The Estate Of: William Taylor: Patricia Caiarelli v. Reuben Taylor, Jr

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 20, 2019
Docket76444-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of The Estate Of: William Taylor: Patricia Caiarelli v. Reuben Taylor, Jr (The Estate Of: William Taylor: Patricia Caiarelli v. Reuben Taylor, Jr) 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
The Estate Of: William Taylor: Patricia Caiarelli v. Reuben Taylor, Jr, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Estate of ) No. 76444-6-1 WILLIAM ROSS TAYLOR, ) (Consolidated with No. 76840-9-1) ) Deceased. ) DIVISION ONE ) PATRICIA CAIARELLI, ) ) Appellant, ) ) V. ) ) REUBEN TAYLOR, JR., EMILY ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION TAYLOR, and the marital community ) thereof,

Respondents,

CHARLES E. TAYLOR 11 and ELIZABETH TAYLOR,

Defendants. FILED: May 20, 2019

SCHINDLER, J. — This is the third appeal in this case. The legal guardian of

A.C.T., Patricia Caiarelli, filed a Trust and Estate Dispute Resolution Act(TEDRA),

chapter 11.96A RCW,action against Charles E. Taylor II, individually and as the

personal representative of the estate of William Ross Taylor, and Reuben and Emily

Taylor to impose a constructive trust on nonprobate assets. Caiarelli alleged the will

established William's intent to have his brother Charles and his father Reuben hold the No. 76444-6-1 (Consol. with No. 76840-9-1)/2

nonprobate assets as trustees for A.C.T.1 Caiarelli also alleged the family exerted

undue influence on William. In the first appeal, we reversed the decision on summary

judgment to award three AIG life insurance policies and a Fidelity individual retirement

account to Charles as the beneficiary and five Northwestern Mutual life insurance

policies to William's father Reuben. On remand, the trial court dismissed the undue

influence claims against Reuben and Emily. A jury found William designated Charles to

hold the nonprobate assets in trust for A.C.T. and in the alternative, Charles unduly

influenced William to designate him as the beneficiary. The trial court entered a

judgment on the jury verdict against Charles for $1,422,077.54 and awarded Caiarelli

attorney fees and costs. We affirmed the jury verdict but reversed the decision to

dismiss the undue influence claim against Reuben and Emily. On remand, a jury found

Reuben and Emily exerted undue influence over William to designate Reuben as the

owner of the insurance policies. The court entered judgment on the jury verdict in the

amount of $451,491.33. Caiarelli requested $1,085,325.29 for attorney fees and costs,

including $195,791.78 for attorney fees incurred in the first trial. The court awarded

Caiarelli $623,806.70 in attorney fees and costs against Reuben and Emily. Caiarelli

appeals the award of attorney fees, arguing the court abused its discretion by deducting

attorney fees for delay of the trial and declining to award any attorney fees incurred to

preserve the undue influence claim against Reuben and Emily. We affirm in part,

reverse in part, and remand.

For purposes of clarity, we refer to the Taylor family members by their first names.

2 No. 76444-6-1 (Consol. with No. 76840-9-1)/3

TEDRA Action

The facts are set forth in In re Estate of Taylor, 159 Wn. App. 1003, 2010 WL

5464751, and In re Estate of Taylor, No. 68222-9-1 (consolidated with No. 68224-5-1)

(Wash. Ct. App. May 19, 2014)(unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/

682229.pdf, and will be repeated only as necessary.

William Ross Taylor and Patricia Caiarelli were married in November 2001.

A.C.T. was born in May 2002.

In 2003, William lost his job and Caiarelli filed for dissolution of the marriage.

William prepared a will directing that in the event of his death, all of his assets were to

be held in trust for his son A.C.T., including the "Charles Schwab accounts(Schwab

IRA's,[2] Schwab One, etc.), my Fidelity accounts (401K, ESPP,[3] etc.), and all other

checking and savings accounts under my name." William named his brother Charles E.

Taylor II as the trustee, his father Reuben Taylor Jr. as the alternative trustee, and his

mother Emily Taylor as the second alternative.

The court entered the final decree in the dissolution of the marriage in February

2005.

In July 2005, William started working at a new company. William transferred his

Fidelity IRA and named his brother Charles as the primary beneficiary and his father

Reuben as contingent beneficiary. William purchased three AIG life insurance policies

and designated Charles as primary beneficiary and Reuben as contingent beneficiary.

That same month, William also signed a change of owner designation, transferring his

ownership of five Northwestern Mutual life insurance policies to his father Reuben.

2 Individual retirement accounts. 3 Employee stock purchase plan.

3 No. 76444-6-1 (Consol. with No. 76840-9-1)/4

In September 2005, William died in a boating accident. The will was admitted to

probate and Charles was appointed as the personal representative of the estate.

William's last will and testament made two bequests and left the remainder of his estate

to A.C.T. Charles identified the Charles Schwab accounts, Fidelity IRA, and AIG life

insurance policies as nonprobate assets. Charles obtained the proceeds of the AIG

policies and Fidelity IRA. Reuben obtained the proceeds for the five Northwestern

Mutual policies.

In 2006, Caiarelli as the legal guardian of A.C.T. filed a Trust and Estate Dispute

Resolution Act(TEDRA), chapter 11.96A RCW, action against Charles individually and

as the personal representative of the estate, seeking an order that A.C.T. was entitled to

the proceeds of all probate and nonprobate assets identified in the will and owned by

William at the time of his death. In November 2008, the court ruled as a matter of law

that the Charles Schwab IRA should be distributed to Charles as trustee for A.C.T. In

2009, the court consolidated the probate and TEDRA actions.

On March 9, the court found "extensive mishandling of the Estate."4 The court

removed Charles as the personal representative of the estate and denied the

appointment of all Taylor family members to serve as alternate representatives. The

court appointed Michael Longyear as the administrator of the estate.

The court ruled on summary judgment that Charles was entitled to the proceeds

of the three AIG policies and the Fidelity IRA and Reuben was entitled to the proceeds

of the five Northwestern Mutual life insurance policies.

4 Taylor, 2010 WL 5464751, at *2.

4 No. 76444-6-1 (Consol. with No. 76840-9-1)/5

First Appeal

In the first appeal, we reversed the summary judgment decision to award the

Charles Schwab IRA to Charles as the trustee for A.C.T. We remanded for entry of an

order awarding the Charles Schwab IRA to Charles in his personal capacity. We

reversed the summary judgment decision that Charles was the owner of the Fidelity IRA

and the three AIG polices and that Reuben was the owner of the five Northwestern

Mutual insurance policies. We concluded there were material issues of fact whether

"William intended to leave these assets to his son by entrusting them to his father and

brother in a representative capacity."5

On remand, Caiarelli amended the TEDRA petition to also name William's

parents Reuben and Emily Taylor and his sister Elizabeth Taylor. Caiarelli alleged the

will established William's intent that all his assets be held in a trust for the benefit of

A.C.T. and Charles, Reuben, Emily, and Elizabeth unduly influenced William to transfer

assets to Charles and Reuben.

Judge James Rogers presided over the November 2011 trial. The court

dismissed the claims against Emily and Elizabeth early in the trial. The court dismissed

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