Caitlin Cromar, Et Ano, V. Tag Realty, Llc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 17, 2025
Docket87780-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Caitlin Cromar, Et Ano, V. Tag Realty, Llc. (Caitlin Cromar, Et Ano, V. Tag Realty, Llc.) 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
Caitlin Cromar, Et Ano, V. Tag Realty, Llc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

CAITLIN CROMAR and DAMON CROMAR, No. 87780-1-I

Appellants, DIVISION ONE

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

TAG REALTY, LLC,

Respondent,

and

1021 N 29TH STREET, LCC,

Defendant.

COBURN, J. —Caitlin and Damon Cromar successfully obtained a judgment

against TAG Realty, LLC (TAG Realty) for its unlawful withholding of their security

deposit in violation of Washington’s Residential Landlord Tenant Act (RLTA), chapter

59.18 RCW. The trial court granted the Cromars’ motion for attorney fees under RCW

59.18.280(2). The Cromars appeal the trial court’s attorney fee order, arguing that the

court abused its discretion by significantly reducing their requested fee amount without

conducting a proper lodestar analysis. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for

the trial court to determine an attorney fee award consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

The Cromars married in September 2022. That same month they renewed a one- 87780-1-I/2

year lease for a rental home with the property management company TAG Realty. As a

condition of the lease, the Cromars provided a security deposit in the amount of

$2,200. 1 The lease provided:

If Tenant vacates prior to the Expiration Date (as extended, if applicable), the security deposit shall be forfeited and Tenant shall be obligated for rent payments for the remainder of the term, or until the Property has been re-rented whichever is less.

Upon purchasing a home, the Cromars notified TAG Realty in February 2023 that

they would be terminating their lease early. They moved out of the rental home at the

end of March. On April 5 TAG Realty emailed a move-out statement to the Cromars.

The statement, titled “EARLY TERMINATION SECURITY DEPOSIT FORFEIT,”

deducted $1087.19 from the Cromars’ security deposit for touch-up painting and the

replacement of one blind. The statement provided that the balance of the Cromars’

deposit was due to TAG Realty and stated at the bottom, “**No refund due to tenants

due to early termination**.” The next day, the Cromars sent a letter to TAG Realty

requesting that the balance of their security deposit be returned on the ground that

forfeiture of the deposit due to early lease termination is not permitted under the RLTA. 2

On April 24 TAG Realty responded to the email:

We received your letter from the mail, again as per the lease agreement, you terminated the lease early so the security deposit will be forfeited thanks!

The Cromars then obtained legal assistance to prosecute their rights under the

RLTA. They hired the firm Anderson Santiago, PLLC, and were assisted by counsels

Jason D. Anderson and T. Tyler Santiago. 3

1 The security deposit was carried over from the plaintiffs’ initial lease. 2 In the letter, plaintiffs noted that TAG Realty rescinded its initial charge for the blind. 3 The record shows that the firm started billing for work for the plaintiffs in July 2023. 2 87780-1-I/3

In August TAG Realty sent an email to the Cromars offering to refund the

balance of the security deposit to avoid litigation. The email does not reference TAG

Realty’s obligations under the RLTA or offer to compensate the Cromars for any legal

fees or costs incurred.

In September the Cromars brought a putative class action complaint against TAG

Realty for claims under the RLTA and Washington’s Consumer Protection Act (CPA),

chapter 19.86 RCW. As part of their class claims, the Cromars alleged that TAG Realty

withheld their and other tenants’ security deposits based on an unlawful lease

agreement provision in violation of the RLTA. Additionally, they alleged that the lease

provision “allowing a deposit to be forfeited is an unfair or deceptive act or practice” in

violation of the CPA. They also raised individual RLTA and CPA claims against

defendant Bohmann & Co., LLC (Bohmann), who allegedly owned the rental house that

the Cromars lived at.

In their complaint, the Cromars requested certification under CR 23 for two

proposed classes:

The first proposed class … includes: All persons in the State of Washington who signed a lease with TAG [Realty] containing a deposit forfeiture provision herein described, which constitutes violations of the [CPA]. … The second proposed class … includes: All persons in the State of Washington who signed a lease with TAG [Realty] and who did have some or all of such deposit forfeited, voided, or otherwise confiscated (and thus retained by TAG [Realty] or its principals), which constitutes violations of the [RLTA].

In TAG Realty’s answer, it denied that its lease agreement with the Cromars

contained a security deposit forfeiture provision that was illegal under the RLTA but

admitted that it “unknowingly and in reliance upon prior court orders, lease form

3 87780-1-I/4

publications, and established practice retained deposit that it now knows was improper

because the remedy for early termination is statutorily defined.” TAG Realty also denied

that it was liable for violations of the CPA “by having [the Cromars] and class members

sign an agreement allowing a deposit to be forfeited.” TAG Realty asserted 15

affirmative defenses and “reserve[d] the right to plead further answer, affirmative

defenses, counterclaims and/or third-party claims as investigation and discovery may

warrant.” TAG Realty requested the court deny the Cromars’ alleged class, dismiss the

complaint with prejudice, and award TAG Realty its costs and attorney fees. 4

On September 6, 2024, TAG Realty responded to the the Cromars’ first set of

interrogatories and admitted that it withheld security deposits for 13 additional tenants’

early lease terminations since September 8, 2019. TAG Realty noted that discovery was

ongoing and reserved the right to supplement its answer.

On December 20 the Cromars moved for summary judgment on their individual

RLTA claim and relinquished their class claims and individual CPA claim. In their

motion, the Cromars cited TAG Realty’s above-mentioned answer to interrogatories and

explained that discovery revealed there was a lack of numerosity to move forward with

their class claims.

On January 13 TAG Realty filed a notice of non-opposition to the Cromars’

summary judgment motion. The trial court granted summary judgment to the Cromars

the next day. The court found there was no genuine issue of material fact that TAG

Realty retained a portion of the Cromars’ security deposit based on an unlawful deposit

4 Plaintiffs later amended their complaint to substitute Bohmann with 1021 N 29th Street, LLC as the correct owner of the subject rental home, but that company was later dismissed through a joint motion. The court noted that the plaintiffs and “1021 N 29th Street, LLC shall each bear their own fees and costs as to those dismissed claims.” 4 87780-1-I/5

forfeiture provision in the parties’ lease agreement in violation of the RLTA. See

Gebreseralse v. Columbia Debt Recovery, 24 Wn. App. 2d 650, 659-60, 521 P.3d 221

(2022); RCW 59.18.310.

Accordingly, the trial court found TAG Realty was liable to the Cromars for the full

amount of the $2,200 security deposit. See RCW 59.18.280(2). Additionally, the court

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