OneWest Bank, FSB v. Erickson

337 P.3d 1101, 184 Wash. App. 462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 13, 2014
DocketNo. 31944-0-III
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 337 P.3d 1101 (OneWest Bank, FSB v. Erickson) 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
OneWest Bank, FSB v. Erickson, 337 P.3d 1101, 184 Wash. App. 462 (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

[464]*464¶1 We address the unique circumstance of an Idaho court authorizing an Idaho conservator to encumber a Washington residence. Following established principles from the hoary past concerning state jurisdiction over real property, we hold that the Idaho court lacked jurisdiction and that the order authorizing the encumbrance is invalid.

Fearing, J.

¶2 Plaintiff One West Bank FSB seeks to judicially foreclose on a deed of trust purportedly encumbering a Spokane home. A conservator appointed by an Idaho court signed the deed of trust on behalf of the home’s owner or former owner, Bill McKee. McKee’s daughter, defendant Maureen Erickson, challenges the deed of trust as invalid, and she appeals a summary judgment order enforcing and foreclosing on the instrument. We reverse the summary judgment order and grant Erickson a dismissal of the complaint.

FACTS

¶3 Bill McKee had three children: Jerome McKee, Craig McKee, and Maureen Erickson. Bill and his wife, Erickson’s mother, acquired property in Canada, Idaho, and Washington. Erickson’s mother died in 1994, leaving her daughter by will “all of her one-half of the community property owned by her and [Bill McKee].” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 124. Bill McKee hid the will from Maureen Erickson. McKee later explained to Erickson that he did not desire to take property from her that her mother intended she have, but he wanted to maintain control over all of the marital couple’s combined estate and properties.

¶4 In 1997, a driver rear-ended Maureen Erickson at a high speed, rupturing several discs in her back. Erickson and her three sons moved from California to Spokane later that year to be near Bill McKee. Bill McKee lived in Idaho at that time.

¶5 Maureen Erickson underwent back surgery in 2000. With Erickson distracted by her surgery, Jerome McKee [465]*465traveled from Louisiana to visit his father, Bill McKee, in Idaho. Jerome convinced his father to sell property in Canada and entrust him with the proceeds as a means of avoiding United States taxes. Under her mother’s will, Maureen Erickson would have owned an interest in the property and would have been entitled to some of the sales proceeds. McKee obliged Jerome. Bill McKee later repeatedly asked Jerome to return the money, but Jerome refused.

¶6 In 2001, with Maureen Erickson’s financial assistance, Bill McKee purchased a home in Spokane, at 4702 South Pender Lane. This foreclosure action concerns the residence. McKee initially lived in the home half of the time. Erickson and her three sons lived there full time. McKee and Erickson planned for Erickson to eventually own the home, and Erickson made the mortgage payments. Erickson and her sons cared for the home.

¶7 In 2004, Maureen Erickson underwent another back surgery after another car collision. In 2005, Erickson discovered her mother’s will in Bill McKee’s safety deposit box. By January 2007, Maureen Erickson’s health improved. Bill McKee, who had recently turned 90 years old, began residing year round in the Spokane residence with Erickson and his three grandchildren. McKee lived with Erickson in the South Pender Lane home the rest of his life. He did not reside even temporarily in Idaho after January 2007.

¶8 Bill McKee anticipated undergoing heart surgery, and he sought to qualify for Medicaid payments. McKee and Maureen Erickson sought legal advice from attorney Richard Sayre. Sayre astutely advised Erickson to sue her father for failing to deliver her share of her mother’s assets upon the mother’s death. According to Sayre, McKee could settle the suit by transferring assets to Erickson and then qualify for Medicaid. Bill McKee was receptive to the recommendation because he knew he had wronged his daughter. Maureen Erickson sued her father in Spokane County Superior Court, and, in turn, Bill McKee transferred assets, including the Spokane residence, to Erickson [466]*466to satisfy the claim. McKee transferred the Spokane home in January 2007 and completed other transfers in February 2007. After a lengthy review of the transfers, Medicaid declared them valid and qualified Bill McKee for Medicaid payments.

¶9 In response to the transfers from Bill McKee to Maureen Erickson, McKee’s son Jerome filed suit in the Shoshone County, Idaho, District Court. Jerome McKee asked that the Idaho court appoint him as his father’s guardian or, in the alternative, appoint someone else as Bill’s conservator. Bill McKee appeared in the suit through counsel and informed the Idaho court that he resided in Washington. Maureen Erickson may have attended one or more hearings, but the extent of her involvement is not clear. She was not a party to the conservatorship action. According to Erickson, the court viewed her negatively because of the property transfers from Bill McKee to her. Trial for the Idaho proceeding spanned three nonconsecutive days, with the first day of trial being May 31, 2007.

¶10 Physicians scheduled Bill McKee’s heart surgery for July 3, 2007. As McKee prepared for surgery, he and Maureen Erickson looked for but could not find the deed he executed in January to transfer the Spokane home. On June 28,2007, McKee again conveyed the property to Erickson by quitclaim deed. Erickson did not immediately record this deed.

¶11 On July 2, 2007, the Shoshone County, Idaho, District Court, at the request of Jerome McKee, signed an order enjoining Bill McKee’s heart surgery. Doctors believed Bill McKee would not survive without surgery, and McKee underwent open heart surgery at Spokane’s Deaconess Hospital anyway on July 3. After surgery, McKee recovered at the South Pender Lane, Spokane, residence with the care of Maureen Erickson.

¶12 The Idaho District Court conservatorship trial resumed on July 10 and July 12, 2007. Bill McKee could not [467]*467participate in the Idaho proceedings as he recovered from heart surgery. Maureen Erickson later declared:

At that time, my father was 90 years old, had recently undergone open heart surgery, was extremely hard of hearing, and occasionally had difficulties with his eyesight, but he was certainly not incompetent. His doctors wrote affidavits to the court saying he was competent. There were telephone proceedings that I vaguely recall, with my recollection being that nothing I said seemed to matter or help and that my father could not participate because he could not hear what anyone said.

CP at 130.

¶13 On August 22, 2007, the Spokane County Superior Court dismissed, without entering a judgment, Maureen Erickson’s action for fraud against Bill McKee, for his hiding Erickson’s mother’s will. On August 27, 2007, the Idaho District Court signed “Letters of Conservatorship” appointing Shelley Bruna, dba Idaho Fiduciary Services, as conservator for Bill McKee. CP at 18. The letters do not declare Bill McKee to be an Idaho resident.

¶14 On September 10, 2007, Bill McKee faxed a handwritten letter to his attorney “to make sure that the judge [in Idaho] was told that [he] lived in Washington and that he had given the Property to [Maureen Erickson] for taking care of him for years and because he had hid [den] [Erickson’s] mother’s will.” CP at 130. Jerome McKee filed the Letters of Conservatorship from the Idaho proceeding with Spokane County on September 18, 2007. CP at 17. On September 24, 2007, the Idaho court entered an order granting Jerome’s petition to appoint Shelley Bruna as Bill McKee’s conservator.

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Related

OneWest Bank, FSB v. Erickson
349 P.3d 857 (Washington Supreme Court, 2015)

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Bluebook (online)
337 P.3d 1101, 184 Wash. App. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onewest-bank-fsb-v-erickson-washctapp-2014.