RAINIER NATIONAL BANK v. Wells

829 P.2d 1168, 65 Wash. App. 893, 1992 Wash. App. LEXIS 237
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 1, 1992
Docket27084-2-I
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 829 P.2d 1168 (RAINIER NATIONAL BANK v. Wells) 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
RAINIER NATIONAL BANK v. Wells, 829 P.2d 1168, 65 Wash. App. 893, 1992 Wash. App. LEXIS 237 (Wash. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Scholfield, J.

Appellants Duane and Gertrude Wefts and Val Bain (Wells), sellers of an office building to Rainier National Bank (Rainier), appeal a summary judgment in favor of Chicago Title Insurance Company, an intervenor and subrogee under Rainier, in which the sellers were ordered to reimburse Chicago Title $49,349.24 in local improvement district (LID) assessments it paid to the City of Renton, including interest and attorney’s fees. We reverse.

Facts

The appellants built the Earlington Plaza Office Building in Renton in the 1970's. On December 14, 1984, the Renton city clerk received a diagram and preliminary assessment roll of a local improvement district (LID), No. 330, which included the property in question, and was available to the public in the city clerk's office from that day forward. On December 17, 1984, the Renton City Council passed Resolu *895 tion 2584, declaring its intention to make improvements, notifying all persons who may desire to object, "and creating Local Improvement District No. 330." On January 28, 1985, a public hearing was held to consider the proposed LID. At that meeting, Wells protested the method that the City used to estimate the proposed assessment. A motion carried to "recommend the City proceed with LID 330 and refer this matter to Ways and Means Committee for proper legislation." Two weeks later, on February 11, 1985, the City-passed Ordinance 3890 establishing the LID. The final assessment roll was not confirmed until after the improvements were completed and their costs known in early 1988.

In December 1986, after the LID was established by ordinance but before the final assessment roll was confirmed, Wells and Rainier finalized an agreement to sell the property for $1,550,000 to Rainier, a trustee under the will of C.D. Martin, Jr. The agreement made no mention of LID 330, but stated the seller would be responsible for "installments of special assessments" prior to closing. In the event of a default by the seller, a clause that the buyer may bring an action for damages was stricken and initialed by both parties, leaving only specific performance available as a remedy for the buyer after closing. Although the parties signed a second, separate agreement at closing, the first agreement specifically provided that its terms would remain in force subsequent to closing.

On December 9, 1986, Chicago Title Insurance Company issued a title insurance preliminary report, and on December 30, 1986, it issued a policy with Rainier as beneficiary. Neither the preliminary report nor the Chicago Title policy mentioned LID 330. The policy stated that it "does not insure against loss or damage by reason of . . . special assessments which are not shown as existing hens by the public records."

After the LID improvements were completed, the City of Renton gave notice of a public hearing in April 1988 on the final assessment roll for LID 330, and later that month the *896 assessment roll was entered. Wells refused Rainier's request to pay the property's share of the assessment. Rainier sued Wells, claiming Wells should indemnify Rainier for the LID assessment. Chicago Title paid the assessment on behalf of Rainier in 1989 and intervened in the suit against Wells.

The trial court granted summary judgment to Chicago Title on August 17, 1990, ordering Wells to pay the assessment of $42,542.45 plus interest and costs. This appeal by Wells followed.

The Agreement

LID's may be "ordered only by an ordinance of the city or town council, pursuant to either a resolution or petition . . .." RCW 35.43.070. After the ordinance forms the LID, a number of other steps are necessary before a property owner is hable to pay an assessment, including a protest period; authorization of design work and bidding; completion of the project; computation of the final assessment roU (with hearings); and confirmation of the assessment roll by ordinance.

RCW 35.50.010 1 provides that a hen normally attaches when the assessment is ready to be collected. As between a vendor and vendee, however, if there is no express agreement as to the payment of the LID assessments, the hen *897 attaches 30 days after the preliminary filings required by RCW 35.50.005. 2 The threshold question is thus whether the parties had an express agreement concerning payment of special assessments. If the parties did have such an agreement, then the lien attached after the sale, and the buyer, not Wells, would be statutorily liable for the assessments.

Paragraph 11 of the parties' agreement states that "installments of current year special assessments" shall be prorated. LID 330 is a special assessment, though not a "current year" special assessment, which logically refers only to special assessments in the year of the agreement, or 1986. However, paragraph 11 also states: "Seller shall be responsible for all . . . installments of special assessments for any period prior to the Closing", without reference to "current year" assessments. Since the clause limits the seller's liability for assessments to those accruing prior to closing, it follows logically that the buyer is responsible for special assessments accruing subsequent to closing. We hold that this provision of paragraph 11 manifests an explicit intention by the parties to allocate responsibility between the parties to pay the special assessment from LID 330 according to when the assessment becomes due. Indeed, the word "installments" enhances this interpretation, because it suggests that even if a final assessment constituting a hen existed prior to the sale, as is not the case here, any amount owed for assessments coming due subsequent to the sale of the property would be borne by the buyer. Any other reading of the clause would be strained. Short of specifically *898 mentioning LID 330 by name, there is little the parties could have done to make their allocation of the cost of an assessment clearer.

Although we find this issue to be dispositive, there are two additional bases for our holding: whether Chicago Title was liable to Rainier for the assessment under its title pohcy and whether the buyer agreed to relinquish damages as a remedy.

Wells contends that because Chicago Title expressly excluded unrecorded special assessments from its title pohcy, it was a volunteer payor with no rights against the sellers. Chicago Title argues that by statute the LID assessment attached before the sale, and it was thus not a volunteer. At oral argument, Chicago Title also maintained that a hen existed in the pubhc record at the time of sale.

Chicago Title's pohcy excluded coverage for "loss or damage by reason of the following exceptions: 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
829 P.2d 1168, 65 Wash. App. 893, 1992 Wash. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rainier-national-bank-v-wells-washctapp-1992.