Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Community Association

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 25, 2022
Docket38048-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Community Association (Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Community Association) 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
Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Community Association, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED JANUARY 25, 2022 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

BANNER BANK, a Washington ) No. 38048-3-III corporation, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) REFLECTION LAKE COMMUNITY ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ASSOCIATION, a nonprofit corporation; ) and RICK SMITH, ) ) Respondents, ) ) JAMES POWERS, ) ) Appellant. )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. — James Powers appeals after the trial court granted

summary judgment in favor of Reflection Lake Community Association and Rick Smith.

He argues the trial court erred by not striking a declaration, and it abused its discretion by

not continuing the summary judgment hearing. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

This case stems from an interpleader action filed by Banner Bank to determine the

rights to accounts it holds as between two competing boards of directors for a

homeowners’ association. No. 38048-3-III Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Cmty. Ass’n

Reflection Lake Community Association election

Reflection Lake is a manmade lake in northeast Spokane County. The Reflection

Lake Community Association (RLCA), a nonprofit corporation and homeowners’

association, serves the community around the lake. In the spring of 2020, an ongoing

dispute about management led to the resignation of eight of the nine directors on the

board of directors. The remaining director appointed eight replacements. The newly

appointed board failed to hold the customary annual election in July, and a small number

of community members decided to form an election committee in an effort to persuade

the appointed board to schedule an election.

In August, members of the election committee went door to door to gather support

for a petition demanding the appointed board hold an election. If the appointed board did

not comply, the signers of the petition also indicated support for removing the appointed

members of the board and holding an election for those positions. The RLCA bylaws

provide that a special meeting to remove and elect directors may be called by 40 percent

of the voting power of the association. The election committee collected signatures from

approximately 70 percent of RLCA members.

The appointed board refused to hold the election, and the election committee

proceeded with the special meeting and election. To comply with COVID-19 restrictions

2 No. 38048-3-III Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Cmty. Ass’n

on large gatherings, the election committee mailed a combination ballot and proxy

designation form, allowing RLCA members to simultaneously indicate their vote and

designate the election committee as their directed proxy to cast such votes in the election.

In late September, the election committee held a special meeting to remove the

appointed board members and elect their replacements. By virtue of their proxy

designations, the election committee represented sufficient voting power to constitute a

quorum for business. As a result of the election, seven of the eight appointed directors

were removed.

Access to RLCA bank accounts

Shortly after the election, James Boothby, the newly elected treasurer of the board,

contacted the Washington Secretary of State and began the process of becoming RLCA’s

registered agent. He received confirmation this process was complete on

October 8, 2020. Meanwhile, the ousted members of the appointed board retained

counsel, who contacted Banner Bank on October 6 to inform it there were competing

boards of directors. When Mr. Boothby attempted to sign on as the authorized owner of

RLCA’s accounts on October 8, Banner Bank refused and directed his inquiries to its

legal department.

3 No. 38048-3-III Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Cmty. Ass’n

On October 13, Banner Bank notified members of both the elected and appointed

boards that RLCA’s accounts were frozen. In November, Banner Bank filed a complaint

for interpleader, naming as defendants James Powers, president of the appointed board,

Rick Smith, president of the elected board, and RLCA itself.1

On November 19, 2020, Mr. Powers and other members of the appointed board

filed a separate lawsuit against RLCA, Mr. Boothby, Mr. Smith, and other members of

the elected board, requesting a declaratory judgment that the election was not valid under

the RLCA bylaws or state statutes, a declaratory judgment that the RLCA board had no

control over the water association serving Reflection Lake homes, and a reorganization of

RLCA into two separate community associations.2 Mr. Powers’s counsel in the

interpleader case, William C. Schroeder, also represented the plaintiffs in this second

case.

RLCA’s motion for summary judgment

On December 14, 2020, RLCA and Mr. Smith3 filed a motion for summary

judgment in the interpleader action, arguing there was no genuine issue of material fact in

1 Spokane County Case No. 20-2-03199-32. 2 Spokane County Case No. 20-2-03213-32. 3 For succinctness, we will refer to RLCA and Mr. Smith collectively as “RLCA.”

4 No. 38048-3-III Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Cmty. Ass’n

dispute about whether the election was held in compliance with RLCA’s bylaws and

applicable statutes. The motion was supported by several exhibits, a declaration from a

member of the election committee, a declaration from an RLCA member who voted in the

election and had previously served on the board, and a declaration from Mr. Boothby. A

hearing on the motion was scheduled for January 12, 2021.

Mr. Schroeder promptly reached out via e-mail to RLCA’s attorney, Tyler Lloyd,

about his intent to schedule depositions of the declarants over December 21-23. On

December 14 and 15, Mr. Lloyd e-mailed about the possibility of pushing back the

summary judgment hearing so the depositions would not conflict with December

holidays. Mr. Schroeder agreed to hold the depositions in the first two weeks of January;

the hearing was ultimately rescheduled for January 29, 2021. On December 21, Mr.

Lloyd provided availability for depositions of all three declarants, but Mr. Schroeder

noted only Mr. Boothby for deposition on January 6. On January 4, Mr. Lloyd confirmed

Mr. Boothby’s deposition and inquired about depositions for the other two declarants. In

response, Mr. Schroeder indicated they would decide after Mr. Boothby’s deposition

whether further depositions were needed.

5 No. 38048-3-III Banner Bank v. Reflection Lake Cmty. Ass’n

Mr. Boothby’s deposition

Mr. Boothby was deposed on January 6, 2021. After asking some biographical

questions, Mr. Schroeder began asking Mr. Boothby about the formation of the water

association, which was the subject of a separate lawsuit between Mr. Powers and Mr.

Boothby. While Mr. Boothby stated in his declaration that a dispute led to the previous

board’s resignation and while that dispute in fact involved the water association, Mr.

Boothby’s declaration did not anywhere reference the water association. Mr. Lloyd

objected to the relevance of the question in relation to the interpleader action, and Mr.

Schroeder informed him, “I am going to ask the questions I planned on asking.” Clerk’s

Papers (CP) at 148. After another question to Mr. Boothby about the water association,

Mr. Lloyd again objected, leading to a dispute with Mr. Schroeder:

MR. LLOYD: I will object to the relevance of this whole line of inquiry. MR.

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