Hidden River Ranch, Llc & Calvin Evans, Jr., App V. Lindsey Rodriguez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 14, 2022
Docket82228-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hidden River Ranch, Llc & Calvin Evans, Jr., App V. Lindsey Rodriguez (Hidden River Ranch, Llc & Calvin Evans, Jr., App V. Lindsey Rodriguez) 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
Hidden River Ranch, Llc & Calvin Evans, Jr., App V. Lindsey Rodriguez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

HIDDEN RIVER RANCH, LLC, a No. 82228-4-I Washington limited liability company; CALVIN EVANS, JUNIOR, DIVISION ONE

Appellants, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

LINDSEY RODRIGUEZ and CORY EVANS,

Respondents,

and

CALVIN EVANS, III,

Defendant.

ANDRUS, C.J. — Hidden River Ranch, LLC and Calvin Evans, Jr. (referred

to hereafter as HRR) appeal an order requiring the sale of six parcels of land

owned by HRR and Cal Jr.’s two children, Lindsey Rodriguez, and Calvin Evans

III, as tenants in common. 1 HRR currently operates the property as a horse ranch

and boarding business. In opposing Lindsey’s request to sell the ranch property

in its entirety, HRR proposed two alternatives: granting Cal Jr. a life estate with the

1 In their appellate briefs, the parties each refer to one another and the four Evans children by their

first names. For the sake of clarity, we follow that convention here. No disrespect is intended.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 82228-4-I/2

owners retaining residual title, or selling only the most valuable tax parcel, the sale

proceeds of which could be used to pay Lindsey and Cal III the value of their

ownership interest. The trial court rejected these proposals and granted Lindsey’s

motion for sale, finding that a partition in kind cannot be made without great

prejudice to all of the owners and selling the property as a whole would preserve

the highest value for all the co-owners. We affirm.

FACTS

The property at the center of this dispute is a horse ranch originally owned

by Calvin Evans Sr. Cal Jr. moved to the ranch with his former wife and their four

children, Lindsey Rodriguez, Calvin Evans III, Cory Evans, and Jesse Evans, in

2005. The ranch contains a house, stables, barns, and a riding arena. Following

Cal Sr.’s death in 2011, the probate court found that Cal Jr. had financially

exploited his father and deemed him to have predeceased his father under RCW

11.84.030. 2 The ranch passed to Cal Jr.’s four children as equal tenants in

common.

In 2017, Cory and Jesse entered into an agreement with their father to

quitclaim their interest in the property to Cal Jr.’s limited liability company, HRR,

and in exchange, Cal Jr. agreed “to execute a will in which Cory and Jesse are

each named as beneficiaries and each to receive one half of any interest” that Cal

Jr. would have in the property. At the time Lindsey filed this lawsuit, HRR owned

a 50 percent interest in the property, while Lindsey and Cal III each owned a 25

percent interest.

2 This court affirmed the probate court’s decision. In re Estate of Evans, No. 69214-3-I, slip op. at 3 (Dec. 21, 2015) (unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/692143.pdf. -2- No. 82228-4-I/3

In August 2019, Lindsey sought an order requiring the sale of the entire

property on the grounds that partition in kind was not feasible or practical without

great prejudice to the owners. HRR opposed partition. 3 Cory intervened in

Lindsey’s action, and filed a third-party complaint against HRR and Cal Jr., seeking

a judicial dissolution of the LLC and the imposition of a constructive trust based on

allegations that the agreement he executed transferring his interest in the real

estate to the LLC lacked consideration. 4 Cory supported Lindsey’s request for

partition by sale.

HRR’s position regarding partition evolved through the course of litigation.

In discovery, HRR stated that “[p]artition in kind of 25%, 25%, and 50% value is

not feasible due to the nature of the property and structures. Trying to separate

the property into three parcels or four parcels would destroy most of the value.”

HRR seemed to backtrack from this position in an October 13, 2020 pretrial issues

statement, in which it stated that “[t]he parties do not agree whether the subject

property can be partitioned in kind without substantial harm to its value and great

prejudice to the parties.” HRR proposed that “[i]f any partition is ordered, the

property with the home on it is clearly the most valuable piece and should be

saleable for enough cash to pay the properly valued shares of Lindsey ‘Evans’

Rodriquez and Calvin Evans III. The remainder of the property should remain in

its current ownership and condition.” In its October 26, 2020 trial brief, however,

HRR opposed all partition remedies and, in the alternative, asked that any sale be

3 Although Cal III appeared pro se in the partition action, he filed no pleadings below and no

appellate brief with this court. 4 Trial on Cory’s claims was set to begin on October 4, 2022.

-3- No. 82228-4-I/4

subject to a life estate in the property that it asked the court to grant Cal Jr.

When the parties appeared for trial, the trial court admitted into evidence

two documents: the deeds granting the property to the tenants in common and a

Snohomish County tax assessor summary showing that the land is comprised of

six separate tax parcels. 5 The court, based on arguments of counsel, concluded

that no material facts were in dispute and granted Lindsey’s petition to partition the

property. It reserved ruling on Lindsey’s request that the property be sold in its

entirety and HRR’s request that Cal Jr. be granted a life estate. The court

instructed the parties to bring their respective requests for relief to the court by

motion.

Lindsey moved for a sale of the entire property and Cory joined the motion.

Lindsey submitted the declaration and appraisal report of Jim Dodge, a certified

real estate appraiser, who opined that the probable market value of the property,

located near Sultan, Washington, in east Snohomish County, was $1,150,000 if

sold “as is,” for fee simple title. He testified that the property consists of a 31.83-

acre rectangular shaped tract of land, improved with a 3,030 square foot single-

family residence, a 792-square foot garage, six outbuildings—with a barn, machine

sheds, and stables—and a riding arena.

Dodge confirmed that the property consists of six contiguous tax parcels.

The tax assessed values of these parcels vary greatly, with four of the parcels

assessed at values ranging from a low of $900 to a high of $11,700. A fifth tax

parcel, identified as “270803-004-007-00” had a tax assessed value of $499,400.

5 These exhibits are not in the record before this court.

-4- No. 82228-4-I/5

This tax parcel is approximately 10.9 acres in size and contains the single-family

home. The sixth and final tax parcel, “270803-004-014-00,” with a tax assessed

value of $379,100, is 9.1 acres in size and contains a barn, garage, shop, well

house, and other improvements. The deed conveying the property to Cal Jr.’s four

children, however, contains only a single legal description that combines all of

these tax parcels into one large parcel. 6

The ranch is accessed from Mann Road, a paved, two-lane road that

terminates east of the property. Dodge described the northern third of the site as

a floodway bordering the Skykomish River. It appears that some of the tax parcels,

including those in the floodway, have no road access other than the driveway

serving the residence and horse boarding facilities.

After evaluating the location, site, access, topography, available utilities, the

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