Kamaljit Singh And Harminder Kaur, Res. v. Harjit Kaur Gill, Harbans Grewal, Apps.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 19, 2016
Docket72817-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kamaljit Singh And Harminder Kaur, Res. v. Harjit Kaur Gill, Harbans Grewal, Apps. (Kamaljit Singh And Harminder Kaur, Res. v. Harjit Kaur Gill, Harbans Grewal, Apps.) 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
Kamaljit Singh And Harminder Kaur, Res. v. Harjit Kaur Gill, Harbans Grewal, Apps., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

KAMALJIT SINGH and HARMINDER r-o

KAUR, husband and wife; KENT VALLEY NO. 72817-2-1 APT., LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Company, iX>

Respondents, DIVISION ONE v.

HARJIT KAUR GILL, and JOHN DOE GILL, UNPUBLISHED OPINION wife and husband; and HARBANS GREWAL and JASBIR KAUR GREWAL, husband and wife; SATWINDER SHARMA and JANE DOE SHARMA, husband and wife; CHICAGO TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF WASHINGTON, as trustee under that certain deed of trust recorded under Recording No. 20110218001102,

Appellants. FILED: January 19, 2016

LAU, J. - Harbans Grewal, Jasbir Kaur Grewal, and Harjit Kaur Gill

(collectively the Grewals) appeal from the judgment entered in favor of Kamaljit Singh

and Harminder Kaur (collectively the Singhs).1 Because the Grewals fail to

demonstrate any error or abuse of discretion in the trial court's evidentiary rulings,

use of the interpreter, and determination of reasonable attorney fees, we affirm.

Where necessary for clarity, we use the parties' first names. No. 72817-2-1/2

FACTS

The trial court's detailed findings offact, entered following a seven-day bench trial, support the following summary of events. For purposes of appeal, appellants do not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court's findings of fact.2

Respondents (plaintiffs below) Kamaljit Singh and Harminder Kaur are

husband and wife. In 2006, Kamaljit and a business partner purchased real estate in Kent for future development. They later transferred title to the property to Harminder. In February 2009, Harminder conveyed the property to Kent Valley Apartments, LLC (Kent Valley LLC).

Appellants Harbans and Jasbir Grewal are husband and wife and reside in

British Columbia. Harjit Kaur Gill is Harbans' sister. Both Harbans and Jasbir are

experienced business owners.

In July 2009, Harbans contacted Kamaljit to discuss opening a business in

Washington. In September 2009, Harminder agreed to sell a 50 percent interest in

Kent Valley LLC to Harjit. Harbans, under the authority of a power of attorney, negotiated the transaction on Harjit's behalf as her attorney-in-fact. Harjit paid

Harminder the agreed-upon price of $235,000. Harminder and Harjit executed an

operating agreement reflecting that each owned 50 percent of Kent Valley LLC.

2 In their reply brief, appellants contend that the evidence was insufficient to support several findings of fact. Because they raise these arguments for the first time in the reply brief, we decline to consider them. See Cowiche Canyon Conservancy v. Boslev. 118 Wn.2d 801, 809, 828 P.2d 549 (1992).

-2- No. 72817-2-1/3

Kamaljit and Harbans also engaged in several smaller financial transactions during the remainder of 2009.

In December 2010, Harjit (through Harbans) entered into an agreement to purchase Harminder's remaining 50 percent interest in Kent Valley LLC for a cash payment of $235,000. On December 20, 2010, Harbans told Kamaljit that he had Harjit's check in the amount of $235,000 for the purchase. On the same day, Harbans and Kamaljit went to the Secretary of State's Office in Olympia and filed an Amended Annual Report for Kent Valley LLC. The Report listed Harjit as the sole member of Kent Valley LLC and Harbans as the registered agent. After leaving the Secretary of State's Office, Kamaljit asked Harbans for the check. Harbans said he would give Kamaljit the check as soon as the parties completed the transactional documents.

Kamaljit and Harbans then went to the home of Sabir Khan and asked Khan to

prepare documents memorializing the transaction. Several of the documents listed

Harjit as the sole owner of Kent Valley LLC. One document, entitled "Agreement between Harjit Kaur and Harminder Kaur," provided for the payment of $235,000 cash for the remaining 50 percent interest in Kent Valley LLC. After leaving Khan's house, Kamaljit and Harbans took the agreements to a bank for signature and notarization. Kamaljit again asked for the check. Harbans

informed him that the agreements were defective and that he would deliver the check

after his attorney reviewed and approved the sale documents. During the following weeks, Harbans contacted Kamaljit several times and asked for additional

information so that the transaction could close.

-3- No. 72817-2-1/4

On December 21, 2010, Harbans retained John Meenk, a Bellingham attorney, to review the sale documents. Based on his conversations with Harbans,

Meenk believed that Harjit had paid Harminder $235,000 cash for the additional 50

percent interest in Kent Valley LLC on or before December 20. In drafting the terms

of an addendum to the purchase and sale agreement, Meenk assumed that Harjit had already paid $235,000 in cash. At Harbans' request, Meenk also drafted a

$675,000 promissory note for Harjit's signature, payable to Harbans' wife Jasbir, and a related Deed of Trust against Kent Valley LLC to secure the promissory note.

On January 8, 2011, one day after Kamaljit left for a trip to India, Harbans

went to Harminder's home and gave her Harjit's $235,000 check. Harminder showed

the check to Manmohan Grewal, a business associate, who was present at the

meeting. Harminder and Harbans then went to a UPS store to sign the addendum in

front of a notary public. At Harbans' request, Harminder agreed not to deposit the

check until Harbans transferred sufficient funds to Harjit's account.

On January 25, 2011, Harjit signed the $675,000 promissory note, payable to

Harbans' wife"Jasbir, and the Deed of Trust securing the note. The trial court found that the Grewals failed to present any "credible evidence ... to support the

Defendants' contention that Jasbir advanced a reasonably equivalent value to Harjit

in exchange for the $675,000.00 note." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 1803. On February

18, 2011, Harbans' attorney recorded the Deed of Trust, without notice to the Singhs

and without Harminder's authorization.

Kamaljit returned from India in late February 2011 and unsuccessfully

attempted to contact Harbans for authorization to deposit the check. Kamaljit and

-4- No. 72817-2-1/5

Harminder eventually presented the check for payment at a Bank of America branch. The bank refused to honor the check because it was written on a "Seafirst Bank" account that was closed in 2007. CP at 1803.

In March or April 2011, Harminder and Manmohan travelled to Harbans' home

in Abbottsford, British Columbia. At the meeting, Harbans and Jasbir informed Harminder that Harjit no longer wished to purchase Harminder's remaining interest in Kent Valley LLC and recommended that Harminder sell the property and split the proceeds according to the terms of the 2009 operating agreement. On April 19, 2011, the Singhs filed a complaint for breach of contract against Kent Valley LLC, Harjit, and Harbans. Among other things, the complaint alleged that Harbans had drawn up and recorded the Deed of Trust for $675,000 without

Harminder's knowledge. The complaint sought monetary damages and a declaration that the Deed of Trust was null and void. The court dismissed the action in October

2012 for lack of personal jurisdiction.

On April 19, 2013, Jasbir executed an "Assignment of Beneficiary's Interest in Deed of Trust," purporting to assign her interest in the Deed of Trust to Satwinder

Sharma as security for a loan.

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