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Nonprobate > Dealing with Creditor's Claims Presented > Allowing a Creditor's Claim

 

Washington Nonprobate

 

 

Allowing a Creditor's Claim

 

 

1.  What Does It Mean to "Allow" a Creditor's Claim?

 

To "allow" a Creditor's Claim means that you have determined that the claimant's claim:

What to "allow" a Creditor's Claim does not mean:

Following allowance, you must:

Now, let's move from "what does 'allowing' mean" to "how do you allow."

 

 

2.  Allowing Claims

 

If you have determined to allow such a Claim:

If you are not allowing the full amount of the Creditor's Claim, go to Rejecting a Creditor's Claim and follow Steps 2 through 4 of those instructions.

 

Timetable:  Do all the above by the later to occur of:

 

3.  "Holding" Creditor's Claims (ie, Taking No Action about Them)

 

By "holding" a Claim, you are effectively putting the issue back in the claimant's lap --- The claimant is forced to put further energy into pursuing it.  Specifically, the claimant can notify you in writing that he or she will petition the Court to have the Claim allowed.  If you then continue neither to allow nor reject the claim nor notify the claimant of your allowance or rejection within 20 days of your receipt of the claimant's notice, the claimant can petition the Court for a hearing to determine whether the Claim should be allowed or rejected (in whole or part).  RCW 11.42.080(2)

 

Caution: If the Court substantially allows the Claim, you (meaning the nonprobate estate and its beneficiaries) not only will become liable for the amount allowed by the Court but also may become liable for the claimant's reasonable attorney's fees to obtain the Court's allowance.  RCW 11.42.080(2)  Furthermore, if you had no reasonable basis for not allowing the Claim (eg, you had a personal grudge against the claimant and refused to allow the Claim out of spite), the nonprobate estate's Beneficiaries may be able to obtain a Court Order shifting the claimant's reasonable attorney's fees from the nonprobate estate to you personally.

 

 

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