Columbia Cmty. Bank v. Newman Park, LLC ( 2013 )


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  •        FILE
    IN CLERKS OPFICI
    llJIRSE COURT, STATE Olf Mllll«mlN
    JUN 2 0:
    Ronald R. Carp nt r       ,
    ~upreme  Court Clerk
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    COLUMBIA COMMUNITY BANK,
    NO. 87174-4
    Respondent/Cross Appellant,
    ENBANC
    v.
    NEWMAN PARK, LLC,
    Filed - -!JUN- 0 2013 -
    -
    2
    --
    Appellant/Cross Respondent.
    GORDON McCLOUD, J.-The goal of equity is to do substantial justice.
    Equity exists to protect the interests of deserving parties from the "harshness of
    strict legal rules." 1 Washington courts embrace a long and robust tradition of
    applying the doctrine of equity. 2
    The question here is whether equitable subrogation-a species of equity
    developed to prevent unjust enrichment-is available to a lender to ameliorate the
    otherwise harsh consequence of a strict reading of the recording act, chapter 65.08
    1
    Rodriguez v. Dep 't of Labor & Indus., 
    85 Wn.2d 949
    , 953, 
    540 P.2d 1359
     (1975)
    (quoting Ames v. Dep 't ofLabor & Indus., 
    176 Wash. 509
    , 513-14, 
    30 P.2d 239
     (1934)).
    2
    See Hamm v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    151 Wn.2d 303
    , 326, 
    88 P.3d 395
    (2004) (Sweeney, J., dissenting).
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    RCW. Specifically, in this case,- the issue is whether a lender who is tricked into
    refinancing property that the borrower lacked the authority to pledge as a security
    can benefit from equitable subrogation, when that lender had no preexisting
    interest in the property. The lender argues that equitable subrogation applies in
    this mortgage refinancing context. The property owner-debtor argues that the
    lender's lack of a preexisting interest in the property bars it from equitable
    subrogation because of the "volunteer rule," which would characterize such a
    lender as essentially an intermeddler unworthy of the protection of equity.
    In accordance with our prior case law, with the modem trend, and with our
    traditional robust reading of the doctrine of equity, we reject the volunteer rule as a
    bar to equitable subrogation. We confirm what our recent prior decisions have
    suggested, that is, that Restatement (Third) of Property: Mortgages § 7.6 (1997)
    provides the more well-reasoned rule for determining whether a later lender has a
    sufficient interest in property to step into the shoes of an earlier lender with a
    higher priority lien. We therefore affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals,
    which held that the lender in this case-who was defrauded into paying off a loan
    of approximately $400,000-was entitled to be equitably subrogated to the
    position of the first priority lienholder. 3
    FACTS
    Newman Park, LLC, a development company, was formed for the purpose
    of developing a piece of real property in Thurston County. Newman Park was
    3
    The lender, of course, is entitled to equitable subrogation only to the extent of the
    first priority lienholder's current obligation.
    2
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    owned by 12 members. Eleven members were individuals, and the 12th member
    was a company owned by Joseph Sturtevant: Landmark Development Ventures.
    Landmark held a 39 percent interest in Newman Park, and the other 11 members
    held the remaining 61 percent interest.
    In 2004, Newman Park purchased the Thurston County property that is the
    subject of this litigation. To pay for the property, it obtained a loan of about
    $400,000 from Hometown National Bank (HNB). HNB's loan to Newman Park
    was secured by a deed of trust on the property itself. Although the loan was
    negotiated by Sturtevant, all the members of Newman Park knew of and ratified
    the loan.
    In 2008, without the knowledge of the other owners of Newman Park,
    Sturtevant went to a different bank, Columbia Community Bank (CCB), and
    requested a loan for his 95 percent-owned company, Trinity. CCB agreed to loan
    Sturtevant $1.5 million. Trinity had nothing to do with Newman Park, but CCB's
    loan to Sturtevant-Trinity was secured by a second deed of trust on the Newman
    Park property, which Sturtevant signed as owner of Landmark, his company with a
    39 percent interest in Newman Parle
    CCB was aware that HNB had a priority security interest in the Newman
    Park property, so CCB required Sturtevant to use $400,000 of CCB's $1.5 million
    loan to pay off HNB fully as a condition of CCB loaning Sturtevant the new
    money. Through this transaction, essentially a refinance, CCB expected to acquire
    the first priority security interest in the property.   CCB's expectation was
    3
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    understandable because HNB was the only prior lender with an interest in the
    property, and HNB's interest was extinguished when its $400,000 loan was paid
    off out of CCB' s loan to Sturtevant.
    Unfortunately, Sturtevant had no authority to sign the deed of trust giving
    CCB a security interest in Newman Park's property. Newman Park's operating
    agreement required a membership interest of at least 80 percent to approve such a
    transaction. Sturtevant's company Landmark had only a 39 percent membership
    interest. Hence, Sturtevant lacked authority to grant the Newman Park property to
    CCB as a security interest.
    CCB was unaware that Sturtevant lacked the authority to give CCB that
    deed of trust.   CCB was unaware because Sturtevant had forged some of the
    documents CCB reviewed before agreeing to make the loan. The key forgery was
    Sturtevant's alteration of the original operating agreement for Newman Park. The
    unaltered_ operating document correctly identified Sturtevant's company Landmark
    as a 39 percent stakeholder with 11 other individuals.        Sturtevant, however,
    showed CCB a version of the operating agreement listing Landmark as the only
    stakeholder, with a 100 percent membership interest. 4
    The deception came to light in 2009. At that time, Sturtevant's company
    Trinity, which received the $1.5 million loan from CCB, defaulted. CCB tried to
    foreclose on the Newman Park property. Newman Park objected that it had never
    4
    CCB claims Sturtevant presented the same falsified operating agreement to HNB
    when securing the HNB loan, which was ratified by the Newman Park members. Reply
    Br. ofResp't at 23. Newman Park does not dispute this.
    4
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 8717 4-4
    given CCB a security interest in the property and filed a complaint to prevent the
    foreclosure. That was when CCB discovered Sturtevant's deception.
    In 2010, CCB sought a declaration from the superior court that the deed of
    trust it received from Sturtevant was valid under various agency theories and, in
    the alternative, that it had acquired a lien on the property through the doctrine of
    equitable subrogation. Newman Park sought a contrary declaration that the deed
    was invalid. On motions for summary judgment, the trial court ruled in favor of
    Newman Park on the question of the deed's validity. It held that the deed of trust
    on the property Sturtevant gave to CCB was invalid because Sturtevant's company,
    Landmark, lacked the 80 percent membership interest in Newman Park required
    for such a transaction.
    But the trial court also held that because CCB had paid off the $400,000 loan
    from HNB to ensure a priority position for its security interest, CCB was equitably
    subrogated to HNB' s position and acquired an equitable lien on the Newman Park
    property in the amount of the $400,000 loan from HNB. The trial court denied
    Newman Park's motion for attorney fees because both parties prevailed on
    substantial issues, which they plainly did. 5
    In 2012, the Court of Appeals affirmed. 6          It rejected Newman Park's
    argument that CCB was a mere volunteer and, hence, could not benefit from
    5
    Because we affirm the trial court and the Court of Appeals, it remains true that
    both parties prevailed on substantial issues. Newman Park is thus still not entitled to
    attorney fees, and its claim to the contrary is rejected.
    6
    Columbia Cmty. Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 
    166 Wn. App. 634
    , 
    279 P.3d 869
    (2012).
    5
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    equitable subrogation. The Court of Appeals based its holding rejecting the so-
    called "volunteer rule" in Washington on a recent case from this court, Bank of
    America, NA v. Prestance Corp., 
    160 Wn.2d 560
    , 576, 
    160 P.3d 17
     (2007). We
    accepted review of the equitable subrogation issue only, to determine whether the
    volunteer rule survives as a bar to equitable subrogation in the refinance context.
    The answer is no. We hold that under the circumstances of this case, CCB is
    entitled to be equitably subrogated to HNB' s position. We therefore affirm the
    trial court and the Court of Appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a trial court's order granting summary judgment de novo. Mohr
    v. Grantham, 
    172 Wn.2d 844
    , 859, 
    262 P.3d 490
     (2011). On review of a summary
    judgment order, we view all the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party.     
    Id.
       Summary judgment is appropriate "if ... there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is entitled to a
    judgment as a matter of law." CR 56(c).
    II. EQUITABLE SUBROGATION OF COLUMBIA COMMUNITY BANK
    a. The General Rules ofEquitable Subrogation in Washington
    Equitable subrogation allows one party to step into the shoes of a second
    party who is owed a debt or obligation and to receive the benefit of that debt or
    obligation, in the absence of any contractual agreement or assignment of rights
    between those two parties or the debtor. See Winters v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
    6
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    Co., 
    144 Wn.2d 869
    , 875, 
    31 P.3d 1164
     (2001). Subrogation is permitted without
    assignment in order to prevent unjust enrichment. See Prestance, 
    160 Wn.2d at 576
    . Unjust enrichment is an equitable doctrine; thus this sort of subrogation is
    called equitable subrogation.
    In its simplest form, equitable subrogation involves three parties: a lender, a
    debtor, and a third party. 7 If a third party pays a debtor's outstanding loan to the
    lender without any formal agreement between the parties, then, under certain
    circumstances, equity permits the third party to take over the lender's interest and
    receive the continuing payments of the debtor-to step into the lender's shoes to
    the extent of the current obligation. In other words, the third party is subrogated to
    the lender's interest. The rationale is that subrogation prevents the windfall that
    would otherwise accrue to the debtor-that is, it prevents unjust enrichment. 8' 9
    Equitable subrogation takes a somewhat different form in the context of
    mortgage refinancing.       In the refinancing world, equitable subrogation is
    considered "a tool by which real property lenders, or lienors, may replace the prior,
    7
    As this court has commented, "Subrogation applies in many contexts, and while
    the overall purpose of preventing unjust enrichment is the same, many times the
    requirements will be tailored to the particular nuances of the situation." Prestance, 
    160 Wn.2d at 576
    . We do not suggest that equitable subrogation is limited to a three party
    situation.
    8
    See generally Hannoch Dagan & James J. White, Governments, Citizens, and
    Injurious Industries, 75 N.Y.U. L. REV. 354, 383-85 (2000).
    9
    Note that some commentators have objected to this restitution-based explanation
    of subrogation, claiming that "[t]he nature of the world of subrogation is a complicated,
    fragmented, multidoctrinal melange, which is not susceptible to any facile restatement."
    Michael Sean Quinn, Subrogation, Restitution, and Indemnity, 74 TEX. L. REV. 1361,
    1363 (1996) (reviewing CHARLES MITCHELL, THE LAW OF SUBROGATION (1994)). This
    is a minority point of view. Id. at 1395.
    7
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    senior lien position of an earlier in time lender by paying off that prior lender's
    loan. " 10
    We recently described how equitable subrogation ensures priority of a
    security interest in the refinancing context:
    For example, suppose A, a homeowner, has two mortgages: one
    recorded first by bank B and one recorded second by bank C. Our
    recording act says B has a higher priority because it recorded first,
    putting the world on notice as to its interest in A's land. If D fully
    discharges B' s debt, then equitable subrogation substitutes D for B, so
    D has a higher priority than C, even though D recorded after.
    Prestance, 
    160 Wn.2d at 564
     (citations omitted). In the refinancing situation, the
    party who would become unjustly enriched absent equitable subrogation is usually
    different than the party who would become unjustly enriched in other contexts. In
    the refinancing context, it is generally not the debtor who would become unjustly
    enriched by the payment of his or her debt by a third party; rather, it is the junior
    lienholder. The reason is that, absent subrogation, the third party's payment would
    bump the number two security interest into the number one position without the
    junior lienholder having taken any action to warrant such an advancement. 
    Id. at 567
    . We prevent this unjust enrichment by subrogating the party paying off the
    priority interest to the party who held that interest, to the extent of the former
    lienholder's interest at that time. 11
    10
    Scott B. Mueller, Is Equitable Subrogation Dead for Lenders and Insurers in
    Missouri?, 66 J. Mo. B. 196, 196 (2010).
    11
    We note that the facts of this case do not implicate relative priorities under the
    recording act in a refinancing context.
    8
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    b. The Development of the Intermeddler Exception to Equitable
    Subrogation in Washington
    In Washington, unjust enrichment, and by extension equitable subrogation,
    has traditionally been restricted in application to a party who is not acting as a
    "volunteer." Murray v. O'Brien, 
    56 Wash. 361
    , 371-72, 
    105 P. 840
     (1909). The
    most obvious "volunteer" is the "officious intermeddler"-a stranger to the
    underlying transaction who is not acting under any legal compulsion or to protect
    some interest. 12   But courts have debated the precise contours of the term
    "volunteer" for over half a century. 13
    In the past, this court has sometimes used language suggesting that a party
    seeking subrogation for a payment it made must have made that payment to satisfy
    an existing legal obligation or protect an existing interest that was under threat.
    For example, early in our state's history we stated:
    The right of subrogation under the better rule applies in cases where a
    party who has an interest in the property and who does not stand as a
    mere volunteer pays a debt owing in whole or in part by another to
    protect his own rights or to save his own property. The remedy is no
    longer limited to sureties and quasi sureties, but is freely applied by
    courts of equity in all cases where good conscience and equity dictate
    that a debt paid by one under any sort of legal coercion ought to be
    paid by another.
    12
    See Daniel Friedmann, Unjust Enrichment, Pursuance of Self-Interest, and the
    Limits of Free Riding, 36 LOY. L.A. L. REv. 831, 845-47 (2003).
    13
    "All courts subscribe to the rule that subrogation will not be permitted a mere
    'volunteer.' But there is no general agreement as to the personification of the word."
    Note, Subrogation of Purchaser to Rights of Senior Mortgagee against Junior
    Encumbrances, 48 YALE L.J. 683, 686 (1939) (footnote omitted).
    9
    Columbia Community Bankv. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    Murray, 56 Wash. at 371-72 (emphasis added). Fifty years later, relying in part on
    the Murray case, we similarly stated:
    Appellant does not fall within the rationale of the rule because
    her right to live in the house, if we indulge the presumption that it
    constituted an interest in the property, was never threatened by the
    grantor and her advancement of the down payment could not have
    been made for the purpose of protecting it. She acted freely and
    without compulsion. She was a volunteer.
    Goodrich v. Fahey, 
    55 Wn.2d 692
    , 694, 
    349 P.2d 729
     (1960) (emphasis added).
    More recently, in BNC Mortgage, Inc. v. Tax Pros, Inc., 
    111 Wn. App. 238
    ,
    254, 
    46 P.3d 812
     (2002), the Court of Appeals ruled that to avoid the volunteer bar,
    a party must pay to protect a preexisting interest or to satisfy a legal obligation. It
    therefore concluded that equitable subrogation was unavailable to a refinancing
    lender because the lender "did not act under any . . . duty or compulsion, but
    instead chose freely and voluntarily to avail itself of a business opportunity." I d.
    These cases have sometimes labeled the doctrine barring intermeddlers from
    benefitting from equitable subrogation the "volunteer rule." The context in which
    the cases have used the rule suggests a strict interpretation of the term "volunteer"
    -that "everyone [is] a volunteer who was not in the position of a surety or who
    did not have some previous interest to protect in the subject matter in question." 14
    14
    Note, supra, at 686. This perspective is in the minority, but it is a well-
    established minority. See generally id.
    10
    Columbia Community Bankv. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    However, in the context of mortgage refinancing, this court has generally
    permitted a lender to be subrogated to the position of a priority interest holder
    simply by paying off that priority interest holder's loan. E.g., Spokane Sav. &
    Loan Soc'y v. Park Vista Improvement Co., 
    160 Wash. 12
    , 27, 
    294 P. 1028
     (1930);
    Prestance, 
    160 Wn.2d 560
    . In these cases we have not required any preexisting
    interest or legal obligation.
    We recognize the tension between the rule that a subsequent lender may be
    equitably subrogated to the interest of a prior lender simply by paying off the prior
    lender and the rule that a party may not obtain equitable subrogation unless it acted
    to protect a preexisting, threatened, interest or to fulfill a preexisting legal
    obligation. In the refinancing context a lender often acts for future profit, rather
    than to protect a preexisting, threatened, interest or to fulfill a preexisting legal
    obligation. As BNC Mortgage makes clear, a lender may instead be acting "freely
    and voluntarily to avail itself of a business opportunity." BNC Mortg., Ill Wn.
    App. at 254.
    c. The Treatment of the Volunteer Rule in Restatement (Third) § 7. 6
    Restatement (Third) § 7.6 recognizes the tension between a strict volunteer
    rule and equitable subrogation in the mortgage priorities context. It has expressly
    addressed the problem by rejecting the strict volunteer rule and adopting the
    "protect some interest" rule instead:
    11
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    Prior case law has often indicated that one who pays as a
    "volunteer" is not entitled to subrogation. However, the meaning of
    the term "volunteer" is highly variable and uncertain, and has
    engendered considerable confusion. This Restatement does not adopt
    the "volunteer" rule, but instead requires simply that the subrogee pay
    to protect some interest.
    RESTATEMENT     (THIRD) § 7.6 cmt. b.      Restatement (Third) § 7.6 then defines
    "interest" broadly to cover even lenders who do not have an existing interest in the
    property at issue:
    [U]nder this section, the subrogee must have performed in order to
    protect an "interest," but that interest need not be a legally recognized
    interest in real property. It may be, for example, a business or
    financial interest that would be impaired by foreclosure of the
    mortgage, an interest in reputation, or a moral obligation.
    Id.   Whatever tensions traditional interpretations of equitable subrogation have
    engendered, Restatement (Third) § 7.6 resolves them with the rule that "one who
    performs a mortgage is entitled to subrogation in order to avoid unjust
    enrichment." !d. cmt. a.
    d. This Court Now Adopts Restatement (Third) § 7. 6
    This court recently adopted the liberal approach of Restatement (Third) § 7.6
    in Prestance. Specifically, Prestance addressed whether "a party is barred from
    seeking relief [via equitable subrogation] whenever he has actual knowledge of the
    intervening interests."    Prestance, 
    160 Wn.2d at 566
    .         We considered three
    different approaches:
    12
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    First, the Restatement approach that says actual or constructive
    knowledge of intervening interests is irrelevant; second, a minority
    approach that says a plaintiff with either actual or constructive
    knowledge cannot seek equitable subrogation; and third, a "majority"
    approach that says a plaintiff with actual knowledge cannot seek
    equitable subrogation, while one with constructive notice can.
    I d. (emphasis and footnote omitted). The question in Prestance was strictly about
    knowledge of intervening interests. We expressly adopted Restatement (Third) §
    7.6 but only for the purposes of resolving the knowledge question. Id. at 582 ("We
    adopt§ 7.6 of the Restatement (Third) and hold WFB West is equitably subrogated
    to Washington Mutual's first-priority lien, regardless of either its actual or
    constructive knowledge of intervening interests."). We did not expressly consider
    the volunteer rule.
    Based on Prestance, the Court of Appeals in this case held that the volunteer
    rule no longer applies in Washington:
    Volunteer Rule
    Newman Park further argues that equitable subrogation does
    not apply because Columbia was a volunteer.
    Previously, we recognized the volunteer rule in the context of a
    commercial loan. BNC Mortg., Inc., 111 Wn. App. at 254. After our
    decision in BNC Mortgage, Inc., 
    111 Wn. App. 238
    , 
    46 P.3d 812
    , the
    Washington Supreme Court considered the volunteer rule in
    [Prestance], 
    160 Wn.2d 560
    . In [Prestance], the court held that
    equitable subrogation was available in the refinance context and, as
    previously discussed, adopted Restatement (Third) of Property:
    Mortgages § 7.6, which rejects the "volunteer" rule. [Prestance], 
    160 Wn.2d at 560-64
    . And our Supreme Court did not limit its adoption of
    13
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    the Restatement or attempt to preserve the volunteer rule. We now
    conclude that the volunteer rule is no longer a defense where a
    mortgagee pays off another mortgage holder. We therefore affirm the
    order granting partial summary judgment to Columbia on the basis of
    equitable subrogation.
    Columbia Cmty. Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 
    166 Wn. App. 634
    , 645, 
    279 P.3d 869
     (2012).
    But because we did not explicitly "consider[ ] the volunteer rule" in
    Prestance, the parties contest this holding. Newman Park argues that the BNC
    Mortgage opinion stated the correct view of the law in Washington-that a later
    lender without an existing interest or legal obligation who pays off a prior lender is
    a volunteer and barred from equitable subrogation. Newman Park concludes that
    CCB was a volunteer and cannot be subrogated to HNB' s interest. In contrast,
    CCB argues that Prestance implicitly approved Restatement (Third) § 7.6's
    rejection of the strict volunteer rule.
    15
    We now explicitly adopt Restatement (Third) § 7.6 in ful1.             We have
    already adopted large portions of Restatement (Third) § 7.6.           As we said in
    15
    Restatement (Third)§ 7.6 states:
    (a) One who fully performs an obligation of another, secured by a
    mortgage, becomes by· subrogation the owner of the obligation and the
    mortgage to the extent necessary to prevent unjust enrichment. Even though
    the performance would otherwise discharge the obligation and the
    mortgage, they are preserved and the mortgage retains its priority in the
    hands of the subrogee.
    14
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    Prestance, albeit in a slightly different context, "[The] trend is clearly toward the
    more liberal approach, and we would be wise to follow it." Prestance, 
    160 Wn.2d at 576
    .    We gave two policy reasons why a liberal approach to equitable
    subrogation was desirable. First, we noted that "by facilitating more refinancing,
    [liberal application of] equitable subrogation helps stem the threat of foreclosure."
    
    Id. at 580
    . Second, we asserted that "a liberal equitable subrogation doctrine can
    save billions of dollars by reducing title insurance premiums" and that those
    premiums would be passed on to homeowners. Jd. at 580-81. Maybe the effect of
    liberalizing equitable subrogation on promoting these policies was overstated.
    Still, the Restatement (Third) § 7.6 approach is the more simple and clear approach.
    It is most consistent with our recent prior case law and also remains an effective
    way of preventing true intermeddlers from benefitting from an equitable remedy.
    Indeed, the result in Prestance would have been the opposite if we had applied a
    (b) By way of illustration, subrogation is appropriate to prevent
    unjust enrichment if the person seeking subrogation performs the
    obligation:
    ( 1) in order to protect his or her interest;
    (2) under a legal duty to do so;
    (3) on account of misrepresentation, mistake, duress, undue
    influence, deceit, or other similar imposition; or
    (4) upon a request from the obligor or the obligor's successor to do
    so, if the person performing was promised repayment and reasonably
    expected to receive a security interest in the real estate with the
    priority of the mortgage being discharged, and if subrogation will
    not materially prejudice the holders of intervening interests in the
    real estate.
    15
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 8717 4-4
    strict version of the volunteer rule in that case. To the extent that BNC Mortgage
    suggested that the volunteer rule generally bars equitable subrogation in the
    refinance context, it is overruled.
    e. Application a/Restatement (Third) § 7. 6 to This Case
    Our adoption of Restatement (Third) § 7.6 does not change the fact that
    equitable subrogation remains "an equitable remedy." RESTATEMENT (THIRD) §
    7.6 cmt. a.     As such, it is "founded in the facts and circumstances of each
    particular case." Credit Bureau Corp. v. Beckstead, 
    63 Wn.2d 183
    , 186, 
    385 P.2d 864
     (1963). From ancient times, "[t]he first maxim in equity" has been that one
    'who seeks equity must do equity."' People's Sav. Bankv. Bufford, 
    90 Wash. 204
    ,
    208, 
    155 P. 1068
     (1916) (italics omitted). Of similarly ancient provenance is the
    requirement that those "'who come[ ] into equity must come with clean hands."'
    Retail Clerks Health & Welfare Trust Funds v. Shapland Supermarket, Inc., 
    96 Wn.2d 939
    , 949, 
    640 P.2d 1051
     (1982).
    In this case, CCB arguably failed to exercise due diligence when it loaned
    Sturtevant $1.5 million without an in-depth investigation into his claimed assets.
    But there is no question that Sturtevant altered the Newman Park operating
    documents he submitted to CCB in support of his loan application to make it
    appear that he was the sole owner of Newman Parle           Indeed, the trial court
    declared that the deed of trust Sturtevant gave to CCB was invalid in part because
    16
    Columbia Community Bankv. Newman Park, LLC, 87174-4
    "the bank [CCB] was operating with a forged document." Report of Proceedings
    (Apr. 15, 2010) at 78. Restatement (Third) § 7.6 expressly lists "misrepresentation,
    mistake, duress, undue influence, deceit, or other similar imposition" as situations
    in which equitable subrogation is warranted. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) § 7 .6(b)(3).
    Thus, under Restatement (Third) § 7.6(b)(3), Sturtevant's deceit makes equitable
    subrogation especially appropriate here. 16
    In fact, Restatement (Third)§ 7.6's comment d addresses "[p]erformance
    induced by fraud and the like":
    In some cases one may be induced to perform and discharge a
    mortgage obligation by misrepresentation, mistake, duress, undue
    influence, deceit, or other similar imposition. The deception may be
    practiced on the payor by the mortgagor or by some other person. If
    the circumstances are such that subrogation to a prior mortgage will
    relieve the payor, and if no prejudice to any innocent person will
    result, the payor may have subrogation.
    (Emphasis added.) This comment compels the same conclusion. CCB may have
    been less than diligent when it gave Sturtevant a loan with apparently minimal
    investigation. But granting equitable subrogation here would not result in any
    prejudice to Newman Park because it retains exactly the same position it would
    have had if CCB had never paid its loan-it owes a debt of approximately
    $400,000. The only change is the identity of the party owed.
    16
    The parties in this case both stated at oral argument that the record in this case is
    factually complete. This court can therefore balance these equitable considerations of
    deception and due diligence to resolve whether summary judgment equitably subrogating
    CCB to HNB 's interest was appropriate in this case.
    17
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 8717 4-4
    The fact that Sturtevant presented forged documents to CCB, along with the
    fact that no prejudice to anyone will result, makes equitable subrogation
    particularly appropriate here. We hold that under the circumstances of this case,
    the trial court properly granted CCB' s motion to be equitably subrogated to HNB 's
    interest.
    CONCLUSION
    Some past equitable subrogation cases in Washington contain language
    suggesting support for a strict version of the volunteer rule. A strict volunteer rule
    would bar commercial lenders like CCB from obtaining equitable subrogation in
    most circumstances. Restatement (Third) § 7.6 applies a more liberal approach
    that permits lenders like CCB to benefit from equitable subrogation in the
    mortgage refinance context. This court recently expressly adopted Restatement
    (Third) § 7 .6's liberal approach to equitable subrogation, albeit in a different
    context where we did not consider the volunteer rule. We now expressly reject the
    volunteer rule and adopt Restatement (Third) § 7.6 in full. Under Restatement
    (Third) § 7 .6, equitable subrogation is available in the mortgage refinance context
    and it is especially appropriate where the potential subrogee's payment is induced
    by deceit or fraud.   That is just what happened here.      We affirm the Court of
    Appeals.
    18
    Columbia Community Bank v. Newman Park, LLC, 8717 4-4
    WE CONCUR:
    19