Phillip Kairez, et ux v. Budget Funding I, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 7, 2013
Docket30891-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Phillip Kairez, et ux v. Budget Funding I, LLC (Phillip Kairez, et ux v. Budget Funding I, LLC) 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
Phillip Kairez, et ux v. Budget Funding I, LLC, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED

November 7, 2013

In the Office of the Clerk of Court W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

PHILLIP KAIREZ and CAROLYN )

KAIREZ, husband and wife, ) No. 30891-0-111

)

Appellants, )

v. )

BUDGET FUNDING I, LLC, a California ) corporation, ) ) Respondent, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION )

BENTON FRANKLIN TITLE )

CONWANY; WELLS FARGO )

FOOTHILL INC., a California )

corporation; and CITY OF PASCO, a )

municipal corporation formed under the )

laws of the State of Washington, )

Defendants. )

SIDDOWAY, A.CJ. Phillip and Carolyn Kairez brought the action below to

assert a lien against an apartment complex and to recover amounts they loaned to their

son, whose limited liability company was a one-time owner of the complex. One of the

several defendants-a lender, Budget Funding I, LLC-was granted summary judgment

dismissing the Kairezes' claims against it. The Kairezes appeal. We affirm the

dismissal. No.30891-0-III Kairez v. Budget Funding I, LLC

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In March 2006, Nick Kairez,l the son of Phillip and Carolyn Kairez, formed NRK

Investments LLC. Nick was the sole member and manager. A month later, NRK entered

into a real estate contract to purchase an apartment complex in Pasco from James and

Krista Gottula. Nick executed the contract as NRK's manager but was not individually a

party to the contract. The contract was recorded.

Nick's parents had loaned him $50,000 to make the down payment for the

property. To memorialize the loan, Nick, individually, signed and delivered a $50,000

promissory note to his parents. A month after NRK entered into the real estate contract,

Nick executed what was styled as a deed of trust on the apartment complex property to

secure the promissory note to his parents. The deed of trust identified the grantor as

Nick, however, and only he signed it, individually, as grantor. It too was recorded. A

$90,000 "amended" promissory note in favor of Nick's parents was later executed by

Nick and was recorded in April 2007. NRK was not mentioned in the original note, the

amended note, or in the deed of trust.

The Kairezes continued to loan Nick money for costs associated with the

apartment complex through December 2008. According to them, the total amount they

1 Mr. and Ms. Kairez refer to their son as "Nick" in their briefing and we adopt that reference as well to avoid confusion between our references to him and to his father. We intend no disrespect.

No. 30891-0-111 Kairez v. Budget Funding I, LLC

loaned to Nick that he used to purchase, renovate, and operate the apartment complex

was $149,104.30.

In 2007, NRK sought financing from Budget Funding I, LLC and offered its

interest in the apartment complex as security. Budget agreed to loan NRK $263,250 with

a portion of the funds to be applied first to payoff the Gottulas. The loan documents all

identified the borrower as NRK and were prepared for execution by Nick as NRK's

manager. When the loan closed in September 2007, the Gottulas were paid the balance

of the contract price from the loan proceeds, and the earlier-executed fulfillment deed

from the Gottulas to NRK was recorded, as was Budget's deed of trust from NRK.

Budget was aware of the Kairezes' deed of trust and, it contends, it intended the

proceeds of its loan to NRK to be applied to satisfy amounts secured by that deed of trust

before the balance was disbursed to Nick. Budget's escrow agent contacted Carolyn

Kairez before the loan closing and requested a payoff amount. According to a sub-

escrow agent responsible for disbursing the loan proceeds, Ms. Kairez supplied a payoff

figure of $70,402 and wire instructions. When the loan closed, a slightly higher amount,

$70,672, was wired to a Kairez bank account. Despite making the payment, neither the

escrow agent nor Budget obtained the Kairezes' signatures on a request for

reconveyance, an acknowledgment that the obligation secured by the deed of trust had

been satisfied, or any other documentation that the Kairezes were relinquishing whatever

interest they held in the property.

No.30891-0-III Kairez v. Budget Funding 1, LLC

In April 2009, the Kairezes learned from Nick that Budget was going to begin

foreclosure proceedings. The Kairezes contacted a lawyer, who requested a copy of a

trustee's sale guarantee issued by Benton Franklin Title Company, also a defendant in the

action below. The trustee's sale guarantee disclosed the Kairezes' deed of trust as one of

the "[ d]efects, liens, encumbrances or other matters affecting title," although it also

revealed that title to the apartment complex was held by NRK and yet the grantor of the

Kairezes' deed of trust was Nicholas Robert Kairez. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 61. The

Kairezes' deed of trust was identified by the guarantee as the third numbered lien,

encumbrance, or matter affecting title while Budget's deed of trust was identified as the

fourth. The Kairezes construed the guarantee as establishing that their deed of trust was

superior to Budget's. They did not thereafter receive a notice of the trustee's sale, but

according to Ms. Kairez this did not concern them because they understood that only

lienholders junior to Budget would receive notice.

The trustee's sale took place in December 2009. Budget was the successful bidder

and the property was conveyed to it by a trustee's deed. In January 2011, more than a

year after the foreclosure sale and more than three years after the Kairezes received

$70,672 from the closing of the loan from Budget, they filed the action below. Budget

denied liability and later moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted.

This appeal followed.

No. 30891-0-111 Kairez v. Budget Funding 1, LLC

ANALYSIS

The Kairezes argue that summary judgment in favor of Budget was improper

because genuine issues of material fact remained with respect to their claim to a

continuing property interest; for negligence; and under the Consumer Protection Act

(CPA), chapter 19.86 RCW. They also argue that their receipt of$70,672 from the loan

closing should not estop them from relying on their deed oftrust, as argued by Budget.

The Kairezes failed to present evidence demonstrating any genuine issue of

material fact in support of their claim to a property interest in the apartment complex,

which is fatal to all of the issues they raise on appeal. We tum to that first.

1. Did the Kairezes present evidence raising a genuine issue ofmaterial fact that they had a property interest in the apartment complex?

On appeal from an order granting summary judgment, the standard of review is de

novo. Hisle v. Todd Pac. Shipyards Corp., 151 Wn.2d 853, 860, 93 P.3d 108 (2004).

Summary judgment will be upheld if the pleadings, affidavits, answers to interrogatories,

admissions, and depositions establish that there is no genuine issue of material fact and

that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter oflaw. Jones v. Allstate Ins.

Co., 146 Wn.2d 291,300-01,45 P.3d 1068 (2002); CR 56(c).

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