Kevin Porter v. Nathaniel Boisso

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 16, 2015
Docket31805-2
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Porter v. Nathaniel Boisso (Kevin Porter v. Nathaniel Boisso) 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
Kevin Porter v. Nathaniel Boisso, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED

JUNE 16,2015

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division 1Il

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

KEVIN PORTER, ) ) No. 31805-2-111 Appellant, ) (cons. with No. 31809-5-111) ) v. ) ) NATHANIEL (NATE) BOIS SO, )

PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF ) PUBLISHED OPINION

THE ESTATE OF CHARLES BOISSO, )

) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, C.J. - A creditor of a decedent's estate who is notified by the

personal representative of rejection of his claim is required by Washington's nonclaim

statute to bring suit within 30 days, failing which his claim is forever barred. RCW

11.40.100. The statute provides that the personal representative's notification of rejection

"must advise the claimant that the claimant must bring suit in the proper court against the

personal representative within thirty days." Id. (emphasis added). These consolidated

cases involve a creditor's claim filed in a Kittitas County probate that was dismissed

because the holder of the claim filed his post-rejection lawsuit in the Superior Court for

Pierce County. They call on us to decide the meaning of "the proper court" for a post-

rejection suit. No. 3lB05-2-III; cons. wi No. 3lB09-5-III Porter v. Boisso

We hold that to the extent Kevin Porter's claims for relief asserted in his Pierce

County action were subject to the nonclaim statute (and some were not), ''the proper

court" in which to assert them was the superior court. His action, which was transferred

to Kittitas County on Mr. Porter's own motion for change of venue, should not have been

dismissed nor should the Kittitas County court have quieted title to the real property that

was at issue in Charles Boisso' s estate. We reverse several orders and the final

judgments entered in both matters and remand for proceedings consistent with this

opInIon.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On November 13, 2012, Kittitas County granted letters of administration for the

probate of the estate of Charles Boisso. Kevin Porter filed notice of a creditor's claim in

the probate action several weeks later, on December 17. His notice alleged that he had

entered into a contract to purchase two one-half-acre parcels of property owned by the

late Mr. Boisso, located in Pierce County; that the agreed purchase price had been

$120,000; and that he had, since 1999, paid a total of$116,900. He asked that upon his

payment of the balance owed the estate deliver to him a statutory warranty deed.

The estate rejected Mr. Porter's claim on December 31. Its notice of rejection

stated that "[p]ursuant to RCW 11.40.100, you must bring suit in the proper Court against

the Personal Representative within thirty days after the date of the postmark of the

No. 31805-2-III; cons. wiNo. 31809-5-II1 Porter v. Boisso

mailing of this Notice, and that otherwise your claim will be forever barred." Clerk's

Papers (CP) (No. 318095) at 5.

On January 29, 2013, Mr. Porter filed suit in Pierce County. He would later

explain that he did so because his claim involved real property located in Pierce County

and he was concerned with a series of Washington decisions that construed RCW

4.12.010, which governs the county in which many actions involving real property "shall

be commenced," as jurisdictional. The cases "continually affirmed that RCW 4.12.010

governs jurisdiction affecting local actions and that local actions commenced in the

wrong county must be dismissed." Ralph v. State Dep 't ofNatural Resources, 182

Wn.2d 242,267, 343 P.3d 342 (2014) (Wiggins, J., dissenting) (citing cases). After

briefing in this appeal was completed, our Supreme Court decided Ralph, in which a five-

member majority overruled that line of cases, holding that RCW 4.12.01 O( 1) prescribes

only venue, not jurisdiction. Ralph, 182 Wn.2d at 259.

Mr. Porter's Pierce County complaint disclosed the Kittitas County probate, his

creditor's claim, and the estate's notice of rejection. It described the terms of his alleged

purchase agreement and his alleged substantial performance. Attached to the complaint

was a handwritten letter from the late Mr. Boisso to Mr. Porter dated July 17,2001, that

included references to a mortgage, an interest rate, and a principal balance.! CP (No.

I The text of the handwritten note is included in an appendix to this opinion.

No. 31805-2-III; cons. wi No. 31809-5-III Porter v. Boisso

318095) at 34-35. Mr. Porter's prayer for relief sought a declaratory judgment specifYing

his right and interest in the property and an order compelling specific performance;

alternatively, he sought damages for unjust enrichment.

The estate moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing that venue and jurisdiction

were improper. After hearing argument, the Pierce County court initially stayed

proceedings, later entertaining a motion by Mr. Porter for change of venue to Kittitas

County. It eventually entered an order "Transferring Venue and Jurisdiction" to Kittitas

County on May 3,2013. CP (No. 318095) at 231-33.

Meanwhile, the estate had filed a petition in the Kittitas County probate

proceeding for an order clearing title to the Pierce County properties. It argued that by

filing his complaint in Pierce County, Mr. Porter failed to file suit in "the proper court"

and was forever barred from asserting a claim. As further support for the requested

relief, it argued that Mr. Porter had no contract right to purchase the Pierce County

property but instead had been a tenant paying rent, attaching a 1999 rental agreement

signed by Mr. Porter as support. After hearing from the parties, the court granted the

relief requested by the estate on the basis that Mr. Porter failed to file a complaint in

Kittitas County and, by statute, his claims were barred. It did not address whether the

late Mr. Boisso and Mr. Porter had entered into a real estate purchase and sale agreement.

In May 2013, the estate filed a motion to dismiss Mr. Porter's complaint on

collateral estoppel grounds, arguing that the issues presented had been litigated and

No. 31805-2-111; cons. wi No. 31809-5-111 Porter v. Boisso

resolved against Mr. Porter through the quiet title proceeding. The court granted the

estate's motion and dismissed Mr. Porter's complaint with prejudice. It awarded the

estate attorney fees in the probate action and costs in both proceedings, for a total of

$29,942.

Mr. Porter appeals orders and final judgments entered in both proceedings.

ANALYSIS

Washington's nonclaim statute, RCW 11.40.010, provides that "[a] person having

a claim against the decedent may not maintain an action on the claim unless ... the

claimant has presented the claim as set forth in this chapter." Once a claim is filed, the

personal representative shall allow or reject each claim, failing which the statute allows

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