Joseph Mojarrad & Nicole Ching v. Lorraine Walden

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 19, 2016
Docket74546-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joseph Mojarrad & Nicole Ching v. Lorraine Walden (Joseph Mojarrad & Nicole Ching v. Lorraine Walden) 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
Joseph Mojarrad & Nicole Ching v. Lorraine Walden, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

JOSEPH MOJARRAD and NICOLE CHING LIN LU, husband and wife, No. 74546-8-1 (consolidated with 74768-1) Appellants, DIVISION ONE

RON WALDEN and JANE DOE WALDEN, husband and wife; RON WALDEN, as personal representative for the ESTATE OF GILBERT WALDEN, a probate estate,

Defendants, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

LORRAINE WALDEN and JOHN DOE FILED: December 19, 2016 WALDEN, husband and wife,

Respondents.

Becker, J. — This appeal concerns a claim for breach of the warranty of

quiet possession of a gravel driveway that runs across a parcel of rural property.

In 2005, the seller gave the buyer a statutory warranty deed to the parcel,

including the driveway. The buyer claims that at closing, he was unaware that a

neighbor had acquired title to the driveway by adverse possession decades

earlier. In 2010, the buyer found he was unable to use the driveway because the

neighbor had gated it. On summary judgment, the trial court held that the alleged

breach of the warranty of quiet possession occurred at the time of conveyance in

2005, necessitating dismissal of the claim as beyond the statute of limitations. No. 74546-8-1/2

We reverse. A jury could find that the breach did not occur until the buyer

encountered the blocked driveway in 2010.

We review a summary judgment order de novo, considering the evidence

in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Mastro v. Kumakichi Corp..

90 Wn. App. 157, 162,951 P.2d 817. review denied. 136 Wn.2d 1015 (1998).

Summary judgment is appropriate only when there are no genuine issues of

material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See

CR 56(c).

FACTS

From 1952 until his death in 2009, Gilbert Walden owned and lived on

property in rural Skagit County just off Butler Creek Road. To get from the road

to the residence and shop on his property, he used a driveway that extends

some 30 to 50 feet past the residence.

Respondent Lorraine Walden is a widow in her late 60s. She was married

to Gilbert's brother, Melroy. Lorraine and Melroy lived in Seattle and regularly

drove up to Skagit County to visit Gilbert. Melroy was interested in buying

property as an investment. Gilbert recommended the purchase of the property

that adjoined his to the north, an undeveloped plot of land of 20 acres between

Butler Creek on the west and Butler Creek Road on the east. Melroy and

Lorraine bought this property in 1965. They received a warranty deed that was

recorded in March 1967. The driveway is near the boundary line of the two

properties. No. 74546-8-1/3

According to Lorraine, she and Melroy did not go onto their property and

they were not interested in developing it. They did not believe the driveway was

included in their property; they always thought it belonged to Gilbert, who

exclusively used it, as had his predecessors. They used the driveway only when

they visited Gilbert.

Gilbert at one time raised cattle on his property and maintained a fence on

the north side of the driveway. Sometime in the 1960s, he moved his cattle, and

from then on, he had no reason to keep the fence repaired. At present, the

barbed wire remnants of the fence can be found only by picking through brush.

Melroy died in 1990. Lorraine continued to live in Seattle, where she

worked until her retirement in 2013. She drove up from time to time to visit

Gilbert. She thought of her property as an asset that she could sell for cash

when she needed money to live on.

Around 1992, Lorraine decided to acquire a narrow two-acre pie-shaped

piece of land between the eastern boundary of her property and the Butler Creek

Road. Lorraine understood that acquisition of this parcel was necessary to

prevent her parcel from being landlocked. To facilitate the purchase, she

commissioned a survey by AARAY Consultants. The survey is dated October 5,

1992.

The AARAY survey showed the driveway as being on Lorraine's property.

Gilbert and Lorraine discussed this and "laughed" about what they considered to

be a mistake. Gilbert believed the surveyor had started from the wrong post.

The surveyor refused Lorraine's request to make a correction. Lorraine left it at No. 74546-8-1/4

that. She had spent $5,000 on the survey. "I didn't want to spend money on

something I knew that was useless. I knew where my line was." She knew all

along Gilbert had owned the driveway since 1952 or 1953. Lorraine received title

to the 2-acre parcel in April 2004. With that addition, the property she sold to

Mojarrad now consists of 22 acres.

In 2005, Lorraine decided to offer the property for sale. At the same time,

Mojarrad and his wife, who live in Texas, were looking for rural acreage in

Washington as a possible place to move and build a house for retirement. The

Mojarrads did not meet Lorraine personally. Their agent, Mike Trojan, showed

them Lorraine's property. They walked along the driveway, "way down to the

west side," to the west corner "that was a little like a fish creek," until they got to

an area so crowded by trees it was impassable. In doing so, they walked by

Gilbert's house. They did not see a fence or a ditch.

On September 30, 2005, the Mojarrads signed a purchase and sale

agreement offering to purchase the property for $175,000. Lorraine signed her

acceptance on October 1, 2005. On October 4, the Mojarrads obtained a seller

disclosure statement and a copy of the 1992 AARAY survey. The seller

disclosure statement, initialed by Lorraine on October 3, represented that there

were no "rights of way, easements, or access limitations that may affect the

Buyer's use of the property," no "encroachments, boundary agreements, or

boundary disputes," and no "covenants, conditions, or restrictions which affect

the property." No. 74546-8-1/5

Closing occurred on October 19, 2005. The Mojarrads did not attend the

closing. The real estate agent for Lorraine was there, and Mojarrad's agent was

present also, at least by speaker phone. According to Lorraine, Gilbert

accompanied her to the escrow "to make it absolutely crystal clear that whatever

the survey showed was not a true reflection of ownership or possession." She

said that Gilbert "made it very clear" to the realtors and others present at the

escrow that it was always understood that he owned the driveway "to the north

side of the ditch where the fence ran." According to Lorraine, Mojarrad's agent

said, "Yes, they know that."

The record does not conclusively establish that the message delivered by

Gilbert at closing was relayed to Mojarrad. The record does not contain

testimony from either of the real estate agents. According to Mojarrad, "We

relied upon Lorraine Walden's seller disclosure statement and survey and closed

the purchase of the Property. Lorraine Walden did not notify us that any other

person claimed to own or possess any interest in any portion of the Property."

Lorraine admits she took no other steps to inform the Mojarrads that the driveway

was not included in the sale.

In 2009, Gilbert died and his property passed to his estate. Gilbert's son

Ron Walden took over as the personal representative of Gilbert's estate in 2010.

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