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On May 8, 2012 the Washington State Court of Appeals, Division II issued a new published opinion, Witt v. Estate of Young, which held that claims for quasi-community property by partners of the deceased who were in intimate and committed relationship are not subject to the creditor claims time limits and can be brought, most properly as a challenge to the inventory anytime until the probate is closed. 

In the Witt case, the deceased's long time partner filed a creditor's claim in her late partner's probate holding that all the property was quasi-community property and therefore should go to her.  The Personal Representative of the Estate denied the claim with a notice that any challenge to the denial must be made in 30 days.  More than 30 days late, Witt filed a complaint against the Estate in Superior Court for Partition of real and personal property.  The Estate moved for Summary Judgment to have the complaint dismissed on the basis that she had missed the thirty day window for making a challenge to the denial of her creditors' claim. The trial court declined to dismiss the action and the Estate appealed.

The Court of Appeals made on factual determination of whether the property in question would be covered by the quasi-community property rules that allow a court to treat property earned by either party during an intimate and committed relationship as analogous to community property earned during a marriage.  It left that question to the trial court.  But it did find that such a claim is really a challenge to the inventory of the Estate and not a claim for debt owed by the decedent and so isn't a creditor's claim and isn't subject to the creditor's claim time limits.  The court acknowledged that Witt had initially brought a creditors claim but found that her having done so did not preclude from bringing a more proper claim at a later date.  The court also went out of its way to make it clear that such a claim would need to be brought before the probate was closed or it would be barred.

The case provides some helpful guidance to both non-married partners who fail to do proper estate plans and personal representatives of their partner's estates about how these claims should be brought and the timelines that govern them.  This was important because while the court has been consistent and often generous in awarding these claims on an equitable basis they have come before the court in a variety of manners leaving practitioner frequently perplexed about how to properly introduce such a claim and proper way to accept or reject such claims.   As a practical matter, by channeling these claims in to the TEDRA process for challenging inventories the court has also created more generous timelines and enhanced incentives for resolving these disputes through alternative dispute resolution presumably with the hope of having more of these heavily fact intensive cases settled by the parties rather than litigated through the courts.  It is also an important reminder to personal representative who are administering estates were such a claim is possible not to let estates linger open longer than necessary as it will increase the time that these challenges can be brought and to be very careful about making any preliminary distributions before closing the estate where any possible claim could be made by an unmarried partner. 

Perhaps its best warning is that couples who are in long term, committed relationships are really best served and best taken care by careful planning before death, ideally including powers of attorney, co-habitation agreements, and wills that spell out what the plan is with regard to the creation of quasi-community property, who should be in charge of crucial life choices, and where assets should flow at death.

If you have lost a partner and want to better understand your possible rights to quasi-community property, or managing an estate that might be subject to such a claim, or are in an non-married committed relationship and want to plan to avoid this kind of potentially ugly and expensive mess at your death, please contact us to schedule a free half hour consultation at info@phinneyestatelaw.com or (206)459-1908.

 
 
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ADMINISTRATOR
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The person appointed by a court to administer the estate of a decedent and who was not nominated by the decedent as his/her personal representative, usually because the decedent died without a Will.  

At Phinney Estate Law we represent a lot of administrators in their work probating estates.  Often an administrator is appointed because there was no will.  Sometimes there is a will but the named Personal Representative has predeceased the decedent or is unable to serve. 

Whenever we work with an administrator, we work hard to present a case to the court, hopefully with the cooperation of all the family, to allow that person to serve without court intervention so that they can take advantage of that cheaper and simpler probate process.  Sometimes it simply isn't possible under the law, which means that probate will cost an average of ten times as much to administer.  Even when it is possible to get non-intervention powers, the work required to get it approved makes the legal fees at least double what it would have been with a Will that appointed an appropriate personal representative.  Which is why a Will is always a good investment for a family.

There is a statute that lays out who is entitled to serve as administrator, the timeline for their retaining the privilege to serve, and limitations on their serving with non-intervention powers.  If you have lost someone in your life and think you might be entitled to serve as the administrator of their estate, you should contact an attorney as soon as possible to see if you are entitle to serve and what needs to be done to start the process.  At Phinney Estate Law we can answer these questions at a free 1/2 hour consultation. 

Contact us (206) 459-1908  or info@phinneyestatelaw.com.

 
 
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ABATEMENT:
When someone dies their debts, taxes, and the costs of administrating their estate are required to be paid before any gifts or bequests may be distributed.  If the estate distribution plan is simple and the assets far exceed the debts this is a simple process.  However, if the estate contains a lots of specific gifts and/or debts are high, the executor must decide in what order property will be used to pay for the debts, taxes, and costs.  The priority in which the assets are used is known as "abatement." Washington has a statute the spells out the order in which these assets are to be used and it covers both assets passing through a formal probate and assets transferred through beneficiary designations, trusts or other non-probate process.  The rules in the statute can be changed by the terms of the Decedent's will or trust as long as they still allow all debts, taxes, and costs to be paid. 

The rules of abatement can be complicated and don't always match the expectations of families.  Before assets are used to pay debts, a Trustee or Personal Representative in Washington should consult with an attorney to make sure that they are using the right assets.  Abatement is the source of a number of probate disputes and mistakes can lead to unnecessary expense and conflict and even result in personal liability for the Trustee or Personal Representative. 

If you have questions about Abatement, please contact us at info@phinneyestatelaw.com or (206) 459-1908.