Penny Arneson v. Gary Nordlund

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
Docket78053-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Penny Arneson v. Gary Nordlund (Penny Arneson v. Gary Nordlund) 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
Penny Arneson v. Gary Nordlund, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

PENNY ARNESON f/k/a PENNY ARNESON SWEET, on behalf of herself DIVISION ONE personally and on behalf of The 6708 Tolt Highlands Personal Residence No. 78053-1-I Trust, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant,

V.

GARY NORDLUND,

Respondent,

MFE, LLC; COLUMBIA NORTH WEST MORTGAGE; MARK D. FLYNN; L80 COLLECTIONS, LLC; ALDENTE, LLC; ROGER MAY and “JANE DOE” MAY; McGAVICK GRAVES, P.S. and DOE DEFENDANTS I through 20,

Defendants. FILED: September 3, 2019

DWYER, J. — Penny Arneson, in her capacity as trustee of the 6708 ToIt

Highlands Personal Residence Trust (the Trust), brought suit against Gary

Nordlund to enjoin Nordlund’s nonjudicial foreclosure of the Trust’s real property

and to allege that Nordlund committed usury and unlicensed lending—both

violations of the Consumer Protection Act (CPA).1 The trial court initially enjoined

I Chapter 19.86 RCW. No. 78053-1-1/2

the foreclosure but subsequently granted summary judgment to Nordlund,

dismissing all claims. The Trust appealed. We reversed.

On remand, the trial court granted Nordlund’s motions for summary

judgment dismissal of the Trust’s usury and assumpsit claims and, following a

jury trial, entered judgment for Nordlund, dismissing the CPA claim predicated

upon a violation of the Consumer Loan Act (CLA).2 The Trust again appeals.

We reverse the trial court’s grants of summary judgment as to the usury and

assumpsit claims but affirm the judgment as to the dismissal of the CPA claim.

The underlying facts of the parties’ dispute are set forth in our opinion in

Arneson v. Nordlund (Arneson I), No. 71148-1-I (Wash. Ct. App. March 30, 2015)

(unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.qov/opinions/pdf/71 1482.rdf, but will be

briefly summarized here. Arneson’s former husband Kenneth Sweet, as a co

trustee of the Trust, arranged for a loan from Aldente, LLC, to the Trust. Then, to

facilitate repayment of this loan, he arranged a second loan from Gary Nordlund

to the Trust in the amount of $375,000.00. Nordlund’s loan was secured by a

deed of trust against the Trust’s real property at 6708 Tolt Highlands Road N.E.

in Carnation, Washington. The Trust defaulted on this loan and Nordlund

initiated a nonjudicial foreclosure on the deed of trust. Arneson, both as an

individual and in her capacity as trustee of the Trust, then filed this suit to enjoin

the trustee’s sale and to assert CPA claims against Aldente and Nordlund. The

trial court granted the Trust’s request to enjoin the trustee’s sale but ordered the

2 Chapter 31.04 RCW.

2 No. 78053-1-1/3

Trust to sell the property securing Nordlund’s loan and to deposit the sale

proceeds in the court registry.

The trial court later dismissed all of the other claims brought by Arneson

and the Trust on summary judgment. In the first appeal, we affirmed the trial

court in part and reversed in part. Arneson I, No. 71148-2-I, slip op. at 2.

Dismissal of Arneson’s individual claims was affirmed on the basis that the Trust,

not Arneson in her individual capacity, was the borrower on the Nordlund loan.

Thus, Arneson lacked standing to assert claims as an individual. Arneson I, No.

71 148-2-I, slip op. at 20. However, the trial court’s summary judgment dismissal

of the Trust’s claims against Nordlund and Aldente for violation of the CPA—

specifically, claims predicated upon violations of the CLA and the usury

statutes3—was reversed, as we held that the Trust had presented sufficient

evidence to raise competing inferences from the facts. Arneson I, No. 71148-2-I,

slip op. at 13, 18. Viewing the facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom in

the light most favorable to the Trust, we stated that a fact finder could infer that

Aldente and Nordlund were in the business of making qualifying loans, subjecting

them to the CLA licensing requirement, because they had made at least two

secured cash loans in the span of a year. Arneson I, No. 71148-2-I, slip op. at

13. Thus, the Trust’s claims were remanded for further proceedings.

The trial court’s original judgment had awarded Nordlund $604,371.72:

$375,000 in unpaid loan principal, $193,263.43 in prejudgment interest at the

default rate specified in the promissory note, $29,955.50 in attorney fees, and

~ Chapter 19.52 RCW.

3 No. 78053-1-1/4

$6,152.79 in costs. Because, during the pendency of the action, the Trust had

sold the property and deposited the proceeds from that sale into the court

registry, the trial court e~tered an order directing the court clerk to disburse funds

from the registry so as to satisfy Nordlund’s judgment against the Trust. Thus,

Nordlund’s judgment against the Trust was paid in full.4 The remaining proceeds

from the Trust’s sale of the property were then distributed from the registry to the

Trust through its counsel.

After we remanded the case, the superior court directed both parties to

return to the registry the money that had been distributed to them. Nordlund did

so; the Trust did not. The trial court denied Nordlund’s motion for an order of

contempt after finding that the Trust was unable to comply with the restitution

order. Thus, only funds in the amount of Nordlund’s original judgment were

extant in the registry.

On remand, Nordlund again moved for summary judgment dismissal of

the Trust’s usury claim. He now argued that the Trust did not have standing to

assert a cause of action for usury because a usury statute, RCW 19.52.032,

states that “[t]he debtor, if a natural person,” may commence an action, and the

Trust was not a natural person. The trial court accepted this argument and

granted summary judgment dismissal of the statutory usury claim.

Thereafter, the trial court granted the Trust leave to amend its complaint to

add a common law assumpsit claim. Nordlund’s motion for summary judgment

~ The Trust filed a motion to stay enforcement of the trial court’s order. The trial court determined that the motion was moot because the funds had already been disbursed.

4 No. 78053-1-1/5

dismissal of this claim was also subsequently granted. Before trial, the Trust

voluntarily dismissed its claims against Aldente.

The subsequent jury trial concerned the question of whether Nordlund had

committed a violation of the CLA and, thus, a per se violation of the CPA, in

failing to obtain a lending license. Both parties submitted proposed jury

instructions. Among the factual questions submitted to the jury was whether

Nordlund was in the business of making qualifying loans under the CLA. The

Trust’s proposed instruction on this question sought to invoke our statement in

Arneson I that, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Trust,

making two secured cash loans in a year supported the inference that one was in

the business of making qualifying loans. This proposed instruction was not

given.

The jury was instructed, instead, that:

A violation of the Washington Consumer Loan Act relating to consumer lending is an unfair or deceptive act or practice in the conduct of trade or commerce. A violation of this statute also affects the public interest. Gary Nordlund has admitted and you must accept as true that he did not hold a license under the Consumer Loan Act.

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