Marc Landry, V Port Of Port Townsend

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 20, 2018
Docket49617-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marc Landry, V Port Of Port Townsend (Marc Landry, V Port Of Port Townsend) 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
Marc Landry, V Port Of Port Townsend, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

March 20, 2018 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II MARC LANDRY, an individual No. 49617-8-II

Appellant,

v.

PORT OF PORT TOWNSEND, a Washington UNPUBLISHED OPINION municipal corporation; LARRY CROCKETT, both as an individual and as an agent and / or Executive Director of PORT OF PORT TOWNSEND; JIM PIVARNIK, both as an individual and as an agent / Deputy Director of PORT OF PORT TOWNSEND; PT MARINE ENTERPRISES LLC dba as GOLD STAR MARINE and its co-owner / officer / agent at all relevant times, JIM HECKMAN; and DOES 6 through 15, Inclusive,

Respondents.

LEE, J. — Marc Landry filed a complaint against the Port of Port Townsend, challenging

the validity of the “Derelict Vessel Agreement & Deposit Form” (derelict vessel agreement) he

executed with the Port, under which he was required to pay a “derelict vessel deposit.” The

superior court denied Landry’s motion for summary judgment, granted the Port’s motion for

summary judgment, and dismissed Landry’s claims against the Port.

On appeal, Landry failed to provide a sufficient record for our review. We ordered Landry

to supplement the appellate record to allow us to review this appeal. Landry did not comply with

our order to perfect the record. Thus, the record is insufficient for us to review Landry’s assigned No. 49617-8-II

errors challenging the superior court’s order on the summary judgment motions. Accordingly, we

dismiss Landry’s appeal.

FACTS

A. LANDRY’S TENANCY WITH THE PORT OF PORT TOWNSEND

The Port of Port Townsend owns and operates “a waterfront haul out yard facility,” where

boat owners may contract with the Port to store their boats. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 81. This

provides boat owners a space to work on their boats out of the water at the Port’s yard.

In 2011, Marc Landry became a tenant of the Port and situated his boat on the Port’s yard

facility. On January 15, 2015, Landry renewed his tenancy with the Port. As a condition of

renewing his tenancy, the Port required Landry to execute a “Derelict Vessel Agreement & Deposit

Form” (derelict vessel agreement). CP at 140.

The derelict vessel agreement required Landry to provide a derelict vessel deposit in the

amount of $17,030.78. According to the derelict vessel agreement, the derelict vessel deposit

would be returned to Landry if, and when, Landry removed his boat from the Port’s property.

However, if Landry failed to remove his boat, abandoned his boat, or failed to pay his

storage/moorage fee, the derelict vessel deposit would be forfeited and used in the demolition,

transportation, and disposal of his boat. The derelict vessel agreement also stated that the “deposit

required herein shall be considered a “Port Charge” as defined by RCW 53.08.310(1).” CP at 140.

B. LANDRY’S SUIT AGAINST THE PORT

On May 23, 2016, Landry filed a complaint against the Port, the Port’s Executive Director

Larry Crockett, and the Port’s Deputy Director Jim Pivarnik (collectively, the Port) and Gold Star

2 No. 49617-8-II

Marine1 and its co-owner Jim Heckmann (collectively, Gold Star Marine) seeking “actual,

compensatory and fraud-based damages.” CP at 2. Landry accused the Port of charging him an

unauthorized derelict vessel deposit in his contract with the Port.

Landry requested a judicial determination of whether his boat constituted a “derelict

vessel.” CP at 15. Landry also sought a judicial determination that his derelict vessel agreement

with the Port was the product of fraud and collusion between Gold Star Marine and the Port. In

his prayer for relief, Landry requested “emotional damages, fraud-based damages,” as well as

damages for the “loss of his equity stake” in his boat. CP at 17. Landry specifically requested

damages of $10 million for “emotional distress,” $1 million for “foregone economic opportunity,”

and $50,000 for the costs of suit and his legal research time. CP at 17. Landry also requested

“fraud damages” equivalent to three times the sum of his $17,030.78 derelict vessel deposit. CP

at 17.

C. MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Landry filed a summary judgment motion asking the superior court to find as a matter of

law that the derelict vessel agreement he signed contained an illegal term because his boat could

not be classified as a derelict vessel. The Port filed a motion to dismiss Landry’s case pursuant to

CR 12 and CR 56. The Port argued that the Port was clearly authorized by Title 53, Washington’s

1 Between January 2013 and January 2015, Landry relocated his boat to Gold Star Marine, a private business that leases land in the Port’s boat haven. Even though Landry named Gold Star Marine as a defendant in this case, he does not seek review of the superior court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of Gold Star Marine.

3 No. 49617-8-II

statute governing port districts,2 to lease its property to Landry and charge him a rental security

deposit. The parties submitted 23 documents to the superior court in support of and in opposition

to the summary judgment motions.

On August 24, the superior court heard oral argument on the parties’ competing summary

judgment motions. The superior court denied Landry’s summary judgment motion and granted

the Port’s motion to dismiss Landry’s case.

Landry appealed the superior court’s order denying his summary judgment motion,3

granting the Port’s summary judgment, and dismissing his claims against the Port. Of the 23

documents the superior court reviewed in reaching its summary judgment decisions, Landry did

not provide 16 documents on appeal. Thus, on December 21, 2017, we issued an order requiring

Landry to file a supplemental designation of clerk’s papers to perfect the appellate record with the

additional pleadings and declarations the superior court relied on in its summary judgment rulings.4

Landry failed to file a supplemental designation of clerk’s papers.

2 RCW 53.08.085 provides that, “Every lease of all lands, wharves, docks, and real and personal property of a port district for a term of more than one year shall have the rent secured by rental insurance, bond, or other security satisfactory to the port commission.” 3 Landry designated the court’s denial of his summary judgment motion in his notice of appeal. However, in his briefing, Landry did not assign error to the superior court’s ruling denying his summary judgment motion. 4 The documents we ordered Landry to include in a supplemental designation of clerk’s papers included: 1) Declaration of Jim Pivarnik, dated August 15, 2016; 2) Plaintiff Landry’s Response to Port Motion to Dismiss; 3) The Port’s Reply in Support of Dismissal; 4) Plaintiff Landry’s statements in Open Court on July 29, 2016; 5) Declaration of Jim Heckmann; 6) Port Defendant’s Response in Opposition to Plaintiff’s Summary Judgment & In Support of Dismissal; 7) PT Marine Defendant’s Response in Opposition to Plaintiff’s Summary Judgment; 8) PT Marine Defendants’ Reply in Support of PT Marine Motion for Summary Judgment; 9) Landry Reply in Support of Summary Judgment; 10) Plaintiff Landry’s August 17, 2016 Motion to Continue; 11) PT Marine Defendants’ Opposition to

4 No. 49617-8-II

ANALYSIS

MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rhinevault v. Rhinevault
959 P.2d 687 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1998)
Stiles v. Kearney
277 P.3d 9 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2012)
Kelley v. Pierce County
319 P.3d 74 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2014)
Nelson v. Department of Labor & Industries
392 P.3d 1138 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Marc Landry, V Port Of Port Townsend, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marc-landry-v-port-of-port-townsend-washctapp-2018.