Sharon And Judy Hartzell, V Dorothy M. Thomas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 11, 2018
Docket51391-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sharon And Judy Hartzell, V Dorothy M. Thomas (Sharon And Judy Hartzell, V Dorothy M. Thomas) 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.

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Sharon And Judy Hartzell, V Dorothy M. Thomas, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

December 11, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II SHARON L. HARTZELL, a single woman; No. 51391-9-II JUDY L. HARTZELL, a single woman, in her capacity as the Attorney-in-Fact for Sharon L. Hartzell, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellants,

v.

DOROTHY M. THOMAS, a single woman,

Respondent.

BJORGEN, J. — Sharon L. Hartzell, and Judy Hartzell, in her capacity as the attorney-in-

fact of Sharon L. Hartzell,1 brought suit against Dorothy Thomas for conversion and fraud

relating to transactions concerning the family home. The Hartzells appeal the superior court’s

order granting summary judgment in Thomas’ favor and dismissing the Hartzells’ complaint.

The Hartzells argue that the superior court erred when it granted summary judgment

based on the three-year statute of limitations for conversion and fraud because their causes of

1 We refer to Sharon or Judy by their first name when discussing them individually and as the Hartzells when discussing them collectively in their capacity as the appellants in this matter. No. 51391-9-II

action did not accrue until they discovered facts constituting the fraud. In addition, the Hartzells

assign error to the superior court’s refusal to apply the doctrine of equitable tolling.

We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS

A. Substantive Facts

Sharon is the mother of eight children, including Judy and Dorothy.

In 1996, Sharon owned a home located in Port Townsend, in which she had resided since

1971.2 In the early summer of 1996, Sharon recognized that her home needed a variety of

improvements. She contacted her nephew, a contractor, who estimated that the home

improvements would cost about $30,000. Unable to obtain financing on her own, Sharon and

Dorothy agreed that Dorothy would cosign a loan so that Sharon could make the improvements

to her home.

On July 24, 1996, Sharon executed a quitclaim deed, giving her daughter, Dorothy, a 50

percent interest in the home, as a tenant in common.3 The quitclaim deed was notarized and

recorded by the county auditor.

On July 30, Dorothy cosigned a loan for Sharon with a principal amount of $62,000. The

loan settlement statement indicated that Sharon’s outstanding mortgage obligation prior to

obtaining the loan was $2,981.83.

2 Sharon and Judy still reside at this property. 3 There are no facts on the record indicating that Sharon was incompetent at the time she executed the quitclaim deed, although there are facts on the record indicating that she was declared legally blind around 1990.

2 No. 51391-9-II

On January 16, 2004, Sharon signed another quitclaim deed, which granted Sharon’s

remaining 50 percent interest in the home to Dorothy, as a gift from mother to daughter. The

quitclaim deed was notarized and recorded. After this conveyance, Sharon no longer had record

ownership of the home.

As record owner of the home, Dorothy has since obtained multiple deeds of trust in her

name borrowing against the home’s equity.

On May 18, 2015, Sharon appointed Dorothy and Judy as her attorneys-in-fact. On

December 21, Sharon revoked Dorothy’s appointment and appointed Judy as her sole attorney-

in-fact.

B. Conflicting Declarations and Deposition Testimony

In her declaration supporting summary judgment, Dorothy stated,

In 1996, at the age of 59, my mother asked me to assist her in re-financing her home so that she could do some improvements and repairs. I agreed to help her and we sought professional advice from a bank loan officer. We were, at that time, informed that the best way to accomplish our goals included my being on title with my mother. It was based upon this advice that my mother granted me a 50% interest in the property. We thereafter obtained the loan and it was used to remodel and make repairs on the house, as well as to help each of us financially. I made all payments on the loan.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 24. Dorothy continued:

In 2004, at the age of 67, my mother again felt she needed a loan to help pay expenses she had incurred since 1996 and to pay for more repairs and maintenance on her aging home. She asked me again to help her obtain this financing. We again sought professional assistance and obtained a loan. In the process of doing so we were told that my mother’s income status was not sufficient upon which to borrow the money we sought. As a result of this information it was decided that I alone would borrow the money. Based upon the advice we were given, it was also decided that I should be the sole owner of the property. There was not then, and never has been, a question but that my mother could continue to live in the home for her lifetime[.] The mortgage loan proceeds were used in large part for

3 No. 51391-9-II

maintenance and repairs at my mother[’s] request and I have been solely responsible for repayment of the loan.

CP at 24. Dorothy also declared that,

Each time my mother and I applied for and got mortgage loans, and consulted with loan professionals, my mother was present. To the best of my knowledge and understanding, she was as fully informed and knowledgeable about the processes we were involved in for obtaining the loans as I was based upon the information provided to us by the loan professionals. My mother signed loan documents in the presence of loan professionals.

CP at 24.

When asked about the 1996 quitclaim deed giving Dorothy one-half interest in the home,

Sharon stated in her deposition that she had “no clue” what that document meant. CP at 87. She

stated,

I mean, you could read that document to me until the cows come home, and I didn’t comprehend it. But I did not know I was giving her an interest, because I just thought she [Dorothy] was going to be a cosigner just to help me get the loan, but I was paying her back.

CP at 87-88. The deposition continued:

Q. So you understood she was going to cosign for the loan? A. Yes. Q. And you also signed the loan? A. Yes. Q. But was it your understanding that you were going to give her a one-half interest in the property? A. No, no. Because she knew from the time she was approximately 12 years old when we moved into the house, that if something happened that house was to be kept in all eight, for all eight kids, not just one.

CP at 88. When asked about the 2004 quitclaim deed, which granted Sharon’s remaining interest

in the home to Dorothy, Sharon stated,

I recall it, but I don’t remember – I don’t – I didn’t realize I was giving her the home. Because she called me up and said that the loan company wanted her name

4 No. 51391-9-II

to be first on the loan. And she said we’re going to swap places, it’s just on paper, it’s not legal.

CP at 91-92. The colloquy continued:

Q. So you never had any intention, then, to give her [Dorothy] the entire property— A. No. Q. –in 2004? A. Heavens, no.

CP at 92-93.

When Sharon was asked why she would sign the documents without having someone else

look at them, she stated, “I had somebody probably read them to me.” CP at 97.

C. Discovery of Will

In Judy’s declaration, she declared,

In late 2015, Shirley4 was visiting with me and Sharon and she asked if Sharon . . . had a Will. Sharon said that she had signed a Will that Dorothy had prepared for her, and we looked around the house to help her find it. Shirley and I had never previously known anything about the existence of this Will.

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