Diane Perillo And Ted Perillo v. Island County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 30, 2020
Docket80055-8
StatusPublished

This text of Diane Perillo And Ted Perillo v. Island County (Diane Perillo And Ted Perillo v. Island County) 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
Diane Perillo And Ted Perillo v. Island County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIANE PERILLO and TED PERILLO, ) No. 80055-8-I Trustees of the Diane Perillo Living ) Trust, dated September 28, 2011, ) DIVISION ONE ) Petitioners, ) ) v. ) ) ISLAND COUNTY, a political ) subdivision of the State of Washington, ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) Respondent, ) ) VIEW SUN INVESTMENTS, LLC, a ) limited liability company, ) ) Defendant. )

BOWMAN, J. — Diane and Ted Perillo bought a home on Camano Island.

As they prepared to move into their new home, neighbors informed them it had a

long history as a “drug house.” Testing revealed levels of methamphetamine

contamination so high that the house was not habitable and needed to be

demolished. The Perillos learned that the Island County Sheriff’s Office and

Island County Public Health were aware of drug activity at the home for years.

The Perillos filed a negligence claim against Island County for failure to inspect

the property for hazardous chemical contamination as required under RCW

64.44.020. The Perillos appeal the trial court’s determination that the public duty

doctrine barred their claim and the order granting summary judgment for Island

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 80055-8-I/2

County. We conclude that the legislative intent exception to the public duty

doctrine applies to the Perillos’ negligence claim and that sufficient evidence of a

legal duty precludes summary judgment. We reverse and remand.

FACTS

The house at 505 Michelle Drive on Camano Island sat derelict for many

years after its owner went to prison in 2010. The house became a hub of

criminal activity, illegal drug use, and garbage dumping. In May 2015, title to the

property transferred back to the lender bank. Later that year, a real estate

preservation and maintenance company began efforts to restore the property,

hiring successive contractors for the massive undertaking to clean the property.

In 2016, the lender sold the restored property to View Sun Investments LLC, who

listed the property for sale.

On February 24, 2017, Diane and Ted Perillo bought the newly renovated

house for $479,000. As they prepared to move in, service providers and

neighbors warned them of the property’s dubious history. Both the Frontier

phone and Internet installer and the DISH Network installer were familiar with the

property and told the Perillos the house was “well known on the island as a drug

house.” Through conversations with neighbors, the Perillos learned of extensive

law enforcement activity on the property and of multiple complaints to law

enforcement and the local health department about the property.

The Perillos’ real estate agent contacted Island County Public Health

(ICPH) and filed a public records request for “[a]ll information on the property,”

including “police records pertaining to drugs, shootings, [and] criminal activity in

2 No. 80055-8-I/3

[the] last 10 years.” The records from ICPH and the Island County Sheriff’s

Office (ICSO) revealed years of reports of drug activity on the property, including

suspected manufacturing of methamphetamine.

In June 2014, neighbor Jewel Enger contacted ICSO to report “a constant

stream of people coming and going from the location,” including many teens.

According to Enger, “[S]ometimes they are so messed up that they have to hold

each other up while standing at the bus stop.” The ICSO report states Enger

said it was an “ ‘obvious drug house.’ ” In October 2014, ICSO received specific

information about methamphetamine on the premises. A caller who had been

squatting at the home reported methamphetamine trafficking.1 She reported that

the house was “ ‘polluting the island, it is saturated with meth.’ ” She also said

that deputies had done nothing despite knowing it was a “drug house.”

A month later, the president of the homeowners association (HOA) that

includes the 505 Michelle Drive property contacted ICPH to complain about

“suspected drug activity” and to ask “why the drug task force was not doing

anything about it.” ICPH told the HOA president to contact the ICSO, but the

ICSO had referred him to ICPH.

In March 2015, an ICPH environmental health specialist and solid waste

coordinator wrote an e-mail to other ICPH employees, describing the property as

“very complex” and “not a safe place.” The coordinator had taken photographs

but “was only able to capture half of the property due to safety measures.” She

also stated that the Island County Planning Department posted “a cease and

1 She also told the ICSO that there was stolen property at the house and a “chop shop in the garage.”

3 No. 80055-8-I/4

desist order” on the property “because the occupants were tearing down the

metal shop,” leaving “large amounts of garbage.”

ICPH and ICSO report logs show multiple calls to the agencies about the

property, including complaints about strong chemical smells and drug

manufacturing. In April 2015, a nearby property owner called ICPH because he

“believes meth is being cooked” at the house. The same day, neighbor Enger

again reported a “strong chemical smell for over a week. The last 5 days it is

worse so when she goes outside her eyes water, she can’t breathe and gets

wheezy.” In her report to the ICSO, Enger described “the smell of chemicals

being used to make drugs.” The ICSO explained to Enger its “limitation in

entering a private home” and recommended she report “a public health/nuisance

violation” to the county.2

In October 2015, a contractor working to clean up the property contacted

ICPH to ask whether “there was any prior history of Meth manufacturing for the

property.” He joked, “Sounds like this place is pretty familiar to about everyone in

that office!! (lol).”3 While working at the property, “several neighbors” warned

him that there was a “significant history” of methamphetamine manufacturing in

the interior of the home and in a trailer parked in the driveway. The contractor

told ICPH:

After learning a little about the signs and symptoms for meth labs, I immediat[e]ly stopped working and felt it necessary to contact you guys or the Sheriff[’]s department for any insight. There were nearly 50 gas cans, countless plastic bottles, short lengths of hose

2 Enger made a report to ICPH two days later. 3 In this context, “lol” likely means “laugh out loud” or “laughing out loud.”

4 No. 80055-8-I/5

(everywhere), 15 or 20 propane tanks, many antifreeze bottles, e[tc.] . . . .

....

I also uncovered MANY needles.

The contractor said that when he stopped working, he experienced

dizziness, “severe headache, rapidly developing sore[ ]throat,” and overall

fogginess. The contractor asked ICHP whether there was information on “any

possible hazard” on the property and a way to test the interior and exterior of the

home for contamination before he continued working on the property. ICPH told

him the property had an established history of “drug activity” but no record of

drug “manufacturing.” ICPH referred the contractor to the ICSO for more

information and suggested he contact the Washington State Department of

Health (DOH) Anonymous Meth Hotline to report a possible lab site. Also in

October, another contractor cleaning the property reported to ICSO that she

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