Shaheen Rahimzadeh, V. Mahnaz Shiralian

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 11, 2025
Docket86306-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Shaheen Rahimzadeh, V. Mahnaz Shiralian (Shaheen Rahimzadeh, V. Mahnaz Shiralian) 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
Shaheen Rahimzadeh, V. Mahnaz Shiralian, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Marriage of: No. 86306-1-I SHAHEEN RAHIMZADEH, DIVISION ONE Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION and

MAHNAZ SHIRALIAN,

Respondent.

COBURN, J. — Shaheen Rahimzadeh appeals the trial court’s dissolution order on

several grounds. He challenges the court’s valuation of several companies and

commercial properties, and the division of community property. Because he has not

established entitlement to relief, we affirm.

FACTS

Rahimzadeh and Mahnaz Shiralian were married for nearly 28 years before

separating in February 2022. The community assets included two businesses: Excellent

Choice Auto Sales (ECAS), a used car dealership, and Shaud Powers, a captive

insurance company created to issue warranties on vehicles sold by ECAS. 1 The

community also owned three commercial properties: (1) 9310 State Avenue in

Marysville, (2) 11200 Evergreen Way in Everett, and (3) 9229 State Avenue in

1 The community also held other assets that are not relevant in this appeal. 863061/2

Marysville. The community also owned SAKS Holdings LLC, which held title to the three

commercial lots. SAKS is a single-member limited liability company that is a real estate

investment holding company and not an operating company. SAKS’s value is derived

from the underlying assets held by the company. Its sole member was Rahimzadeh.

ECAS leases both the 9310 State Avenue and Evergreen Way properties. An auto

service and repair shop are under a long-term lease of the 9229 property. The 9310

property is contaminated from a prior gas station that previously operated on the site.

The community was aware of the contamination prior to purchasing the property.

In the days following separation, Rahimzadeh dissipated a significant amount of

community assets by transferring large sums of money from community accounts

without Shiralian’s permission. These acts included withdrawing $100,000 from one of

the community bank accounts and depositing it into the petty cash account of ECAS,

which was later found to no longer be in the account. 2 The trial court made several

detailed findings regarding the many ways Rahimzadeh dissipated community assets,

none of which Rahimzadeh challenges on appeal. 3

The parties jointly retained expert Kevin Grambush to value ECAS, Shaud

Powers, and the SAKS real estate portfolio. Grambush valued SAKS Holding at

$2,726,690, a value he based on stipulated real estate appraisals and available cash

minus debt. Grambush used the capitalized earnings method to value ECAS at $2.039

million, and Shaud Powers at $1.025 million. Rahimzadeh also hired CPA Steven

Kessler, who testified that he agreed with Grambush’s valuation of ECAS. However,

2 The court found that Rahimzadeh attempted to submit fraudulent receipts and records to support his claim that he used the money for business expenses. 3 The trial court’s unchallenged findings of fact are verities on appeal. In re Dependency of J.A.F., 168 Wn. App. 653, 670-71, 278 P.3d 673 (2012). 2 863061/3

Kessler said that the value of Shaud Powers should be reduced to $699,000 based on

anticipated tax liabilities, but he acknowledged there was no immediate or planned

liquidation of the entity. The trial court accepted Grambush’s methodology of valuation

and rejected Kessler’s valuation. The real properties owned by SAKS were valued at

$1,150,466 for the Evergreen Way property, $735,000 for the 9229 State Avenue

property, and $1,210,833 for the 9310 State Avenue property using a stipulated

appraisal.

During trial, Rahimzadeh submitted evidence of the prior contamination of the

Evergreen Way property and his previously expended cleanup costs.

At the end of trial, the parties submitted written closing arguments and separate

proposed property divisions. Rahimzadeh objected to any division of property that would

result in Shiralian becoming his landlord. He proposed two alternative solutions.

Regarding the 9310 property that ECAS leases, Rahimzadeh proposed giving

him that property whereby he would continue to share its rent with Shiralian for two

more years. In the alternative, the property would remain in the LLC for two more years

and at the end of October 2025, he would have the option to buy out Shiralian at its

then-appraised value. Otherwise, he proposed that the property would then be sold with

profits split between the parties.

The trial court found the total value of the community estate to be approximately

$8 million. It awarded ECAS, Shaud Powers, and the 9310 property to Rahimzadeh.

The court awarded the other two commercial properties to Shiralian, which includes the

Evergreen Way property that ECAS leases. The trial court also awarded SAKS Holding

3 863061/4

to Shiralian with specific conditions. 4 The court ordered both parties to assume

responsibility for the mortgages related to their respective awarded properties. The trial

court also awarded Shiralian a $300,000 equalizing judgment and an additional

$109,948.50 for her share of back rent owed to SAKS from ECAS.

The trial court adopted Grambush’s valuations in full, declining to apply a tax-

effected adjustment to Shaud Powers. The court made the following finding regarding

the 9310 property:

This property is contaminated from the prior gas station that was operated on the site. Respondent has spent approximately $200,000 on cleanup costs. No information was presented to the Court as to whether additional cleanup, groundwater or soil monitoring is necessary (or what such additional work might cost). No information was presented as to whether the Washington State Department of Ecology has levied any penalties against the property, or whether Respondent is seeking contribution or repayment from prior owners under Washington’s Model Toxic Control Act (Ch.70A.305 RCW) ("MTCA”) and WAC 173-340. Accordingly, the Court lacks any evidence upon which to decide that the property should be valued at a different or lower amount than the appraised value. This real property should be awarded to Respondent as his separate property, free and clear of any interest of the Petitioner.

Rahimzadeh appeals. DISCUSSION

Financial Entanglement

Rahimzadeh asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by creating an

antagonistic, open-ended landlord-tenant relationship that left the parties financially

4 Initially, the trial court had ordered the dissolution of SAKS Holding LLC. However, after realizing SAKS held title to all three commercial properties, the trial court on reconsideration chose to award the company SAKS to Shiralian with conditions. She was ordered to become a member of SAKS, and either refinance or pay off the mortgages related to the properties that were awarded to Rahimzadeh, convey the properties awarded to him, and seek to remove him from SAKS Holding. 4 863061/5

entangled by awarding Shiralian the Evergreen Way property that ECAS leases. We

disagree.

A trial court has broad discretion in distributing the marital property, and its

decision will only be reversed in the case of manifest abuse of discretion. In re Marriage

of Rockwell, 141 Wn. App. 235, 242-43, 170 P.3d 572 (2007). A trial court in dissolution

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