FILED JUNE 27, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE
1383 FAIR STREET, LLC, a Washington ) No. 39836-6-III Limited Liability Company, ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) MISTY STEINER, a single person, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant, ) ) JOHN DOE, a single person, and all other ) unauthorized occupants. ) ) Defendants. )
PENNELL, J. — Misty Steiner appeals from a judgment holding her liable for
unlawful detainer of a mobile home lot and an order granting a writ of restitution in favor
of 1383 Fair Street, LLC (Fair Street). Because Fair Street failed to allege proper grounds
for an unlawful detainer action against Ms. Steiner, we reverse.
FACTS
In April 2023, Fair Street served Misty Steiner with a notice to quit and vacate a
mobile home lot she occupied in Clarkston, Washington. Fair Street, the owner of the lot,
cited RCW 59.12.030(6), which makes trespassers liable for unlawful detainer if they fail
to vacate after three days’ notice. Fair Street warned in its notice that a failure to vacate
could result in the filing of a lawsuit against Ms. Steiner, and alleged: No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
[Y]ou are occupying the mobile home lot after the tenant of record, Elida Denny, vacated the leasehold premises. The tenant of record, Elida Denny, informed management staff that she moved out of the home and allowed you to take occupancy on or about March, 2023. Your occupancy is without the permission or consent of the owner of the mobile home lot, or color of title thereto. In case of your failure to vacate the subject premises at the time and date set forth above, you shall be deemed in Unlawful Detainer of the premises.
Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 9.
Ms. Steiner failed to vacate and Fair Street initiated an action for unlawful
detainer. In its verified complaint, Fair Street claimed that it had leased the mobile home
lot to Elida Denny, but that the “lease agreement has been misplaced and/or lost.” Id. at 3;
see id. at 20.
According to Fair Street, Ms. Denny “informed management staff that she
permanently vacated the premises” and “had allowed” Ms. Steiner “to occupy the
property.” Id. at 3; see id. at 20. Fair Street complained Ms. Steiner did not have its
“permission” to live on the lot. Id. at 4; see id. at 20. Fair Street stated it “believed”
that Ms. Steiner was endangering the premises by committing waste, that she had failed
to pay utilities, and that she owed Fair Street unpaid rent, but never cited any statute
under which these would be appropriate bases for eviction. Id. at 4-5. Nor did Fair Street
claim that Ms. Denny’s lease prohibited her from allowing Ms. Steiner to live on the lot.
2 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Fair Street sought damages and attorney fees, as well as a writ of restitution restoring it
to possession of the lot. Alongside its complaint, Fair Street filed a declaration from its
authorized agent repeating the allegations and appending a copy of the notice to vacate.
Ms. Steiner answered Fair Street’s complaint. The answer claimed Ms. Denny “did
not forfeit [her] leasehold, has continued to pay rent, and intends to sell the mobile home
to [Ms. Steiner],” whom Ms. Denny had allowed to occupy the lot. Id. at 29. Ms. Steiner
argued, “There is nothing prohibiting Elida Denny from subletting the property to Misty
Steiner.” Id. at 31. Ms. Steiner sought dismissal of Fair Street’s complaint, an award of
attorney fees, and an order limiting dissemination (OLD) of the unlawful detainer action. 1
Alongside her answer, Ms. Steiner filed a sworn declaration from Elida Denny.
Ms. Denny explained she had leased the lot from Fair Street and that her mobile home
“is now and always has been parked on” the lot. Id. at 33. Ms. Denny went on:
. . . I informed the property manager that I would be moving out and that I would be leasing the mobile home and trailer space to my brother and his girlfriend, Misty Steiner. The property manager . . . did not object and there is nothing prohibiting me from subletting . . . . My brother and Misty . . . are no longer dating and Misty is the only person renting the trailer and subletting the lot space at this time. As the lessor of the lot space, Ms. Steiner has my permission to live . . . in the mobile home.
1 RCW 59.20.310 allows mobile home lot tenants to move for an OLD, which prevents tenant screening companies from automatically disseminating an unlawful detainer action to prospective landlords.
3 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Id.
The superior court held a show cause hearing. Ms. Steiner’s counsel began the
hearing by stating, “[T]here is an initial issue that we need to resolve, which is failure
to join a necessary third party,” namely, Elida Denny. Rep. of Proc. (RP) (Jun. 27, 2023)
at 3. Fair Street’s counsel retorted: “I do not believe that it is necessary . . . to have pled
Ms. Denny as this is not an eviction action against her, and we are not intending to evict
Ms. Denny. Instead, we are trying to evict Ms. Steiner.” Id. at 3-4. Ms. Steiner’s attorney
responded by pointing out that Fair Street had alleged, contrary to Ms. Denny’s
declaration, that Ms. Denny had abandoned her leasehold, and if the court credited that
allegation, it would “significantly impact [Ms. Denny’s] interest.” Id. at 4. Moreover,
Ms. Steiner’s counsel noted that, to side with Fair Street, the court would have to
invalidate Ms. Denny’s purported sublease with Ms. Steiner, another significant interest.
The superior court began by stating, “I agree with [Ms. Steiner’s counsel]. I think
we need Elida Denny as part of this action.” Id. at 6. Fair Street’s counsel interrupted,
however, by arguing,
. . . [W]e are not saying that Ms. Denny does not have a right to reside on the lot. . . . [S]he still has a right to occupy that land pursuant to the lease agreement with my client. The issue is that we have a third party who . . . doesn’t have any contract with my client . . . .
4 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Ms. Denny can do what she wants with the home . . . ; however, there is no unilateral right to allow somebody to go around the landlord, to allow somebody to reside on the property when they haven’t been properly screened. . . . [W]e are not trying to evict Ms. Denny from the property. Her home can stay there. She can still be a tenant. It is that this third party who does not have any relationship with my client is allowed to reside upon their land . . . . . . . My client has not approved that Ms. Steiner is allowed to reside on the lot, and that is why this case has moved forward . . . .
Id. at 6-7. The court sought clarification, asking, “So you’re not seeking to actually
get the mobile home out, just Ms. Steiner?” Id. at 7. Fair Street’s attorney responded
affirmatively:
. . . [W]e are not trying to evict Ms. Denny. . . . She still has a right to have her home on the lot. Our issue is that Ms. Steiner is residing upon my client’s land, which there is no contract for. She has not been given authority to reside there . . . . . . . Ms. Denny is still going to be a tenant regardless of the results of this action, so I do not think it is necessary to add her [as a necessary party].
Id.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
FILED JUNE 27, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE
1383 FAIR STREET, LLC, a Washington ) No. 39836-6-III Limited Liability Company, ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) MISTY STEINER, a single person, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant, ) ) JOHN DOE, a single person, and all other ) unauthorized occupants. ) ) Defendants. )
PENNELL, J. — Misty Steiner appeals from a judgment holding her liable for
unlawful detainer of a mobile home lot and an order granting a writ of restitution in favor
of 1383 Fair Street, LLC (Fair Street). Because Fair Street failed to allege proper grounds
for an unlawful detainer action against Ms. Steiner, we reverse.
FACTS
In April 2023, Fair Street served Misty Steiner with a notice to quit and vacate a
mobile home lot she occupied in Clarkston, Washington. Fair Street, the owner of the lot,
cited RCW 59.12.030(6), which makes trespassers liable for unlawful detainer if they fail
to vacate after three days’ notice. Fair Street warned in its notice that a failure to vacate
could result in the filing of a lawsuit against Ms. Steiner, and alleged: No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
[Y]ou are occupying the mobile home lot after the tenant of record, Elida Denny, vacated the leasehold premises. The tenant of record, Elida Denny, informed management staff that she moved out of the home and allowed you to take occupancy on or about March, 2023. Your occupancy is without the permission or consent of the owner of the mobile home lot, or color of title thereto. In case of your failure to vacate the subject premises at the time and date set forth above, you shall be deemed in Unlawful Detainer of the premises.
Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 9.
Ms. Steiner failed to vacate and Fair Street initiated an action for unlawful
detainer. In its verified complaint, Fair Street claimed that it had leased the mobile home
lot to Elida Denny, but that the “lease agreement has been misplaced and/or lost.” Id. at 3;
see id. at 20.
According to Fair Street, Ms. Denny “informed management staff that she
permanently vacated the premises” and “had allowed” Ms. Steiner “to occupy the
property.” Id. at 3; see id. at 20. Fair Street complained Ms. Steiner did not have its
“permission” to live on the lot. Id. at 4; see id. at 20. Fair Street stated it “believed”
that Ms. Steiner was endangering the premises by committing waste, that she had failed
to pay utilities, and that she owed Fair Street unpaid rent, but never cited any statute
under which these would be appropriate bases for eviction. Id. at 4-5. Nor did Fair Street
claim that Ms. Denny’s lease prohibited her from allowing Ms. Steiner to live on the lot.
2 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Fair Street sought damages and attorney fees, as well as a writ of restitution restoring it
to possession of the lot. Alongside its complaint, Fair Street filed a declaration from its
authorized agent repeating the allegations and appending a copy of the notice to vacate.
Ms. Steiner answered Fair Street’s complaint. The answer claimed Ms. Denny “did
not forfeit [her] leasehold, has continued to pay rent, and intends to sell the mobile home
to [Ms. Steiner],” whom Ms. Denny had allowed to occupy the lot. Id. at 29. Ms. Steiner
argued, “There is nothing prohibiting Elida Denny from subletting the property to Misty
Steiner.” Id. at 31. Ms. Steiner sought dismissal of Fair Street’s complaint, an award of
attorney fees, and an order limiting dissemination (OLD) of the unlawful detainer action. 1
Alongside her answer, Ms. Steiner filed a sworn declaration from Elida Denny.
Ms. Denny explained she had leased the lot from Fair Street and that her mobile home
“is now and always has been parked on” the lot. Id. at 33. Ms. Denny went on:
. . . I informed the property manager that I would be moving out and that I would be leasing the mobile home and trailer space to my brother and his girlfriend, Misty Steiner. The property manager . . . did not object and there is nothing prohibiting me from subletting . . . . My brother and Misty . . . are no longer dating and Misty is the only person renting the trailer and subletting the lot space at this time. As the lessor of the lot space, Ms. Steiner has my permission to live . . . in the mobile home.
1 RCW 59.20.310 allows mobile home lot tenants to move for an OLD, which prevents tenant screening companies from automatically disseminating an unlawful detainer action to prospective landlords.
3 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Id.
The superior court held a show cause hearing. Ms. Steiner’s counsel began the
hearing by stating, “[T]here is an initial issue that we need to resolve, which is failure
to join a necessary third party,” namely, Elida Denny. Rep. of Proc. (RP) (Jun. 27, 2023)
at 3. Fair Street’s counsel retorted: “I do not believe that it is necessary . . . to have pled
Ms. Denny as this is not an eviction action against her, and we are not intending to evict
Ms. Denny. Instead, we are trying to evict Ms. Steiner.” Id. at 3-4. Ms. Steiner’s attorney
responded by pointing out that Fair Street had alleged, contrary to Ms. Denny’s
declaration, that Ms. Denny had abandoned her leasehold, and if the court credited that
allegation, it would “significantly impact [Ms. Denny’s] interest.” Id. at 4. Moreover,
Ms. Steiner’s counsel noted that, to side with Fair Street, the court would have to
invalidate Ms. Denny’s purported sublease with Ms. Steiner, another significant interest.
The superior court began by stating, “I agree with [Ms. Steiner’s counsel]. I think
we need Elida Denny as part of this action.” Id. at 6. Fair Street’s counsel interrupted,
however, by arguing,
. . . [W]e are not saying that Ms. Denny does not have a right to reside on the lot. . . . [S]he still has a right to occupy that land pursuant to the lease agreement with my client. The issue is that we have a third party who . . . doesn’t have any contract with my client . . . .
4 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Ms. Denny can do what she wants with the home . . . ; however, there is no unilateral right to allow somebody to go around the landlord, to allow somebody to reside on the property when they haven’t been properly screened. . . . [W]e are not trying to evict Ms. Denny from the property. Her home can stay there. She can still be a tenant. It is that this third party who does not have any relationship with my client is allowed to reside upon their land . . . . . . . My client has not approved that Ms. Steiner is allowed to reside on the lot, and that is why this case has moved forward . . . .
Id. at 6-7. The court sought clarification, asking, “So you’re not seeking to actually
get the mobile home out, just Ms. Steiner?” Id. at 7. Fair Street’s attorney responded
affirmatively:
. . . [W]e are not trying to evict Ms. Denny. . . . She still has a right to have her home on the lot. Our issue is that Ms. Steiner is residing upon my client’s land, which there is no contract for. She has not been given authority to reside there . . . . . . . Ms. Denny is still going to be a tenant regardless of the results of this action, so I do not think it is necessary to add her [as a necessary party].
Id. at 8-9.
Ms. Steiner’s counsel responded:
So it sounds like [Fair Street’s] argument is that they’re willing to admit that Ms. Denny has a valid leasehold . . . but that she does not have the right to sublet that lot to Ms. Steiner . . . . [W]hat oftentimes happens in these cases is there is a lease that would prohibit subletting property . . . . [The right to sublet] is a right that you can contract away. We do not have any contracts . . . in this case that would prohibit Ms. Denny from subletting the lot to Ms. Steiner, which she has done.
5 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Id. at 9-10.
Fair Street’s attorney responded, arguing “[T]here is not just a unilateral right to
sublet,” and pointing the court to former RCW 59.20.073 (2019), which lays out
procedures a mobile home lot tenant must follow when they seek to assign their rental
agreement and sell their mobile home. 2 Id. at 10. The statute guarantees landlords the
ability to screen would-be assignees “on the same basis that the landlord approves or
disapproves of any new tenant.” Former RCW 59.20.073(5). Counsel conceded that an
assignment and a sublease are not the same thing, but argued the statute should
nevertheless apply because they “are fairly similar.” RP (Jun. 27, 2023) at 10. And Fair
Street’s counsel noted that in Ms. Steiner’s answer, she had claimed Ms. Denny “‘intends
to sell’” the mobile home to her. Id. at 11 (quoting CP at 29). Therefore, counsel argued,
the purported sublease is actually an assignment, and “they are trying to get around . . .
[former RCW] 59.20.073.” Id.
Fair Street’s counsel elaborated:
Screening a tenant . . . is the baseline standard for allowing someone to live on property. We do not live in the Wild West. You can’t just go around the law . . . . [I]f they follow the correct procedure in order to assign the lease and are approved to reside there, that’s fine, she can reside there; however, that has not happened at this point, and so, therefore, she does not
An assignment and a sublease are not synonymous. See Willenbrock v. Latulippe, 2
125 Wash. 168, 172, 215 P. 330 (1923).
6 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
have a right . . . to reside on [the lot] regardless of what Ms. Denny does because Ms. Denny has not followed the correct procedure to do so, and neither has Ms. Steiner. At the same time, we are not evicting Ms. Denny for doing so. We are just saying that Ms. Steiner cannot reside on the property until that necessary condition precedent to becoming an occupant of land has occurred.
Id. at 11-12. The court immediately responded, “I agree with you, and based on that
statutory authority . . . I’m going to issue the writ [of restitution].” Id. at 12.
Ms. Steiner’s attorney protested, pointing out that former RCW 59.20.073 applies
to assignments, a situation where the original tenant “no longer has any duty to the
landlord. They are walking away.” Id. at 13. By contrast, here, if Mr. Steiner was only
subleasing the property as she claimed, Ms. Denny “still holds that lease. She still has
privity of contract with the landlord. So she is still responsible for what occurs on the lot.”
Id. Counsel added that the superior court “does not have the authority to extinguish”
the purported sublease between Ms. Denny and Ms. Steiner, given that Fair Street had
produced no written lease agreement curtailing Ms. Denny’s right to sublet. Id. at 14.
Counsel reminded the court that landlords of mobile home lots are “absolutely” required
to have written lease agreements. Id. at 13; see RCW 59.20.060(1). The court asked,
“So under what set of facts would the landlord have any control over their property?”
7 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
RP (Jun. 27, 2023) at 14. Ms. Steiner’s counsel responded: “[T]he proper way to do that
would be to have . . . a written lease” forbidding subletting. Id. at 15.
The court answered: “[N]obody’s filed any contract with the court. So we have an
argument that privity of contract is between Ms. Denny and the landlord, and a random
third party, Ms. Steiner, is in there . . . . I’m going to grant the request [for a writ of
restitution].” Id. at 15-16.
Ms. Steiner’s counsel sought clarification, asking if the court was restoring
Ms. Denny or Fair Street to possession. The court responded: “[Ms. Denny]’s the one
that is the owner of the trailer . . . and [Fair Street] indicates that they’re not trying to
get her out.” Id. at 16. Ms. Steiner’s counsel then asked, “[I]s the court also finding that
Ms. Denny . . . may not have other people living in her trailer . . . ?” Id. The court
explained: “[Ms. Denny is] to follow the correct process if she’s going to be trying to
sublet her property out, she needs to follow [former RCW 59.20.073].” Id. The court
reasoned that “[Fair Street] . . . is correct in [its] analogy” that former RCW 59.20.073
should apply equally to subleases as it does to assignments. Id. at 17.
Ms. Steiner’s counsel sought further clarification:
[MS. STEINER’S COUNSEL]: [W]hat is the Court’s finding as to what Ms. Denny may or may not do with her leasehold? [FAIR STREET’S COUNSEL]: I don’t believe there’s been a finding made as to that, as Ms. Denny is not a party. . . .
8 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
[MS. STEINER’S COUNSEL]: [W]e’re just restoring possession to Ms. Denny, and Ms. Denny is going to turn around and say, “Ms. Steiner can stay there.” THE COURT: Well, I’ve issued my ruling. I don’t think it’s confusing. I’ve made it clear. [Fair Street’s counsel], please send over the order and the writ, and we will be in recess. [FAIR STREET’S COUNSEL]: Thank you, Your Honor. Is this the final resolution of this case, or will further proceedings be necessary? THE COURT: I would think that would be the final resolution of this case, if she’s leaving the property. [FAIR STREET’S COUNSEL]: I agree. I just wanted to clarify. [MS. STEINER’S COUNSEL]: Well, . . . is [Ms. Steiner] being trespassed from the property? Because Ms. Denny— THE COURT: The request is to issue a writ, and I’m granting that request. .... [MS. STEINER’S COUNSEL]: The problem is what Ms. Denny’s rights are. If Ms. Denny has the right to— THE COURT: Ms. Denny is not part of this action. [MS. STEINER’S COUNSEL]: —sublet. THE COURT: This action is to get Ms. Steiner off the property, so I’m granting that request. If there’s something that comes up with Ms. Denny, I assume there will be another lawsuit. [FAIR STREET’S COUNSEL]: Thank you, Your Honor. THE COURT: I don’t know why this is confusing. I don’t think this is confusing, so I’ve made my ruling.
Id. at 17-19.
The superior court subsequently entered written orders granting Fair Street’s
request for a writ of restitution, and additionally rendered a final judgment. The court
found that Ms. Denny had leased the lot “by instrument in writing,” but that “the
aforementioned lease agreement has been misplaced and/or lost.” CP at 37. The court
9 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
further found that Ms. Denny had “permanently vacated” the lot and Ms. Steiner was now
living there without Fair Street’s consent or color of title. Id. at 37, 42. The court ordered
that Ms. Denny was not a necessary party, that Ms. Steiner was liable for unlawful
detainer under RCW 59.12.030(6), and that Fair Street was entitled to an award of $652
for attorney fees and costs. The court authorized the Asotin County Sheriff to enter the
premises and forcibly remove Ms. Steiner from the lot.
Ms. Steiner timely appeals.
ANALYSIS
“An unlawful detainer action is a limited statutory proceeding to resolve the right
to possession between the landlord and the tenant.” 4105 1st Ave. S. Invs., LLC v. Green
Depot WA Pac. Coast, LLC, 179 Wn. App. 777, 785, 321 P.3d 254 (2014). A landlord
who succeeds in an unlawful detainer action may obtain a writ of restitution restoring
their right of possession. See RCW 59.18.370 (providing that a plaintiff-landlord may
seek “a writ of restitution . . . restoring to the plaintiff possession of the property”);
see also RCW 59.20.040 (providing that RCW 59.18.370 ordinarily applies to
tenancies of mobile home lots). Rentals of mobile home lots are governed by the
Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act (MHLTA), chapter 59.20 RCW.
10 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
Ms. Steiner argues that Fair Street failed to articulate a proper basis for unlawful
detainer under the MHLTA. This is a legal issue, reviewed de novo. See Brewer v. Hill,
25 Wn. App. 2d 844, 854, 525 P.3d 987 (2023) (reviewing de novo “the question of
whether [plaintiff] had the authority to evict [defendant]” because it turns on the
interpretation of statutes).
We start our analysis by clarifying the nature of Ms. Steiner’s tenancy. Ms. Steiner
did not have a landlord-tenant relationship with Fair Street. Her relationship was with
Ms. Denny who, in turn, had a landlord-tenant relationship with Fair Street. There was
evidence in the record that Ms. Denny intended to sell her mobile home to Ms. Steiner.
But at the time of the instant proceedings, no sale had taken place. Fair Street recognized
that Ms. Denny retained an interest in the lot. In the absence of evidence that Ms. Denny
“transfer[red] . . . her whole interest in the lease without retaining any reversionary
interest,” Ms. Denny had not assigned her lease to Ms. Steiner. See OTR v. Flakey Jake’s,
Inc., 112 Wn.2d 243, 247, 770 P.2d 629 (1989). Instead, Ms. Denny created a sublease.
See McDuffie v. Noonan, 176 Wash. 436, 439, 29 P.2d 684 (1934) (explaining that a
tenant who retains an interest in a transferred leasehold creates a sublease). Fair Street
did not dispute that Ms. Steiner was a subtenant.
11 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
In Washington, tenants may sublet in the absence of a lease provision forbidding
subleases. See Burns v. Dufresne, 67 Wash. 158, 161, 121 P. 46 (1912) (holding tenant’s
lease did not require landlord’s consent for a sublease even where lease required
landlord’s consent for an assignment). Here, there is no evidence Fair Street ever
prohibited Ms. Denny from subleasing her property to a subtenant. Absent any
prohibition, Ms. Steiner’s arrangement with Ms. Denny would be perfectly legal
and therefore could not form the basis of an unlawful detainer action.
Even if the sublease here was illegal, Fair Street’s remedy would be against
Ms. Denny, not Ms. Steiner. See Flakey Jake’s, Inc., 112 Wn.2d at 249 (explaining that
a tenant who enters into a sublease becomes the subtenant’s sublandlord, but nevertheless
remains the landlord’s tenant). An illegal sublease may provide a basis for an unlawful
detainer action against the original tenant. See former RCW 59.20.080(1)(h) (2019)
(authorizing eviction of a mobile home lot tenant for failure to comply with material lease
provisions). But it does not permit, as Fair Street sought here, an action aimed exclusively
at ousting the subtenant while allowing the tenant to remain. After all, the purpose of an
unlawful detainer action is to restore a landlord to possession of the property. Munden v.
Hazelrigg, 105 Wn.2d 39, 45, 711 P.2d 295 (1985). If a landlord does not seek restoration
12 No. 39836-6-III 1383 Fair Street, LLC v. Steiner
for themselves, but instead merely wishes to prohibit possession by a subtenant,
the unlawful detainer process does not apply. 3
Fair Street failed to allege a statutory basis for holding Ms. Steiner liable for
unlawful detainer. See former RCW 59.20.080 (setting forth an exclusive list of
permissible bases for eviction of a mobile home lot tenant). Given this circumstance,
the request for a writ of restitution should have been denied and the complaint dismissed.
CONCLUSION
The judgment in favor of Fair Street is reversed. This matter is remanded for entry
of an order of dismissal.
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in
the Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
RCW 2.06.040.
_________________________________ Pennell, J.
WE CONCUR:
______________________________ _________________________________ Fearing, J. Cooney, J
3 Of course, a landlord may proactively prohibit subleases by including such a prohibition in its written lease agreements. See former RCW 59.20.060(1) (2022) (requiring that mobile home lot tenancies must be based on written rental agreements).