Larry W. Hoppe v. Cedar Pointe Of Seattle Owners Assoc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 11, 2019
Docket78108-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Larry W. Hoppe v. Cedar Pointe Of Seattle Owners Assoc. (Larry W. Hoppe v. Cedar Pointe Of Seattle Owners Assoc.) 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
Larry W. Hoppe v. Cedar Pointe Of Seattle Owners Assoc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

LARRY HOPPE, a single man, ) No. 781 08-1-I ) Appellant, ) ) DIVISION ONE v. ) CEDAR POINTE OF SEATTLE ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION OWNERS ASSOCIATION, a ) Washington non-profit corporation; ) LOREN FORSBERG and JANE DOE ) FILED: March 11, 2019 FORSBERG, husband and wife and the) marital community composed thereof, )

Respondents.

MANN, A.C.J. — Larry Hoppe non-judicially foreclosed on seven condominium

units and their appurtenances in the Cedar Pointe of Seattle condominium complex

after Mark Johnson, the developer of the complex, defaulted on a loan. Hoppe later

believed that certain parking spaces and storage areas were appurtenant to the units he

foreclosed upon and filed a quiet title action. The trial court concluded, on summary

judgment, that Hoppe did not have a valid claim to the parking spaces and storage

areas. The court also issued sanctions against Hoppe and his attorneys for filing a

frivolous and meritless lawsuit. Hoppe appeals. We affirm. No. 78108-1-1/2

Johnson formed Cedar Pointe of Seattle, LLC (Cedar Pointe LLC) to construct

the Cedar Pointe of Seattle condominium complex. The condominium complex consists

of 76 condominium units, 93 parking spots, and 55 storage areas. On March 5, 2007,

Johnson recorded the Declaration of Condominium for Cedar Pointe (Declaration). The

Declaration named Cedar Pointe LLC as the declarant.

Article 7 of the Declaration describes Limited Common Elements.1 “The Limited

Common Elements allocated to each Unit are. . . (b) any parking space assigned to the

Unit pursuant to Article 8, and (c) any storage area assigned to the Unit pursuant to

Article 8.”2 “Parking spaces and storage areas. . . may be reallocated between Units

Owners only with the approval of the Board and by an amendment to the Declaration.”

Article 8 provides:

Parking spaces and storage areas are or will be allocated to Units as . . .

Limited Common Elements in Schedule B or by amendment to Schedule B signed only by the Declarant. Until assigned to Units or designated as common parking by the Declarant, unassigned parking spaces designated as common parking are for common use. Declarant’s right to assign . . .

parking spaces and storage areas shall terminate on the earlier of the date on which Declarant relinquishes its Development Rights, or seven years after the date of recording the Declaration.

“Until all Units have been sold, the Declarant shall have the right to control the use of

any unassigned parking spaces and carports.”

Article 10 reserved development and special declarant rights:3

1 Limited Common Elements are defined by the Condominium Act as ‘a portion of the common elements allocated by the declaration or by operation of [statute] for the exclusive use of one or more but fewer than all of the units.” RCW 64.34.020(27). 2 (Emphasis added.) ~ Development rights are defined by the Condominium Act as: any right or combination of rights reserved by a declarant in the declaration to: (a) Add real property or improvements to a condominium; (b) create units, common elements, or limited common elements within real property included or added to a condominium; (c) subdivide units -2- No. 78108-1-1/3

Section 10.1 Development Rights. The Declarant reserves the following Development Rights: (a) the right to assign parking spaces or storage areas to Units as Limited Common Elements pursuant to Section 8.1.

Section 10.2 Special Declarant Rights. The Declarant reserves the following Special Declarant Rights so long as the Declarant owns a Unit: (a) to complete any improvements (b) to maintain sales offices. (c) . . . . .

to use easements.

To finance the project, Johnson took out a loan from a Washington Bank.

Separately, Johnson took out a private loan from Hoppe. Hoppe’s loan was secured by

a second position deed of trust on 21 condominium units within the Cedar Pointe of

Seattle condominium complex “together with all the tenements, hereditaments, and

appurtenances now of hereafter thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining, and

the rents, issues, and profits thereof.”

Johnson also borrowed $400,000 from Loren Forsberg. Johnson failed to repay

that loan and on May 29, 2012 Forsberg obtained a judgment against Johnson for

$422,000. That same day, Johnson and Forsberg executed a forbearance agreement,

whereby Forsberg would refrain from executing the judgment against Johnson in

exchange for, among other things, eleven parking spaces and thirteen storage units at

the Cedar Pointe of Seattle condominium complex. The parking spaces were spaces:

1, 2, 5, 38, 63, 64, 65, 69, 70, 71, and 74. The storage areas were units: A, C, E, F, C,

H, J, K, M, 4, 11, 29, and 30 (collectively, parking spaces and storage areas). It is these

specific parking spaces and storage areas that are the subject of this dispute.

or convert units into common elements; (d) withdraw real property from a condominium; or (e) reallocate limited common elements with respect to units that have not been conveyed by the declarant. RCW 64.34.020(18). -3- No. 78108-1-114

On June 29, 2012, after Johnson defaulted on the Hoppe loan, Hoppe non

judicially foreclosed on seven units.4 Hoppe purchased all seven units at the

foreclosure sale and recorded the deed. Soon after the foreclosure sale, Hoppe

conveyed his seven units to Cassidy Property Investments, LLC (Cassidy LLC). Hoppe

is the sole owner of Cassidy LLC.

Prior to the foreclosure sale, Cedar Pointe LLC had not assigned any storage

areas to the units Hoppe purchased. Cedar Pointe LLC had assigned parking spaces

47, 67, 72, 73, 76, 90, and 92 to the units Hoppe purchased. It is undisputed that these

seven assigned parking spaces were appurtenant to the units Hoppe purchased, and

therefore Cassidy LLC retains the exclusive use thereof. However none of the parking

spaces and storage areas that are the subject of this dispute were ever assigned to the

units Hoppe purchased. Regardless, Hoppe later came to believe that he was the

rightful owner of the parking spaces and storage areas, which Forsberg was using

pursuant to the forbearance agreement.

On August 22, 2017, Hoppe filed a quiet title action against Forsberg and the

Condominium Association. After a period of discovery, both Forsberg and Hoppe

moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted Forsberg’s motion. The court

also awarded Forsberg his attorney fees as a sanction against Hoppe and his attorneys,

pursuant to CR 11 and RCW 4.84.185. The court explained that Hoppe “and his

counsel brought this action without any evidence that the [parking spaces and storage

areas] were ever assigned or allocated to the 7 Units [Hoppe] foreclosed upon.”

Due to a total lack of evidence that the 11 parking and 13 storage spaces were ever assigned or allocated to the 7 Units [Hoppe] foreclosed upon

~‘ Due to unrelated dealings between the parties, when the foreclosure took place Hoppe’s security interest remained on only seven of the original twenty-one units. -4- No. 78108-1-1/5

• .leads this Court to the inescapable conclusion that this action is totally devoid of merit and frivolous. It was also not well grounded in law and fact. .

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