GMAC Mortgage, LLC v. City of Spokane ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                    FILED
    JUNE 18,2013
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division UI
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    GMAC MORTGAGE, LLC,                            )        No. 30749-2-111
    )
    Respondent,             )
    )
    v.                              )
    )
    CITY OF SPOKANE,                               )
    )
    Petitioner,             )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    JEANNETTE J. SWAN, HEIRS OF                    )
    JEANNETTE J. SWAN, FRANK LINE                  )
    AND JANE DOE LINE, and the marital             )
    community thereof, and ROBERT S.               )
    DELANEY PLLC, TRUSTEE,                         )
    )
    Defendants.             )
    KULIK, J.      The city of Spokane (City) seeks review of the ruling denying its
    motion for summary judgment in GMAC Mortgage's action for declaratory judgment,
    quiet title, and injunctive relief.
    In 1998, the City made a loan to Jeannette Swan and recorded its deed of trust. In
    2008, GMAC made a loan to the then-owner of the property, Frank Line, Ms. Swan's son.
    In April 2011, the City initiated nonjudicial deed of trust foreclosure proceedings.
    No. 30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    GMAC filed this action for declaratory judgment, quiet title, and injunctive relief. The
    City moved unsuccessfully for summary judgment, arguing that the City's lien has
    priority over GMAC's deed of trust. This court granted discretionary review under
    RAP 2.3(b)(4).
    We agree that Mr. Line could, and did, waive any lack of compliance with the
    provisions ofthe City's note, that Mr. Line waived any statute of limitations defense, and
    that GMAC lacks standing to assert a breach of contract defense or a statute of limitations
    defense. We, therefore, reverse the trial court and grant summary judgment in favor of
    the City.
    FACTS
    On July 13, 1998, Jeannette Swan obtained a loan from the City under the City's
    Community Development Department Single Family Housing Rehabilitation Program
    (Program) and executed the City's note and the City's deed of trust.
    The Program made home rehabilitation loans to low-income owner-occupants of
    single family properties within the City. In addition to gross income and assets limits,
    criteria for eligibility for a loan included the requirements that all owners of record must
    sign the City's note and deed of trust securing the loan and that real property taxes must
    be current at the time the applicant is declared eligible for assistance.
    2
    No. 30749-2-111
    GMAC Mort. v. City o/Spokane
    Under the Program, payments on the note were deferred for an initial period
    expiring September 1,2003, at which time Ms. Swan's eligibility under the Program was
    to be re-evaluated. The City's note provided:
    If, upon the first re-evaluation of loan, Borrower is detennined not to be
    eligible for continued deferral of principal and interest payments, Borrower
    will begin repaying the principal balance of this Note in monthly
    installments .... The first payment of$184.13 or more shall be due on the
    first day of the succeeding month and thereafter payments of$184.13 or
    more will be due on the first day of each month until the entire balance of
    principal and interest is paid in full.
    Clerk's Papers (CP) at 49.
    Under these tenns, the City's note provided that if Ms. Swan was no longer
    eligible for the Program as of September 1,2003, monthly payments would commence on
    the note on the first day of the following month-October 1, 2003.
    Ms. Swan died on October 12, 2000. On November 20,2001, the property was
    conveyed from Ms. Swan's estate to her son, Frank Line. Mr. Line, as personal
    representative of the estate, executed a personal representative's deed conveying the
    property to himself.
    No reviews of the borrower's eligibility to continue the City's note in deferral
    status were conducted and the City never took the note out of deferral status. Taking the
    3
    No. 30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    loan out of deferral status would have triggered the need to begin making monthly
    payments.
    In November 2001, the City received notice of Ms. Swan's death and was
    informed that the personal representative of her estate was Mr. Line and that the attorney
    representing the estate was Melvin Champagne. On November 27,2001, the City sent a
    letter to Mr. Champagne notitying him of the City's lien and requesting him to contact the
    City's office. Mr. Champagne responded by telephone and advised the City that Mr. Line
    was attempting to refinance the property to pay off the City's note. The City received no
    written correspondence from Ms. Swan's estate. The City did not file a creditor's claim
    in Ms. Swan's estate.
    Unless the borrower qualified for continued eligibility, the deferral ofpayments on
    the City's note terminated on September 1, 2003. By this date, the City had heard nothing
    further from Mr. Line or Mr. Champagne. On September 9, 2003, the City sent a letter to
    Mr. Line requesting "an update on the situation and the status of the property." CP at
    102. On September 10, 2003, Mr. Line "called and left a message" stating that he "knows
    this loan is due to us" and that "[h]e knows [this loan] is the 1st priority to pay off when
    refinancing." CP at 102.
    4
    No.30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    The first payment on the City's note was due on October 1,2003. The City
    received no payment or correspondence from Mr. Line. Mr. Line had not assumed the
    City's note. The real property taxes on the property were delinquent. Mr. Line had not
    met the eligibility requirements for further deferral of loan payments under the City's
    Program. Despite these shortcomings, the City did not take any further action on this
    delinquent loan for approximately 20 months. On July 1, 2005, the City sent another pay­
    offletter to Mr. Line. The City received no correspondence from Mr. Line.
    On March 28, 2007, the City sent Mr. Line a letter that referred to a telephone
    message he had left three and one-half years earlier on September 10,2003. The City
    received no response to its letter. In December 2007, the City purportedly received
    information from a mortgage broker, Western Capital Mortgage, indicating that Mr. Line
    was attempting to refinance his loan. The City received no correspondence from Mr.
    Line.
    On March 14,2008, GMAC made a loan to Mr. Line in the amount of$73,000.
    The loan is secured by a deed of trust dated March 14,2008, and recorded April 2, 2008.
    The City sent another letter to Mr. Line on March 12,2009. On March 13,2009,
    Mr. Line had a telephone conversation with Ed Bower ofthe City; notes from the
    conversation read: "he called--can't afford to pay us anything new-maybe in July?" CP
    5
    No. 30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    at 117. The notes also ask: "Is it possible for him to 'assume' our loan as 'low-income
    home owner'-'deferred' status?" CP at 117.
    In October 2009, Mr. Line contacted Kiemle & Hagood Company, which acted as
    the City's Community Development Departmenfs property manager, requesting an
    additional development loan to install a new roof. The City sent an e-mail to Kiemle &
    Hagood explaining that Mr. Line had inherited the property with a preexisting loan and
    that for him to get assistance, he would need to close out the old loan and roll it into the
    new loan.
    On or about December 21,2010, Mr. Line vacated the property. By January 2011,
    the City learned Mr. Line had moved from the property and the house was vacant. The
    City referred the matter to attorney Robert Delaney who works with the City's
    Community Development Department.
    On April I, 2011, Mr. Delaney initiated nonjudicial deed of trust foreclosure
    proceedings under the City's deed of trust. On July 12,2011, 30 days prior to the
    scheduled trustee's sale, Mr. Delaney was contacted by First American Title Company on
    behalf ofGMAC and was told that the City's foreclosure action was barred by the
    applicable statute of limitations.
    6
    No. 30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City a/Spokane
    At Mr. Delaney's request, Mr. Line signed and returned an "Acknowledgement
    and Reinstatement of Promissory Note." CP at 53. In this document, Mr. Line stated that
    the property had been transferred to him in 200 I, that he was not aware of any payments
    made on the promissory note, and he "hereby absolutely, unqualifiedly, and
    unconditionally" acknowledged the debt and waived the applicable six-year statute of
    limitations in order to permit the City to judicially or nonjudicially foreclose the City's
    deed of trust. CP at 136.
    On October 7, 2011, GMAC filed this action seeking declaratory judgment, quiet
    title, and injunctive relief. GMAC acknowledges that Mr. Line is the record owner of the
    property. GMAC does not contend that it lacked actual or constructive notice of the
    City's deed of trust when it made its loan and recorded its deed. GMAC also does not
    contend that it was ever a party to the City's note or deed of trust, a successor in interest
    under either the City's note or deed oftrust, an intended beneficiary under either of them,
    or record owner of the property.
    The City moved for summary judgment. The City requested a determination
    (l) that the City's deed of trust constitutes a first lien superior to the lien of the deed of
    trust in favor ofGMAC, (2) that the City's right to enforce and foreclose its lien is not
    barred or impaired by any statute of limitations, (3) that GMAC lacks standing and has no
    7
    No. 30749-2-111
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    right to challenge the City's right to foreclose its deed of trust lien, (4) dissolving the
    injunction issued in this matter in favor ofGMAC, and (5) awarding reasonable attorney
    fees and costs incurred by the City in this matter to be added to the amounts owed to the
    City, to be included as part of the balance owed to the City in the nonjudicial foreclosure
    of the City's deed oftrust.
    The parties stipulated that there were no disputed facts. The trial court denied the
    City's motion for summary judgment and ordered that the injunction issued in this matter
    in favor of GMAC on October 27, 20 II, should remain in place until further order of the
    court. The court concluded that summary judgment was improper because issues of fact
    remained.
    After reconsideration was denied, the City moved for discretionary review. This
    court granted discretionary review.
    ANALYSIS
    Standard ofReview. The trial court denied the City's motion for summary
    judgment. We review the appeal of a trial court's order denying summary judgment de
    novo, engaging in the same inquiry as the trial court. Triplett v. Dep't ofSoc. & Health
    Servs., 
    166 Wash. App. 423
    , 427, 
    268 P.3d 1027
    , review denied, 174 Wn.2d 1003,278 P.3d
    1111 (2012). Here, there are no material facts in dispute.
    8
    No.30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    Standing. The City argues that GMAC cannot show that it has standing because
    GMAC was never a party to, successor under, or intended beneficiary of the City's note.
    GMAC contends it has standing to assert its claims. Alternatively, GMAC argues that the
    principles of standing do not apply because GMAC does not assert a breach of contract
    claim. This argument is based on the assumption that the alleged expiration of the statute
    of limitations on the City's note caused the City's deed of trust to become wholly,
    unenforceable.
    Principles of standing are intended to prevent one party from asserting another's
    legal right. West v. Thurston County, 
    144 Wash. App. 573
    , 578, 
    183 P.3d 346
    (2008). In
    order to establish standing sufficient to enforce private rights or challenge private rights,
    the challenging party must demonstrate that it has some real interest and that the interest
    is present and substantial, as opposed to an expectancy or future contingent interest. Kim
    v. Moffett, 
    156 Wash. App. 689
    , 698, 
    234 P.3d 279
    (2010) (quoting State ex. reI. Hays v.
    Wilson, 17 Wn.2d670, 672, 137P.2d 105(1943)).
    GMAC argues that statutory provisions provide GMAC with standing. In this
    regard, GMAC relies on RCW 7.28.300; Washington's uniform declaratory judgments act
    (UDJA), chapter 7.24 RCW; and Washington's quiet title statute, RCW 7.28.010.
    9
    No.30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City o/Spokane
    Contract Claim. In the context of contract litigation, the challenging party must
    generally demonstrate that it was either a party to the contract at issue or an intended
    beneficiary under that contract. Here, GMAC would have to show that it was an intended
    beneficiary. GMAC would also have to show that the City and Ms. Swan intended to
    confer benefits on GMAC and create an interest in its favor at the time they formed their
    contract. 
    Kim, 156 Wash. App. at 70
    1 (quoting Burg v. Shannon & Wilson, Inc., 110 Wn.
    App. 798, 807-08,43 P.3d 526 (2002». Common law cases establish that the owner of
    the property has a separate standing to assert a statute of limitations defense in opposition
    to an attempt to foreclose a mortgage. See George v. Butler, 
    26 Wash. 456
    , 460-61, 
    67 P. 263
    (1901).
    GMAC does not satisfy any of the requirements necessary to establish standing to
    challenge the manner in which the contract between the City and Ms. Swan or Mr. Line
    was administered or handled. Moreover, GMAC satisfies none ofthe requirements to
    establish standing to assert a statute of limitations defense. And GMAC was never a
    party or successor in interest under the City's loan agreement, note, or deeds of trust and
    was never a party or successor in interest under any ofthose instruments or agreements.
    GMAC's loan did not come into existence until years after the City's note was made and
    10
    No. 30749-2-111
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    the City's deed of trust was recorded. The City, Ms. Swan, or Mr. Line did not intend to
    benefit or confer enforcement rights on GMAC.
    UDJA. To find that a party has personal standing in order to seek a declaratory
    judgment, a party must have standing under RCW 7.24.020:
    A person interested under a deed, will, written contract or other writings
    constituting a contract, or whose rights, status ... municipal ordinance,
    contract or franchise, may have determined any question of construction or
    validity arising under the instrument, statute, ordinance, contract or
    franchise and obtain a declaration of rights, status or other legal relations
    thereunder.
    Washington courts have adopted a two-part test to determine standing under the
    UDJA. The first part of the test asks whether the interest the complainant seeks to protect
    is in the zone of interests to be protected by the statute or constitutional provision in
    question. Grant County Fire Prot. Dist. No.5 v. City ofMoses Lake (Grant County II),
    
    150 Wash. 2d 791
    ,802,83 P.3d 419 (2004) (quoting Save a Valuable Env't v. City of
    Bothell, 
    89 Wash. 2d 862
    , 866, 
    576 P.2d 401
    (1978». The second part of the test considers
    whether the challenged action has caused injury in fact. Grant County 
    II, 150 Wash. 2d at 802
    (quoting Save a Valuable 
    Env't, 89 Wash. 2d at 866
    ).
    In support of this claim, GMAC relies on Grant County Fire Protection District
    No.5 v. City ofMoses Lake (Grant County I), 145 Wn.2d 702,42 P.3d 394 (2002), rev'd
    in part by Grant County II, 
    150 Wash. 2d 791
    . GMAC claims that this case granted
    11
    No. 30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City o/Spokane
    standing to seek substantive relief under Washington's UDJA to any party whose
    financial interest would be affected. GMAC explains that the court granted standing to
    fire districts under the UDJA to challenge annexation of property by a city even though
    the districts' properties were not included within the annexation plan. See Grant County
    
    I, 145 Wash. 2d at 714
    . However, this portion of the Grant County decision was reversed in
    Grant
    County II. In the revised decision, the court denied the fire districts personal standing
    under the UDJA because the challenged statute was not designed to protect their interests.
    Grant County II, 150 W n.2d at 802-03.
    GMAC next argues that its reference to Grant County II "was simply to illustrate
    that to establish standing under the UDJA, the plaintiff must have a sufficient interest,
    which can be a 'financial interest' in the instrument underlying the dispute." CP at 267.
    But the court in Grant County II provided guidance for standing under the UDJA, stating:
    "[t]his statutory right is clarified by the common law doctrine of standing, which prohibits
    a litigant from raising another's legal right." Grant County 
    II, 150 Wash. 2d at 802
    .
    Even under GMAC's interpretation ofthe UDJA, GMAC lacks standing. To
    establish standing under the UDJA, GMAC would have to establish that it has a financial
    12
    No. 30749-2-111
    GMAC Mort. v. City a/Spokane
    interest in the instrument underlying the dispute, namely, the City's note or the City's
    deed of trust. GMAC has never had an interest in either.
    As a junior creditor, it is difficult to see how GMAC would have standing under
    RCW 7.24.020. This provision provides that a person interested in or affected by a
    contract may obtain a "declaration of rights, status or other legal relations thereunder."
    RCW 7.24.020.
    Alternatively, GMAC contends that its request for standing is supported by Casey
    v. Chapman, 
    123 Wash. App. 670
    , 
    98 P.3d 1246
    (2004). In Casey, the court noted that a
    person interested under a written contract whose rights were affected by a contract can
    seek declaratory relief, as can parties whose financial interests are affected by the
    outcome ofa declaratory judgment action. 
    Id. at 676. Significantly,
    Mr. Chapman, the
    party whose standing was challenged, was an original party to the contract and would
    have had standing under traditional concepts found in case law.
    Even if we assume that GMAC has a right to request declaratory relief under the
    UDJA, that would not mean that GMAC had a right to obtain the substantive relief it
    requests. Under RCW 7.24.020, certain parties interested in contracts can request a court
    to "determine[ ] any question of construction or validity" under the contract and "obtain a
    declaration of rights, status or other legal relations thereunder." Nothing in this provision
    13
    No. 30749-2-111
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    grants a party with no standing in a contract issue the right to interject itself into the
    contractual dealings between third parties and assert substantive rights under the contract.
    Quiet Title Statute. GMAC next argues that it has standing to bring its quiet title
    claim under the common law or pursuant to RCW 7.28.010, Washington's quiet title
    statute.
    The requirements ofRCW 7.28.010 must be met in order for a plaintiff to pursue a
    quiet title action. "RCW 7.28.010 requires that a person seeking to quiet title establish a
    valid subsisting interest in property and a right to possession thereof." Wash. Sec. & Inv.
    Corp. v. Horse Heaven Heights, Inc., 
    132 Wash. App. 188
    , 195, 
    130 P.3d 880
    (2006).
    Webster's Dictionary defines "subsist" as "to have existence: be or remain alive ....
    [T]o exist in a particular way or condition or have a particular form." WEBSTER'S THIRD
    NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 2279 (1993). GMAC cannot show that it has standing
    based on a subsisting interest in the property or a right to possession.
    GMAC next asserts that RCW 7.28.300 grants GMAC standing. However,
    RCW 7.28.300 reads as follows:
    The record owner ofreal estate may maintain an action to quiet title against
    the lien of a mortgage or deed of trust on the real estate where an action to
    foreclose such mortgage or deed of trust would be barred by the statute of
    limitations, and, upon proof sufficient to satisfy the court, may have
    judgment quieting title against such a lien.
    14
    No. 30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    (Emphasis added.)
    RCW 7.28.300 is not available to GMAC because GMAC is not the record owner
    of the property involved here. GMAC argues that this provision encompasses the
    common law and should be read to include any interested person having a right to bring
    an action to quiet title. The customary rules of statutory construction require that
    unambiguous statutes must be interpreted so that the language is given its plain meaning.
    Dep 't ofEcology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 146 Wn.2d 1,9-10,43 P.3d 4 (2002).
    Given that reading, RCW 7.28.300 should not be read to include a junior lienholder like
    GMAC who is not the record owner of the real estate.
    GMAC also argues that the requirement that the party must have possession of the
    property only applies when a plaintiff has a complete remedy at law. GMAC relies on
    Dolan v. Jones, 
    37 Wash. 176
    , 179,79 P. 640 (1905). First, GMAC, a junior lienholder,
    has the same complete remedy it received when it made its loan to Mr. Line. Second,
    GMAC's reliance on Dolan is misplaced. In Dolan, a property owner sued to have a tax
    foreclosure sale declared invalid because the sale had been improperly conducted. The
    court stated that the claim was not brought to quiet title and confirmed that a party not
    having possession of the property is not entitled to bring a quiet title action. 
    Id. 15 No.30749-2-III GMAC
    Mort. v. City ofSpokane
    Equity. Lastly, GMAC argues that it has standing on equitable grounds. In
    Washington, quiet title claims are equitable in nature. Smith v. Monson, 157 Wn. App.
    443,448-49,236 P.3d 991 (2010). However, standing to assert a claim in equity rests in
    the party entitled to equity. [d. at 449. Here, GMAC has articulated no principle
    suggesting any right to equity resides in GMAC. GMAC had notice ofthe City's lien
    when it made its loan, and GMAC had no right to expect that it would have anything
    other than a junior lien. This case is not like Smith where the plaintiff was granted
    standing to assert a claim in equity to enforce a promise on which she relied to her
    detriment. [d. at 448-49.
    Waiver. Mr. Line--as successor owner of the property, the personal representative
    ofMs. Swan's estate, and the record owner ofthe property-had the right to challenge
    foreclosure of the City's deed of trust based on the expiration ofthe statute oflimitations.
    The City maintains that this defense is a personal defense that may be asserted or waived.
    GMAC contends it has the authority to override Mr. Line's decision to waive the
    statute of limitations defense. GMAC points out that Mr. Line attempted to waive the
    statute of limitations when the statute had expired two years earlier. GMAC asserts that
    Mr. Line could not waive the statute of limitations because he did not have the authority,
    16
    No.30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City ojSpokane
    he did not assume the obligations of the City's note, and the acknowledgement and
    reinstatement constituted a new obligation that did not reinstate the City's note.
    Underlying GMAC's arguments is the assumption that the expiration of the statute
    of limitations causes the loan obligation to become invalid, so there was nothing left for
    Mr. Line to reinstate or waive. However, the failure of a party with standing to assert the
    affirmative defense of expiration of the statute of limitations causes the defense to be
    waived and the obligation to remain binding and enforceable. See CHD, Inc. v. Boyles,
    
    138 Wash. App. 131
    , 138-39, 
    157 P.3d 415
    (2007).
    In CHD, this court concluded that CHD, a party to a foreclosure proceeding, had
    waived its right to raise the statute of limitations defense on the underlying obligation by
    failing to employ statutory pres ale remedies. 
    Id. at 134. CHD
    filed a declaratory action
    regarding the statute of limitations, but did not seek to enjoin the sale. 
    Id. at 138. While
    the court concluded that CHD failed to enjoin the sale, the court also discussed the effect
    of the expiration of the statute of limitations:
    A debt is not extinguished by the expiration of the statute of
    limitations on its remedy for enforcement of the contract. Similarly, the
    trust deed securing the obligation is voidable, not void, upon the expiration
    of the contract's statute oflimitation. Thus, CHD's debt was not
    extinguished and power of sale was merely subject to challenge-as
    provided for in [RCW 61.24.130].
    
    Id. at 138-39 (citations
    omitted).
    17
    No. 30749-2-111
    GMAC Mort. v. City o/Spokane
    GMAC argues that the City's failure to file a creditor's claim in Ms. Swan's
    probate proceeding, and Mr. Line's failure to assume any personal obligation under the
    City's note, rendered the statute of limitations useless. We will not consider these claims
    as they are not supported by any authority. Am. Legion Post No. 32 v. City o/Walla
    Walla, 
    116 Wash. 2d 1
    , 7, 
    802 P.2d 784
    (1991).
    Moreover, GMAC fails to respond to the City's argument that the only impact of
    failing to have anyone assume the City's loan and having Mr. Line accept ownership of
    the property was that he took ownership of the property subject to the City's deed oftrust
    lien. See RCW 11.12.070. GMAC also fails to respond to the City's argument that deeds
    of trust securing what began as or have become nonrecourse notes are valid and
    enforceable, even in situations where the obligor cannot be sued. For example, a deed of
    trust lien remains valid and enforceable as a lien against property even when the debt
    obligor has been discharged from any liability in bankruptcy. See, e.g., Boeing
    Employees' Credit Union v. Burns, 
    167 Wash. App. 265
    , 282-83, 
    272 P.3d 908
    , review
    denied, 175 Wn.2d 1008,285 P.3d 885 (2012).
    Mr. Line's actions did not create a new contract but, rather, validated the existing
    obligations. Waiver of the statute of limitations, whether done affirmatively or through a
    failure to assert the defense, causes the obligation to remain valid and enforceable. See,
    18
    No.30749-2-III
    GMAC Mort. v. City o/Spokane
    e.g., 
    CHD, 138 Wash. App. at 138-39
    . The statute of limitations is an affirmative defense
    that the record owner of the property has the right, but not the obligation, to assert
    pursuant to RCW 7.28.300.
    Mr. Line had the authority to assert or waive the statute oflimitations defense.
    Here, Mr. Line chose to waive the defense.
    Conclusion. GMAC lacks standing other than to assert legal arguments that its
    own lien should have priority. Under the circumstances of this case, GMAC shows no
    legal basis why the City's deed of trust does not retain first priority. Thus, the City should
    have summary judgment in its favor.
    We also conclude Mr. Line waived any defenses he may have had. We remand to
    the trial court for further action consistent with this decision.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
    RCW 2.06.040.
    Kulik, 1.
    WE CONCUR:
    acy
    Sidd~'                             ()
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