Bank Of America v. Kenneth Treiger

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 14, 2013
Docket70225-4
StatusPublished

This text of Bank Of America v. Kenneth Treiger (Bank Of America v. Kenneth Treiger) 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
Bank Of America v. Kenneth Treiger, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., a national association, No. 70225-4-1

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

v. PUBLISHED OPINION

J'AMY LYN OWENS, an unmarried person; SHULKIN HUTTON, INC., O P.S., a Washington professional service coo —\cz

corporation; and EDMUND JOHN WOOD, Defendants, -Z* —-

;;>-; -:' T*- KENNETH TREIGER, a married person as to his separate estate, FILED: October 14, 2013 ro o—

Appellant.

Grosse, J. — An appellate court's mandate is the law of the case and

binding on the lower court and must be followed. Here, both this court and the

Supreme Court held that appellant Kenneth Treiger's lien on the real property at

issue had priority over Bank of America's lien.1 On remand, the trial court had no authority to revisit the Bank's in rem claim that the trial court "preserved and

tolled" when it rendered summary judgment in favor of the Bank on its other

claim. The in rem claim was not raised on review of the summary judgment and

the claim was, therefore, abandoned. The trial court had no authority to ignore

the Supreme Court's mandate on remand. Accordingly, we reverse the summary

judgment and remand with directions that the trial court enter judgment

consistent with the Supreme Court's opinion and mandate.

1Bank of America. N.A. v. Owens. 153 Wn. App. 115,221 P.3d 917 (2009); Bank of America. N.A. v. Owens. 173 Wn.2d 40, 266 P.3d 211 (2011). No. 70225-4-1 / 2

FACTS

Kenneth Treiger and J'Amy Lyn Owens married in July 1997. Treiger and

Owens separated on June 1, 2000 and filed for dissolution in February 2001.

In January 2002, during the pendency of the dissolution action but before

entry of a decree of dissolution, Treiger filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy petition,

which was converted to a chapter 7 bankruptcy in April 2002. In February 2002,

Owens filed a separate chapter 11 bankruptcy petition.

The bankruptcy court in Treiger's case lifted the stay to allow the parties'

dissolution action to proceed in superior court. The superior court entered a

decree of dissolution on June 19, 2002 and reserved property and debt issues

until the bankruptcy proceedings concluded.

Between the date of separation and the entry of a decree of dissolution,

Treiger and Owens purchased real property referred to as the "Maplewood property" as husband and wife. The bankruptcy court determined that this property was community property and therefore property of Treiger's bankruptcy

estate.

While the parties were married, Owens, as part owner of a business called

The Retail Group, executed a promissory note and borrowing agreement in favor

of Bank of America, N.A. (the Bank). The Retail Group defaulted under the note

and agreement, and the Bank filed a claim in Treiger's bankruptcy action. In April 2004, nearly two years after entry of the decree of dissolution,

Treiger's trustee and Owens entered into a settlement agreement in which the trustee agreed to convey his entire interest in the Maplewood property to Owens, subject to all liens of record against the property, in exchange for $215,000 from No. 70225-4-1/3

Owens. By trustee's quitclaim deed dated April 29, 2004, the trustee conveyed

all of the bankruptcy estate's interest in the Maplewood property to Owens, "a

single individual." The Maplewood property thus became Owens' separate

property.

Treiger's chapter 7 case was closed in March 2005 and any obligation he

owed to the Bank was discharged. Owens' chapter 11 case was dismissed in

July 2005.

Treiger and Owens then returned to superior court to complete the

property distribution in their dissolution action. In May 2006, the superior court

entered a supplemental decree of dissolution (Supplemental Decree), dividing

their assets and liabilities. In the Supplemental Decree, the court ordered that

the Maplewood property be sold and that Treiger be awarded one-half of the net

proceeds of the sale. The court also entered several orders awarding Treiger varying amounts of fees and sanctions for Owens' intransigence during the dissolution proceedings. Treiger recorded the Supplemental Decree as well as

other orders pertaining to fees and sanctions on October 27, 2006.

Meanwhile, in July 2006, the Bank filed an action against Owens, seeking

payment of the debt she guaranteed. In November 2006, the Bank amended its complaint to add a claim in rem against any separate property of Owens awarded to Treiger. The Bank moved for a prejudgment writ of attachment on the Maplewood property. The trial court granted the Bank's motion and directed the issuance of a prejudgment writ of attachment on the Maplewood property against only Owens' interest in the property. A writ of attachment issued in accordance No. 70225-4-1/4

with the court's order and was recorded on December 20, 2006. On December

14, 2007, the Bank obtained a judgment in the amount of $593,519.24.

The bankruptcy, dissolution, and debt collection proceedings gave rise to

several conflicting claims that complicated the sale of the Maplewood property by

preventing the parties from obtaining title insurance. The Bank, Treiger, Owens,

Owens' attorney, and an independent trustee entered into an agreement (Trust

Agreement) to obtain title insurance and facilitate the sale of the Maplewood

property. In the Trust Agreement, the parties agreed that any of them could file a

declaratory judgment action, naming the other parties as defendants and seeking

a declaration regarding the priority and extent of the claims asserted by Owens,

Treiger, the Bank, and Owens' attorney in the net sale proceeds held in trust by the trustee. The Trust Agreement provides: "Owens, as her separate estate, is

the owner of the Property."

The Maplewood property sold in May 2007. On May 20, 2007, pursuant to

the Trust Agreement, the title insurance company wired the net proceeds of the

sale ($1,114,054.83) to the specified trust account.

Upon deposit of the net proceeds into the trust account, the Bank filed a

declaratory judgment action to determine the priority of the parties' interest in the funds held in trust. On cross motions for summary judgment brought by Owens,

Treiger, and the Bank, the trial court granted the Bank's motion and concluded that the matter was controlled by the Trust Agreement in which the parties

agreed that the Maplewood property was Owens' separate estate. The court also concluded that apart from the money judgments, the Supplemental Decree

did not grantTreiger a lien or other interest in the Maplewood property, but rather No. 70225-4-1 / 5

awarded him half of the proceeds from the sale of the property, "which is one-half

of the monies received by Owens as the seller of the Maplewood [pjroperty . . .

prior to the sale on May 20, 2007."

The court ordered distribution of the net proceeds of the sale of the

Maplewood property in the following order:

(1) payment of Owens' $40,000 homestead exemption; (2) payment to Treiger of four [money] judgments he recorded on October 27, 2006 . .

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