Klem v. Wash. Mut. Bank

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 2013
Docket87105-1
StatusPublished

This text of Klem v. Wash. Mut. Bank (Klem v. Wash. Mut. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klem v. Wash. Mut. Bank, (Wash. 2013).

Opinion

Fll E IN CLERKS OFFICE IUPREME COURT, STAT!: OF WASHINCmlN

~282013 . --Sf- IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIANNE KLEM, as Administrator of the ) Estate of Dorothy Halstien, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) No. 87105-1 ) WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK, a ) EnBanc Washington Corporation, ) ) Defendant, ) ) QUALITY LOAN SERVICE ) CORPORATION OF WASHINGTON, a ) Washington Corporation; and QUALITY ) LOAN SERVICE CORPORATION, a ) California Corporation, ) ) Respondents. ) Filed FEB 2 B 2013 -------------------------- ) CHAMBERS, J. * -Dorothy Halstien, an aging woman suffering from

dementia, owned a home worth somewhere between $235,000 and $320,000. At

about the time she developed dementia, she owed approximately $75,000 to

Washington Mutual Bank (WaMu), secured by a deed of trust on her home.

Because of the cost of her care, her guardian did not have the funds to pay her

mortgage, and Quality Loan Services (Quality), acting as the trustee of the deed of

*Justice Tom Chambers is serving as a justice pro tempore of the Supreme Court pursuant to Washington Constitution article IV, section 2(a). Klem v. Washington Mutual Bank, No. 87105-1

trust, foreclosed on her home. On the first day it could, Quality sold her home for $83,087.67, one dollar more than she owed, including fees and costs. A notary, employed by Quality, had falsely notarized the notice of sale by predating the notary acknowledgment. This falsification permitted the sale to take place earlier than it could have had the notice of sale been dated when it was actually signed. Before the foreclosure sale, Halstien's court appointed guardian secured a signed purchase and sale agreement from a buyer willing to pay $23 5, 000 for the

house. Unfortunately, there was not enough time before the scheduled foreclosure sale to close the sale with that buyer. In Washington, the trustee has the discretion to postpone foreclosure sales. This trustee declined to consider exercising that discretion, and instead deferred the decision to the lender, WaMu. Despite numerous requests by the guardian, WaMu did not postpone the sale. A jury found that the trustee was negligent; that the trustee's acts or practices violated the Consumer Protection Act (CPA), chapter 19.86 RCW; and that the trustee breached its contractual obligations. The Court of Appeals reversed all but the negligence claim. We reverse the Court of Appeals in part and restore the award

based upon the CPA. We award the guardian reasonable attorney fees and remand to the trial court to order appropriate injunctive relief. FACTS The issues presented require a detailed discussion of the facts. In 1996, Halstien bought a house on Whidbey Island for $147,500. In 2004, she borrowed $73,000 from WaMu, secured by a deed of trust on her home. That loan was the

2 Klem v. Washington Mutual Bank, No. 87105-1

only debt secured by the property, which otherwise Halstien owned free and clear. Unfortunately, by 2006, when Halstien was 74 years old, she developed dementia. At the time, Halstien' s daughter and her daughter's boyfriend were living at the home with her. Washington State's Adult Protective Services became concerned that Halstien was a vulnerable adult being neglected at home. After an investigation, protective services petitioned the court for the appointment of a professional guardian to protect Halstien. The court granted the petition and Dianne Klem, executive director ofPuget Sound Guardians, was appointed Halstien's guardian in January 2007. Klem soon placed Halstien in the dementia unit of a skilled nursing facility in Snohomish County. Halstien's care cost between $3,000 and $6,000 a month. At the time, Halstien received about $1 ,444 a month in income from Social Security and a Teamsters' pension. The State of Washington paid the balance of her care and is a creditor of her estate. Halstien's only significant asset was her Whidbey Island home, which at the time was assessed by the county at $257,804. WaMu also had an appraisal indicating the home was worth $320,000, nearly four times the value of the outstanding debt. Klem testified that if she had been able to sell the home, she could have improved Halstien's quality of life considerably by providing additional services the State did not pay for. Selling the home was neither quick nor easy. Even after Halstien was placed

3 Klem v. Washington Mutual Bank, No. 87105-1

in a skilled care facility, her daughter still lived in the home (without paying rent) and both the daughter and her brother strongly opposed any sale. The record suggests Halstien's children expected to inherit the home and, Klem testified, getting the daughter and her family to leave "was quite a battle." Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Jan. 13, 2010) at 94. Ultimately, Puget Sound Guardians

prevailed, but before it could sell the home, it had to obtain court permission (complicated, apparently, by the considerable notice that had to be given to various state agencies and to family members, and because some of those entitled to notice were difficult to find), remove abandoned animals and vehicles, and clean up the property. 1 During this process Halstien became delinquent on her mortgage. Quality, identifying itself as "the agent for Washington Mutual," posted a notice of default on Halstien's home on or around October 25, 2007. Ex. 3, at 3. The notice demanded $1,372.20 to bring the note current. The record establishes that the guardianship did not have available funds to satisfy the demand. A notice of trustee sale was executed shortly afterward by Seth Ott for Quality. The notice was dated and, according to the notary jurat of"R. Tassle," notarized on November 26, 2007. VRP (Jan. 13, 2010) at 89-90. However, the notice of sale was not actually signed that day. The sale was set for February 29, 2008. This notice of sale was one of apparently many foreclosure documents that

1 Puget Sound Guardians advanced the costs and, as of trial, had not been reimbursed. 4 Klem v. Washington Mutual Bank, No. 87105-1

were falsely notarized by Quality and its employees around that time. There was

considerable evidence that falsifying notarizations was a common practice, and one that Quality employees had been trained to do. While Quality employees steadfastly refused to speculate under oath how or why this practice existed, the evidence suggests that documents were falsely dated and notarized to expedite foreclosures and thereby keep their clients, the lenders, beneficiaries, and other

participants in the secondary market for mortgage debt happy with their work. Ott

acknowledged on the stand that if the notice of sale had been correctly dated, the sale would not have taken place until at least one week later.

On January 10, 2008, Puget Sound Guardians asset manager David

Greenfield called Ott in his capacity as trustee. Greenfield explained that Halstien

was in a guardianship and that the guardianship intended to sell the property.

Greenfield initially understood, incorrectly, that the trustee would postpone the sale if Puget Sound Guardians presented W aMu with a signed purchase and sale

agreement by February 19, 2008. Puget Sound Guardians sought, and on January

31, 2008, received, court permission to hire a real estate agent to help sell the

house. Unknown to Greenfield, Quality, as trustee, had an agreement with WaMu that it would not delay a trustee's sale except upon WaMu's express direction.

This agreement was articulated in a confidential "attorney expectation document" that was given to the jury. This confidential document outlines how foreclosures

were to be done and billed. It specifically states, "Your office is not authorized to

5 Klem v.

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