Mdk General Construction, Llc, V. Aspen Grove Owners Association

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 25, 2024
Docket85704-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mdk General Construction, Llc, V. Aspen Grove Owners Association (Mdk General Construction, Llc, V. Aspen Grove Owners Association) 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
Mdk General Construction, Llc, V. Aspen Grove Owners Association, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MDK GENERAL CONSTRUCTION, LLC, a Washington limited liability DIVISION ONE company, No. 85704-5-I Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION v.

ASPEN GROVE OWNERS ASSOCIATION, a Washington non- profit corporation,

Respondents,

INTEGRITY CONSTRUCTION SOLUTIONS, LLC, a Washington limited liability company; AMERICAN CONTRACTORS INDEMNITY COMPANY, a foreign corporation, under Bond Number 100530967,

Defendants.

DWYER, J. — MDK General Construction, LLC, appeals from the order of

the superior court granting the Aspen Grove Owners Association’s motion for

summary judgment, dismissing MDK’s lien foreclosure claim against the

Association, and ordering MDK to record a release of its lien claim against the

Aspen Grove Condominium. On appeal, MDK asserts that the trial court erred in

so doing because MDK timely accomplished service of process of its

materialmen’s lien foreclosure action on the owner of the condominium against

which it recorded that lien. This was so, according to MDK, because the owner No. 85704-5-I/2

of the property in question is the Association, the nonprofit unit owners’

association charged with governing and operating the condominium in question.

Because MDK fails to establish that the Association was—or has become—the

owner of the condominium in question and because MDK fails to establish that it

accomplished service of process on another individual or entity that would

constitute the owner of the condominium in question, we conclude that the trial

court did not err by dismissing MDK’s lien foreclosure action against the

Association and by ordering MDK to record a release of its lien against the

condominium at issue. Accordingly, we affirm.

I

In March 2005, a document entitled “Condominium Declaration for Aspen

Grove, a Condominium” was recorded with the King County Department of

Assessments. The declaration defined the “Declarant” as Park Promenade

Apartments, LLC, Windbridge, LLC, and Holton Kabili Seattle, LLC. The

declaration identified a parcel of real property in King County and indicated that

the parcel of land would be subjected to a condominium.

The declaration set forth that the property interests in the real estate

created by the condominium declaration would be property interests in the

condominium’s 96 individual units—defined as the physical portions of the

condominium designated for separate ownership—and in the condominium’s

“common elements”—defined as “all portions of the Condominium other than

Units.” The declaration vested all of the property interest in the condominium’s

common elements in the condominium’s 96 units, allocating to each unit an

2 No. 85704-5-I/3

undivided property interest in the common elements ranging from 0.82 percent to

1.46 percent. The sum of those interests was 100 percent.

The declaration described the boundaries of a unit as

the unfinished interior surfaces of the perimeter walls, floors, and ceilings of the Units, and shall include within the Unit all wallboard, plasterboard, plaster, paneling, tiles, wallpaper, paint, finished flooring, and any other materials constituting any part of the finished surfaces thereof, provided, that the Unit boundaries shall not include those Common Elements specified in Article 6. All spaces, interior partitions, and other fixtures and improvements within the boundaries of a Unit are a part of the Unit.

The declaration described the boundaries of the common elements, as pertinent

here, as “all portions of the Condominium other than the Units, including all

portions of the walls, floors, or ceilings which are not a part of or within the Unit

boundaries.”

The declaration also provided for an “Owners Association,” and indicated

that “[t]he Owners of Units shall constitute an owners association to be known as

the Aspen Grove Owners Association. The Association shall be organized as a

nonprofit corporation, no later than the date the first Unit in the Condominium is

conveyed.”

That same month, articles of incorporation were filed to create the Aspen

Grove Owners Association, a nonprofit corporation

organized to provide an entity pursuant to the Washington Condominium Act (Ch. 64.34 RCW), hereinafter called the “Condominium Act,” for the operation of Aspen Grove, a condominium, located in King County, Washington, and to engage in all such activities as are incidental or conducive to the attainment of the objectives of the corporation and all activities which are permitted to be done by a nonprofit corporation under any laws that may now or hereafter be applicable or available to this corporation.

3 No. 85704-5-I/4

The powers of this corporation shall be subject to and shall be exercised in accordance with the Condominium Act and the provisions of the Condominium Declaration for Aspen Grove, a condominium, as it may from time to time be amended, hereinafter referred to as the “Declaration.”

Fifteen years later, in 2020, the Association contracted with Integrity

Construction Solutions, LLC, to perform a multi-million-dollar remediation project

on the condominium’s buildings.

In September 2021, Integrity hired MDK as a subcontractor to perform

remediation services “on the exterior of all of the condominium’s buildings,”

specifically, to “perform construction services in the form of exterior siding and

related work.” Br. of Appellant at 4. Integrity agreed to pay MDK a sum of

$70,000 for this work.

MDK later commenced work on the exterior of the condominium’s

buildings. During the time in question, the Association issued monthly payments

to Integrity for the remediation project approximating $3.9 million. Integrity,

however, did not issue any valid payments to MDK for MDK’s work. According to

MDK, by January 2022, when it stopped performing the work for which it had

been hired by Integrity, MDK had performed $65,000 worth of work and had not

received any payment from Integrity for that work.

Two months later, in March 2022, Integrity filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

One month later, in April 2022, MDK recorded a materialmen’s lien of

$65,000 against the real estate described in the Aspen Grove condominium

declaration. MDK’s lien alleged that the owner of that parcel of land was the

Aspen Grove Owners Association. The lien did not further identify any

4 No. 85704-5-I/5

individuals or entities as purported owners either of that parcel of land or of the

Aspen Grove condominium.

In December 2022, MDK filed a complaint in King County Superior Court

seeking to foreclose on its materialmen’s lien against the condominium. The

complaint identified, as pertinent here, the Aspen Grove Owners Association as a

defendant.1 MDK’s complaint did not individually identify any other persons or

entities purported to be Aspen Grove condominium unit owners as parties to its

lien enforcement action.

That same month, MDK accomplished service of process on the Aspen

Grove Owners Association. MDK did not accomplish service of process, either

that month or within 90 days of the filing of its lien enforcement action, on any

additional persons or entities purported to be Aspen Grove condominium unit

owners.

In July 2023, the Association moved for summary judgment dismissal of

MDK’s claim against it on the basis that it was not an owner of the property

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Mdk General Construction, Llc, V. Aspen Grove Owners Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mdk-general-construction-llc-v-aspen-grove-owners-association-washctapp-2024.