Janice Courchaine v. Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 13, 2012
Docket30020-0
StatusPublished

This text of Janice Courchaine v. Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Co. (Janice Courchaine v. Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Co.) 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
Janice Courchaine v. Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Co., (Wash. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

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COURT OF APPEALS, DIVISION III, STATE OF WASfU~ON'~:ii~::,:;

JANICE COURCHAINE, a single person; ) No. 30020-0-111 and EVA VOSS, a single person, ) (consolidated with ) No. 30021-8-111) Respondents, ) ) v. ) ) ORDER GRANTING MOTION COMMONWEALTH LAND TITLE ) TO PUBLISH OPINION INSURANCE COMPANY; and FIDELITY ) NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE GROUP, ) ) Appellants, ) ) SPOKANE COUNTY TITLE, ) ) Defendant. )

THE COURT has considered a third party's motion to publish the court's opinion

of December 13, 2012, and the record and 'file herein, and is of the opinion the motion

should be granted. Therefore,

IT IS ORDERED, the motion to publish is granted. The opinion filed by the court

on December 13, 2012 shall be modified on page 1 to designate it is a published

opinion and on page 25 by deletion of the following language:

A majority of the panel has determined that this opinion will not be printed in the Washington Appellate Reports but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW 2.06.040.

DATED: March 12, 2013

PANEL: Judges Siddoway, Korsmo, Sweeney.

FOR THE COURT:

Ki2

December 13,2012

In tne Office oftne Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals. Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

JANICE COURCHAINE, a single person; ) and EVA VOSS, a single person, ) No. 30020-0-III ) (consolidated with Respondents, ) No. 30021-8-III) ) v. ) ) COMMONWEALTH LAND TITLE ) INSURANCE COMPANY; and ) FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE ) INSURANCE GROUP, ) ) Appellants, ) ) SPOKANE COUNTY TITLE, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Defendant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. - Janice Courchaine and Eva Voss sued Commonwealth Land

Title Insurance Company and its parent, Fidelity National Title Insurance Group, over an

undisclosed easement burdening property whose title Commonwealth insured.

Courchaine and Voss prevailed at trial. Commonwealth and Fidelity appeal, arguing that

(1) Commonwealth did not breach the title policy and Fidelity has no liability for

coverage; (2) Commonwealth did not breach the Consumer Protection Act (CPA), No. 30020-0-III; 30021-8-III

Courchaine v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co.

chapter 19.86 RCW; and (3) even if Commonwealth did violate the CPA, Fidelity is not

separately and additionally chargeable for that violation.

We reverse the trial court's judgment against Fidelity on the policy and against

Commonwealth under the CPA but otherwise affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In September 2008, Janice Courchaine and Eva Voss entered into a purchase and

sale agreement for real property located on Cataldo Avenue in Spokane Valley. A single

family home existed on the west half of the very large lot and there was room to build a

second, adjoining home on the east half, which suited the women's plans to build duplex

homes for their families.

Before closing, Courchaine and Voss obtained a preliminary commitment for title

insurance from Commonwealth. They reviewed it, considered each of its exceptions, and

found nothing that would frustrate their construction plans. Schedule B to the

commitment, identifying specific exceptions to coverage, revealed an easement in favor

of Modern Electric Company, their utility company. But the easement was consistent

with the seller disclosure statement that disclosed a "power company easement" on the

property and consistent with the distribution and service lines delivering electricity to the

home. Ex. 4. On October 15,2008, they purchased the property and acquired title by

statutory warranty deed.

No. 30020-0-III; 30021-8-III Courchaine v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co.

Shortly after purchasing the property, they learned from a neighbor that the

Bonneville Power Administration (BP A) may have an as-yet unused easement across

their property, which was confirmed when they attempted to get a building permit and

were denied. They learned that construction on the east half of the lot would interfere

with a 75-foot easement for transmission lines, in favor ofBPA.

The women submitted a claim under their Commonwealth title policy, which did

not list the BPA easement as an exception to coverage. Commonwealth originally

accepted the claim, acknowledging coverage. But it then reassigned responsibility to

Lisa Leick, a claims adjuster for Fidelity, its corporate parent. Leick thereafter notified

the women in a four-page letter that their claim was not covered.

Among other reasons offered by Leick for denying the claim was that the recorded

plat for the Guthrie's Valley View 4th Addition, by which their lot was created in 1954,

disclosed an easement along the eastern half of the lot for BPA transmission lines. The

women did not see the 1954 plat before purchasing the property.

Courchaine and Voss commenced the action below in March 2010. A three-day

bench trial was conducted a year later. The trial court delivered its oral decision at the

conclusion of the evidence, finding that the claim was covered and that both

Commonwealth and Fidelity had violated the CPA. Its judgment imposed liability under

the insurance policy against both Commonwealth and Fidelity.

Commonwealth and Fidelity timely appealed.

No. 30020-0-III; 30021-8-III Courchaine v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co.

ANALYSIS

Commonwealth and Fidelity assign error to the trial court's conclusion that

Courchaine's claim was covered by the Commonwealth policy, to its finding of a

violation of the CPA against Commonwealth, and to its finding Fidelity separately and

additionally liable under the policy and chargeable for the CPA violation. We address

their assignments of error to the coverage issue first, and thereafter their assignments of

error to the findings of CPA violations. In discussing the parties' positions hereafter, we

refer to Courchaine and Voss collectively as Courchaine, for simplicity.

I

Commonwealth was the issuer of the title insurance policy. Its first and second

assignments of error essentially challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to establish a

breach of its policy. It concedes that many of the facts are undisputed, focusing instead

on what it argues are the trial court's unwarranted conclusions of law.

When a trial court enters findings of fact and conclusions of law following a bench

trial, review is limited to determining whether substantial evidence supports the findings,

and if so, whether the findings support the trial court's conclusions of law and judgment.

Saviano v. Westport Amusements, Inc., 144 Wn. App. 72,78, 180 P.3d 874 (2008). We

review only the findings to which appellant assigns error; unchallenged findings are

treated as verities on appeal. Nordstrom Credit, Inc. v. Dep't ofRevenue, 120 Wn.2d

935,941,845 P.2d 1331 (1993).

No. 30020-0-III; 3002l-8-III

Commonwealth has not assigned error to any finding of fact, so our review is

limited to determining whether the findings support the trial court's conclusions. Fenton

v. Contemporary Dev. Co., 12 Wn. App. 345, 347, 529 P.2d 883 (1974). The

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