Richard Sorrels & Christopher Sorrels v. Sam Chui

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 3, 2015
Docket45043-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Richard Sorrels & Christopher Sorrels v. Sam Chui (Richard Sorrels & Christopher Sorrels v. Sam Chui) 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
Richard Sorrels & Christopher Sorrels v. Sam Chui, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS P /ISPONII 2015 M R - 3 & M 8: 35

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

RICHARD SORRELS, a single person, and No. 45043 -7 -II CHRISTOPHER SORRELS, a single person,

Appellants,

v.

MAVI MACFARLANE, a single person; SAM UNPUBLISHED OPINION / a XIANJU XUI) (a/ k/ a XIANJU CHUI ( f k/ CUI), individually or as a marital community,

Respondents,

KEY PENINSULA REAL ESTATE LLC, a/ k/ a TWO VAULTS GALLERY and /or MAVI GALLERY, a Washington limited liability company; AGACON LLC, a Washington limited liability company; GINTZ AND TONER LLC, a Washington limited liability company; DAVID GINTZ, individually or as a marital community; TERRY EASTWOOD, individually or as a marital community; DAVE EASTWOOD, individually or as a marital community; JOHN DOE 1 - 10 individually or as a marital community; and any other persons claiming any interest in the subject real property,

Defendants. No. 45043 -7 -II

JOHANSON, C. J. — In this long- standing property dispute, Richard and Christopher Sorrels

Sorrels), appeal a superior court order granting summary judgment in favor of Sam Chui

dismissing Sorrels' s claims for adverse possession, trespass, and conversion. Sorrels also appeals

the superior court' s order issuing a writ of restitution and the declaratory judgment ruling that

Sorrels had abandoned certain personal property. We hold that ( 1) the superior court did not abuse

its discretion by declining to consider Sorrels' s CR 56 and CR 41 motions, ( 2) the doctrine of res

judicata bars consideration of Sorrels' s adverse possession claim, ( 3) Sorrels fails to provide

argument to support his claims for trespass, conversion, unlawful entry, and forcible detainer under

RAP 10. 3( a)( 6), ( 4) Sorrels failed to perfect the record regarding his writ of restitution claim, and

5) the superior court properly dismissed his claims with prejudice in its order granting final

judgment. We affirm.

FACTS

I. PREVIOUS LITIGATION

This appeal, like the one before it, arises from the sale of real property.' Sorrels sold a

parcel of real property in Gig Harbor to David Brown in 1992. In conjunction with the sale, Brown

executed a promissory note. As security for the note, Brown executed a deed of trust ( 1992 deed)

against the Gig Harbor property. According to Sorrels, Brown did not pay the 1992 note when it

matured on August 3, 1994. Nevertheless, Sorrels took no action to collect the note or to foreclose

on the 1992 deed at that time.

1 The majority of the background facts are taken from Westar Funding, Inc. v. Sorrels, 157 Wn. App. 777, 239 P. 3d 1109 ( 2010), a published decision by this court concerning an earlier action involving the same parties to quiet title to the same property that is the subject of this appeal.

2 No. 45043 -7 -II

In 1995, Brown executed a statutory warranty deed ( 1995 deed) conveying the Gig Harbor

property to The R.E. S. Trust. Brown specifically conveyed the Gig Harbor property to Sorrels as

trustee for The R.E. S. Trust. As a part of the transaction, Sorrels and Brown signed an excise tax

affidavit noting that Brown executed the 1995 deed conveying the Gig Harbor property to The

R.E.S. Trust, and expressly to Sorrels as trustee, in lieu of foreclosure.

In 2002, acting in his capacity as The R.E. S. Trust trustee, Sorrels borrowed money from

Westar Financial, Inc. To secure the loan, The R.E.S. Trust executed a promissory note and a deed

of trust against the Gig Harbor property ( 2002, deed) in favor of Westar. In his loan application,

Sorrels represented that the Gig Harbor property was free and clear of encumbrances. He further

verified that the loan would be secured by "` a first mortgage or deed of trust on the property. "'

Westar Funding, Inc. v. Sorrels, 157 Wn. App. 777, 780, 239 P. 3d 1109 ( 2010).

The R.E. S. Trust defaulted on the Westar note. On April 13, 2007, Westar foreclosed on

its 2002 deed by a nonjudicial trustee' s sale. Chui, who had funded Sorrels' s loan through Westar,

purchased the property at the sale for the debt owed. The effect of the sale and transfer of the deed

was to vest title in Chui and to divest The R.E. S. Trust from title to the property.

Despite the nonjudicial foreclosure on the Westar deed of trust, Sorrels attempted to go

forward with a separate nonjudicial foreclosure sale based on the 1992 deed executed by Brown.

On January 20, 2009, Westar and Chui filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to quiet title

of the Gig Harbor property. The trial court granted Westar and Chui' s motion.

Sorrels appealed to this court, which ruled that Chui legally acquired the Gig Harbor

property through Westar' s nonjudicial foreclosure sale and that Chui had the right to maintain an

action to quiet title as the record owner of the property. Sorrels, 157 Wn. App. at 786. We No. 45043 -7 -II

concluded that the trial court properly granted summary judgment and quieted title in Chui' s favor

because the statute of frauds and the statute of limitations barred Sorrels' s claims. Sorrels, 157

Wn. App. at 786. We further determined that Sorrels had presented no legally debatable issues or

legitimate arguments and that his appeal was frivolous. Sorrels, 157 Wn. App. at 787.

Accordingly, we awarded attorney fees under RAP 18. 9( a).

II. CURRENT LITIGATION

On December 27 2011, Sorrels filed suit, naming Chui and several other parties as

defendants.2 Sorrels sought to quiet title to the same Gig Harbor property, this time under a theory

of adverse possession. Sorrels also alleged other causes of action, including trespass, conversion,

unlawful entry, and forcible detainer.

In July 2012, Chui filed a summary judgment motion to dismiss all causes of action against

him. The superior court continued the hearing until November 9. On October 31, Chui filed a

motion seeking a writ of restitution, which was heard in conjunction with the summary judgment

proceeding. Sorrels failed to timely respond to either of Chui' s motions. Sorrels instead filed a

CR 56( f)motion to continue, but Sorrels failed to confirm his motion for the hearing, so it was

never on the superior court' s docket to be heard. Sorrels filed his response to Chui' s motion for a

writ of restitution one day before the hearing. The superior court refused to consider either of

2 Sorrels named several defendants, but there are only three parties identified as respondents for purposes of this appeal. Furthermore, Sorrels' s arguments on appeal appear to relate only to Chui despite the fact that he also names Chui' s wife, Mingxia Wang, and Mavi Macfarlane, who is Chui' s real estate agent. Both Wang and Macfarlane filed respondent' s briefs, but we refer to the parties collectively as " Chui." No. 45043 -7 -II

Sorrels' s responsive filings and granted both of Chui' s motions, again quieting title in Chui and

deeming Sorrels' s case frivolous.

Furthermore, Sorrels had previously filed a partial voluntary dismissal motion in which

Sorrels asserted his willingness to dismiss his adverse possession claim as to Chui. But Sorrels

did not note the motion for hearing or otherwise bring it to the superior court' s attention.

On January 4, 2013, Sorrels and the remaining parties entered an agreed dismissal order on

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