Trimm v. Davis

977 P.2d 591, 95 Wash. App. 358
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 1, 1999
DocketNo. 40992-1-I
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 977 P.2d 591 (Trimm v. Davis) 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
Trimm v. Davis, 977 P.2d 591, 95 Wash. App. 358 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Agid, A.C.J.

— Frances arid Thomas Trimm appeal the trial court’s order denying their petition to invalidate the [361]*3611996 will of Lavina Kessler. The Trimms contend that the trial court erred in concluding they did not come forward with clear, cogent and convincing evidence of lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence, fraud and improper execution. They also contend that the trial court erred in finding that they acted without probable cause and good faith in contesting the will on those grounds. Because we defer to the trial court’s assessment of the credibility of the respective witnesses, we conclude that there is sufficient evidence to support its findings that the Trimms were unable to meet the applicable standard of proof. As counsel for Brian and Tami Davis herself conceded at oral argument, however, the Trimms presented a compelling case. For that reason, we hold that there is no basis for concluding that the Trimms acted without probable cause or in bad faith in contesting the will. We reverse the trial court’s award of attorney fees to the Davises but affirm its conclusion that Lavina Kessler’s 1996 will was valid.

FACTS

Lavina Kessler, who was born in Canada in 1896, died in Washington on May 24, 1996, at the age of 99. Frances and Thomas Trimm, now 83 and 84 years old themselves, had been friends of Lavina’s for approximately 50 years at the time of her death. Over the years Lavina had looked to them for assistance in various matters, especially after her eyesight began to fail. The Trimms took her to the doctor, paid her bills and managed her financial affairs. They also ran errands, did occasional shopping, provided other personal services, and arranged for care. When Lavina was hospitalized with a broken hip in April 1993, she executed a power of attorney appointing Mrs. Trimm as her attorney-in-fact. Lavina began to receive visiting nurse services and home health care that year. In 198.7, 1990, 1993 and 1995, Lavina Kessler made four wills.1 In each of those wills she [362]*362made substantial bequests to the Trimms.2

In mid-December 1995, Almyra Butler, one of Lavina Kessler’s tenants who helped her with cooking and cleaning, was forced to stop providing care because of her own physical problems. On December 14, Frances Trimm found Lavina on the floor of her Renton residence and took her to the doctor. Dr. Graves advised them that it was no longer safe for Lavina to live alone, but Lavina was adamant that she would not go to a nursing home. Because the Trimms were personally unable to provide 24-hour care, Dr. Graves contacted Adult Protective Services to see what other arrangements could be made.3 When they learned about Lavi-na’s situation, two other friends of Lavina’s, Greg and Sherry Schroeder, contacted Lavina’s great-nephew, Brian [363]*363Davis, who lived in Idaho with his wife, to express concern about the way in which the Trimms were handling Lavi-na’s affairs.

Brian and Tami Davis arrived unannounced on December 16. On December 18, Tami Davis contacted Lawrence Warren, Lavina’s attorney, and told him Lavina wanted to revoke her power of attorney. Tami complained to Warren about the care Lavina was receiving from the Trimms. She also told him that the Trimms were trying to discharge William Cavender, Lavina Kessler’s accountant since 1967, in order to get control of her financial affairs. And she told him that the Trimms were trying to sell some of Lavina’s assets including a piece of real property on Camano Island. Because it was Lavina Kessler who was his client, Warren explained he would need to speak with her. When he met with Lavina at her home that afternoon, however, he could not determine whether she recognized him or whether she was capable of executing a testamentary instrument. He was unable to conduct a meaningful dialogue with her except to ascertain that she was greatly agitated at the thought that she might be put in a nursing home. Although she appeared somewhat better during a second interview on the morning of December 19, he was again unable to communicate with her enough to reach any conclusion regarding her testamentary capacity. Warren was never asked to meet with Lavina again.

On December 29, Tami Davis contacted attorney John Hertog and asked him to meet with Lavina Kessler at her home to assist in revoking the power of attorney.4 Hertog met with Lavina at her home the following day to discuss revoking any existing powers of attorney and preparing a new power of attorney appointing Tami Davis as attorney-[364]*364in-fact.5 He testified at trial that when he asked Lavina why she wanted to revoke the power of attorney, she told him the Trimms had not done right by her and she no longer trusted them. Lavina also told him they had not kept her informed about how her assets were being managed and that she feared they were going to try to put her in a nursing home. The record also reflects that Tami Davis gave Hertog a copy of Lavina Kessler’s 1995 will. He read it to Lavina that day but went no further at that time.

On January 3, Hertog again met with Lavina Kessler so she could execute the documents he had drafted following the December 29 meeting. Hertog’s partner, Barbara Coster, was also present. During the January 3 meeting, Hertog asked Lavina if she knew what the Trimms had done with her investments. She responded that she had gotten “a notice on the tv” that they had taken her money and “done something with it.” Lavina was convinced that she had far fewer funds than she had back in 1993. She told Hertog that the Trimms “didn’t go ahead and look after the—look after me and look after things. They just— they just looked after themselves.” Because Lavina appeared unable to understand what would happen as a result of revoking the power of attorney, Hertog concluded the meeting without having her execute the documents he had prepared.6

On January 4, the Davises filed a petition to establish a limited guardianship for Lavina Kessler. Hertog was appointed by the court to represent Lavina in that guardianship, and Julie Schisel was appointed guardian ad litem. When Julie Schisel met with Lavina on January 11, she was again confused at times. When Schisel asked her to de[365]*365scribe her whereabouts, for example, Lavina insisted she was living in Seattle and that her Renton home had been closed up, even though the interview took place in the Renton home in which she had lived for 50 years. Lavina also told Schisel that, while she did not want to make accusations, she believed the Trimms had “deposited her funds differently.” But she explained she had to take Tami Davis’s word for it because she could no longer see well enough to read and relied on Tami to read her mail for her. When Schisel met with Lavina a second time on January 12 to discuss ownership of certain properties, Lavina was able to tell her she had stocks, mutual funds and some bank accounts, but was unable to describe the extent of her assets. Lavina also told Schisel that she owned the Bennett Apartments and that the Bennett Grocery had heen sold. In fact, the Bennett Apartments had been sold 15 years earlier; the Bennett Grocery remained an asset of hers and was being operated as Arnold’s Market.

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Bluebook (online)
977 P.2d 591, 95 Wash. App. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimm-v-davis-washctapp-1999.