Estate Planning · WA

Probate Litigation in Washington

Washington probate litigation handles disputes over wills, executor conduct, beneficiary rights, and estate administration — including will contests, breach of fiduciary duty, and accounting disputes.

Published May 9, 2026
## Probate litigation in Washington **Probate litigation** covers disputes that arise during estate administration: will contests, claims against fiduciaries, beneficiary disputes, accounting challenges, and family conflicts. Washington probate courts handle these matters with specialized procedures. ## Common probate disputes **Will contests:** - Lack of testamentary capacity - Undue influence - Fraud / forgery - Improper execution - Revocation issues - Multiple wills **Executor / administrator disputes:** - Breach of fiduciary duty - Self-dealing - Failure to act - Improper distribution - Excessive fees - Improper investments - Accounting disputes **Beneficiary disputes:** - Distribution challenges - Specific bequests - Class definitions - Conditions in wills - Survivor disputes - Lapse + abatement **Trust disputes:** - Trustee conduct - Beneficiary rights - Specific provisions interpretation - Modification / termination - Removal of trustees **Heir disputes:** - Intestate distribution - Pretermitted heirs - After-born / -adopted children - Specific family relationships - DNA + paternity issues **Creditor claims:** - Validity of debts - Priority of claims - Specific contested claims - Collection procedures **Property issues:** - Real estate ownership - Title questions - Joint property - Beneficiary deeds - Specific assets ## Will contest grounds (detailed) **1. Lack of testamentary capacity:** - Mental capacity at execution - Specific medical evidence - Witness testimony - "Sound mind" standard varies - Specific cognitive issues **Required:** - Understand nature of testamentary act - Understand nature of property - Understand natural objects of bounty - Coherent plan **Common evidence:** - Medical records (dementia, etc.) - Treating physicians - Specific medications - Family observations - Specific behaviors - Lucid intervals (if existed) **2. Undue influence:** - Replacement of testator's wishes - With influencer's wishes - Specific factors: - Confidential relationship - Active participation in execution - Unnatural disposition - Vulnerable testator - Inequality of bequests **Common scenarios:** - Caretaker influencing elderly testator - Family member isolating testator - Recent relationship pre-death - Specific changes from prior will - Unnatural disinheritance **3. Fraud:** - Misrepresentation - Forgery of signature - Substituted page - Concealment of material facts - Specific evidence required **4. Improper execution:** - Failure to follow formalities - Inadequate witnesses - Improper notarization (if required) - Specific state requirements - Holographic will issues **5. Revocation:** - Subsequent will revoked - Physical revocation - Implied revocation - Specific procedures - Multiple wills issue **6. Mistake:** - Execution under mistake of fact - Different document signed - Specific narrow grounds ## Procedure for will contests **Standing:** - Must be "interested party" - Beneficiary under prior will - Heir who would inherit - Specific definition varies - Cannot be stranger to estate **Filing deadlines:** - Often very tight (90 days - 1 year typical) - ${s.name} specific deadlines - Strict enforcement - Cannot extend usually **Typical process:** 1. Will offered for probate 2. Notice to interested parties 3. Will contest filed 4. Discovery + investigation 5. Settlement or trial 6. Appeal possible ## Burden of proof **Generally:** - Proponent shows valid execution - Contestant shows specific grounds - Specific to ${s.name}'s rules - Different burdens for different elements **Specific shifts:** - Confidential relationship + benefit may shift - Specific presumptions - Specific evidence requirements ## No-contest clauses ("in terrorem") **"If you contest, you lose":** - Common in wills + trusts - Forfeit any benefit if challenge - Specific enforceability varies - Some states limit (probable cause exception) - Strategic consideration **${s.name} treatment:** - Specific enforceability rules - Specific exceptions - Strategic implications ## Executor / administrator disputes **Common claims:** **Breach of fiduciary duty:** - Duty of loyalty - Duty of care - Duty to administer per terms - Duty to account - Duty to act prudently **Specific failures:** - Self-dealing - Personal use of estate funds - Excessive fees - Failure to invest prudently - Failure to file taxes - Failure to account - Specific misconduct **Removal:** - Court can remove fiduciary - Cause required - Specific procedures - Replacement appointment **Damages:** - Restoration of estate - Personal liability of fiduciary - Surcharge for losses - Specific remedies - Sometimes punitive ## Accounting challenges **Beneficiary rights:** - Right to accounting - Specific frequency - Detailed disclosure - ${s.name} specific procedures **Common challenges:** - Inadequate detail - Missing transactions - Improper expenses - Specific objections - Independent audit - Surcharge actions ## Trust disputes **Different from probate:** - Trust is private (not court-supervised typically) - Different procedures - Different remedies - Specific rules **Common trust litigation:** - Trust contest (similar to will contest) - Trustee removal - Trust modification / termination - Specific provisions interpretation - Distributions disputes - Accounting challenges ## Settlement vs trial **Most cases settle:** - Family relationships preserved - Avoid no-contest forfeiture - Privacy maintained - Costs controlled - Predictable outcome **Mediation often successful:** - Family-focused - Confidential - Creative solutions - Cost-effective - Often court-required **Trial considerations:** - Length + cost - Family relationships destroyed - Specific outcome risk - Public record - Specific to merit of claims ## Costs **Probate litigation expensive:** - Will contest: $25K-$200K+ - Complex disputes: $100K-$1M+ - Multiple parties = compounded - Hourly rates typical - Specific to complexity **Funding:** - Estate sometimes pays - Personal funds - Specific fee arrangements - Limited contingency (vs PI) - Specific to facts ## Strategic considerations **For contestants:** - Specific factual basis - Documentary evidence - Witness availability - Cost-benefit analysis - No-contest implications - Family dynamics - Settlement openness **For estate / fiduciary:** - Strong administration - Detailed records - Communication with beneficiaries - Specific responsiveness - Documentation of decisions - Independent advice ## Common mistakes - **Missing deadlines** (will contest particularly) - **Inadequate documentation** of issues - **Family alienation** without strategic basis - **Settlement rejection** for spite - **Specific procedural violations** - **Inadequate experts** (medical, financial) - **Witness availability** - **Cost overruns** without budget ## Recent trends **Increasing complexity:** - Aging population + wealth transfer - More dementia-related contests - Online wills + DIY documents - Multi-jurisdictional issues - Trust litigation increasing - Specific industry trends ## What you should do If facing probate litigation in Washington: hire experienced probate litigation attorney IMMEDIATELY — deadlines tight + procedures specific. Most Washington estate-planning attorneys handle litigation; some specialize. Cost varies widely. Mediation often resolves at fraction of trial cost. Family relationships at stake — strategic considerations beyond legal. --- *This guide is general information about Washington law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. Probate litigation is technical + time-sensitive. Talk to a licensed Washington probate litigation attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.