In re Estate of Petelle ( 2020 )


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  •             FILE                                                                THIS OPINION WAS FILED
    FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON
    IN CLERK’S OFFICE                                                              MAY 14, 2020
    SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON
    MAY 14, 2020
    SUSAN L. CARLSON
    SUPREME COURT CLERK
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    In the Matter of the Estate of        )
    )     No. 97463-2
    MICHAEL A. PETELLE,                   )
    )
    Deceased.       )
    )
    GLORIA PETELLE,                       )     En Banc
    )
    Respondent,     )
    )
    v.                             )
    )
    MICHELLE ERSFELD-PETELLE,             )
    )
    Petitioner.     )
    )     Filed May 14, 2020
    JOHNSON, J.—This case involves an issue of contract interpretation,
    determining whether a surviving spouse agreed in a separation contract to give up
    her right to intestate succession under RCW 11.04.015. Petitioner Michelle
    Ersfeld-Petelle seeks reversal of a published Court of Appeals opinion reversing
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    the trial court’s denial of a motion to terminate her right to intestate succession in
    the estate of her late husband, Michael Petelle. We affirm the Court of Appeals and
    conclude that petitioner expressly waived her right to intestate succession under the
    terms of the contract.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    After six years of marriage, Michael Petelle filed a petition to dissolve his
    marriage to petitioner, having separated on January 27, 2017. The parties, both
    represented by counsel, executed a separation contract and CR 2A agreement on
    February 14, 2017.1 The contract divided assets and liabilities, contained an
    integration clause, and required all modifications to be in writing.
    In the contract, the parties agreed “to make a complete and final settlement
    of all their marital and property rights and obligations on the following terms and
    conditions.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 43 (emphasis added). The contract also
    provides that the “contract shall be final and binding upon the execution of both
    parties, whether or not a legal separation or decree of dissolution is obtained[,]”
    and, by its terms, the contract remained valid and enforceable against the estate of
    1
    CR 2A states that “[n]o agreement or consent between parties or attorneys in respect to
    the proceedings in a cause, the purport of which is disputed, will be regarded by the court unless
    the same shall have been made and assented to in open court on the record, or entered in the
    minutes, or unless the evidence thereof shall be in writing and subscribed by the attorneys
    denying the same.”
    2
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    either party if either party died after the execution of the contract. CP at 43-44, 48.
    Though the contract contains a “Full Satisfaction of All Claims” section, the right
    to intestate succession is not mentioned. CP at 46.
    Petitioner claims that she and Michael, the decedent, were contemplating
    reconciliation, citing an e-mail the decedent sent to his attorney requesting an
    extension to the “closing date” of the divorce. CP at 17. Before any reconciliation
    or dissolution occurred, the decedent died intestate on May 1, 2017.
    Petitioner filed, and was granted, a petition for letters of administration,
    appointment of an administrator, an order of solvency, and nonintervention powers
    for probate of the decedent’s estate. Petitioner did not disclose the existence of the
    dissolution action or the separation contract and did not give notice to any of the
    decedent’s heirs of her intent to petition for nonintervention powers pursuant to
    RCW 11.68.041(2).
    Respondent Gloria Petelle, the decedent’s mother, filed in the trial court a
    motion contesting the grant of powers. The trial court revoked petitioner’s
    nonintervention powers but allowed petitioner to continue to serve as personal
    representative and required the posting of a $100,000 bond. Respondent petitioned
    the trial court to terminate petitioner’s right to intestate succession, which the trial
    court denied. Respondent appealed, and the Court of Appeals reversed, holding
    that petitioner waived her right to intestate succession under the language in the
    3
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    separation contract. 2 In re Estate of Petelle, 8 Wn. App. 2d 714, 721, 
    440 P.3d 1026
    , review granted, 
    194 Wn.2d 1001
     (2019).
    ANALYSIS
    Absent disputed material facts, the construction or legal effect of a contract
    is reviewed de novo. Yeats v. Estate of Yeats, 
    90 Wn.2d 201
    , 204, 
    580 P.2d 617
    (1978). When interpreting contracts, we attempt “to determine the parties’ intent
    by focusing on the objective manifestations of the agreement, rather than on the
    unexpressed subjective intent of the parties,” imputing an intention corresponding
    to the reasonable meaning of the words used. Hearst Commc’ns, Inc. v. Seattle
    Times Co., 
    154 Wn.2d 493
    , 503, 
    115 P.3d 262
     (2005). The dispute in this case
    centers on whether the separation agreement waived statutory intestate rights.
    Generally, waiver may be either express or implied; an express waiver is
    governed by its own terms, while implied waiver may be found based on conduct
    conclusively establishing intent to waive a right. Reynolds v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
    
    176 Wash. 36
    , 45, 
    28 P.2d 310
     (1934). Both express and implied waiver are
    asserted in this case.
    The doctrine of waiver ordinarily applies to all rights or privileges, and the
    party alleged to have waived a right must generally have actual or constructive
    2
    Professor Karen E. Boxx filed an amicus curiae brief in support of the petition for
    review.
    4
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    knowledge of the existence of the right. Bowman v. Webster, 
    44 Wn.2d 667
    , 669,
    
    269 P.2d 960
     (1954). In this case, the effect of the separation contract is
    determined based on the provisions in the agreement and the agreement as a whole.
    The statutory right at issue in this case is created under chapter 11.04 RCW,
    which controls intestate distribution and intestate rights. Under RCW
    11.04.015(1)(c), a surviving spouse is entitled to receive three-quarters of a
    decedent’s estate when the decedent is survived by no children but is survived by a
    parent or sibling. The parties seem to agree that this statutory directive can be
    waived and dispute whether the terms of the separation agreement establish waiver
    and how waiver can be accomplished.
    Although none of our cases address this exact situation, we have previously
    decided cases touching on whether similar spousal statutory rights were waived by
    contract or conduct. The most analogous case cited by respondent and relied on by
    the Court of Appeals is In re Estate of Brown, 
    28 Wn.2d 436
    , 440, 
    183 P.2d 768
    (1947). In Brown, we found that the language in a separation contract waived a
    surviving spouse’s statutorily created homestead right. There, a husband and wife
    had entered into a separation contract. Before the parties were divorced, the
    husband died, leaving behind a will that did not mention his wife. This court found
    that the wife expressly waived her homestead rights based on the following three
    provisions in the separation contract: (1) the agreement indicated it was to be a
    5
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    final and conclusive agreement between the parties regardless of whether either
    party died before a decree of divorce was entered, (2) the agreement divided the
    assets free of all claims of the other party, and (3) the agreement was intended to
    be binding on each spouse’s “heirs and assigns forever.” Brown, 
    28 Wn.2d at 441
    .
    We reasoned that the language indicating the agreement was final and conclusive
    even if a party died before a divorce was obtained showed an intent to waive and
    further evidenced contemplation of any rights that might accrue upon death, such
    as the homestead right at issue. We also noted the postcontract conduct of the
    parties further supported this interpretation, with the parties having sold their
    separate interest in real estate to a third party after signing the separation contract.
    Brown, 
    28 Wn.2d at 440-41
    . Similar reasoning applies here. Much like the
    statutory homestead right at issue in Brown, the right to intestate succession arises
    from statute.
    In the present case, the separation contract contains more explicit language
    regarding the resolution of all marital rights than that in Brown. Here, the
    agreement provides, “[T]he parties hereby stipulate and agree to make a complete
    and final settlement of all their marital and property rights and obligations on the
    following terms and conditions.” CP at 43 (emphasis added). The Court of Appeals
    reasoned that “[t]his language is, arguably, sufficient to constitute waiver of all
    marital and property rights flowing from the marital relationship, including the
    6
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    right to intestate succession.” Petelle, 8 Wn. App. 2d at 721. We agree. This
    provision is an express declaration to resolve “all marital and property rights,”
    leaving no ambiguity that some or any marital or property rights remain
    unresolved. Our conclusion is further supported by a general purpose of separation
    contracts—to divide assets and liabilities in preparation for divorce.
    Petitioner argues that this provision does not effectively waive all marital
    and property rights because the settlement is on the following terms and conditions
    and the right to intestate succession is not specifically mentioned. Petitioner also
    cites to Estate of Lundy v. Lundy, 
    187 Wn. App. 948
    , 959-60, 
    352 P.3d 209
     (2015)
    for the rule that “[d]isclaiming an ownership interest [is] not the same as
    disclaiming future rights as a beneficiary.” But petitioner’s argument based on this
    rule is premised on the assertion that the right to intestate succession is not
    included in the words “all their marital and property rights.” Respondent, on the
    other hand, asserts that “all” means all, including the right to intestate succession.
    Again, the analysis applied in Brown aids us in resolving this issue. In
    Brown, the homestead right was not specifically enumerated in the separation
    agreement, but we found waiver based on the broad language indicating the
    agreement was intended to be “final and conclusive” regardless of death and also
    based on the broad language to release all claims with respect to property. Brown,
    7
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    
    28 Wn.2d at 441
    . Here, the contractual language similarly uses all-encompassing
    references to marital and property rights.
    The fact that the right to intestate succession was not specifically mentioned
    in the contract does not limit the clear and explicit language providing the
    agreement is a complete and final settlement of all marital and property rights. The
    rights of a surviving spouse under RCW 11.04.015 flow from the marital status.
    Because the right to intestate succession is a result of the marital status, the right to
    intestate succession is similar to a marital or property right and we find the right is
    encompassed in this language.
    Petitioner asserts that the right to intestate succession cannot be waived but
    can only be disclaimed, analogizing to In re Estate of Baird, 
    131 Wn.2d 514
    , 
    933 P.2d 1031
     (1997). Baird, however, is distinguishable because it did not address
    interests that arise as a result of one’s marital status. Baird involved an issue of
    statutory interpretation regarding disclaimers of interest by a beneficiary under
    chapter 11.86 RCW. There, we held that a beneficiary could not anticipatorily
    disclaim a future expected intestate interest because such an interest is created at
    the time of the decedent’s death and did not yet exist when the disclaimer was
    executed. While the intestate interest at issue here is created at the time of death,
    the right flows as a result of the successor spouse’s marital status, a status that
    exists before the decedent’s death. We also note that disclaimer statute did not
    8
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    replace the doctrine of waiver but created a process by which beneficiaries could
    disclaim an interest. This conclusion is supported by the use of the word “may” in
    RCW 11.86.021 and, more pointedly, by the statute providing that disclaimer is
    barred when “[t]he beneficiary has waived the right to disclaim in writing” under
    RCW 11.86.051(1)(d).
    Ordinarily, statutory interests can be waived. Though we did not label the
    homestead right as a marital or property right in Brown, we viewed the ability to
    waive this right as an obvious proposition. 
    28 Wn.2d at 439
     (“That the right of
    homestead may be waived or relinquished, needs no citation of sustaining
    authority.”). The statutory right to intestate succession is substantially similar to
    the statutory homestead right, and petitioner has not established any basis why the
    general rule that statutory rights can be waived should not be applied in this case.
    Bowman, 
    44 Wn.2d at 669
     (“The doctrine of waiver ordinarily applies to all rights
    or privileges to which a person is legally entitled.”).
    Further, the agreement here provides some constructive knowledge from its
    language. Similar to Brown, this contract contains a provision regarding the
    enforceability of the contract after the death of either party. This shows that the
    agreement contemplates and makes provision for the possibility of death and
    establishes some understanding of rights and obligations that could accrue upon
    death. The contract contains no limiting language as to these rights.
    9
    In re Estate of Petelle, No. 97463-2
    Finally, petitioner asserts the right to intestate succession must be
    specifically mentioned in a contract to be effectively waived, relying in part on the
    reasoning in In re Estate of Boston, 
    80 Wn.2d 70
    , 75, 
    491 P.2d 1033
     (1971). There,
    we addressed whether a husband orally waived his statutory homestead right and
    stated that “[a]bsent the most clear and explicit language confirming a voluntary
    relinquishment of the award as a known right, a waiver will not be found.” Boston,
    
    80 Wn.2d at 75
    . This reasoning in Boston was tailored to the analysis of the
    adequacy of an oral waiver and cannot be read to stand for a proposition that a
    written waiver must specifically list all rights waived. This is made somewhat
    evident by the sentence immediately following the quoted passage: “While we can
    conceive of a possible set of circumstances in which a waiver could be found
    without an express written document, such circumstances are not present here.”
    Boston, 
    80 Wn.2d at 75
    . Because this rule must be read in the context of the facts
    in that case, we decline to take this language out of context and apply it to express
    written waivers.
    10
    In re Estate of Petelle
    No. 97463-2
    MADSEN, J. (dissenting)—Michael Petelle and Michelle Ersfeld-Petelle decided
    to separate in January 2017. In February 2017, they signed a separation contract and CR
    2A agreement, which settled the couple’s marital and property rights and divided their
    assets into separate property in anticipation of a divorce. In May 2017, Michael died
    without a will while he and Michelle were still married. 1 Under the intestate inheritance
    statute, RCW 11.04.015(1)(c), Michelle was Michael’s surviving spouse and entitled to
    take three-quarters of his net separate estate.
    The majority concludes otherwise. Though it acknowledges the separation
    contract at issue says nothing about statutory inheritance rights, the majority nevertheless
    holds that Michelle knowingly waived these rights based on general, boilerplate language
    in the agreement: that the parties settled “all their marital and property rights and
    obligations on the following terms and conditions.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 43. But the
    terms and conditions of this agreement concern only the separation and future dissolution
    of Michael and Michelle’s marriage. These rights do not encompass testamentary rights,
    let alone rights that are not explicitly spelled out in the contract. In short, the majority
    1
    I refer to Michael and Michelle by their first names for clarity. No disrespect is intended.
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    finds an express waiver of spousal inheritance rights where none exists. I disagree and
    respectfully dissent.
    ANALYSIS
    Separation agreements are used to “promote the amicable settlement of disputes”
    arising from separation and dissolution of marriage or domestic partnership. RCW
    26.09.070(1). Parties may use these contracts to provide maintenance, dispose of
    property, create a parenting plan, and release each spouse from other obligations. 
    Id.
     If
    the parties elect to terminate the contract, they may do so without formality. RCW
    26.09.070(8).
    Interpretation of separation agreements, like other written contracts, is a question
    of law we review de novo. Berg v. Hudesman, 
    115 Wn.2d 657
    , 668, 
    801 P.2d 222
    (1990); see also In re Estate of Brown, 
    28 Wn.2d 436
    , 440, 
    183 P.2d 768
     (1947) (citing
    In re Estate of Garrity, 
    22 Wn.2d 391
    , 398, 
    156 P.2d 217
     (1945)). When parties to a
    separation contract dispute its meaning, courts must ascertain and effectuate the parties’
    intent at the time they formed the agreement. In re Marriage of Boisen, 
    87 Wn. App. 912
    , 920, 
    943 P.2d 682
     (1997). Courts accomplish this by “‘viewing the contract as a
    whole, the subject matter and objective of the contract, all the circumstances surrounding
    the making of the contract, the subsequent acts and conduct of the parties to the contract,
    and the reasonableness of respective interpretations advocated by the parties.’” Berg, 
    115 Wn.2d at 667
     (quoting Stender v. Twin City Foods, Inc., 
    82 Wn.2d 250
    , 254, 
    510 P.2d 221
     (1973)).
    2
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    We determine the parties’ intent “by focusing on the objective manifestations of
    the agreement, rather than on the unexpressed subjective intent of the parties.” Hearst
    Commc’ns, Inc. v. Seattle Times Co., 
    154 Wn.2d 493
    , 503, 
    115 P.3d 262
     (2005). The
    majority notes but does not engage with this directive, choosing instead to analyze
    whether Michelle waived her rights as a surviving spouse by analogizing to cases
    concerning the waiver of homestead rights. Majority at 4-7 (citing Brown, 
    28 Wn.2d at 440
    ); Estate of Lundy v. Lundy, 
    187 Wn. App. 948
    , 959-60, 
    352 P.3d 209
     (2015)). The
    majority puts the cart before the horse.
    We need look no further than the plain terms of the separation contract to discover
    the intent of the parties. In the contract, Michael and Michelle agreed “to make a
    complete and final settlement of all their marital and property rights and obligations on
    the following terms and conditions.” CP at 43. The terms and conditions of the
    agreement relate to Michael and Michelle’s separation. E.g., id. at 43 (the parties entered
    into the CR 2A agreement “in order to promote an amicable settlement of disputes
    attendant to their separation”) (emphasis added), 44 (terminating community property).
    They did not contract to legally separate or to dissolve their marriage. Id. There is no
    mention of what would occur should either party die without a will. The objective of the
    contract is to resolve the parties’ property and marital rights in order to separate and
    possibly divorce—nothing more. See Berg, 
    115 Wn.2d at 667
    . This was Michael and
    Michelle’s intent at the time they formed the agreement. See Boisen, 87 Wn. App. at
    920.
    3
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    Instead of interpreting the contract in its proper context, the majority focuses on a
    single term in one provision to hold the parties intended to resolve more than the rights
    implicated in separation and divorce. The majority declares that “all” means “all,” and
    the provision settling all marital and property rights constitutes an express waiver of
    Michelle’s rights as a surviving spouse. Majority at 7. I cannot agree.
    In the context of the CR 2A agreement, “all” means every right and obligation
    arising from the separation and dissolution of Michael and Michelle’s marriage. It is
    limited to resolving those rights only. The term does not encompass more than the
    parties’ intended it to and, therefore, cannot extend to testamentary decisions on
    inheritance. To hold otherwise, as the majority does, invests more into the word than did
    Michael and Michelle. In re Estate of Bachmeier, 
    147 Wn.2d 60
    , 68, 
    52 P.3d 22
     (2002)
    (“[C]ourts function to enforce contracts as drafted by the parties and not to change the
    obligations of the contract the parties saw fit to make.”).
    In my view, the parties made their intent known. Michael and Michelle sought to
    accomplish the general purpose of separation contracts—dividing assets and liabilities in
    order to resolve the immediacy of their separation and possible divorce. They did not
    intend for the agreement to extend beyond those events. They understood that their
    divorce may not occur, in which case had a will been made, it would have had to state
    that Michelle was Michael’s wife and that he specifically intended not to include her in
    the will. In re Estate of Lindsay, 
    91 Wn. App. 944
    , 949, 
    957 P.2d 818
     (1998) (“A testator
    has the right to intentionally disinherit a surviving spouse.”); Strait v. Kennedy, 
    103 Wn.
                                4
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    App. 626, 634, 
    13 P.3d 671
     (2000) (“[A] simple will or codicil to an earlier will stating
    that the testator intends to leave nothing to the spouse is sufficient [to disinherit a
    spouse].”). Specific language disinheriting a spouse is required in a will, and I see no
    reason why it should not be required in a separation contract. “‘[W]here a person has the
    right to die intestate . . . he is charged with full knowledge of who will succeed to his
    property if he dies intestate [and] the assumption exists that . . . he is satisfied with the
    will the law of the state made for him.’” Pitzer v. Union Bank of Cal., 
    141 Wn.2d 539
    ,
    550, 
    9 P.3d 805
     (2000) (alterations in original) (quoting Wilson v. Jones, 
    281 S.C. 230
    ,
    233, 
    314 S.E.2d 341
     (1984)) (discussing Hesthagen v. Harby, 
    78 Wn.2d 934
    , 
    481 P.2d 438
     (1971)). Because Michael died intestate while married to Michelle, she was his
    surviving spouse and entitled to take under RCW 11.04.015(1)(c).
    I further disagree with the majority that the contractual language is broad enough
    to demonstrate Michelle knew she was waiving intestate inheritance rights. See majority
    at 8. The majority states that the rights of a surviving spouse flow from marital status,
    and so they are encompassed in the separation contract’s statement resolving all marital
    rights. 
    Id.
     But “[w]aiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known right.” Wagner v.
    Wagner, 
    95 Wn.2d 94
    , 102, 
    621 P.2d 1279
     (1980) (emphasis added). As noted above,
    there is no indication in the terms and conditions of the separation agreement indicating it
    extended to testamentary decisions, and I can find no authority from this court or from
    the legislature characterizing intestate inheritance rights as marital or property rights.
    5
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    Moreover, the rights of a surviving spouse include more than just dividing assets
    for dissolution of marriage. They include rights under the wrongful death statute, ch.
    4.20 RCW; rights to Social Security survivor benefits; rights under the Employee
    Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. 18; and the right to control the disposition of
    remains under RCW 68.50.160. Amicus Curiae Mem. in Supp. of Review at 6. Parties
    in separation and divorce proceedings are often unrepresented or have minimal access to
    legal assistance. Id. at 4-5. We should not assume, as the majority does, that pro se
    litigants in the past have comprehended the full legal consequence of agreeing to resolve
    all marital rights, especially considering the complexity of those rights. This result is
    even more concerning because the statute governing separation contracts, RCW
    26.09.070(1), does not mention settling questions of inheritance. Just as we should not
    assume pro se litigants will recognize that intestate inheritance rights are encompassed in
    the terms marital and property rights when no prior authority has endorsed this holding,
    we should not assume these litigants intended to do something the statute does not
    mention.
    I am also unconvinced that parties may waive their intestate inheritance rights in
    separation contracts. Michelle contends that an inheritance right in intestacy must be
    disclaimed, while Gloria Petelle (Michael’s mother) argues that only a waiver is needed.
    The case law we have on separation contracts is very limited and only in the context of
    homestead rights. See Brown, 
    28 Wn.2d at 439
     (“That the right of homestead may be
    waived or relinquished, needs no citation of sustaining authority.”); Lindsay, 
    91 Wn.
                                       6
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    App. at 950 (“But a surviving spouse may waive the right to a homestead allowance by
    express writing or conduct that renounces or abandons the right.”).
    RCW 11.86.011(5) defines a “disclaimer” as “any writing which declines, refuses,
    renounces, or disclaims any interest that would otherwise be taken by a beneficiary.”
    Statutory disclaimers have their roots in the common law principle that a beneficiary
    under a will has the right to disclaim or renounce a testamentary gift. In re Estate of
    Baird, 
    131 Wn.2d 514
    , 518, 
    933 P.2d 1031
     (1997) (citing MARK REUTLINGER &
    WILLIAM C. OLTMAN, WASHINGTON LAW OF WILLS AND INTESTATE SUCCESSION 163-67
    (1985)). At common law, an interest passing via intestacy could not be disclaimed, but in
    Washington, this distinction was abrogated when the law of disclaimer was codified. 
    Id.
    RCW 11.86.011(6)(a) explains that an “interest” that may be disclaimed includes “the
    whole of any property, real or personal, legal or equitable, or any fractional part . . . [and]
    includes, but is not limited to, an interest created . . . [b]y intestate succession.”
    An intestate interest is created only upon the death of the creator of the interest,
    i.e., the death of the intestate. Baird, 
    131 Wn.2d at
    520 (citing In re Estate of
    Wiltermood, 
    78 Wn.2d 238
    , 240, 
    472 P.2d 536
     (1970); RCW 11.04.250, .290). In Baird,
    we held that at the time a son executed an anticipatory disclaimer of an interest, he did
    not yet have an “interest” in his mother’s estate to disclaim. Id. at 520-21.
    Here, Michelle could not waive (or disclaim) her right to inherit as a surviving
    spouse because it did not exist. See id. An intestate interest is created only upon the
    death of the intestate, and Michael passed away after the agreement was signed. The
    7
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    majority’s conclusion thus conflicts with Baird’s holding on the creation of an intestate
    interest.
    The majority waves away this conflict. It relies on statements from Brown “‘[t]hat
    the right of homestead may be waived or relinquished, needs no citation of sustaining
    authority’” and from Bowman that the doctrine of waiver ordinarily applies to all legal
    rights. Majority at 9 (quoting Brown, 
    28 Wn.2d at 439
    ). The statutory homestead right
    differs substantially from the right to intestate inheritance. See Suppl. Br. of Pet’r at 8-9
    (detailing the differences between homestead and intestate inheritance rights). The
    legislature repealed the homestead right in 1997, renaming it an award of family support.
    Lindsay, 91 Wn. App. at 950 n.2. To seek family support, a surviving spouse must
    petition the court for an award; it does not come about automatically when a spouse dies.
    RCW 11.54.010(1). Intestate inheritance, however, occurs upon the death of a spouse
    and no affirmative action is required. RCW 11.04.250. Homestead is not equivalent to
    intestate inheritance.
    In my view, cases concerning the right to a homestead allowance are not
    controlling and we should instead decide this case consistently with Baird—the right of a
    surviving spouse to inherit from the intestate estate of the other spouse cannot be waived
    or disclaimed prior to the creation of the interest, i.e., the death of the spouse, and must
    comport with the statutory requirements of chapter 11.86 RCW. See, e.g., RCW
    11.86.031(1) (the disclaimer must be in writing, signed by the disclaimant, identify the
    interest to be disclaimed, and state the disclaimer and the extent thereof).
    8
    No. 97463-2
    Madsen, J., dissenting
    In any event, we should give effect to the plain language of Michael and
    Michelle’s separation agreement—dividing assets and property solely for the purposes of
    separation and dissolution. Testamentary decisions on inheritance were not expressly
    mentioned nor were they contemplated by the parties as demonstrated the terms and
    conditions of their contract. See Hearst Commc’ns, 
    154 Wn.2d at 503
     (We determine the
    parties’ intent “by focusing on the objective manifestations of the agreement.”). Because
    I would hold that Michelle is a surviving spouse and RCW 11.04.015(1)(c) governs the
    distribution of Michael’s estate, I respectfully dissent.
    ______________________________________
    9