Jennell Prentice, Respondent/cross-appellant V. Anthony Prentice, Appellant/cross-respondent

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 27, 2022
Docket84232-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jennell Prentice, Respondent/cross-appellant V. Anthony Prentice, Appellant/cross-respondent (Jennell Prentice, Respondent/cross-appellant V. Anthony Prentice, Appellant/cross-respondent) 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.

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Jennell Prentice, Respondent/cross-appellant V. Anthony Prentice, Appellant/cross-respondent, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Marriage of No. 84232-3-I

JENNELL PRENTICE, DIVISION ONE

Respondent/Cross- Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

ANTHONY PRENTICE,

Appellant/Cross- Respondent.

SMITH, A.C.J. — Anthony Prentice and Jennell Endrizzi (f/k/a Prentice)

finalized their dissolution in 2009. The dissolution decree ordered the parties to

split the net proceeds from the sale of the house without providing a deadline for

the sale, and awarded the house to both Prentice and Endrizzi as tenants in

common.

Eleven years later, Endrizzi filed a motion to enforce the dissolution

decree and requested that the court order Prentice to pay her one-half the equity

in the home by a date certain or order Prentice to place the property for sale to

comply with the terms of the decree. The trial court ordered the sale of the home

and for the parties to split the equity presently in the house with additional offsets

awarded to Prentice for house upkeep and maintenance. Because Endrizzi

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 84232-3-I/2

executed a quit claim deed conveying her interests in the house to Prentice after

the entry of the dissolution order but before she began this lawsuit, we reverse.

FACTS

Anthony Prentice and Jennell Endrizzi finalized their dissolution in

July 2009. The dissolution decree awarded both parties as separate property

“[o]ne-half net proceeds from the sale of the family home” and awarded Prentice

“[a]n additional $2,500 above [his] one-half net proceeds.” The decree provided

that the parties were to remain tenants in common and awarded Prentice

permission to continue to reside in the home. It also provided that “both parties

will be considered to have the home as their principal residence for capital gains

purposes.” It ordered that Prentice would pay the mortgage until the home sold

and that Endrizzi would assume other community debts.

The decree did not provide a timeline for when the home was to be sold.

However, neither party disputes that they intended to sell the home shortly after

the dissolution was finalized. Indeed, it can be inferred from the language in the

decree that this was the court’s understanding too; for example, Endrizzi was

awarded the family refrigerator, to be delivered within ten days of the sale.

After the dissolution, Prentice remained in the home and Endrizzi moved

out. The parties tried to sell the home in the years following but were

unsuccessful, due in part to an economic downturn. Both parties endured

financial struggles in the following years. Prentice fell behind on mortgage

payments and was in danger of foreclosure and Endrizzi filed for bankruptcy in

2011.

2 No. 84232-3-I/3

In 2012, Endrizzi signed a quit claim deed conveying all her interest in the

family home to Prentice. The parties do not dispute that Endrizzi executed the

quit claim deed on her own volition and that Prentice did not request the deed.

They do, however, dispute the intent and effect of the quit claim deed. Endrizzi

maintains that she executed the quit claim deed so that Prentice and Endrizzi’s

father (who lived next door) could negotiate the terms of a well agreement and so

that Prentice could sell the home while Endrizzi lived out-of-state. Prentice

contends that Endrizzi did not communicate any of these reasons with him;

rather, Endrizzi executed the deed without any prior discussions or agreements

as to the parties’ intended course of action. Endrizzi admits that Prentice “did not

ask for the quit claim deed and [the parties] did not discuss it.”

Soon thereafter, Endrizzi moved to Minnesota to start a new job. In the

meantime, Prentice assumed full responsibility for the couple’s two younger

children and continued working with his bank to avoid foreclosure. In 2013, the

bank approved Prentice’s hardship application and he was able to refinance the

home.

Seven years later, in 2020, Endrizzi filed an action to enforce the

dissolution decree. She claimed she tried to convince Prentice to sell the house

“many times over the years” to no avail. However, in support of this claim,

Endrizzi produced a single email she sent to Prentice in July 2020, two months

before filing her motion to enforce the decree and shortly before Prentice was to

get remarried. Prentice asserted that Endrizzi never raised the issue with him

after 2012. He argued that Endrizzi forfeited all her rights to the house by signing

3 No. 84232-3-I/4

the quit claim deed in 2012 and by surrendering the house as an asset on her

bankruptcy petition. He also asserted that the statute of limitations and principles

of equity barred Endrizzi’s claim. The trial court ordered the home to be sold and

for Endrizzi to receive half of any equity less $12,553.10 awarded to Prentice

(constituting the $2,500 awarded in the decree and the money he spent in home

upkeep). The trial court did not make findings of fact or conclusions of law in its

order, although it did issue a letter ruling explaining the order. Prentice appeals.

Endrizzi cross appeals.

ANALYSIS

The parties assert the trial court made several errors when it entered its

order, including its interpretation of the quit claim deed’s effect, the applicable

statute of limitations, the application of equitable principles, and the court’s

modified award. Because we conclude that interpretation of the quit claim deed

is dispositive of this case, we do not reach the other issues. Before analyzing the

quit claim deed, we first examine rights created by the dissolution decree.

Framing our analysis is our review of the trial court’s order enforcing the

dissolution decree, which we review de novo. In re Marriage of Thompson, 97

Wn. App. 873, 877, 988 P.2d 499 (1999).

Dissolution Decree

In a dissolution proceeding, the trial court must “ ‘dispos[e] of the property

and the liabilities of the parties, either community or separate, as shall appear

just and equitable after considering all relevant factors.’ ” In re Marriage of

Muhammad, 153 Wn.2d 795, 803, 108 P.3d 779 (2005) (alteration in original)

4 No. 84232-3-I/5

(quoting RCW 26.09.080). To accomplish that end, trial courts have wide

discretion to fashion a dissolution order that will address the circumstances of the

parties. Bulicek v. Bulicek, 59 Wn. App. 630, 634, 800 P.2d 394 (1990). For

example, when assets cannot be justly and equitably divided, a greater portion of

the estate may be awarded to one spouse with an offsetting obligation to pay the

other. See, e.g., In re Marriage of Tower, 55 Wn. App. 697, 780 P.2d 863 (1989)

(husband awarded disproportionate share of community property but required to

pay wife permanent maintenance). Likewise, an unequal division of property

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Jennell Prentice, Respondent/cross-appellant V. Anthony Prentice, Appellant/cross-respondent, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennell-prentice-respondentcross-appellant-v-anthony-prentice-washctapp-2022.