Arthur Skinner, Res/cross-app V. Incity Properties Holdings Inc, App/cross-res

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 16, 2025
Docket86151-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Arthur Skinner, Res/cross-app V. Incity Properties Holdings Inc, App/cross-res (Arthur Skinner, Res/cross-app V. Incity Properties Holdings Inc, App/cross-res) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur Skinner, Res/cross-app V. Incity Properties Holdings Inc, App/cross-res, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

ARTHUR SKINNER III, No. 86151-4-I Respondent/Cross Appellant, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION INCITY PROPERTIES HOLDINGS, INC.; and COLUMBIA BUSINESS PARTNERS BUSINESS PARK, LLC,

Appellants/Cross Respondents.

BIRK, J. — We are asked to consider, among other things, the relief

available to a tenant of a residential lease who has proved that Columbia Partners

Business Park LLC, and its agent, InCity Properties Holdings Inc. (collectively

“landlords”), committed forcible entry and forcible detainer, unlawfully

dispossessing him from his apartment.

According to the landlords, Arthur Skinner III, was arrested in his apartment

on criminal charges, purportedly involving possession of an incendiary device,

whose elements were never supported by sufficient evidence to the extent of this

court’s record. Witness accounts state that the arrest was disruptive to the

apartment community and the neighborhood, seemingly because police and fire

departments feared a potential incendiary conflagration. Skinner was held in jail

for 10 days following his arrest, and the unsupported charges against him were

eventually dismissed. While Skinner was in jail, his landlords executed a notice No. 86151-4-I/2

which purported to terminate Skinner’s tenancy. When Skinner attempted to return

home after his release from jail, his landlords locked him out, and some weeks

later entered his apartment and seized his belongings. Skinner remains locked

out, despite winning a judgment in superior court concluding the landlords engaged

in an illegal self-help eviction in the absence of an authorizing court order—an act

that has been illegal in Washington since 1890. See Laws of 1889-90, ch. V, §2.

The landlords originally justified their action based on a theory of terminating

Skinner’s tenancy for illegal behavior, a justification long since abandoned. In

pretrial proceedings, the landlords interposed their centerpiece legal counter-

move: more than six months after dispossessing Skinner, they re-let his apartment

to a new tenant never joined in this action, a fact they claim requires the court to

deny relief to Skinner. The landlords principally justified their actions at trial on the

theory that Skinner had abandoned his apartment, disputing factually whether he

had returned and sought to re-enter the apartment, a theory on which the superior

court found the landlords’ witnesses all not credible. And for the first time in this

court, the landlords suggest the theory that Skinner’s rent arrearage bars redress

(and would thus mean any tenant in arrears might be subjected to self-help

evictions without the ability to seek redress). Wash. Ct. of Appeals oral arg.,

Skinner v. InCity Props. Holdings, Inc., No. 86151-4-I (Mar. 6, 2025), at 1 min., 7

sec., https://www.tvw.org/watch/?clientID=9375922947&eventID=2025031228&

startStreamAt=69.

We affirm the superior court’s judgment that Skinner is entitled to

possession of the apartment, reasonable attorney fees and costs, and a protective

2 No. 86151-4-I/3

order barring the landlords from disposing of his illegally seized belongings.

Skinner was entitled to actual damages, but we affirm the superior court’s

conclusion that he proved none. We modify the superior court’s judgment to the

extent that relief alternative to possession—here, allowing the landlords to

optionally provide a substantially similar unit and requiring the landlords to pay

Skinner fair rental value during any period of noncompliance from the date of the

judgment—may be ordered only under the court’s contempt power and requires

the court to first find willful noncompliance. We deny Skinner’s cross appeal for

double damages. And we award Skinner, as the prevailing party, his reasonable

attorney fees and costs on appeal.

I

On January 27, 2021, Arthur Skinner entered into a lease agreement with

the landlords for a premises located at 1050 James Street, Unit 401, Seattle, WA

98104. That lease expired on January 26, 2022, but Skinner continued to reside

in Unit 401 and pay rent. Skinner fell behind in his rent, but after a governmental

rental assistance payment, he was current on his rent through July 2022. Skinner

did not make subsequent rental payments.

On October 29, 2022, at a gas station near his apartment building, Skinner

placed a bottle, he said containing fish sauce, with a gym sock in it on his ex-boss’s

car. This “stupid little prank” purportedly gave some, including law enforcement,

the impression that the bottle was a Molotov cocktail. Skinner returned home from

the gas station and shortly thereafter police arrived to arrest him. Police slid an

arrest warrant under his door, Skinner refused entry, and police kicked in the door

3 No. 86151-4-I/4

and arrested him. The incident caused commotion at the apartment building, with

“multiple police officers and cars and . . . fire trucks, ambulances, [and] people

everywhere.”

Skinner spent 10 days in jail and was released on November 8, 2022. Two

hours before his release, he was served with a “three day notice to vacate” his

apartment. (Capitalization and boldface omitted.) The notice stated that Skinner’s

conduct on October 29, 2022, had “endangered the entire neighborhood,” and

“good cause” existed to terminate his tenancy for “unlawful activity.”

Upon release, Skinner walked from the jail to his apartment building.

Skinner was without his identification, keys, wallet, and phone. Unable to enter

the building, he used the building’s call box to contact the building manager who,

he testified, received his call, looked at him through the window, rejected his call,

and left on an elevator. Skinner approached a ground floor tenant whom he asked

for help to enter the building. The tenant refused to help, and instead reported him

to building management, who called the police. In the following weeks, Skinner

made other unsuccessful attempts to contact building management.

On November 21, 2022, the landlords posted a 48 hour “notice of

abandonment” on Skinner’s apartment door. (Capitalization and boldface

omitted.) The notice was signed by Karis Scott, as “agent” of the landlord, who

identified her address as that of “InCity Properties.” (Capitalization omitted.) The

landlords entered Unit 401. The landlords found Skinner’s belongings still in the

unit, removed them, and placed them into storage. They continued to store

Skinner’s car on site. The landlords charged Skinner’s account for legal fees,

4 No. 86151-4-I/5

repair, restoration, cleaning, dumping, and removal after they took possession of

Unit 401.

In early December 2022, Skinner submitted a complaint with the Seattle

Department of Construction and Inspections claiming he had been locked out of

his apartment. Through the department, Skinner first learned of the notice of

abandonment. Shortly after, Skinner and the landlords began to communicate by

phone and text message, though the subject matter of these communications was

generally the landlords encouraging Skinner to collect his belongings. By January

6, 2023, the charges against Skinner had been dropped.

On January 18, 2023, Skinner, through counsel, sent a demand letter to

InCity, notifying it that he would file a forcible entry and detainer action if

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