Wilkes v. O'Bryan

989 P.2d 594, 98 Wash. App. 411
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 13, 1999
DocketNo. 43789-5-I
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 989 P.2d 594 (Wilkes v. O'Bryan) 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
Wilkes v. O'Bryan, 989 P.2d 594, 98 Wash. App. 411 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Agid, A.C.J.

Annette and Thomas Wilkes executed a community property agreement which purported to vest a “fee simple” estate in the surviving spouse, but also provided that upon the death of the second spouse, the residuary estate should be divided among their melded family of six children. Arguing that community property agreements may be used as will substitutes to pass property to third parties, Thomas’s three children contend that this agreement created a vested remainder in each of them for one-sixth of the Wilkes’ residuary estate. In Bartlett v. Bartlett,1 however, the Washington Supreme Court analyzed a functionally identical community property agreement and held that once a fee simple interest is conveyed, any further attempt in the same instrument to devise a remainder interest is void. Because Thomas’s children are unable to demonstrate that Bartlett is no longer valid, it is dispositive here, and the trial court properly granted summary judgment against them.

FACTS

Annette and Thomas Wilkes married on September 11, 1971. Each had children from a previous marriage and a modest amount of property. Three years after their mar[413]*413riage, Thomas and Annette purchased a mobile home which they put on Annette’s Arlington, Washington, property. In order to convert it to community property in 1982, Annette deeded a one-half community interest in the property to Thomas. The same year, Annette and Thomas executed a standard community property agreement which provided that “upon the death of either of us, title to all community property as herein defined shall immediately vest in fee simple in the survivor.” The agreement also had a nonstandard clause:

[A]fter both Thomas F. Wilkes and Annette L. Wilkes have deceased!,] the residuary estate shall go to our six children, listed as follows: George L. O’Bryan, Thomas B. Wilkes, Norman E. Wilkes, Danny E. O’Bryan, Kenneth B. Wilkes, Cynthia A. Hale. Each shall receive equal shares of said residuary estate. (1/6 each).

Two years later, Annette and Thomas executed identical wills which provided, as evidenced by Thomas’s will:

SECOND: I declare that I am now married to Annette L, Wilkes, who is my wife; I have four children: Thomas R. Wilkes, Norman E. Wilkes, Kenneth B. Wilkes and Cynthia Ann (Hale) Wilkes and two step-children: George L. O’Bryan and Danny E. O’Bryan, and no deceased children with lineal descendants now living.
THIRD: I give, devise and bequeath all of my estate of whatever nature and wheresoever situate to my wife, Annette L. Wilkes. In the event that my wife shall not survive me or shall die within thirty days after my death, I give, devise and bequeath all of my estate to my above-named children and step-children, and to any children hereafter bom to or adopted by me, and to the lineal descendants of those predeceasing me, in equal shares, per stirpes. . . .
FIFTH: I declare that I have or may enter into an agreement concerning the status and disposition of community and separate property with my said wife. It is my intent that this Will shall not be revoked by said agreement, and that said [414]*414agreement shall not be revoked by this Will, but that in the event my said wife survives me and there is any of my property which is for any reason not effectively disposed of by said agreement, the provisions of this Will shall be effective as to such property.

Thomas died in 1993, but his will was never probated. Annette claimed title to the mobile home property under the community property agreement.

In March of 1996, Annette executed and delivered a revocable quit claim deed intended to convey the mobile home property to her son Danny O’Bryan after her death. On the same day, Annette executed a will which purported to “revoke all former wills and codicils previously made” and made no reference to the community property agreement. The will devised all property, aside from a few items of personal property, to O’Bryan. Annette died in 1996.

After O’Bryan took possession of the mobile home property, Thomas’s three children filed a creditors’ claim against him and Annette’s estate, arguing that by the clear terms of the community property agreement, they were each entitled to one-sixth of Annette’s personal property. When the claim was rejected, they filed a complaint and summary judgment motion against O’Bryan and Annette’s estate to quiet title in each of them to an undivided one-sixth interest in the property.2 Arguing that the community property agreement provided Annette with a fee simple interest in the mobile home property which she could devise as she pleased, O’Bryan filed a cross motion for summary judgment. The trial court granted O’Bryan’s motion, and Thomas’s children appeal.3

DISCUSSION

A statutory community property agreement is a will [415]*415substitute which allows a husband and wife to contract for the automatic vesting at death of their community property in the survivor without court administration.

Nothing contained in any of the provisions of this chapter or in any law of this state, shall prevent the husband and wife from jointly entering into any agreement concerning the status or disposition of the whole or any portion of the community property, then owned by them or afterwards to be acquired, to take effect upon the death of either. But such agreement may be made at any time by the husband and wife by the execution of an instrument in writing under their hands and seals, and to be witnessed, acknowledged and certified in the same manner as deeds to real estate are required to be, under the laws of the state, and the same may at any time thereafter be altered or amended in the same manner. . . .[4]

Several commentators have noted that, while it appears that the statutory community property agreement was originally intended to pass property from a predeceasing spouse to a surviving spouse on the death of the former, it is possible that they may also “be used as a will substitute to pass property to third parties on the death of either the first or the second spouse to die.”4 5 But before we can consider whether a community property agreement can be used that way, we must first decide (1) whether the Wilkes evinced a mutual intent to rescind their community property agreement in their 1984 wills, and if not, (2) whether their community property agreement was designed to provide their children with a vested interest in their residual community estate.

O’Bryan argues that the terms of the 1984 wills executed by Annette and Thomas should prevail over the earlier, inconsistent community property agreement. As previously noted, the 1982 community property agreement provided that upon the death of the first spouse, “title to all com[416]*416munity property as herein defined shall immediately vest in fee simple in the survivor,” but that after both spouses have died, “the residuary estate shall go to our six children.” In their identical 1984 wills, however, Thomas and Annette each devised “all of my estate of whatever nature and wheresoever situate” to the other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
989 P.2d 594, 98 Wash. App. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkes-v-obryan-washctapp-1999.