The personal representative of Wayne Colyer Fields's estate challenges an October 2015 superior court order providing for the closure of the estate. The order directed that certain property was to be distributed to Fields's children and that the personal representative was to receive the remainder of the estate as reimbursement for administrative expenses. The personal representative challenges the court's determination that he was not entitled to reimbursement for appellate attorney's fees. He also argues that the court erred in failing to include in the estate inventory a piece of property held in trust for the benefit of Fields's descendants. Because the trust containing the property does not belong to the estate, this argument is without merit. And because the personal representative is already entitled to the entire remaining value of the estate, he was not prejudiced by the court's failure to award him appellate attorney's fees.
This appeal is the most recent chapter of an extended effort to settle the estate of Wayne Colyer Fields. Fields executed his Last Will and Testament in 1980, making specific bequests to each of his four children, to his son-in-law, and to the Fairbanks North Star Borough Library. The will also contained a residuary clause bequeathing the remainder of Fields's estate to the Wayne Colyer Fields Trust. Fields appointed his son Charles as the estate's personal representative.
In 1987, before his death, Fields conveyed a piece of property in Washington to his four children; the property had been used by the family for recreational purposes for many years.
The court determined that Fields had conveyed the Washington property to his children with the intent to create an inter vivos trust that was never formalized.
Charles's three siblings (the siblings) appealed to this court, and we upheld the superior court's decision.
The current appeal pertains to the proceedings arising out of Charles's petition to close the estate.
Charles submitted his proposed final inventory of the estate in January 2013, stating that he was "relying on the Inventory and Appraisement previously filed with the Court on August 30, 1991." This inventory did not include the Washington property. In his reply to the siblings' objections to his filing, Charles again indicated that he had provided a full and accurate accounting of the estate and that "the Washington [p]roperty and the Trust itself are not properly a part of the remaining matters to be resolved in the Probate Court." He further stated that "[t]he matters and business of the Trust are not at issue in the probate court."
A hearing to close the estate was held in November 2014. In his opening statement before the standing master Charles reiterated that the superior court, in its order requiring a final petition for settlement and distribution of the estate, had been
Charles testified at the hearing about the fees and expenses he sought to have reimbursed from the estate. He stated that he had expended more than $100,000 defending the estate in legal proceedings. At the close of the hearing the standing master asked the parties to submit their lists of issues for the court to resolve. In this list Charles only mentioned the Washington property in connection with an unrelated issue.
In January 2015 Charles submitted records of his attorney's fees and costs. The standing master noted that the appellate fees had not been separated from the trial fees, and she directed Charles to resubmit his fee and cost accounting "with respect to proceedings in front of the trial court only." Charles resubmitted his accounting in April 2015 but did not clarify whether he had removed the appellate costs and fees as ordered. The standing master calculated that Charles had requested $99,038.94 in attorney's fees and $6,166.93 in costs. The siblings objected to approximately $79,500 of the requested fees and costs, leaving approximately $20,000 in uncontested attorney's fees.
The master found that, in light of the complex and long-term litigation surrounding the estate, "the amount of attorney's fees and costs is reasonable for the most part." However, she found that certain actions had not been taken in good faith and therefore did not warrant attorney's fee reimbursement. She also recommended that attorney's fees incurred on appeal not be awarded because the superior court could not determine whether those fees were reasonable and necessary.
Relying on the estate inventory submitted by Charles, the standing master found that the estate had a value of $93,074. Factoring in the income from rents and property sold from the estate, the statutory exempt personal property allowance, specific devises, the $81,300 in valid administrative expenses, and the $20,000 in uncontested attorney's fees, the standing master concluded that either $9,763.65 or $17,563.65 remained in the estate.
After the standing master issued her findings, Charles's estate attorney filed a stipulation for limited entry of appearance to allow Charles's trust attorney to make objections to the standing master's findings. The superior court denied the stipulation, stating: "The [Washington property] trust is not a party to the probate case. The trust is free to move to intervene in the probate case and have the matter addressed in an orderly manner, but it cannot circumvent that deliberative process under the guise of a limited appearance." The trust did not move to intervene.
In October 2015 the superior court adopted the standing master's findings and ordered the estate to be closed. Charles now appeals the court's failure to include the Washington property in the value of the estate and the court's denial of reimbursement for attorney's fees incurred on appeal in prior proceedings.
Because Charles did not raise the issue of the Washington property below, we review the court's decision not to include the property in the estate for plain error.
Charles's claim for appellate attorney's fees is appropriately reviewed for abuse of discretion.
We apply our independent judgment to questions of statutory interpretation; "we interpret the statute according to reason, practicality, and common sense, considering the meaning of the statute's language, its legislative history, and its purpose."
Charles argues that the probate court erred in excluding the value of the trust containing the Washington property from its accounting of the estate. However, he did not raise that issue in his statement of points on appeal, and we ordinarily "will not consider issues that are not included in the appellant's statement of points on appeal."
Charles maintained a consistent position throughout the proceedings that the Washington property belonged to the trust and was therefore not subject to the probate proceedings. In his February 2013 reply to the siblings' objections to his closing statement, Charles argued that the reimbursement of the trust was to be decided in a separate trust case, rather than in the estate case. In his July 2014 opposition to the siblings' motion to compel production of accounting records and tax information for the trust, Charles asserted that "[t]he Fields Family Trust is not a part of this estate and the Court has already held as such" and that the trust "is not even a party to this estate action." And he did not include the Washington property in the estate inventory he submitted to the standing master.
The siblings argue that Charles's consistent representations amount to intentional waiver of any argument that the Washington property should be included in the estate, such that he cannot prevail on a claim of clear error.
Charles argues that the exclusion of the Washington property from the estate resulted from a misapplication of the term "estate" as defined by Alaska's Uniform Probate Code. He asserts that the court in 2005 "ordered the [Washington] property returned to decedent's estate pursuant to a constructive trust order." Charles appears to conclude that, because the order imposing the constructive trust and directing him to establish the express trust for the Washington property was originally entered in the estate case, the Washington property remains part of the estate.
But Charles misunderstands the operation and effect of the constructive trust in Fields I. A constructive trust is not a trust in the ordinary sense of the word; it is an equitable remedy intended to convey property to "a claimant [who] has a better right to certain property than the person who has legal title to it."
Alaska Statute 13.16.435 entitles an estate's personal representative to reasonable attorney's fees for "defend[ing] . . . any proceeding in good faith." Charles argues that the court erroneously excluded appellate work from AS 13.16.435's definition of "proceedings" when it declined to reimburse him for the attorney's fees he incurred on appeal to this court.
In Enders v. Parker we explained that "[t]he language of AS 13.16.435 is unambiguous. It states that a personal representative or nominated personal representative who has prosecuted or defended a probate action in good faith is entitled to recover all necessary expenses and disbursements, regardless of whether he or she prevailed in the action."
Nonetheless, any abuse of discretion in declining to reimburse Charles for appellate attorney's fees was harmless. We will disregard any defect in a trial court's decision that did not prejudice the parties:
Charles has not been harmed by the court's denial of appellate attorney's fees.
Because the superior court properly excluded the Washington property from the estate inventory, and because any abuse of discretion in denying reimbursement for appellate attorney's fees did not prejudice Charles, we AFFIRM the superior court's decision.
Id.
Charles appears to view AS 13.16.410(16) and (22) as alternate bases for the recovery of appellate attorney's fees. But those two provisions describe actions considered properly within the authority of an estate's personal representative; they do not provide for the reimbursement of expenses. The court properly analyzed Charles's claims according to AS 13.16.435, which is the provision authorizing reimbursement for actions taken pursuant to a personal representative's authority to defend the estate.