Yakima Air Terminal-mcallister Field v. Ma West Rockies Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 10, 2013
Docket29306-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Yakima Air Terminal-mcallister Field v. Ma West Rockies Corporation (Yakima Air Terminal-mcallister Field v. Ma West Rockies Corporation) 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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Yakima Air Terminal-mcallister Field v. Ma West Rockies Corporation, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED

December 10,2013

In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

YAKIMA AIR TERMINAL ­ ) McALLISTER FIELD, an agency of the ) No. 29306-8-111 City of Yakima and County of Yakima, ) Washington, ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) M.A. WEST ROCKIES CORPORATION, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION a Nevada corporation, ) ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. - After fact-fmding that we asked be done by the trial court,

M.A. West Rockies Corporation's challenge to its eviction from airport ramp space it

leased from Yakima Air Terminal at McAllister Air Field is before us again for decision.

Based on the trial court's supplemental findings, it is evident that the airport commenced

its unlawful detainer action at a time when West had cured the breach as to which it had

received notice. Because the evidence does not support essential elements of unlawful

detainer-that the tenant has failed to correct a breach following notice-the lease was

improperly deemed forfeited and the writ of restitution was improperly issued. We No. 29306-8-111 Yakima Air Terminal-McAllister Field v. MA. West Rockies Corp.

reverse the court's judgment and amendment to judgment and remand for further

proceedings.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Yakima Air Terminal-McCallister Field filed a complaint for unlawful detainer

against M.A. West Rockies in March 2010. An unlawful detainer show cause hearing

was held in May 2010 at which the trial court ruled in the airport's favor and entered its

findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order directing the issuance of a writ of

restitution and judgment.

West appealed and challenged its eviction. It argued that in light ofthe payments

it had made and how it believed they had been applied by the airport, it had not been in

default and eviction was improper.

In January 2012, we filed an initial unpublished opinion, Yakima Air Terminal-

McAllister Field v. MA. W. Rockies Corp., noted at 166 Wn. App. 1005 (2012). We

explained that we were unable on the existing record to resolve the appeal because we did

not know what the court came to believe about two key factual disputes. The first key

dispute that was not addressed by the court's findings was whether the airport had applied

a security deposit by West that it was holding in the first half of March 2010 as itemized

in a March 15 document entitled "Notice of Application of Deposit Towards Unpaid

Rent" that the airport served on West, or whether it had continued to hold the amount in

trust, as a deposit. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 86. The second was whether a $2,920.56

No. 29306-8-111

Yakima Air Terminal-McAllister Field v. MA. West Rockies Corp.

payment tendered by West was tendered on Friday, March 26, as West contended, or on

the following Monday, March 29, as alleged by the airport's complaint and suggested by

some of its evidence.

We remanded the case for entry of additional findings and conclusions, with final

disposition to await further proceedings. Yakima Air, slip op. at 16-17.

The trial court reviewed additional declarations, heard argument from counsel, and

entered findings in answer to our questions in June 2013. Counsel for West then filed the

trial court's findings with us. The answers are sufficient to resolve the appeal.

ANALYSIS

The decisive issue is whether eviction was improper because West had cured the

breach of the lease as to which it received the required notice.

Relief under the unlawful detainer statute requires: (1) the tenant's breach, (2)

notice to the tenant of the existence of a breach with an opportunity to correct, and (3)

failure by the tenant to correct the breach. RCW 59.12.030(4); see also Wilson v.

Daniels, 31 Wn.2d 633, 643, 198 P.2d 496 (1948). It is undisputed that between January

and March 26 or 29 West missed several monthly rental payments required by its lease

but that it had also made several unscheduled payments to the airport in an effort to cure

its breaches. What was in dispute was whether it had cured its breach in the manner

required and the time allowed.

No. 29306-8-III

Yakima Air Terminal-McAllister Field v. MA. West Rockies Corp.

Our first uncertainty in earlier deciding the case was whether the airport had

applied a $3,000 security deposit from West that was in its hands on March 15 to unpaid

rent and expenses, or whether it had instead retained it as a security deposit. There was

conflicting evidence. Additional payments were made by West on March 22 and 24, and

it was impossible to determine the status of West's obligations following those payments

without knowing what had happened with the $3,000 security deposit in the airport's

hands on March 15.

In response to our first question, "Did the airport apply the $3,000 security deposit

reimbursement payment that West made in the first half of March 2010 as itemized in its

March 15 notice of application of deposit or did it hold it as a deposit?" Yakima Air, slip

op. at 11, the trial court responded with the finding, "The [airport] did not apply the

$3,000 deposit described in its March 15,2010 Notice of Application of Deposit and

M.A. West's $3,000 security deposit remained held as the deposit at all times material up

to and after the May 20, 2010 hearing." CP at 380.

With this answer, and as explained in more detail in our earlier opinion, we are

able to determine that the status of rents and deposits after applying payments made by

West on March 22 and 24 was as follows:

Rent owed: $5,451.32 less $3,104.74 $2,346.58.

Finance charges: $51.36 plus additional accruals.

Attorney fees and costs: $754.50 in fees and $45.00 in service costs due.

Deposit account: $3,000.00 remaining from early March.

No. 29306-8-111 . Yakima Air Terminal-McAllister Field v. MA. West Rockies Corp.

Yakima Air, slip op. at 7 (citing Report of Proceedings at 44).

Our second uncertainty concerned whether a final payment tendered by West was

made on the afternoon of Friday, March 26, or the following Monday, March 29. We

determined in our prior opinion that given the time and manner of the airport's service of

its notice of default, West had until March 28 to cure. 1 In response to our second

question, "Did West tender its $2,920.56 payment on March 26 or 297" id. at 12, the trial

court responded with the finding, "West tendered to [the airport] its $2,920.56 payment

on March 26,2010." CP at 380.

Based on the status of rents and deposits previously recognized and set forth

above, payment by West of$2,920.56 on March 26 would have more than covered the

rent that it owed. Yakima Air, slip op. at 7. The airport's finance administrator

nonetheless refused the payment as untimely and returned it to West, based on the advice

of counsel (which was based, in tum, on a misunderstanding of how the March 15

payment was applied). The airport then filed its unlawful detainer action on March 30,

alleging that West's tender of rent that it refused was made on March 29-too late, given

th~ time to cure required by its notice of default.

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Related

Daniels v. Ward
669 P.2d 495 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1983)
Ehsani v. McCullough Family Partnership
159 P.3d 407 (Washington Supreme Court, 2007)
Wilson v. Daniels
198 P.2d 496 (Washington Supreme Court, 1948)
Ehsani v. McCullough Family Partnership
160 Wash. 2d 586 (Washington Supreme Court, 2007)

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