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Trial will not begin Sept. 29, as scheduled, in a wrongful death suit brought against the Washington state Department of Social and Health Services by Susan Powell's parents in connection with the deaths of Charlie and Braden Powell.

The trial has been continued, according to a Wednesday Facebook post by Ann Bremner, an attorney for Chuck and Judy Cox, who are the boys' maternal grandparents.

In August, an attorney for the state argued that the case should be thrown out before trial, saying Chuck and Judy Cox's claims were without merit, according to The News Tribune in Tacoma, Wash.

But Pierce County Superior Court Judge Jerry Costello agreed with attorneys for the Puyallup couple that the case should go to a jury.

"The Cox family will have their day in court," Costello said in denying the state's motion for summary judgment.

The Coxes contend in their lawsuit that state social workers did not do enough to keep the boys safe from their father, Josh Powell, the husband of missing Utahn Susan Cox Powell.

Josh Powell, 35, killed the boys and himself at his Graham-area rental house on Feb. 5, 2012, during what was supposed to be a supervised visit with his sons.

The Coxes sued DSHS in April 2013, alleging that state social workers and their superiors were negligent in their handling of court-ordered supervised visits between Josh Powell and his sons, who were 7 and 5.

Josh Powell was being investigated at the time in the disappearance of his wife, 28-year-old Susan Cox Powell, from their home in West Valley City in December 2009. Susan Powell remains missing and is presumed dead. The Coxes are Susan Powell's parents.

Assistant attorney general Peter Helmberger argued in August that state social workers did nothing wrong in their implementation and supervision of visitations between Powell and his sons, according to The News Tribune.

What's more, their role was not to second-guess the judge who ordered the visits or the psychologist who approved them, Helmberger said. They were charged with making the visits happen, and they did so, he argued.

Trying to hold them responsible for Josh Powell's homicidal actions does not comport with the law, Helmberger said.

But Cheryl Snow, one of the attorney's representing the Coxes, argued that the state had a duty to protect the boys from their father, who clearly was dangerous, according to The News Tribune.

"They had an utter failure to implement the policies they were supposed to," Snow told Costello. "They failed to carry out their duty in a reasonable way."

Costello did not rule on the merits of either argument. He simply decided the questions should be put to a jury, according to The News Tribune.