Sumner Plains 84, Llc, V. John Wakefield

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 2, 2022
Docket55406-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sumner Plains 84, Llc, V. John Wakefield (Sumner Plains 84, Llc, V. John Wakefield) 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
Sumner Plains 84, Llc, V. John Wakefield, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

August 2, 2022

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II SUMNER PLAINS 84, LLC, a Washington No. 55406-2-II Limited Liability Company,

Appellant,

v.

JOHN ANTHONY WAKEFIELD and MARIE UNPUBLISHED OPINION WAVELET WAKEFIELD, husband and wife, and the marital community comprised thereof,

Respondents.

CRUSER, A.C.J. – Sumner Plains 84 sued its former tenant, John Wakefield, and Marie

Wavelet Wakefield, for unpaid rent and alterations Wakefield made to the warehouse he had rented

from Sumner. Ultimately, Sumner and Wakefield signed a settlement agreement that required

Wakefield, within a year, to obtain a city inspection and approval of his alterations, and that

Wakefield would arrange and pay for any repairs that the city required.

A year later, Wakefield claimed that he fulfilled his obligations under the agreement. But

Sumner sued Wakefield for breach of the settlement agreement, statutory trespass, violation of the

Consumer Protection Act (CPA),1 and fraud. For the breach of the settlement agreement and fraud

claims, Sumner alleged that Wakefield had misled the city multiple times when obtaining approval

1 Chapter 19.86 RCW. No. 55406-2-II

for the alterations. For the statutory trespass and CPA claims, Sumner alleged that Wakefield

entered the premises without Sumner’s authorization and performed the repairs himself, rather

than hiring a registered contractor.

Wakefield moved for summary judgment on all claims. The court granted summary

judgment, awarded Wakefield attorney fees, and dismissed the case.

On appeal, Sumner argues that the court erred in dismissing its claims on summary

judgment and awarding attorney fees. We hold that dismissal of the breach of the settlement

agreement and statutory trespass claims was improper. Additionally, the award of attorney fees

was improper. However, we affirm the dismissal of the remaining claims.2 Accordingly, we affirm

in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS

I. PREVIOUS LAWSUIT

Sumner sued Wakefield for breach of lease, alleging that Wakefield had failed to pay over

$17,000 in rent for three warehouse units Wakefield had leased from Sumner and that Wakefield

had made “a multitude of illegal and unauthorized alterations,” resulting in the need for Sumner

to make costly repairs. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 44. Wakefield acknowledged he constructed an

office in one of the units and that he removed, and later replaced, the walls between his units. But

Wakefield contended that he had Sumner’s consent.

2 Sumner also argues that the court erred in striking statements from a declaration that was submitted in support of its motion to vacate summary judgment and in denying the motion. Because the motion to vacate concerned Sumner’s breach of the settlement agreement claim and we have already decided to remand that claim for further proceedings, we decline to consider these issues.

2 No. 55406-2-II

The parties ultimately settled, and the relevant portions of the settlement agreement on

appeal are as follows:

3. . . . [Wakefield] will obtain inspection and approval from the City of Sumner of the approximately 10 foot by 12 foot portion of the wall [Wakefield] patched between units 101 and 102 and approximately 10 foot by 12 foot portion of the wall [Wakefield] patched between units 102 and 103. If the City of Sumner requires additional work to be completed for approval, [Wakefield] shall coordinate the necessary work and pay for all labor and materials. .... 4. . . . [Wakefield] will obtain inspection and approval from the City of Sumner of [Wakefield’s] improvements made by [Wakefield] to Unit 101 including the approximately 15 foot by 4 foot internal wall and ceiling [Wakefield] added to the existing structure of the building. If the City of Sumner requires additional work to be completed for approval, [Wakefield] shall coordinate the necessary work and pay for all labor and materials. [Sumner] shall provide [Wakefield] with reasonable access to the space to perform the work.

Id. at 47-48. Under the agreement, Wakefield had one year to obtain the city’s approval. The

agreement also provided, “If a party to this Agreement commences an action to enforce its terms,

then the substantially prevailing party in such action shall be entitled to recover its reasonable

attorney’s fees and costs actually incurred in connection with said action.” Id. at 48.

Approximately a month after signing the agreement, Sumner granted Wakefield

permission to enter the warehouse with a city official for an inspection and provided the current

tenants’ contact information for Wakefield to arrange a convenient time with them for his visit.

After Sumner did not hear from Wakefield for almost 10 months, Wakefield notified Sumner that

“[a]ll the permits have been issued.” Id. at 126. Sumner asked Wakefield to provide the permits,

but Sumner did not hear from Wakefield until three days before the deadline at which time

Wakefield emailed Sumner that he had fulfilled his duties under the agreement and provided copies

of the city’s approval.

3 No. 55406-2-II

II. PRESENT LAWSUIT

A. COMPLAINT

Sumner sued Wakefield for breach of the settlement agreement, statutory trespass,

violation of the CPA, and fraud. Sumner acknowledged that Wakefield had obtained a city

inspection, made repairs to the alterations, and the city had issued an approval. But Sumner

alleged, for the breach of agreement claim, that Wakefield had been intentionally dishonest with

the city when obtaining approval, in particular regarding the scope of his alterations; therefore, the

city’s inspection and approval did not cover all of Wakefield’s alterations as required under the

agreement. To support its statutory trespass claim, Sumner asserted that only registered contractors

were authorized to enter the building to perform the repairs. But Wakefield and his employees

carried out the repairs, Sumner alleged, and they were not authorized to enter the property to

perform any repairs.

For its CPA claim, Sumner asserted the work that Wakefield and his employees performed

on the premises required a license that Wakefield and the employees did not have. Regarding its

fraud claim, Sumner claimed that Wakefield committed fraud when he misled the city regarding

the scope of his improvements and he had listed himself as the owner or registered agent of the

owner on the building permit.

B. SUMMARY JUDGMENT

1. Wakefield’s Motion

Wakefield moved for summary judgment to dismiss all of Sumner’s claims. In support of

the motion, Wakefield included a declaration in which he asserted that he had arranged for a city

inspection, by Rick Kelley, of “the tenant improvements.” Id. at 36. Wakefield also declared that

4 No. 55406-2-II

he had accomplished the three required actions Kelley had listed as necessary for city approval:

(1) “provide an as-built engineering diagram of the framing work,” (2) install insulation in the

ceiling, and (3) install fire sprinklers in the new office. Id.

Wakefield also included “[t]he inspection approval” that consisted of multiple documents:

(1) an application to the city for a permit that stated Wakefield’s project was “add[ing] [an] office

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