South Kitsap Family Worship Center v. Weir

135 Wash. App. 900
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 7, 2006
DocketNo. 33399-6-II
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 135 Wash. App. 900 (South Kitsap Family Worship Center v. Weir) 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
South Kitsap Family Worship Center v. Weir, 135 Wash. App. 900 (Wash. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Van Deren, J.

¶1 South Kitsap Family Worship Center (Center), Custom Communities Corporation, Inc. (CCC), and JEH Corporation, Inc. (JEH), appeal dismissal of their breach of contract claim against David Weir and Jennifer Sansen-Weir and the trial court’s award of damages and attorney fees to Weir. Because substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that the real estate purchase and sale agreement (REPSA) was fully integrated without reference to the claimed repurchase option and that the Center knowingly conveyed by way of a statutory warranty deed all right, title, and interest in the property to Weir, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the breach of contract claim. We also affirm its damages award and the attorney fees award under RCW 4.28.328(3), reverse the attorney [904]*904fees award under the REPSA, and award attorney fees on appeal.

FACTS

¶2 When this dispute arose in late 2000, the Center had financial difficulties. The Center’s landlord, Ted Sadtler, had a judgment against the Center for $189,080.35, and the Center needed to pay a bank loan of over $34,000.00 (Kitsap Bank loan). In addition, it owed $4,000 to one of its pastors (Leith loan). The Center’s five-acre parcel of undeveloped real property had been used as collateral for the Kitsap Bank loan, and the superior court had expressly permitted Sadtler to foreclose on this property if the Center failed to pay the landlord’s judgment within 150 days.

¶3 In 1996, the Center’s appraiser valued the property at $550,000, anticipating that the property would be rezoned for commercial use. In October 2000, Stan Morris, the Center’s senior pastor, negotiated a sale of the property to CCC and JEH (Developers) for $365,000. This sale was contingent, however, on removal of a development moratorium prohibiting the Developers’ intended use. The moratorium was expected to be removed in 2000 but not before the 150-day deadline for paying the Sadtler judgment. Accordingly, Morris attempted to obtain a loan secured by the property to pay the Sadtler judgment, but he was unable to negotiate satisfactory terms through formal lending institutions.

¶4 Weir, who was a member of the Center’s congregation, proposed that he loan the necessary funds to the Center. The parties reached an agreement that Weir would pay the Sadtler judgment, the Kitsap Bank loan, and the Leith loan, and that the Center would transfer title to the property to Weir but retain an option to repurchase it by August 31, 2001, for the amount Weir paid plus nine percent interest. Tracy Flood, also a Center member and an attorney, prepared a sales agreement memorializing these terms, which was signed in January 2001 by Morris and Weir but not by Weir’s wife, Jennifer Sansen-Weir.

[905]*905¶5 In February, the parties executed a REPSA, the terms of which differed from the sales agreement. The purchase price was $221,500, roughly the combined amounts of the Kitsap Bank loan and the Sadtler judgment. The price did not include the Leith loan. More significantly, the REPSA contained no repurchase option and paragraph 20 of the REPSA was an integration clause stating that it was the entire agreement between the parties. It also provided that the Center would transfer title to Weir with a statutory warranty deed. Paragraph 17 of the REPSA was an attorney fees provision entitling the prevailing party in a dispute arising out of the agreement to reasonable attorney fees and costs. The REPSA was signed by both Weir and Sansen-Weir. The Center transferred title to Weir and Sansen-Weir by statutory warranty deed.

¶6 In August 2001, Morris contacted Weir, asking him for the amount of accumulated interest to finalize the Center’s repurchase of the property. The Center estimated that the amount due (purchase price plus nine percent interest) was $231,914.48. Weir replied that he would sell the property to the Center for “around $265,000.” Ex. 9.

¶7 The Center and the Developers entered into a purchase and sale agreement based on the sales agreement between Weir and the Center. In late August, the Developers wrote a letter to the Center’s counsel stating that they were the assignee purchasers of the Center’s repurchase option and that they were ready to close the transaction. The Center’s attorneys sent correspondence to Weir’s counsel offering to tender performance. The August 31 deadline for repurchase under the sales agreement passed, and Weir refused to sell the property to the Center for the sales agreement price.

¶8 The Center sued Weir for damages and specific performance and filed a lis pendens against the property. The Developers assisted the Center with the legal fees in these actions.1

[906]*906¶9 Weir counterclaimed for damages caused by the lis pendens. Weir later moved to add the Developers as plaintiffs to the suit. The trial court granted the motion because the Center assigned its rights under the sales agreement to the Developers and a judgment in the Center’s favor might expose Weir to multiple or inconsistent obligations.

¶10 In 2001, Weir commissioned an appraisal which, based on the property’s actual zoning, valued the property at $239,000. The Center’s appraiser valued the property at $430,000 in 2002. The Center’s appraisal again presumed that the property would be rezoned to permit higher density use than was then allowed.

¶11 Following a bench triál, the trial court found that the sales agreement was unenforceable under the statute of frauds2 and that it had merged into the deed. The trial court found that Morris had read both the REPSA and the deed before signing them and understood that neither contained a repurchase option. Accordingly, it concluded that Weir was entitled to the property free of encumbrances and dismissed the Center’s and the Developers’ claims with prejudice. In addition, it awarded Weir reasonable costs and fees under RCW 4.84.330 and the REPSA’s attorney fees provision. Finally, it awarded Weir damages caused by the lis pendens.

ANALYSIS3

I. REPSA INTEGRATION CLAUSE

¶12 The Center and the Developers argue that the REPSA’s integration clause is boilerplate that does not [907]*907reflect the parties’ intent and, therefore, should not supersede the sales agreement. They claim that the REPSA simply implemented the earlier agreement to transfer title with an option to repurchase and that the two agreements must be read together.

¶13 We review findings of fact for substantial evidence, “defined as a quantum of evidence sufficient to persuade a rational, fair-minded person that the premise is true.” Sunnyside Valley Irrigation Dist. v. Dickie, 149 Wn.2d 873, 879, 73 P.3d 369 (2003) (citing Wenatchee Sportsmen Ass’n v. Chelan County, 141 Wn.2d 169, 176, 4 P.3d 123 (2000)). “If the standard is satisfied, a reviewing court will not substitute its judgment for the trial court’s even though it might have resolved a factual dispute differently.” Sunnyside Valley, 149 Wn.2d at 879-80 (citing Croton Chem. Corp. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 Wash. App. 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-kitsap-family-worship-center-v-weir-washctapp-2006.