited Roy and Rubye's

management of the timberland. CP at 417. The rental agreement and farm lease

conflicted with Roy and Rubye Ames' life estate.

In recent years, Wesley and Stanley Ames have interfered with Roy and Rubye's

right, pursuant to their life estate, to full control and management of the farm. Randy has

participated in the interference but with different motives and by different means. Randy

I 1 No. 31661-1-III; 31825-7-III Ames v. Ames

Ames has sought to gain control and ownership of the property. Randy constructed an

addition to Roy and Rubye's existing home, rather than building a new home. He

manipulated his elderly parents and isolated them from their family and friends. On one

occasion, Randy spirited Roy away for one week, took Rubye' s cell phone, and prevented

visits to his parents by neighbors, friends, and fellow church members.

In January 2011, Ames Development Corporation and Wesley Ames entered a

housing and farming agreement with Roy and Rubye Ames. The agreement sought to

"establish a relationship" between the parties in light of Randy Ames being a tenant on

the farm. CP at 417. It granted Roy and Rubye rights they already held under the oral

life estate, such as the right to possession and the right to lease the premises. The

agreement limited some of their rights, including the right to come and go, the right to

manage the timber, and the right to determine farming activities. Finally, it granted

Stanley, Ames Development Corporation, and Wesley rights they did not have under the

oral life estate, such as the right to enter and remain on the land at any time, the right to

construct and remove buildings, and the right to confer with Roy and Rubye about all

farm activities. Stanley, Ames Development Corporation, and Wesley could cancel the

agreement at any time.

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Roy A. Ames, et ux v. Wesley B. Ames, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-a-ames-et-ux-v-wesley-b-ames-washctapp-2014.