FILED
DECEMBER 14, 2021
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
In the Matter of the Estate of: ) No. 37255-3-III
) (consolidated with
K. WENDELL REUGH. ) No. 37290-1-III)
)
) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
PENNELL, C.J. — The adult children of K. Wendell Reugh appeal trial court
decisions denying their attempt to invalidate distribution of their father’s residuary estate
through a trust. Although the children are beneficiaries of the trust, the bulk of the trust
assets are designated to a charitable foundation. After lengthy litigation, the trial court
dismissed the children’s petition to invalidate the trust on the basis that it was a de facto
will contest and not filed within the applicable statute of limitations. We agree with this
assessment. In addition, we find the trial court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to
defer its dismissal decision to accommodate the children’s last-minute request for
mediation or by awarding attorney fees to the other parties. This matter is affirmed.
FACTS
K. Wendell Reugh was a wealthy real estate developer in the Spokane area.
Mr. Reugh 1 was survived by three adult children—James R. Reugh, Mark W. Reugh, and
1
For clarity and readability, we refer to K. Wendell Reugh throughout the opinion
as Mr. Reugh.
Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
JoLynn Reugh-Kovalsky. Prior to his death, Mr. Reugh retained attorney Thomas
Culbertson as his estate planner. Over the course of several years, Mr. Reugh debated
whether to leave his considerable fortune to his children or to make a large charitable gift.
Mr. Culbertson ultimately proposed a revocable living trust that would be funded by
Mr. Reugh’s estate. He provided Mr. Reugh with a draft copy of a trust agreement.
This draft copy contained a default clause that would provide the Inland Northwest
Community Foundation (INWCF) with Mr. Reugh’s residuary trust estate if Mr. Reugh
did not establish his own charitable foundation or charitable donor-advised fund by the
time of his death.
On January 4, 2011, Mr. Reugh executed a trust agreement creating the
“K. Wendell Reugh Revocable Living Trust” (Mr. Reugh’s Trust or the Trust).
Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 40-51 (some capitalization omitted). Mr. Reugh was both the
settlor and trustee of the Trust. Article II of the Trust stated “The Settlor hereby transfers
to the Trustee the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00).” Id. at 40. The Trust assigned
to Mr. Reugh, as trustee, various duties and benefits. Article VI of the Trust provided for
distributions to be made upon the death of Mr. Reugh, including $1,500,000 to each of his
children, and $1,000,000 to the “K. Wendell Reugh Charitable Remainder Trust” for the
2
Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
initial benefit of Doreen Decker, Mr. Reugh’s longtime companion. Id. at 44-45;
see also id. at 5.
The Trust directed the successor trustee to distribute the remainder of the Trust
estate to a charitable foundation or a charitable donor-advised fund to be created by
Mr. Reugh. If such an organization did not exist at the time of Mr. Reugh’s death, the
Trust directed the successor trustee to distribute the remainder to INWCF.
Contemporaneously with the Trust, Mr. Reugh executed his last will and testament
(Mr. Reugh’s Will or the Will). Article III of the Will contained a pour-over clause
directing the distribution of Mr. Reugh’s residuary estate to his Trust. Besides a short
list of tangible personal property, the bulk of Mr. Reugh’s estate was to pass with his
residuary estate to his Trust.
Mr. Reugh died on March 22, 2015. At the time of his death, he had not
established his own charitable foundation or charitable donor-advised fund. On March 27,
the superior court admitted Mr. Reugh’s Will to probate, declared the estate to be solvent,
appointed JoLynn Reugh-Kovalsky and Steve Gill as co-personal representatives of
Mr. Reugh’s estate, granted nonintervention powers for administration of the estate, and
directed the issuance of letters testamentary. A tax return for the estate filed in 2016 by
Ms. Reugh-Kovalsky and Mr. Gill showed a charitable gift, after taxes, of approximately
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In re Estate of Reugh
$15,000,000 to INWCF. The return indicated Ms. Reugh-Kovalsky and Mr. Gill were
also cotrustees of Mr. Reugh’s Trust. Distributions in accordance with the directions of
Mr. Reugh’s Trust, including to Mr. Reugh’s children and other members of the family,
were made. In re Estate of Reugh, 10 Wn. App. 2d 20, 29, 447 P.3d 544 (2019) (Reugh I),
review denied, 194 Wn.2d 1018, 455 P.3d 128 (2020).
In June 2015, an attorney representing the co-personal representatives and
cotrustees sent INWCF a letter wherein they notified INWCF it was to receive a then-
unascertained amount of money from Mr. Reugh’s Trust. Id. In January 2016, an
accountant for Mr. Reugh’s estate sent INWCF a letter offering a contribution of
$2,200,000. Id. at 30-31. The letter did not disclose the fact that INWCF could potentially
receive a much higher sum through Mr. Reugh’s Trust. Id. at 31. INWCF declined the
offer. Id. In July 2016, an attorney representing James Reugh and Mark Reugh sent
INWCF a letter wherein they alleged Mr. Culbertson had failed to effectuate their father’s
desire to establish a charitable foundation for his estate, and threatened litigation over
the sum INWCF was to receive from his Trust. Id. at 31-34. The brothers offered to settle
the dispute, but informed INWCF of their intent to refuse to distribute the residuary of
Mr. Reugh’s estate if no settlement was reached. Id. A subsequent letter to INWCF sent
by counsel for all three Reugh children in January 2017 stated the children’s intent to
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In re Estate of Reugh
pursue legal action to invalidate Mr. Reugh’s Trust, and threatened that the children
would seek an award of attorney fees and costs from INWCF if INWCF contested the
action. Id. at 34.
On February 27, 2017, Mr. Reugh’s three children filed a petition under
RCW 11.103.050 2 to contest the validity of Mr. Reugh’s Trust (the Trust Contest
Petition). 3 The children initially advanced two arguments. First, they claimed Mr.
Reugh’s Trust was invalid because Mr. Reugh was identified as both the settlor and the
trustee. Second, they argued the trust was invalid because Mr. Reugh had failed to fund
the Trust prior to his death. In this second argument they also contended article III of Mr.
Reugh’s Will, which purported to activate his Trust, was invalid. The children asked the
trial court to declare that both article III of Mr. Reugh’s Will and the entirety of his Trust
were invalid. Mr. Reugh’s estate, through the co-personal representatives, Ms. Reugh-
Kovalsky and Mr. Gill, later answered the Trust Contest Petition wherein the estate
admitted to nearly every allegation of fact and law.
2
RCW 11.103.050 concerns actions to contest the validity of a revocable living
trust.
3
On a stipulated motion of the parties, the trial court later consolidated the Trust
Contest Petition with the probate action.
5
Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
In November 2017, Innovia Foundation (Innovia) 4 filed a motion to remove
JoLynn Reugh-Kovalsky and Steve Gill as co-personal representatives of the estate,
and as cotrustees of Mr. Reugh’s Trust, for breaching their fiduciary duties. Reugh I,
10 Wn. App. 2d at 36. The trial court granted this motion and appointed Northwest
Trustee and Management Services, LLC (Northwest Trustee) as the successor personal
representative of Mr. Reugh’s estate and successor trustee of the Trust. Id. at 38-39.
The children, and separately Ms. Reugh-Kovalsky and Mr. Gill in their capacity as former
co-representatives and cotrustees, appealed the order to this court. Id. We affirmed the
trial court’s order. Id. at 70-71.
As that appeal was pending, Northwest Trustee amended the answer of the estate
to the Trust Contest Petition to generally deny the legal and factual allegations made by
the children and to raise affirmative defenses. The children subsequently sought leave to
amend their Trust Contest Petition (the Amended Trust Contest Petition). In July 2018,
Innovia and Northwest Trustee consented to the filing of the Amended Trust Contest
Petition. In the Amended Trust Contest Petition, the children no longer sought to
invalidate article III of Mr. Reugh’s Will. The children continued to claim Mr. Reugh’s
Trust should be ruled invalid, arguing:
4
INWCF changed its name to Innovia during the course of this case.
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
1. Mr. Culbertson exercised undue influence on Mr. Reugh during the
creation of the Trust, causing him to gift his residuary estate to
Innovia as opposed to the children;
2. Mr. Culbertson deceived Mr. Reugh into creating his Trust which,
contrary to his intent, gifted his residuary estate to Innovia;
3. Innovia conspired with Mr. Culbertson to defraud Mr. Reugh of his
residuary estate;
4. The trust documents executed by Mr. Reugh contained formal
defects and lacked a sufficient level of clarity;
5. The Trust merely named Innovia as a custodian of a gift, and
Innovia’s insistence it was the beneficiary of a gift created a conflict
of interest that frustrated the purpose of the Trust;
6. Mr. Reugh failed to fund his Trust during his lifetime; and
7. The terms of the Trust were contrary to Mr. Reugh’s intent.
The children also sought attorney fees and costs incurred during their defense of
Mr. Reugh’s estate from Innovia’s “predatory” actions. CP at 161.
Northwest Trustee answered the Amended Trust Contest Petition on behalf of the
estate, again generally denying the allegations made and raising affirmative defenses.
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
During the pendency of Reugh I, the children also filed nine motions 5 in various courts
and engaged in extensive discovery. The children’s actions caused Innovia and Northwest
Trustee to file motions for an order striking briefing, to strike a jury demand, and to strike
undisclosed expert witnesses.
In March 2019 both Innovia and Northwest Trustee moved for summary judgment.
Northwest Trustee argued it was entitled to summary judgment on the merits. Innovia
joined in the majority of Northwest Trustee’s summary judgment argument, but also filed
its own motion seeking dismissal on the basis that the children’s cause of action was a de
facto will contest, barred by a four-month statute of limitations. Northwest Trustee joined
in Innovia’s motion.
The trial court initially denied Innovia’s motion and reserved ruling on the
merits of Northwest Trustee’s motion pending the outcome of the appeal in Reugh I.
In June 2019, Innovia and Northwest Trustee moved for reconsideration of the summary
judgment ruling as to the statute of limitations issue. The motions for reconsideration
5
These included multiple motions to stay the litigation, a motion for recusal of the
trial judge, a motion for reconsideration of the trial court’s denial of the motion for
recusal, a motion seeking to have the case preassigned to another judge, a motion to have
this case consolidated with another case before another different judge, and a motion for
an order directing the case to mediation.
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
were eventually scheduled for oral argument on September 30. One week before the
scheduled hearing, the children filed a notice of mediation under RCW 11.96A.300(1)(b).
The trial court focused the September 30 hearing on the motions for
reconsideration. The court did not make any decisions on either reconsideration or
mediation. It instead struck the pending trial date of October 21 and took the matter under
advisement.
On October 15, the children moved in the trial court to order mediation. They
ultimately noted their motion for an in-person hearing on November 15. On November 8,
Northwest Trustee filed a written objection to the children’s motion to order mediation,
asking the court to rule on the motions for reconsideration prior to ordering any
mediation.
In written decision issued November 14, 2019, the trial court granted Innovia’s
motion for reconsideration. The court determined the children’s challenge to the Trust
was a de facto will contest and barred by the four-month statute of limitations. The court
then dismissed the children’s Amended Trust Contest Petition as time barred.
Both Innovia and Northwest Trustee requested attorney fees and costs under
RCW 11.96A.150. Innovia sought $102,781.00 in attorney fees and $10,939.98 in costs.
Northwest Trustee sought $152,177.15 in attorney fees and $4,971.98 in costs. These
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
figures represented all work performed by the parties’ attorneys on the case going back
to 2016, minus appellate fees and costs and fees and costs incurred in the trial court on
the motion to remove Ms. Reugh-Kovalsky and Mr. Gill as co-personal representatives of
Mr. Reugh’s estate and cotrustees of the Trust.
The trial court granted Innovia and Northwest Trustee’s requests for attorney fees
and costs. The court found the amounts sought to be reasonable under the circumstances,
but reduced the amount personally liable by the children by one half in light of their
familial relationship to Mr. Reugh. Ultimately, one half of the fees and costs awarded to
Innovia and Northwest Trustee were to be paid jointly and severally by the children, the
remainder was to be paid from Mr. Reugh’s Trust. 6 In its order granting fees and costs,
the court made the following findings of fact:
• The children “aggressively litigated” to invalidate Mr. Reugh’s
Trust. CP at 1522.
• The children filed motions in various courts with the intent of
stalling a final decision in the Amended Trust Contest Petition
during the pendency of Reugh I.
6
Northwest Trustee had already recouped the entirety of its attorney fees from
Mr. Reugh’s Trust, and the children were to reimburse the Trust for half of those
payments.
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
• The children’s motion for mediation was presumably motivated by a
desire to avoid the trial court’s ruling on Innovia and Northwest
Trustee’s motions for reconsideration.
• The children displayed hostility and antagonism toward Innovia,
as detailed in this court’s opinion in Reugh I.
• The children’s “efforts [were] to keep the remainder of [Mr.
Reugh’s] Trust . . . for themselves.” Id. at 1523.
• The children’s actions required Innovia and Northwest Trustee to
file their own motions before the court.
The children, and former co-representatives and cotrustees, separately appealed
the order granting reconsideration and dismissing the children’s Amended Trust Contest
Petition, and the subsequent order awarding attorney fees and costs to Innovia and
Northwest Trustee. Those appeals have been consolidated for review.
ANALYSIS
Right to mediation
The children argue the mediation procedures set forth in the Trust and Estate
Dispute Resolution Act (TEDRA), chapter 11.96A RCW, precluded the trial court
from acting on the motions for reconsideration after they sought mediation under
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
RCW 11.96A.300. This is a legal matter we review de novo. In re Estate of Rathbone,
190 Wn.2d 332, 338, 412 P.3d 1283 (2018).
TEDRA is a statutory scheme that allows for disputes over trusts and estates to be
resolved in a nonjudicial forum, such as mediation or arbitration. RCW 11.96A.010. The
arbitration and mediation provisions of TEDRA do not strip courts of their “full power
and authority” to administer and settle trusts and estate matters expeditiously in a manner
the court deems “right and proper.” RCW 11.96A.020(2). Furthermore, parties to a
TEDRA proceeding may move for relief on procedural matters or for summary judgment
“at any . . . time.” RCW 11.96A.100(9). By affording a means of alternative dispute
resolution, the legislature’s intent was to maximize efficiency “by providing any party the
right to proceed first with mediation and then arbitration before formal judicial
procedures may be utilized.” RCW 11.96A.270 (emphasis added).
A party wishing to invoke TEDRA’s mediation procedure must follow the notice
provisions set forth in RCW 11.96A.300. This statute contemplates different procedures
according to whether or not a “hearing” has been set. The statute does not define what it
means by “hearing.” If no hearing has been set, a party objecting to mediation must serve
and file a petition objecting to the mediation notice and note the petition for hearing no
later than 20 days after filing. At the hearing, the court “shall order that mediation
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In re Estate of Reugh
proceed except for good cause shown.” RCW 11.96A.300(2)(d). If a hearing has been set,
then there is no specific timeline for an objection to mediation. Instead, an objection may
be filed “by petition or orally at the hearing.” RCW 11.96A.300(3). Again, the statute
provides that the court “shall order that mediation proceed except for good cause
shown. . . . If the court determines that the matter should not be subject to mediation,
the court shall dispose of the matter by: (a) [d]eciding the matter at the hearing, (b)
requiring arbitration, or (c) directing other judicial proceedings.” Id.
Here, the children filed a notice of mediation under RCW 11.96A.300(1)(b); i.e.,
the provision applicable to cases where a hearing has been set. 7 This meant there were no
statutory deadlines for filing an objection. The court took up the issue of the mediation
request and the pending motions for reconsideration at an in-person hearing one week
after the filing of the notice of mediation. During the hearing, Innovia and Northwest
Trustee both urged the court to grant their motions for reconsideration. In so doing, they
implicitly objected to the court ordering mediation in lieu of reconsideration. After the
children subsequently filed a motion to order mediation and noted that motion for
hearing, Northwest Trustee filed a written objection to the motion to order mediation.
7
In their mediation notice, the children indicated that a “trial/hearing . . . is set
for October 21, 2019.” CP at 1117 (some capitalization omitted).
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
The written objection was filed before the court’s written decision on the matters taken
under advisement.
The trial court’s decision to rule on the reconsideration motions, rather than refer
the matter for mediation, was fully consistent with TEDRA. The children’s notice of
mediation did not strip the trial court of authority to act. The trial court never ordered
mediation as contemplated by RCW 11.96A.300(3). It retained full authority over the
case, including the discretion to decide whether good cause warranted denying the request
for mediation. The court justifiably decided to act on the motions for reconsideration,
instead of ordering mediation, given the dispositive nature of the issues before it.
The children’s position that the proceedings should have come to a halt once they
filed the mediation notice is contrary to the purposes of TEDRA. TEDRA’s stated goal is
to allow for the efficient resolution of disputes prior to litigation. Here, the parties were
engaged in extensive litigation prior to the children requesting mediation. It was only
when the proceedings were at the cusp of conclusion (either by dispositive motion or
trial) that the children invoked mediation. Allowing a party to use this type of procedural
maneuver, after protracted litigation has already taken place, to disrupt and delay
resolution of the case would flip the purposes of TEDRA on its head. The trial court’s
decision to act on the motions for reconsideration was proper.
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
Statute of limitations
The dispositive issue in this case is the statute of limitations. The children contend
the trial court should not have applied the four-month statute of limitations applicable
to will contests, RCW 11.24.010. Instead, they claim the court should have applied the
two-year statute of limitations applicable to actions to invalidate revocable living trusts,
RCW 11.103.050(1). Again our review is de novo. Silver v. Rudeen Mgmt. Co.,
197 Wn.2d 535, 542, 484 P.3d 1251 (2021).
While the children have styled their cause of action as a trust contest, this
characterization is not controlling on our review. Our case law holds that any
proceeding challenging the underlying validity of a will must be characterized as a will
contest for purposes of the statute of limitations. In re Estate of Finch, 172 Wn. App.
156, 162-63, 294 P.3d 1 (2012); In re Estates of Palmer, 146 Wn. App. 132, 137-38,
189 P.3d 230 (2008). Contrary to the children’s protestations, nothing in the wording
of RCW 11.103.050(1) requires otherwise. A litigant cannot subvert the strict statute of
limitations applicable to will contests by characterizing a will contest as a trust contest.
The thrust of the children’s claims in support of their cause of action for invalidity
in their Amended Trust Contest Petition is that Mr. Reugh’s attorney, Thomas Culbertson,
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Nos. 37255-3-III; 37290-1-III
In re Estate of Reugh
improperly induced Mr. Reugh to leave the residuary of his estate to Innovia. 8
As the children point out, Mr. Culbertson counseled Mr. Reugh on the trust documents
and prepared them for Mr. Reugh’s signature. However, the trust preparation did not
happen in isolation. The Trust was part and parcel to Mr. Reugh’s Will, which was also
prepared by Mr. Culbertson and signed at the same time. The Will references the Trust
and does little more than pour the majority of Mr. Reugh’s estate assets into the Trust.
If the children were to be correct as a factual matter that Mr. Culbertson exerted undue
influence to convince Mr. Reugh to execute the Trust, he necessarily must have also done
so with respect to the Will. To the extent the children challenge the validity of the Trust
based on undue influence by Mr. Culbertson, they are necessarily also challenging the
validity of the Will. Such a challenge to Mr. Reugh’s Trust cannot be separated from a
challenge to Mr. Reugh’s Will. Under the terms of our case law, the statute of limitations
applicable to will contests applies.
8
Claims 1 (undue influence), 2 (pattern of deception and fraud), 3 (conspiracy to
commit fraud), and 8 (trust contrary to intent) directly assert undue influence. Claims 4
(defects and lack of clarity) and 6 (Innovia as custodian, not owner or beneficiary) only
make sense as part of the undue influence claims. The Trust is easy to read and
understandable. Alleged defects in wording or with respect to Innovia’s beneficiary status
appear to turn on the allegation that Mr. Culbertson exerted undue influence in
convincing Mr. Reugh to designate Innovia as a trust beneficiary, contrary to Mr. Reugh’s
intent. To the extent the children’s allegation means something different, it is not
explained or adequately developed for appellate review.
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In re Estate of Reugh
To a lesser extent, the children also claim the Trust was invalid because it was not
funded or activated during Mr. Reugh’s lifetime. 9 The children’s position on this point
has been fluid. In the factual background presented in their Amended Trust Contest
Petition, the children assert that the Trust was not “operational” because it was never
funded by $100 during Mr. Reugh’s lifetime. CP at 150 (paragraph 2.62). On appeal, the
children argue the Trust was created during Mr. Reugh’s lifetime, but simply not funded.
Appellants’ Consol. Reply Br. at 4 (“[Mr. Reugh’s] revocable living trust was created by
its own language on January 4, 2011. It was simply never funded.”) (citations omitted).
As the children recognize, a pour-over provision in a will can fund a living trust. See
RCW 11.12.250; RCW 11.98.008. This is true even if a trust is previously unfunded.
RCW 11.12.250 (“The existence, size, or character of the corpus of the trust is immaterial
to the validity of the gift.”) (emphasis added). Thus, to the extent the Trust suffered from
funding flaws during Mr. Reugh’s lifetime, those flaws were remedied immediately upon
Mr. Reugh’s death, nearly two years before the children’s initial filing seeking to
invalidate the Trust. To the extent the children claim the Will’s pour-over provision was
insufficient to fund the Trust, this is again an attack on the Will, which is governed by the
four-month statute of limitations.
9
Claim 7.
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In re Estate of Reugh
The children did not initiate their cause of action until February 27, 2017.
This was well outside the four-month statute of limitations triggered by the admission
of Mr. Reugh’s Will to probate on March 27, 2015. The trial court properly dismissed
the petition based on the statute of limitations.
Attorney fees and costs
The children challenge the trial court’s award of attorney fees and costs under
TEDRA, which affords courts broad discretion in awarding costs, including attorney
fees. RCW 11.96A.150. There are no segregation or prevailing party requirements.
Instead, “[t]he court may order the costs, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, to be
paid in such amount and in such manner as the court determines to be equitable.”
RCW 11.96A.150(1). “[T]he court may consider any and all factors that it deems to be
relevant and appropriate, which factors may but need not include whether the litigation
benefits the estate or trust involved.” Id. We will not reverse a trial court’s attorney fee
award under TEDRA absent a manifest abuse of discretion. In re Estate of Black, 116
Wn. App. 476, 489, 66 P.3d 670 (2003).
The trial court here amply justified its fee and cost award. The court determined
the children engaged in aggressive litigation designed to enrich themselves. While
Innovia and Northwest Trustee could have moved to dismiss based on the statute of
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In re Estate of Reugh
limitations earlier in the proceedings, this circumstance does not render the trial court’s
decision unreasonable. The trial court cited numerous instances of the children engaging
in litigation tactics to stall the proceedings and unnecessarily raise costs. The court did
grant the children limited relief by ordering that one half of the attorney fee award come
from the Trust. This was not an abuse of discretion.
The children’s argument against fees and costs relies heavily on the case of Scott
Fetzer Company v. Weeks, 114 Wn.2d 109, 786 P.2d 265 (1990). Fetzer addressed the
propriety of a fee award under Washington’s long-arm statute, RCW 4.28.185(5). The
issue under the statute is whether a nonresident who has been haled into a Washington
court to defend an action can be awarded attorney fees. Fetzer determined that the fee
award should be narrowly limited to the fees incurred for a timely jurisdictional defense.
114 Wn.2d at 120. The narrow factors at play under the long-arm statute are much
different than the broad equitable considerations under TEDRA. Fetzer is inapposite.
APPELLATE ATTORNEY FEES AND COSTS
The parties all request fees and costs on appeal pursuant RCW 11.96A.150 and
RAP 18.1. Consistent with our prior opinion, Reugh I, 10 Wn. App. 2d at 69-70, we grant
the request for appellate attorney fees and costs made by Innovia and Northwest Trustee.
The issues raised on appeal by the children are not meritorious and do not benefit the
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In re Estate of Reugh
estate. Payment of the costs and fees shall be made by Mr. Reugh’s children jointly and
severally. Payment shall not be taken from trust or estate assets.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court and its award of attorney fees and costs. Innovia and
Northwest Trustee are awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs on appeal pursuant
to the terms of this opinion, subject to compliance with RAP 18.1(d).
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in
the Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
RCW 2.06.040.
_________________________________
Pennell, C.J.
WE CONCUR:
______________________________
Siddoway, J.
______________________________
Lawrence-Berrey, J.
20