The Geraldine A. Maniatis Living Trust, Resp V. Malkit Singh, App

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 13, 2025
Docket86872-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of The Geraldine A. Maniatis Living Trust, Resp V. Malkit Singh, App (The Geraldine A. Maniatis Living Trust, Resp V. Malkit Singh, App) 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
The Geraldine A. Maniatis Living Trust, Resp V. Malkit Singh, App, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

GERALDINE A. MANIATIS LIVING TRUST, No. 86872-1-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

MALKIT SINGH AND KAUR RANJIT, and the marital community composed thereof,

Appellants.

COBURN, J. — This is the second appeal between parties involved in this water

trespass dispute. In the prior appeal, this court upheld the trial court’s determination that

Malkit Singh had trespassed by redirecting water onto the Maniatis Living Trust property

and ordered an injunction requiring Singh to abate the flow at his own expense. Despite

these rulings, Singh failed to comply, leading the Trust to seek enforcement through

contempt proceedings. Singh appeals the trial court’s finding of contempt and award of

attorney fees. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

Malkit Singh and Kaur Ranjit (collectively “Singh”) and their neighbors have been

litigating a water trespass dispute since 2016. Geraldine A. Maniatis Living Tr. v. Singh,

No. 53127-5-II, slip op. at 6 (Wash. Ct. App. Dec. 22, 2020) (unpublished),

https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/D2%2053127-5- No. 86872-1-I/2

II%20Unpublished%20Opinion.pdf. 1 We repeat some facts from that opinion as needed

to provide context. Singh purchased two adjacent properties in Tacoma in 2011. The

properties slope down to the north and east toward a home owned by the Geraldine A.

Maniatis Living Trust (Trust) and a home owned by Kim Tosch. A wetland, designated

by the City of Tacoma, and its associated buffer span the north half of both Singh

properties. The western portion of the Trust property and the southern portion of the

Tosch property are designated as part of the wetland buffer. A natural spring has

continuously flowed on the Singh properties since at least the 1970s. Prior to Singh’s

ownership, the spring flowed out from beneath a corner of the foundation of the house

at 2307, combined with other surface runoff, and traveled downhill into a man-made

pool that would overflow. From there, the water passed through a channel leading into a

drainpipe, eventually reaching the Tosch property. It then entered a drainage system

that directed the flow to the street and into the city’s storm sewers. Before 2015, neither

the spring water nor the overflow from the pond ever reached the Trust property.

In 2013, Singh razed the original home on one of his properties and began

constructing a new home in 2015. Sometime after, Singh graded the wetland and buffer

areas. In doing so, he removed the pond that previously collected the spring water.

Singh also installed a drainage system. These drains collected spring and groundwater,

channeling it into a dispersion trench that is designed to disperse the collected water at

the edge of the wetland, which is located uphill from the Trust property and ending

approximately 10 feet from its boundary.

1 GR 14.1(c) provides that we may cite or discuss unpublished opinions in our opinions if “necessary for a reasoned decision.” The instant case centers around a contempt finding regarding a prior court order that was upheld in this unpublished case. 2 No. 86872-1-I/3

The Trust and Tosch sued Singh asserting several claims that stemmed from

water flowing downhill from the Singh properties onto the Trust’s and Tosch’s

properties. Maniatis, No. 53127-5-II, slip op. at 1, 3. 2 In its final judgment, the trial court

ordered that

The flow of water…shall be stopped as it relates to the Maniatis Property on or before September 15, 2019, unless good cause be shown, and the Defendants are therefore permanently enjoined from any further water movement onto the Plaintiff Maniatis’ Property as described in the Plaintiff Maniatis’ Complaint and as further demonstrated in this Court’s February 25, 2019, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

On appeal, this court 3 affirmed the trial court’s determination that Singh

negligently trespassed onto the Trust property by channeling the flow of water and

depositing it directly adjacent to and uphill from the Trust property. 4 Maniatis, No.

53127-5-II, slip op. at 18. The court also affirmed the trial court’s order of an injunction

to abate the ongoing flow of water from the Singh property to the Trust property at

Singh’s sole cost and expense. Maniatis, No. 53127-5-II, slip op. at 23 . This court

rejected Singh’s “impossibility and ‘cannot comply’ arguments.” Maniatis, No. 53127-5-

II, slip op. at 23. This court observed that experts, including Singh’s own expert, testified

about practical solutions to the problem, and that there was no evidence to suggest that

2 A week before trial, Singh conveyed one of his subject properties to Tye and Katherine Minckler. The Trust amended its complaint to include the Mincklers. Maniatis, No. 53127-5-II, slip op. at 7. 3 Division Two of this court heard the first appeal. Division Two transferred this second appeal to Division One of this court. 4 This court concluded the trial court erred in finding the Mincklers liable. Maniatis, No. 53127-5-II, slip op. at 21. But we disagreed with Tosch that the trial court erred in determining that the wetland ceased discharging water onto the Tosch property and instead commenced discharging water only onto the Trust property, from where the water then discharged onto the Tosch property. Maniatis, No. 53127-5-II, slip op. at 30.

3 No. 86872-1-I/4

the City would not issue a permit. Id. The mandate from the first appeal issued on April

29, 2021.

In May, the Trust demanded Singh take action to abate the flow of water onto the

Trust property by July 15. On August 23, Singh submitted an application to the City for a

site development permit to “[a]dd landscape berm and overflow drain in lower backyard

area.” The Trust had filed a motion for contempt but struck the motion. On September

21, the City notified Singh that he would need a “Critical Area Development” permit

because the proposed structures were within a regulated wetland and buffer, and the

previous wetland permit did not cover the new proposed impacts. The City also advised

Singh to contact a qualified wetlands specialist to set up a coaching, pre-application

meeting. The City explained that it needed Singh to provide an agreement/easement for

the installation and maintenance of proposed improvements on a neighboring parcel.

However, because Singh never responded, his site development permit application sat

idle for more than 180 days.

In June 2022, Geraldine Maniatis was hospitalized and later moved into a

nursing home, where she later passed away. Singh’s permit application was voided on

July 11. Her son, James Maniatis, as personal representative of his mother’s estate and

trustee of the Trust, checked the status of Singh’s permit through the City’s website. He

observed that the status of the Singh permit stated it had been “voided.”

On October 11, the Trust contacted Singh 5 stating water was still flowing and that

the last activity on Singh’s permit was that the City voided it. The Trust demanded the

water be stopped within 14 days. That same day, Singh submitted both a pre-

5 Communication was through both parties’ respective attorneys. 4 No. 86872-1-I/5

application request and a Critical Area Development Permit application to “install catch

basin or create berm determined on city’s authority to redirect water off Maniatis

property onto Tosch[ ] property according to court order.” The City explained to Gary

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