Jessica M. Goodeill v. Madison Real Estate

362 P.3d 302, 191 Wash. App. 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 3, 2015
Docket32442-7-III
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 362 P.3d 302 (Jessica M. Goodeill v. Madison Real Estate) 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
Jessica M. Goodeill v. Madison Real Estate, 362 P.3d 302, 191 Wash. App. 88 (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

*91 Lawrence-Berrey, J.

¶1 — This court granted Jessica Goodeill’s request for discretionary review to determine whether RCW 59.18.280 precludes her landlord from retaining a portion of her security deposit because it failed to timely provide her a full and specific statement of the basis for retaining her deposit. Her landlord argues that an exception to RCW 59.18.280 applies: “[C]ircumstances beyond [its] control prevented [it] from providing the statement within ... fourteen days.” We hold that a landlord may not avail itself of RCW 59.18.280’s exception unless it accounts for any active or passive delays sufficient to show that it made a conscientious attempt to comply with the 14-day statutory notice. Because the landlord’s evidence shows it has not met this standard, it may not avail itself of the statutory exception. We, therefore, reverse and remand.

FACTS

¶2 In November 2011, Jessica and Dave Goodeill entered into a seven-month lease agreement for a home at 1502 West Cora Court in Spokane, a property managed and ostensibly owned by Baker & Associates LLC. The Goodeills paid $750 per month for rent, a $750 damage security deposit, and a $50 pet deposit.

¶3 Ms. Goodeill completed a standard move-in condition report and returned it to Baker within the requisite time. She noted a number of nicks, scrapes, stains, dirt marks, nail holes, and paint spots on the walls and wood trim throughout the house. She also noted nicks on closet doors, two burned-out lightbulbs in the hallway, a “bad leak” coming from the washing machine’s hot water valve, one garage remote that did not work, dirty and stained window blinds, peeling wallpaper, a faulty kitchen light, and a broken kitchen drawer, among other things. Pl.’s Ex. 1, at 31-34. Ms. Goodeill did not mince words when describing the yard: “Yard looks like hell.” Pl.’s Ex. 1, at 32.

¶4 During the Goodeills’ tenancy, Madison Real Estate purchased Baker. On August 17, 2012, the Goodeills en *92 tered into a new lease agreement with Madison, with a lease end date of June 30, 2013. After their lease expired, the Goodeills’ tenancy became month to month by operation of RCW 59.18.200(l)(a).

¶5 On August 5, 2013, the Goodeills gave Madison the requisite 20-day notice that they intended to vacate 1502 West Cora Court by the end of August. By August 27, the Goodeills had finished moving out of the residence. That same day, they had the carpets professionally cleaned. On August 28, Madison contacted Ms. Goodeill and requested approval to show the residence and keys to do so. Ms. Goodeill gave Madison one of her keys but retained two other keys.

¶6 On August 30, Ms. Goodeill telephoned Madison to arrange a time to turn in her two remaining keys and complete move-out paperwork. She spoke with an employee named Marlie, who told her that the office would be closed Monday, September 2, in observance of Labor Day, but that she could turn in her two keys by noon on September 3 to avoid being charged extra rent. On September 3, Ms. Goodeill turned in her last two keys to Madison. Despite the conversation between Ms. Goodeill and Marlie, Madison treated September 3 as the Goodeills’ actual move-out date.

¶7 On September 4, Madison completed a move-out condition report, noting that the house needed a “deep clean” and some other minor repairs in order to be ready to rent. Dei’s Ex. 1, at 43. The record shows that Madison hired Action Tech Inc. to clean the blinds, and DavisPro Cleaning & Maintenance to clean, repair, and make the interior and exterior presentable for a new tenant.

¶8 The record does not establish when Madison contacted Action Tech. However, the Action Tech invoice shows that the blinds were cleaned on September 11, and the charges totaled $136.36. This invoice was created on September 11 and was mailed to Madison on that day.

¶9 A work order establishes that Madison did not contact DavisPro until September 9. The DavisPro invoices *93 show that both the interior and exterior work was completed two days after Madison requested the work, or September 11. DavisPro billed its work on two separate invoices, one for $112.50 dated September 18 and the other for $135.69 dated October 1. These two invoices were mailed to Madison on those separate dates.

¶10 On September 16, Madison mailed a letter to the Goodeills, informing them that their deposit of $800 was being held to pay estimated charges for which it claimed they were liable. The notice estimated that the Goodeills owed $900, leaving a balance owing to Madison of $100. PL’s Ex. 1, at 4. The estimated charges were itemized as follows:

9/1/2013 RENT INCOME-SEPTEMBER 2013 (3DAYS) $75.00
9/16/2013 ESTIMATED: CITY UTIL-OVERAGES $75.00
9/13/2013 ESTIMATED: WINDOWS COVERING CLNG $150.00
9/13/2013 ESTIMATED: GENERAL HOUSE CLEANING $350.00
9/13/2013 ESTIMATED: LAWN CARE-DRY & WEEDS $150.00
9/13/2013 ESTIMATED: MAINT/DEBRIS REMOVAL $100.00

PL’s Ex. 1, at 5. The notice further stated:

Once all estimated costs have been determined, a final accounting will be forwarded to you. We will verify againt [sic] move-in reported condition and move-out condition report and account for less normal wear & tear. Please provide confirmation that utilities have been paid through 06/30/13 and your account will be adjusted accordingly.

PL’s Ex. 1, at 4.

¶11 On September 18, Ms. Goodeill called Madison to dispute the estimated charges. She spoke with an associate named Kirsten, who said that Madison typically sends a high estimate “so tenants would not be surprised” by the final statement. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 3. Kirsten said she *94 had no receipts or documentation to support Madison’s estimate and urged Ms. Goodeill to “wait until the final statement,” which could take between two to four additional weeks. CP at 3. Ms. Goodeill asked if it would be possible to return to the property and go over the estimated charges and was told that the property had already been occupied by new renters. Kirsten took Ms. Goodeill’s contact information and told her someone would call her.

¶12 On September 19, Ms. Goodeill called Madison’s office again, insisting that she speak with someone who could explain the estimated charges to her. An associate named Brandy told her that Ron Dickerson would call her back. Ms. Goodeill informed Brandy that she knew her rights as a tenant and that she was entitled to her deposit refund within 14 days of moving out. Brandy told Ms. Goodeill that landlords are required only to provide an estimate of charges within 14 days.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
362 P.3d 302, 191 Wash. App. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jessica-m-goodeill-v-madison-real-estate-washctapp-2015.