ONE PACIFIC TOWERS HOMEOWNERS'ASS'N v. HAL Real Estate Investments, Inc.

61 P.3d 1094
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2002
Docket72087-8
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 61 P.3d 1094 (ONE PACIFIC TOWERS HOMEOWNERS'ASS'N v. HAL Real Estate Investments, Inc.) 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
ONE PACIFIC TOWERS HOMEOWNERS'ASS'N v. HAL Real Estate Investments, Inc., 61 P.3d 1094 (Wash. 2002).

Opinion

61 P.3d 1094 (2002)
148 Wash.2d 319

ONE PACIFIC TOWERS HOMEOWNERS' ASSOCIATION; Janet Abrams, an individual; Daniel H. Anderson and Helen M. Anderson, husband and wife; Mark Baerwaldt, an individual; Thomas V. Giddens, Jr., as personal representative for the Thomas V. Giddens, Jr. Trust; Kenneth Hayes, an individual; Michael Montgomery, an individual; Monique Wendt, an individual; Michael and Theresa O'Connell, husband and wife; Sherry Samuelson, an individual; Jon Staenberg, an individual; Jeffrey Swanson, an individual; Lawrence N. Taubman, an individual; Bradford C. Walker and Lisa M. Walker, husband and wife; and Wayne Willich and Christine Willich, husband and wife, Petitioners,
v.
HAL REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS, INC., a Washington corporation; OPT Holdings, Inc., a Washington corporation; OPT II, Inc., a Washington corporation; OPT III, Inc., a Washington corporation; OPT IV, Inc., a Washington corporation; OPT V, Inc., a Washington corporation; OPT VI, Inc., a Washington corporation; OPT VII, Inc., a Washington corporation; Paul Manheim and Vivienne Manheim, husband and wife; Hal Real Estate Investments, N.V., a Netherlands Antilles corporation; Hal Holding N.V., a Netherlands Antilles corporation; and Hal Trust, a Bermuda trust, Respondents.

No. 72087-8.

Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.

Argued October 17, 2002.
Decided December 19, 2002.

*1096 Louis D. Peterson, Michael R. Scott, Mark McPherson, Hillis Clark Martin & Peterson, Seattle, for Petitioners.

Arthur W. Harrigan, Jr., Timothy G. Leyh, Katherine S. Kennedy, Danielson Harrigan & Tollefson, Seattle, for Respondents.

*1095 BRIDGE, J.

HAL Real Estate Investments Inc. (HAL) formed seven subsidiary companies, OPT Holdings and OPT II through VII (OPT entities), to accomplish the purchase and sale of 30 condominium units in a building developed and constructed by another company. Some of the subsequent consumer purchasers and the Homeowners' Association (Owners) brought suit because they did not receive sales documentation to which they felt they were entitled under the Washington Condominium Act (Act), chapter 64.34 RCW. We hold that the OPT entities were "declarants" under the Act and were therefore obligated to provide subsequent purchasers with "Public Offering Statements" (POSs) rather than "Resale Certificates." We also hold that HAL is a "declarant" under the Act because it "act[ed] in concert" with the OPT entities. RCW 64.34.020(13).

I

FACTS

One Pacific Towers is a 75-unit luxury condominium complex located at First and Virginia in downtown Seattle. The complex was originally developed and built by OPT-1 Limited Partnership (Limited Partnership), whose general partner was Vyzis Residential Properties, Inc. Vyzis was the original declarant[1] of the condominium project.

Upon the death of Basil Vyzis, the principal of Vyzis Residential Properties, a representative of his estate contacted HAL to see if it would be interested in purchasing the remaining 34 unsold units, the parking garage, and the remaining unleased commercial unit. HAL formed a holding corporation, OPT Holdings, Inc., to implement the purchase. OPT Holdings then formed six subsidiaries, OPT II through OPT VII, each of which was to purchase and resell five of the condominium units.[2] OPT Holdings was to purchase the commercial unit and the parking garage. A letter from HAL to the Limited Partnership states that the reason for dividing the purchase of the different portions of the condominium property between various entities was to "avoid incurring `dealer' liability under the condominium statute."[3]

Paul Manheim is the sole officer and director of HAL, OPT Holdings, and the OPT entities. OPT Holdings is owned entirely by HAL. However, neither Manheim nor any of his corporate entities is related to the Limited Partnership, the original developer of One Pacific Towers. It is undisputed that the sale of the One Pacific Towers property to OPT Holdings and the OPT entities was an arm's length transaction.

Prior to the closing of the sales, the Limited Partnership and the OPT entities executed a supplemental agreement, which provided that the Limited Partnership would not transfer or exercise any "special declarant *1097 rights"[4] until authorized to do so by the OPT entities. The agreement further provided that the OPT entities could direct the Limited Partnership to assign to them the special declarant rights to maintain sales offices, erect signs, and operate model units. The Limited Partnership never formally transferred the special declarant rights to the OPT entities. Instead, the Limited Partnership transferred the rights directly to the Homeowners' Association at the direction of the OPT entities after the OPT entities had sold all but one of their units.

Despite the fact that the OPT entities never formally acquired the special declarant rights, they nevertheless maintained two model units in the complex, one of which contained a sales office. They also made various improvements to the lobby and common areas, hired a design firm to finish the interiors of the 30 units they had purchased, hired a marketing firm to advertise the units, and erected signs advertising the units for sale.

Upon the sale of each of the 30 units, the OPT entities provided resale certificates rather than POSs to the purchasers. If the seller is not a "declarant" or "dealer," a resale certificate suffices. RCW 64.34.425. However, if the seller of a condominium unit is a "declarant" or "dealer," the seller must provide a POS, which includes more detailed information than a resale certificate. RCW 64.34.405, RCW 64.34.410.[5]

Following the sale of all of the condominium units in 1997 and 1998, the OPT entities were dissolved. The total profit received was $4,744,415, a gain of 55.4 percent.

Alleging that the OPT entities and their parent companies were "declarants" and "dealers" under the Act, the Homeowners' Association and 12 individual condominium purchasers brought this action for statutory penalties based on the OPT entities' failure to provide POSs. If a declarant or dealer fails to deliver a POS, the purchaser can recover actual damages or a percentage of the unit's sale price. RCW 64.34.420(3). The Owners named the OPT entities, OPT Holdings, HAL Real Estate Investments, and Paul and Vivienne Manheim as defendants.

On cross motions for summary judgment, the trial court held that none of the defendants was a declarant or a dealer within the meaning of the Act. Thus, the court concluded that they had no obligation to provide the purchasers with POSs. The court also awarded $73,894 in attorney fees pursuant to RCW 64.34.455 and $125 in costs pursuant to RCW 4.84.010 to the defendants. The Owners appealed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 P.3d 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/one-pacific-towers-homeownersassn-v-hal-real-estate-investments-inc-wash-2002.