Majid Nayeri, Apps V. Eagle Hardware & Garden, Inc., Resp

548 P.3d 214
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 30, 2024
Docket57873-5
StatusPublished

This text of 548 P.3d 214 (Majid Nayeri, Apps V. Eagle Hardware & Garden, Inc., Resp) 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
Majid Nayeri, Apps V. Eagle Hardware & Garden, Inc., Resp, 548 P.3d 214 (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

April 30, 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II MAJID NAYERI and BITA ABIDIAN, No. 57873-5-II

Appellants,

v.

EAGLE HARDWARE & GARDEN, INC. PUBLISHED OPINION d/b/a LOWE’S COMPANIES, INC., a North Carolina Corporation, and THE CENTER AT 4815 LLC, a Washington limited liability company,

Respondents,

KUEIFOUN, INC d/b/a THE HERBAL GARDEN, a Florida Corporation, and OGLE PROPERTIES, LLC, a Washington limited liability company,

Defendants.

GLASGOW, J.—Article I, section 16 of the Washington Constitution and RCW 8.24.010

allow a party to condemn a private way of necessity (usually an easement) across another’s

property in order to access land that is otherwise inaccessible. The doctrine allows private

condemnation only when the access sought is reasonably necessary for the condemnor to use and

enjoy their land.

Dr. Majid Nayeri bought two undeveloped landlocked parcels in Tacoma from the

Department of Transportation. The property was zoned for commercial development but contained No. 57873-5-II

steep slopes. After trying to negotiate access easements through neighbors’ properties for several

years, Nayeri sued multiple neighbors, including Eagle Hardware & Garden, d/b/a Lowe’s, and

The Center at 4815 LLC, seeking to condemn an easement under RCW 8.24.010.

Lowe’s moved for summary judgment. It argued that an easement was not reasonably

necessary because Nayeri knew the property was landlocked when he bought it and because it was

legally impossible to develop the property due to the difficulty of securing permits and meeting

other requirements in the Tacoma Municipal Code. The trial court granted the motion, dismissed

the case, and awarded Lowe’s and The Center statutory attorney fees.

Nayeri appeals. He argues that there was a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether

an easement was reasonably necessary to access and develop his property. He also asserts that we

should reverse the trial court’s award of attorney fees and require the trial court to reconsider its

fee award in light of our reversal of summary judgment. Lowe’s and The Center seek appellate

attorney fees.

We reverse the order granting summary judgment and remand for further proceedings

consistent with this opinion, but affirm the order awarding attorney fees under the statute. We grant

appellate attorney fees to Lowe’s and The Center.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

In 2005, the Department of Transportation bought two adjacent undeveloped parcels of

property as part of a project to construct a new off-ramp from State Route 16 in the city of Tacoma.

Although the eastern parcel originally bordered a road on its eastern edge, the construction of the

off-ramp eliminated that road, rendering the parcels landlocked.

2 No. 57873-5-II

The landowner who sold the parcels to the Department also owned three developed parcels

immediately to the south, which all had access to Center Street on their southern borders. The

landowner sold one of those parcels in 2008 to The Center and the other two parcels in 2016 to

Kueifoun. The Center granted Kueifoun an access easement that resulted in Kueifoun and The

Center having a shared driveway on The Center’s property. The undeveloped parcels were

bordered on the north by a Lowe’s store.

Br. of Resp’t Lowe’s at 5.

In 2007, when the Department no longer needed the undeveloped parcels for the

construction project, it designated the parcels as surplus and posted them for sale. Nayeri buys and

sells land as investments. In 2015, Nayeri bought the parcels. The sale contract expressly provided

3 No. 57873-5-II

that Nayeri “shall have no right of ingress and egress to, from[,] or between [State Route] 16” and

the parcels. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 236.

II. LAWSUIT

After attempting to negotiate access to the parcels through neighboring properties for

several years, Nayeri sued the owners of the neighboring properties. Nayeri sued Eagle Hardware

& Garden, d/b/a Lowe’s, and The Center at 4815 LLC.1 Nayeri sought to condemn an easement

across one of the neighbors’ properties to access his land under RCW 8.24.010, which allows a

property owner to condemn “a private way of necessity” if their land “is so situate with respect to

the land of another that [the private way] is necessary for its proper use and enjoyment.” RCW

8.24.010.

The complaint asserted that Nayeri purchased the property “to construct a 10,000 square

foot general office building.” CP at 6. He requested 30-foot-wide access by way of an easement

on the Lowe’s property or a 24-foot-wide easement from either Kuiefoun’s or The Center’s

property. The easement would be for ingress, egress, and utilities. And Nayeri sought a temporary

construction easement through whichever property provided the access point.

A. Summary Judgment Arguments

1. Lowe’s and The Center’s arguments and evidence

In December 2022, Lowe’s moved for summary judgment and The Center joined the

motion. Lowe’s argued that there was no dispute of material fact and that an easement over its

property was not “legally possible, let alone reasonably necessary.” CP at 419. Specifically, it

1 Nayeri also sued Ogle Properties LLC and Kueifoun Inc., a Florida corporation which never responded or appeared. Nayeri later voluntarily dismissed Ogle and The Center, but then readded The Center.

4 No. 57873-5-II

reasoned that it was impossible for Nayeri to develop his property without being granted several

municipal code variances and additional easements, which Nayeri had not yet sought. And the

easement Nayeri sought over the Lowe’s property would interfere with the store’s contractor bay

and would remove several parking stalls. Thus, Lowe’s believed that Nayeri’s proposed easement

through its property was “neither feasible [nor] reasonable.” CP at 423.

Lowe’s also asserted that there were “geologically preferable” alternate easements and

possibly an implied easement of necessity through The Center’s or Kuiefoun’s property. CP at

431. Finally, Lowe’s contended that Nayeri was precluded from condemning an easement because

he knew the parcels were landlocked when he bought them.

Lowe’s submitted a geotechnical firm’s report that Nayeri commissioned in 2019. The

report explained that, unless the city granted an exception, it was unlikely Nayeri could develop

his parcels due to municipal code buffer requirements for the steep slopes. The geotechnical firm

anticipated the city would grant an exemption because the slopes were the result of “past grading

activities” rather than naturally occurring. CP at 372. It then explained that a retaining wall or

daylight basement would likely be required as part of any structure built on the property. Overall,

the report concluded that “the proposed development of the project area appears feasible from a

geotechnical standpoint.” CP at 374. And it asserted that development would likely be permitted

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548 P.3d 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/majid-nayeri-apps-v-eagle-hardware-garden-inc-resp-washctapp-2024.