In Re : The Lange Family Trust ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                                                            lL ED
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DP/iSlotj 1i
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    2015 JUN ? O TIM 8; 31
    DIVISION II
    No. 45726 -1 - II `'
    SCOTT K. LANGE, Trustee; and
    ELIZABETH R. LANGE, Trustee; Trustees of
    The Lange Family Trust;
    Appellants.
    SIM
    DAVID           A. CEBELAK and KRISANNE R.                                    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    CEBELAK, husband and wife, and the marital
    community composed thereof,
    Respondents,
    MELNICK, J. —         Scott   and   Elizabeth Lange (" Lange") appeal the trial court' s order granting
    David         Krisanne Cebelak (" Cebelak").           Lange and
    summary judgment in, favor
    partial                                            of           and
    Cebelak own            adjacent properties     that have been the      subject of much     litigation. In 2009, Lange
    filed a complaint against Cebelak alleging negligent injury to real property, public and private
    nuisance, trespass, and loss of lateral support. The trial court dismissed Lange' s negligent injury
    to real property and nuisance claims -arising from damage that occurred in 2006 because they were
    barred    by     the   statute of   limitations.   Lange appeals, but because Lange did not file his complaint
    until after the statute of limitations had run, we affirm.
    FACTS
    Lange         owns              adjacent   to Cebelak in Clallam       County.     Both properties abut the
    property
    issued Cebelak        building            to build   a residence   in
    Clallam    Bay         shoreline.   Clallam   County                      a              permit
    45726 -1 - II
    1996.   Cebelak       sought a revision of   the   building    permit   in late 1996   and again   in 1999. Clallam
    County granted the revisions. Cebelak completed construction of the home on November 2, 1999.
    In late 1996 and 1997, the county also issued the required building and plumbing permits
    for Cebelak to build       a storage   building    on    his property. In September 1997, Cebelak completed
    construction of a storage building on his property, which the county inspected.
    In           1999, Cebelak                                     of a   bulkhead.    The county granted a
    May                     completed        construction
    shoreline exemption, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife granted him a hydraulic permit, for
    the bulkhead.
    On December 14, 2006, a severe storm hit Clallam Bay, washing away some of Cebelak' s
    property and exposing the bulkhead. As a result of the storm, Lange lost a portion of his beachfront
    property.       In March 2007, Lange retained Jim Johannessen, a licensed engineering geologist and
    principal of Coastal Geologic Services, Inc. On November 30, 2007, Johannessen issued a report
    to Lange opining that Cebelak' s bulkhead " was at least in part the cause of the severe erosion to
    the Lange beachfront."        Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 375.
    Over two years later, on December 11, 2009; Lange filed a complaint against Cebelak in
    Clallam County Superior Court alleging causes of action for public and private nuisance, trespass,
    and loss of lateral support. Although Lange used breach, duty, and damage language, he. did not
    specifically    allege negligent   injury   to   real   property.   In the complaint, Lange requested monetary
    damages for the harm to his property caused by the erosion that occurred during the storm in
    December 2006, as well as continuing damages for harm to his property resulting from the
    residence, storage building, and bulkhead on Cebelak' s property. Specifically, Lange claimed that
    the structures exist in violation of the initial building permits, applicable laws, codes, and
    regulations.      Lange also requested injunctive relief requiring Cebelak to remove the residence,
    2
    45726 -1 - II
    storage   structure,     and   bulkhead,      and   to   restore   the   shoreline   to    its   original   condition.    In the
    alternative, Lange asked the trial court to require Cebelak to redesign the bulkhead to eliminate
    the trespass and nuisance.
    Cebelak raised several affirmative defenses, including that Lange' s complaint violated
    applicable statutes of         limitations.    Cebelak moved for summary judgment, seeking dismissal of
    Lange' s. complaint because no material issue of fact existed regarding the nuisance, trespass, and
    loss of lateral support claims, and because most of the claims were barred by statutes of limitations.
    Additionally, Cebelak argued that Lange could not challenge any of the county' s permitting
    decisions relating to the initial construction of the structures because Lange did not timely seek
    review under the Land Use Petition Act (LUPA). 1
    The trial court entered an order granting final partial summary judgment in favor of
    in 2006.     The trial court
    Cebelak     on    the   nuisance     claims   arising from damage that             occurred
    incorporated by reference its memorandum opinion on defendants' motion for summary judgment.
    The trial   court ruled    that "[   c] laims for damages under the theory of negligent injury to real property
    and/ or nuisance for the erosion which occurred in the December storms of 2006 storm [ sic] are
    dismissed as the statute of limitations has run." 2 CP at 25. Specifically, the trial court determined
    that viewing the evidence most favorable to Lange, the date of accrual for the purposes of the
    limitations    was   the date Johannessen issued           his   report,   November 30, 2007.            Because
    statute of
    Lange did not file the complaint until more than two years after the date of that report, the statute
    of limitations for nuisance ran prior to the commencement of litigation.
    Ch. 36. 70C RCW
    2 The trial court also granted the motion as to the claims relating to obstruction of view for failure
    to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. This is not at issue on appeal.
    3
    45726 -1 - II
    The trial court did not dismiss any of Lange' s other claims and those claims remain active.
    The trial court kept active Lange' s claims based on current or continuing trespass, negligent injury
    to real property and/ or nuisance, and loss of lateral support, or that the structures are violating the
    permits issued or are out of compliance with applicable county codes. Lange appeals.3
    ANALYSIS
    1.         STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review an order for summary judgment de novo, engaging in the same inquiry as the
    trial   court.   Jones       v.    Allstate Ins. Co., 
    146 Wn.2d 291
    , 300, 
    45 P. 3d 1068
     ( 2002).                  Summary
    judgment is proper if "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on
    file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact
    and     that the moving party           is   entitled   to   a   judgment   as a matter of   law." CR 56( c).   We construe
    all facts and their reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Jones,
    
    146 Wn. 2d at 300
    .    Summary judgment is proper only if reasonable persons could reach but one
    conclusion       from the         evidence presented. -Bostain v.           Food Express, Inc., 
    159 Wn.2d 700
    , 708, 
    153 P. 3d 846
     ( 2007).
    II.        THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT ERR IN APPLYING THE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
    A.         Accrual of Nuisance Claim
    A nuisance is statutorily defined in Washington, in relevant part, as " an obstruction to the
    free use of property, so as to essentially interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of the life and
    property."      RCW 7. 48. 010.             A public nuisance is one that " affects equally the rights of an entire
    3
    On   appeal,     Cebelak       asks us    to dismiss Lange'       s claims.   Because Cebelak did not file a cross-
    appeal, we decline.
    El
    45726 -1 - II
    or neighborhood, although          the   extent of the   damage may be       unequal."       RCW 7. 48. 130.
    community
    A private nuisance is one that is not a public nuisance. RCW 7. 48. 150.
    A   negligence action accrues when                the   plaintiff suffers   injury   to his   real   property.     Will v.
    Frontier Contractors, Inc., 
    121 Wn. App. 119
    , 125, 
    89 P. 3d 242
     ( 2004). " A nuisance cause of
    action accrues when the plaintiff initially suffers some actual and appreciable harm or when the
    plaintiff should         have discovered the basis for              a nuisance action."     Wallace v. Lewis County, 
    134 Wn. 1
    ,    19, 
    137 P. 3d 101
     ( 2006),         as corrected (    Aug.   15, 2006) (    emphasis added).         Separate
    App.
    causes of action arise for negligent injury to real property and nuisance claims, but plaintiffs must
    file   a   lawsuit two     years      from the time      either action accrues.         RCW 4. 16. 130; Wallace, 134 Wn.
    App. at 19.
    The damage to Lange' s property occurred on the date of the storm, December 14, 2006.
    However, the Johannessen' s report opining that Cebelak' s bulkhead caused the damage issued on
    November 30, 2007. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Lange, neither cause of
    action accrued until            November 30, 2007.             No genuine issue as to this material fact exists in the
    record. Lange did not file his complaint until December 11, 2009. Therefore, Lange commenced
    his lawsuit          outside of   the two        year statute of    limitations for both   claims.        RCW 4. 16. 130.       Thus,
    the trial court correctly dismissed claims for damages for the erosion which occurred from the
    December 2006 storm.
    If a nuisance is continuing, the two year statute of limitations only limits the period for
    which the plaintiff may collect damages. Wallace, 134 Wn. App. at 19. If a nuisance remains, the
    plaintiff may continue to collect damages for uncompensated harm until the nuisance is abated.
    Wallace, 134 Wn.              App.   at   19.    Each successive day that Cebelak' s bulkhead continues to cause
    erosion     to Lange'     s                constitutes a new cause of action.           Wallace, 134 Wn.          App.   at   20. To
    property
    5
    45726 -1 - II
    the extent that Lange argues that the trial court erred by dismissing his nuisance claims because
    the nuisance is continuing, his argument is without merit. The trial court dismissed only those
    claims relating to the December 2006 storm. It did not dismiss any claims related to any continuing
    nuisance caused by any of the structures on Cebelak' s property. It also did not dismiss claims for
    continued erosion resulting from Cebelak' s bulkhead. Therefore, Lange' s argument fails.
    B.          Tolling the Statute of Limitations
    To the extent that Lange argues that fraud or misrepresentation by Cebelak should have
    tolled the nuisance statute of limitations, this argument is without merit. Lange essentially argues
    that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to the accrual date of the cause of action for the
    nuisance claim, and that a jury should determine whether fraud prevented Lange from knowing
    that the nuisance existed
    An actionable nuisance claim is an act or omission that injures the plaintiffs' property or
    unreasonably interferes         with   their   enjoyment of     the property.       Wallace, 134 Wn. App. at 19. The
    depends only     on   the   plaintiff   suffering   some "` actual and
    accrual of a nuisance cause of action
    appreciable"'       harm. Mayer        v.   City   of Seattle, 
    102 Wn. App. 66
    , 76, 
    10 P. 3d 408
     ( 2000) ( quoting
    Haslund       v.   City   of Seattle, 
    86 Wn.2d 607
    , 620, 
    547 P. 2d 1221
     ( 1976)).                   Courts may apply the
    discovery rule in cases where a delay occurs between the injury and the plaintiff' s discovery of it.
    Crisman      v.   Crisman, 
    85 Wn. App. 15
    , 20, 
    931 P. 2d 163
     ( 1997).      The discovery rule " postpone[ s]
    the running of a statute of limitations until the time when a plaintiff, through the exercise of due
    diligence,     should    have discovered the basis for the           cause of action."       Mayer, 102 Wn. App. at 76.
    Gel
    45726 -1 - II
    For tolling purposes, we will assume without deciding that Lange suffered an actual and
    appreciable harm. The undisputed fact is that Lange discovered the erosion to his property as of
    November 30, 2007 when Johannessen' s report issued. Thus, this argument fails.4
    III.        LANGE' s LUPA ARGUMENTS ARE INAPPLICABLE
    Lange      argues on appeal            that "[ t] he [ t] rial   [ c] ourt ...   must ...    be   reversed ...   so that [Lange]
    can present evidence of the code violates and violation of permit conditions at trial to support [ his]
    nuisance claims."              Br.    of   Appellant       at   18.   But, the trial court did not enter an order preventing
    Lange from admitting evidence at trial of non-compliance to support his remaining active claims.
    Rather, the trial court stated that " LUPA does not prevent claims under nuisance, trespass or loss
    of     lateral   support."         CP   at   25.   As the trial court explained in its memorandum opinion which is
    incorporated into its order, under Grundy v. Thurston County, 
    155 Wn.2d 1
    , 
    117 P. 3d 1089
     ( 2005),
    the bar to attacks of land use decisions under LUPA does not bar actions for nuisance or trespass
    may have been            lawfully        permitted.       The grant of a permit does not
    caused      by    structures which
    insulate the       permit      holder from          such actions       if they later become             a nuisance or   trespass.   Grundy,
    
    155 Wn.2d at
    7 n.5. Because the trial court did not issue a ruling precluding Lange from admitting
    evidence relating to code and permit violations, Lange' s argument is without merit.
    Lange          also    asserts   that "    LUPA effectively creates and perpetuates a grant of special
    privilege to those who have been relieved of society' s equal obligations of code and permit
    in   violation of article           1,   sections     8   and   12    of   the Washington Constitution.        Br. of
    compliance"
    Appellant        at   30.         However, Lange offers no argument or authority addressing his assertion.
    4 Furthermore, Lange seems to argue that the trial court ordered that he may not present evidence
    relating to fraud or misrepresentation. However, the trial court entered no written order prohibiting
    evidence.    Washington is a written order state. State v. Dailey, 
    93 Wn.2d 454
    , 458- 59, 
    610 P. 2d 357
     ( 1980). Because the trial court entered no order regarding prohibition of evidence, this issue
    is not properly before us.
    7
    45726 -1 - II
    Accordingly, we         decline to   consider   it. RAP 10. 3(   a)(   6);   Cowiche Canyon Conservancy v. Bosley,
    
    118 Wn.2d 801
    , 809, 
    828 P. 2d 549
     ( 1992).
    IV.       ATTORNEY FEES
    Lange does not request attorney fees on appeal. Cebelak requests attorney fees only under
    RCW 4. 84. 370, which provides that the prevailing party in an action contesting a land use decision
    is   entitled   to   reasonable   attorney fees.   This is not an action contesting a land use decision. Thus,
    neither party is entitled to attorney fees. RAP 18. 1( b).
    We affirm.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2. 06.040,
    it is so ordered.
    s
    Melnick, J.
    We concur:
    iaxa,
    Lee, J.