Kenneth Zimmerman, Jr. v. Wilmington Savings Fund Society Fsb

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 30, 2021
Docket53763-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kenneth Zimmerman, Jr. v. Wilmington Savings Fund Society Fsb (Kenneth Zimmerman, Jr. v. Wilmington Savings Fund Society Fsb) 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
Kenneth Zimmerman, Jr. v. Wilmington Savings Fund Society Fsb, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON Division Two

DIVISION II March 30, 2021

KENNETH P. ZIMMERMAN, JR. and No. 53763-0-II VICTORIA L. ZIMMERMAN, husband and wife,

Appellants,

v.

WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY UNPUBLISHED OPINION FSB, as trustee for STANWICH MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST A,

Respondents,

NORTH CASCADE TRUSTEE SERVICES, INC., trustee to deed of trust,

Defendant.

GLASGOW, J.—Kenneth and Victoria Zimmerman defaulted on their mortgage. Six years

later, they filed an action seeking to quiet title against their deed of trust because any action to

foreclose would be barred by the statute of limitations. They personally served defendant

Wilmington Savings Fund Society FSB in Delaware, but they failed to file a declaration stating

that Wilmington could not be served in Washington as required by our long arm statute.

Wilmington failed to appear, and the trial court granted the Zimmermans a default order

and judgment. Wilmington later moved to vacate the default order and judgment, arguing that the

trial court lacked personal jurisdiction based on failure to comply with the long arm statute. The

trial court vacated the default order and judgment.

The Zimmermans appeal, asserting that they substantially complied with the long arm

statute because the record contains an affidavit from which the trial court could logically conclude No. 53763-0-II

that Wilmington could not be served in Washington and, if Wilmington was properly served, there

is no defect in the default order and judgment. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

Wilmington held a promissory note secured by a deed of trust on the Zimmermans’ home.

The note required monthly installment payments until 2038. It is undisputed that the Zimmermans

stopped making their monthly payments and that they were in default as of July 1, 2010.

Wilmington did not accelerate the debt, and the Zimmermans never resumed payments.

RCW 7.28.300 allows the owner of real estate to quiet title against a deed of trust where

an action to foreclose would be barred by the statute of limitations. In 2016, the Zimmermans

brought an action to quiet title over the deed of trust based on RCW 7.28.300 seeking to have the

deed of trust declared null and void.

The Zimmermans filed two affidavits related to service on Wilmington. First, a process

server attempted to serve Wilmington at 500 Delaware Avenue in Wilmington, Delaware. The

process server’s first affidavit explained that service was rejected and a “[l]egal [a]dministrator”

told them that “[a]ll documents related to a trust must be served on their trust division at 501 Carr

Road” in Wilmington, Delaware. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 15. The second affidavit established

personal service of the summons and complaint at the Carr Road address. Neither affidavit

mentioned any attempt to serve Wilmington in Washington. Nor is there any information in this

record explaining why Wilmington could not be served in Washington.

North Cascade Trustee Services answered the complaint and was dismissed by agreed

order. Wilmington did not appear and the trial court entered an order of default in February 2017.

The trial court also entered a final order concluding that the underlying debt secured by the deed

2 No. 53763-0-II

of trust would be barred by the statute of limitations, quieting title, and requiring that the deed of

trust be removed from the county auditor’s record.

Then in December 2018, Wilmington filed a CR 60 motion to show cause why default

should not be set aside and vacated. Wilmington argued that under RCW 4.28.185(4),

Washington’s long arm statute, the Zimmermans were required to file an affidavit establishing that

Wilmington could not be served in Washington, but they failed to do so. As a result, the trial court

lacked personal jurisdiction over Wilmington. Wilmington argued that the default judgment was

therefore void and had to be vacated.

The trial court entered an order requiring the Zimmermans to show cause. In response, the

Zimmermans argued that they had substantially complied with the long arm affidavit requirement

because they had submitted an affidavit explaining that all documents related to a trust had to be

served at Wilmington’s Carr Road address in Delaware. The logical conclusion from this affidavit,

they said, was that Wilmington could not be served in Washington.

The trial court initially declined to vacate the default order, finding substantial compliance.

Wilmington moved for reconsideration. Recognizing that a substantial compliance analysis

included consideration of harm or injury, Wilmington argued on reconsideration that the entire

amount owed under the note should not have been excused as a result of the six-year statute of

limitations. The note required monthly installment payments, and the statute of limitations accrued

for each missed payment when that payment became due. See Edmundson v. Bank of Am. N.A.,

194 Wn. App. 920, 927-28, 378 P.3d 272 (2016). Thus, when Wilmington filed its motion for

reconsideration in 2019, only two to three years of payments that had been due for more than six

years were barred. But the default order deprived Wilmington of the ability to enforce payment

3 No. 53763-0-II

obligations that were not barred by the statute of limitations.

Upon reconsideration, the trial court entered an order that effectively granted the relief

Wilmington was requesting. The final order on reconsideration stated: “The [d]efault and [d]efault

[j]udgment entered against Wilmington are vacated only with respect to installment payments not

barred by the statute of limitations related to [p]laintiffs’ complaint.” CP at 206. The trial court

also included language stating that it “hereby finds” “[t]he [p]laintiffs substantially complied with

RCW 4.28.185 and service was valid on the [d]efendants in Delaware. The court finds there was

no injury to the [d]efendants with respect to the [d]efault of payments not barred by the statute of

limitations.”1 CP at 205.

The trial court later entered a judgment for money and decree of foreclosure in

Wilmington’s favor under the same cause number. In part, this later order granted summary

judgment to Wilmington on the Zimmermans’ quiet title claim.

The Zimmermans appeal the order on reconsideration vacating the default order and

judgment against Wilmington. Wilmington did not cross appeal.

ANALYSIS

The Zimmermans contend that the trial court erred when it granted Wilmington’s CR 60

motion to vacate the default order and judgment. They assert that the portion of the order finding

substantial compliance with the affidavit requirement in RCW 4.28.185(4), the long arm statute,

cannot be revisited because Wilmington did not appeal. Alternatively, the Zimmermans argue that

service was proper because they substantially complied by filing an affidavit explaining that

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