Andrew Macgregor Robertson, Apps. v. Jun Yu Development Ii, Llc, Res. ( 2020 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    ANDREW MACGREGOR                               )
    ROBERTSON and RENEE ESME                       )   No. 79613-5-I
    ROBERTSON, in their individual and             )
    marital community; and CAY MICHAEL             )
    MIERISCH and CASSANDRA                         )   DIVISION ONE
    MIERISCH, in their individual and              )
    marital community,                             )
    )
    Appellants,              )
    )
    v.                               )
    )
    JUN YU DEVELOPMENT II, LLC, a                  )
    Washington limited liability company;          )
    and JANICKI LOGGING &                          )
    CONSTRUCTION CO., INC., a                      )   UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Washington corporation,                        )
    )
    Respondents.             )
    )
    SMITH, J. — Andrew Robertson, Renee Robertson, Cay Mierisch, and
    Cassandra Mierisch (collectively Robertsons) own property in Whatcom County.
    When the Robertsons purchased their property in 2014, the seller, Trillium
    Corporation, assigned to the Robertsons its claims against third parties arising
    from any trespasses that had occurred during Trillium’s ownership. The
    Robertsons subsequently sued Janicki Logging & Construction Co. Inc. and Jun
    Yu Development II LLC (JYD), alleging trespass and other related claims arising
    out of Janicki’s activities on the property.
    Janicki, joined by JYD, moved for summary judgment, arguing that the
    Robertsons lacked standing because (1) the assignment of Trillium’s trespass
    No. 79613-5-I/2
    claims to the Robertsons merged into the deed between Trillium and the
    Robertsons and (2) the “as is” clause in the purchase agreement between
    Trillium and the Robertsons barred the Robertsons’ claims. The trial court
    granted the motion and dismissed the Robertsons’ claims.
    This was error. Because the only reasonable conclusion from the record
    is that Trillium and the Robertsons intended that the assignment not merge into
    the deed, merger does not apply. And although the “as is” clause may have
    barred certain claims against Trillium, it did not bar the Robertsons’ claims
    against JYD and Janicki. Therefore, we reverse and remand for further
    proceedings.
    BACKGROUND
    JYD owns almost 400 acres of property, which it purchased in late 2011,
    in the Semiahmoo area of Whatcom County. In June 2012, JYD retained Janicki
    to perform logging and related services on JYD’s property. It is undisputed that
    in the contract between JYD and Janicki, the exhibits designating the area in
    which Janicki’s activities were to take place included a 20-acre parcel, located at
    8746 Semiahmoo Drive (8746 Property), that was owned by Trillium and not by
    JYD.
    Additionally, and although the parties disagree about the extent of
    Janicki’s activities on the 8746 Property and the nature and amount of damages
    resulting therefrom, it is undisputed that in early 2013, Janicki conducted some
    surface water reditching operations on the 8746 Property. It also is undisputed
    that later in 2013, Janicki harvested some trees from the 8746 Property.
    2
    No. 79613-5-I/3
    According to Janicki’s principal, the reditching and logging activities conducted
    on the 8746 Property were conducted “under the mistaken belief that the
    property was owned by [JYD].”
    In June 2014, Trillium and the Robertsons entered into a Real Estate
    Purchase and Sale Agreement (REPSA) whereby Trillium agreed to sell the 8746
    Property to the Robertsons. Under the REPSA, Trillium agreed to assign certain
    trespass and related claims to the Robertsons. The REPSA also contained an
    “as is” clause stating that except otherwise set forth in the REPSA, “the Property
    is being sold by Seller, and Buyer agrees to accept the Property, ‘AS-IS’ in its
    condition on the Closing Date.”
    On July 11, 2014, Trillium conveyed the 8746 Property to the Robertsons
    by statutory warranty deed (Deed).
    On July 23, 2014, Trillium and the Robertsons entered into an
    “Assignment and Assumption of Claims” (Assignment Agreement) whereby
    Trillium assigned certain trespass and related claims to the Robertsons:
    Seller hereby assigns, conveys and delivers to Buyer all of Seller’s
    right, title and interest, if any, in any and all claims against third
    parties arising from any trespass on the Property or timber trespass
    on timber and other forest products located or previously located on
    the Property, including any and all claims under RCW Chapter
    64.12 and/or RCW 4.24.630.
    On June 19, 2015, the Robertsons sued JYD and Janicki, asserting
    causes of action for ejectment, trespass and conversion, statutory trespass,
    timber trespass, and injunction or abatement related to Janicki’s activities on the
    8746 Property. The Robertsons then moved for summary judgment, seeking an
    order confirming that JYD and Janicki committed statutory trespass or, in the
    3
    No. 79613-5-I/4
    alternative, timber trespass or common law trespass. The Robertsons also
    sought an order declaring that the Robertsons “have incurred damages in the
    amount of $4,212.87 for the harvested timber” and that JYD and Janicki could
    not assert the “common enemy doctrine” as a defense to trespass.1 The trial
    court initially granted the Robertsons’ motion. But on reconsideration, the court
    denied the motion, citing the existence of remaining issues of material fact.
    On October 6, 2017, the Robertsons filed another motion for summary
    judgment, arguing that certain of JYD’s and Janicki’s affirmative defenses should
    be stricken. The trial court denied this motion as well, again citing to remaining
    issues of fact.
    On September 10, 2018, Janicki filed a summary judgment motion, in
    which JYD joined. Janicki pointed out that exhibit B to the Deed set forth what
    Janicki characterized as “exceptions and reservations to the deed describing
    matters retained by Trillium . . . and other encumbrances to the property.”
    Janicki also pointed out that exhibit B listed, among other things, “[a]ny rights,
    interests or claims which may exist or arise by reason of” certain facts reflected
    by a July 21, 2014, survey, including a “[c]ulvert crossing” and “[d]itches.”
    (Emphasis omitted.) Thus, Janicki argued, no interest in any claims arising out of
    the existing culvert crossing and ditches was ever transferred from Trillium to the
    1 “[T]he common enemy doctrine in Washington allows landowners to alter
    the flow of surface water to the detriment of their neighbors, so long as they do
    not block a watercourse or natural drainway, nor collect and discharge water onto
    their neighbors’ land in quantities greater than, or in a manner different from, its
    natural flow.” Currens v. Sleek, 
    138 Wn.2d 858
    , 862-63, 
    983 P.2d 626
    , 
    993 P.2d 900
     (1999).
    4
    No. 79613-5-I/5
    Robertsons, and Trillium’s assignment of its trespass claims merged into the
    Deed. Janicki argued further that because the Robertsons were aware of the
    condition of the 8746 Property and purchased it “as-is,” they “waived their ability
    to bring a claim for damages arising from the condition of the property.”
    Therefore, contended Janicki, the only claim available to the Robertsons was one
    for the value of the timber harvested from the 8746 Property. Janicki argued that
    the value of that timber was no more than $1,000 and that treble damages were
    unwarranted because Janicki believed in good faith that it was harvested from
    property belonging to JYD. Finally, Janicki argued that even if the Robertsons
    could assert a trespass claim based on Janicki’s reditching activities, there was
    no evidence that those activities caused any damages to the 8746 Property.
    The trial court initially denied Janicki’s motion. Janicki, joined by JYD,
    then moved for reconsideration. It argued, again relying on the doctrine of
    merger, that any assignment of Trillium’s trespass claims to the Robertsons did
    not survive merger with the Deed.
    On February 19, 2019, the trial court entered an order granting Janicki’s
    motion for reconsideration and dismissing the Robertsons’ claims with prejudice.
    The Robertsons appeal, contending that the trial court erred by (1) summarily
    dismissing their claims and (2) denying their earlier motions for summary
    judgment. We address each of these contentions below.
    DISMISSAL OF THE ROBERTSONS’ CLAIMS
    The Robertsons contend that the trial court erred by summarily dismissing
    their claims. We agree.
    5
    No. 79613-5-I/6
    Standard of Review
    The trial court initially denied Janicki’s motion for summary judgment, in
    which Janicki (joined by JYD) relied on the merger doctrine and the fact that the
    Robertsons purchased the 8746 Property “as is” to argue that the Robertsons
    lacked standing. Then, on reconsideration, it granted Janicki’s motion. Under
    these circumstances, this court reviews the trial court’s decision de novo, and the
    usual standards for summary judgment apply. Weber v. Budget Truck Rental,
    LLC, 
    162 Wn. App. 5
    , 8, 
    254 P.3d 196
     (2011). To that end, summary judgment
    is appropriate when, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party, there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. CR 56(c); Cameron v. Atlantic
    Richfield Co., 8 Wn. App. 2d 795, 799, 
    442 P.3d 31
     (2019).
    Analysis
    The Robertsons contend that trespass claims are assignable and that the
    Assignment Agreement effectively assigned the claims described therein from
    Trillium to the Robertsons. Thus, the Robertsons argue, the trial court erred
    when it dismissed the Robertsons’ claims, apparently accepting Janicki’s
    argument that the Robertsons lacked standing. We agree with the Robertsons.
    Trespass claims are tort claims. Birchler v. Castello Land Co., 
    133 Wn.2d 106
    , 115, 
    942 P.2d 968
     (1997). And “a tort claim for damage to property is
    assignable under the law of this state.” Cooper v. Runnels, 
    48 Wn.2d 108
    , 109,
    
    291 P.2d 657
     (1955); see also Carlile v. Harbour Homes, Inc., 
    147 Wn. App. 193
    ,
    207, 
    194 P.3d 280
     (2008) (“The traditional test for whether a cause of action is
    6
    No. 79613-5-I/7
    assignable is whether the claim would survive to the personal representative of
    the assignor upon death. If it would, the cause of action is assignable.”
    (footnotes omitted), review granted and dismissed, 
    166 Wn.2d 1015
     (2009));
    RCW 11.48.010 (providing that personal representative “may institute suit . . . for
    trespass of any kind or character.”). Furthermore, “[n]o particular words of art are
    required to create a valid and binding assignment.” Carlile, 147 Wn. App. at 208.
    Instead, “[a]ny language showing the owner’s intent to transfer and invest
    property in the assignee is sufficient.” Carlile, 147 Wn. App. at 208.
    Here, the plain language of the Assignment Agreement clearly evinces
    Trillium’s intent to assign its trespass claims to the Robertsons. Furthermore,
    neither JYD nor Janicki contends that trespass claims cannot, as a general
    matter, be assigned. Instead, relying on the doctrine of merger and on the
    REPSA’s “as is” clause, they challenge the validity of the Assignment
    Agreement. But as further discussed below, neither of these challenges is
    persuasive, and the trial court erred by summarily dismissing the Robertsons’
    claims.
    Merger
    JYD and Janicki first contend that the Assignment Agreement merged into
    the Deed, i.e., that upon execution of the Deed, which did not itself include an
    assignment of Trillium’s trespass claims, the Assignment Agreement was no
    longer independently enforceable. We disagree.
    “The doctrine of merger is founded on the parties’ privilege to change the
    terms of their contract at any time prior to performance.” Barber v. Peringer, 75
    7
    No. 79613-5-I/
    8 Wn. App. 248
    , 251, 
    877 P.2d 223
     (1994). “Execution, delivery, and acceptance
    of the deed becomes the final expression of the parties’ contract and therefore
    subsumes all prior agreements.” Barber, 
    75 Wn. App. at 251
    . The merger
    doctrine thus provides that “[i]n general, the provisions of a real estate purchase
    and sales agreement merge into the deed” and are no longer enforceable.
    Barber, 
    75 Wn. App. at 251
    .
    The merger doctrine is, however, subject to exceptions. For example, it
    does not apply to “actions based on fraud or mistake.” Brown v. Johnson, 
    109 Wn. App. 56
    , 60, 
    34 P.3d 1233
     (2001). It “also does not apply where terms of a
    purchase and sale agreement are not contained in or performed by the execution
    and delivery of the deed, are not inconsistent with the deed, and are independent
    of the obligation to convey.” Brown, 109 Wn. App. at 60. “Whether a [provision
    of a real estate purchase and sale agreement] merges into a deed depends on
    the parties’ intent.” Failes v. Lichten, 
    109 Wn. App. 550
    , 554, 
    37 P.3d 301
    (2001). Here, the only reasonable conclusion from the record is that the parties
    intended for Trillium’s assignment of its trespass claims not to merge into the
    Deed.
    Black v. Evergreen Land Developers, Inc., 
    75 Wn.2d 241
    , 
    450 P.2d 470
    (1969), is instructive. The dispute in Black involved two plots of land in
    Somerset, a hillside development east of Lake Washington. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 242
    . Plaintiff William Black and his wife purchased a home on lot 72 in 1962
    based, in part, on the selling broker’s oral guarantee that their view of Lake
    Washington would never be impaired. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 242-43
    . Neither the
    8
    No. 79613-5-I/9
    parties’ purchase agreement nor the deed conveying lot 72 to the Blacks
    contained such a guarantee. Instead, the purchase agreement contained an
    integration clause stating, “‘There are no verbal or other agreements which
    modify or affect this agreement,’” and the deed “contain[ed] the simple clause
    that the identified property is ‘Subject to rights, restrictions, easements and
    covenants of record, if any.’” Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 243
    .
    In 1964, the lot situated downhill and to the west (i.e., lakeward) of the
    Black property was purchased by the Avann family. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 242
    .
    When it became clear that the house the Avanns were building would impair the
    Blacks’ view of Lake Washington, the Blacks sued the sellers. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 246, 249
    . The trial court resolved the case against the Blacks, including by
    determining that “all statements, written and oral, made by or on behalf of any of
    the defendants to the [Blacks] with respect to the view from lot 72 . . . were
    merged in the [purchase] agreement or the deed.” Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 247-48
    .
    The Blacks appealed, and the Supreme Court concluded that merger did
    not apply. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 251
    . In doing so, the court observed that the deed
    for the Blacks’ lot contained only a simple clause stating that it was “[s]ubject to
    rights, restrictions, easements and covenants of record.” Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 249
    . In other words, the deed did not plainly express the parties’ intent with
    regard to merger of the oral covenant that the Blacks’ view of Lake Washington
    would not be impaired. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 249
    . But the court also observed that
    the oral view covenant was not inconsistent with the deed. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 249
    . The court also stated, “[W]e [do not] find that there was any intention on the
    9
    No. 79613-5-I/10
    part of either party to surrender this covenant by merger—the evidence is entirely
    to the contrary.” Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 249
    . The court noted, for example, that
    throughout the construction of the Avann house, the selling broker continued to
    reassure the Blacks that their view would not be impaired, and that “the
    defendants affirmatively demonstrated the existence of this oral covenant on
    several occasions by using a crossbar to show the [Blacks] how high the Avann
    roof could be without impairing their view.” Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 249-50
    . Indeed,
    the court ultimately concluded that the evidence confirming the view covenant’s
    existence was so “overwhelming” that it declined even to enforce the express
    integration clause in the purchase agreement. Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 250
    ; see also
    Black, 
    75 Wn.2d at 251
     (“To now hold that the ‘boilerplate’ at the conclusion of
    the . . . agreement would vitiate the manifest understanding of the parties as
    evidenced by this record would amount to a constructive fraud practiced by the
    defendants upon the [Blacks].”).
    Here, as in Black, nothing in the Deed itself plainly expresses the parties’
    intent with regard to Trillium’s assignment of its trespass claims to the
    Robertsons. But as in Black, it is more than clear that the parties did not intend
    for Trillium’s assignment to merge into the Deed. Specifically, the REPSA
    expressly set forth Trillium’s obligation to assign those claims as an entirely
    separate obligation from Trillium’s obligation to convey. The REPSA also
    contemplated that a separate agreement would be used for the assignment, and
    consistent with the REPSA, the parties later memorialized the assignment by
    entering into the Assignment Agreement. In other words, Trillium’s obligation to
    10
    No. 79613-5-I/11
    assign its trespass claims, like the seller’s view covenant in Black, was not
    inconsistent with the Deed and was plainly intended to be independent of
    Trillium’s obligation to convey the 8746 Property. See Brown, 109 Wn. App. at
    60 (merger does not apply “where terms of a purchase and sale agreement are
    not contained in or performed by the execution and delivery of the deed, are not
    inconsistent with the deed, and are independent of the obligation to convey”).
    Therefore, the merger doctrine does not apply here.2
    Janicki and JYD disagree. They contend that by its plain terms, the Deed
    extinguished any trespass claims. They point out that the Deed itself states,
    “See Attached Exhibit ‘B’ for Exceptions.” They also point out that exhibit B to
    the Deed begins with the language “SUBJECT TO:” and then lists, among other
    items:
    Any rights, interests or claims which may exist or
    arise by reason of the following facts shown by
    Survey of the land by NORTHWEST SURVEYING
    AND GPS, INC., dated July 21, 2014, Job No. 14-
    157, as follows:
    A.     Service pole and line thereto on the West side
    of Parcel A;
    B.     Gravel access roads through Parcel A and
    along the West side of Parcel D;
    C.     Culvert crossing on the East and South side of
    Parcel A;
    D.     Ditches through Parcels A, C and D; and
    E.     Overhead phone line along the West line of
    Parcels B and C[.]
    2
    In October 2018, after Janicki moved for summary judgment based on
    the merger doctrine, Trillium executed a “Confirming Assignment and
    Assumption of Claims” in which it again assigned certain trespass claims to the
    Robertsons “[t]o the extent not already assigned in the Assignment [Agreement].”
    Because Trillium and the Robertsons’ intent is very clear from the REPSA and
    the Assignment Agreement alone, we do not rely on the confirming assignment.
    11
    No. 79613-5-I/12
    (Emphasis added.) Janicki and JYD contend that because exhibit B to the Deed
    expressly referenced culvert crossings and ditches, any rights that the
    Robertsons had to bring claims arising out of those conditions were extinguished
    by the Deed. But this argument is unpersuasive because it rests on one or more
    of three premises, each of which is flawed.
    First, JYD and Janicki’s argument assumes that exhibit B was intended to
    list exceptions from the property conveyed by Trillium to the Robertsons, rather
    than mere limitations on the warranties that inhere in a statutory warranty deed.3
    That is, JYD and Janicki argue, in essence, that the Deed carves out the very
    claims that the Assignment Agreement purports to transfer and, thus, the two
    documents are inconsistent such that no exception from merger can apply. But
    the Deed’s use of the term “exceptions” to describe exhibit B creates, at best,
    some ambiguity as to whether each item listed therein is an exception in the true
    sense, or merely a warranty limitation.4 And as discussed, the overwhelming
    3   Under RCW 64.04.030, a statutory warranty deed, once executed, “shall
    be deemed and held a conveyance in fee simple to the grantee, his or her heirs
    and assigns, with covenants on the part of the grantor: (1) That at the time of the
    making and delivery of such deed he or she was lawfully seized of an
    indefeasible estate in fee simple, in and to the premises therein described, and
    had good right and full power to convey the same; (2) that the same were then
    free from all encumbrances; and (3) that he or she warrants to the grantee, his or
    her heirs and assigns, the quiet and peaceable possession of such premises,
    and will defend the title thereto against all persons who may lawfully claim the
    same, and such covenants shall be obligatory upon any grantor, his or her heirs
    and personal representatives, as fully and with like effect as if written at full
    length in such deed.”
    4 “An exception in a deed is a clause that withdraws from its operation
    some part of the thing granted and which otherwise has passed to the grantee
    under the general description.” Harris v. Ski Park Farms, Inc., 
    62 Wn. App. 371
    ,
    376, 
    814 P.2d 684
     (1991), aff’d, 
    120 Wn.2d 727
    , 
    844 P.2d 1006
     (1993); see also
    12
    No. 79613-5-I/13
    extrinsic evidence, and in particular the evidence of Trillium’s independent
    obligation to assign its trespass claims via a separate assignment agreement,
    leads to only one reasonable conclusion: The “exception” on which Janicki and
    JYD rely is not an exception from conveyance, but merely a limitation on
    warranties that precludes the Robertsons from bringing a breach of warranty
    claim against Trillium based on matters disclosed in the survey. See Sunnyside
    Valley Irrigation Dist. v. Dickie, 
    149 Wn.2d 873
    , 880, 
    73 P.3d 369
     (2003) (court
    may look to extrinsic evidence to interpret ambiguous deed). Thus, the Deed
    and the Assignment Agreement are not inconsistent.
    Second, Janicki points out that the REPSA was dated June 11, 2014,
    while the Deed was not executed until July 11, 2014, a month later. Janicki then
    asserts that Trillium’s assignment of its claims was part of the REPSA and, thus,
    predated the Deed by a month. But although the REPSA included an obligation
    to assign as well as an exhibit showing the form the assignment would take, the
    assignment itself was not made until July 23, 2014, after the Deed was executed.
    Thus, even assuming our merger analysis would change if the Assignment
    Agreement predated the Deed, it did not.
    Third and finally, Janicki asserts in passing that trespass claims can be
    assigned only by deed. But it does not cite any authority to support that
    9 THOMPSON ON REAL PROPERTY § 82.14, at 736 (3d Thomas ed. 2011)
    (observing, with regard to the drafting of title covenants, that “[t]he use of the
    phrases ‘subject to’ or ‘except’ must be approached with caution” and that “the
    ‘except’ clause can create ambiguities as to whether the ‘except’ language
    creates a technical exception or whether it is merely a limitation on the title
    warranties.”).
    13
    No. 79613-5-I/14
    proposition. Therefore, Janicki’s assertion fails. See DeHeer v. Seattle Post-
    Intelligencer, 
    60 Wn.2d 122
    , 126, 
    372 P.2d 193
     (1962) (“Where no authorities are
    cited in support of a proposition, the court is not required to search out
    authorities, but may assume that counsel, after diligent search, has found
    none.”).
    We hold as a matter of law that Trillium’s assignment of its trespass claims
    to the Robertsons did not merge into the Deed. See Pelly v. Panasyuk, 2 Wn.
    App. 2d 848, 864, 
    413 P.3d 619
     (2018) (“The rules of contract interpretation apply
    to interpretation of . . . a deed”); Marshall v. Thurston County, 
    165 Wn. App. 346
    ,
    351, 
    267 P.3d 491
     (2011) (“Contract interpretation is a matter of law . . . when . . .
    the extrinsic evidence permits only one reasonable interpretation.”).
    “As Is” Clause
    Janicki and JYD next argue that the Robertsons’ claims against them were
    barred by the REPSA’s “as is” clause. We disagree.
    “An ‘as is’ clause generally means that the buyer is purchasing property in
    its present state or condition.” Olmsted v. Mulder, 
    72 Wn. App. 169
    , 176, 
    863 P.2d 1355
     (1993). “The term implies that the property is taken with whatever
    faults it may possess and that the seller or lessor is released of any obligation to
    reimburse the purchaser for losses or damages that result from the condition of
    the property.” Olmsted, 
    72 Wn. App. at 176
     (emphasis added). In other words,
    while an “as is” clause may bar the buyer from suing the seller, it does not limit
    the buyer’s ability to sue third parties. Therefore, the “as is” clause was not a
    proper basis for dismissal of the Robertsons’ claims.
    14
    No. 79613-5-I/15
    Janicki and JYD disagree. While JYD does not cite any authority, Janicki
    relies on Warner v. Design & Build Homes, Inc., 
    128 Wn. App. 34
    , 
    114 P.3d 664
    (2005). But that reliance is misplaced.
    In Warner, Curtis and Ana Warner entered into a purchase and sale
    agreement with Design and Build Homes Inc. (Design) for the purchase of a new
    home. 128 Wn. App. at 36. The agreement was subject to the Warners’
    approval of a general building inspection report. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 39.
    Additionally, under the agreement, the Warners agreed to purchase the house
    “as is” if Design repaired any conditions identified in the report that the Warners
    wanted fixed. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 39.
    The Warners had the home inspected, and the inspection report flagged
    issues related to bulging and cracking in the exterior stucco wall, as well as
    potential water leaking into the stucco. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 37. Although
    the inspector recommended further evaluations, the Warners did not conduct
    them and instead requested only that the conditions in the inspection report be
    fixed. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 39. Design honored the Warners’ request, thus
    triggering the agreement’s “as is” clause. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 39.
    The Warners later began noticing leaks and water damage, which a
    professional stucco consultant concluded was due to defective stucco
    installation. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 37. The Warners sued Design, arguing
    that it had breached the implied warranty of habitability. Warner, 128 Wn. App.
    at 39. After the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Design, the
    Warners appealed. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 38.
    15
    No. 79613-5-I/16
    On appeal, Division Two observed that “‘[u]nless the circumstances
    indicate otherwise, all implied warranties are excluded by expressions like “as is,”
    “with all faults” or other language which in common understanding calls the
    buyer’s attention to the exclusion of warranties and makes plain that there is no
    implied warranty.’” Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 40 (emphasis omitted) (quoting
    RCW 62A.2-316(3)(a)). The court also observed that the Warners did not assert
    that they were unaware of the “as is” clause or otherwise at a negotiating
    disadvantage. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 40. Finally, the court observed that the
    Warners were told about defects in the stucco and advised to follow up, but
    decided not to do so. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 41. The court thus concluded
    that the trial court did not err by giving effect to the “as is” clause and summarily
    dismissing the Warners’ breach of warranty claim. Warner, 128 Wn. App. at 41.
    In short, the Warner court held that an “as is” clause in a contract between
    a seller and a buyer precluded the buyer, who was not in an unequal bargaining
    position and who was aware of a potential defect before agreeing to the “as is”
    language, from suing the seller for breach of an implied warranty. But here,
    unlike in Warner, the Robertsons are not suing their seller for breach of an
    implied warranty. Instead, the Robertsons are suing a third party for trespass.
    Thus, Warner is not persuasive.
    De Minimis Rule
    As a final matter, while JYD contends that any timber trespass claims are,
    like the Robertsons’ other trespass claims, barred by the doctrine of merger,
    Janicki does not. Instead, Janicki argues that the Robertsons’ timber trespass
    16
    No. 79613-5-I/17
    claims were properly dismissed under the maxim “de minimis non curat lex,” or
    the “de minimis rule,” which provides that “‘the law takes no notice of trivial
    things.’” Arnold v. Melani, 
    75 Wn.2d 143
    , 148, 
    449 P.2d 800
    , 
    450 P.2d 815
    (1968); Bartel v. Emp’t Sec. Dep’t, 
    60 Wn.2d 709
    , 714, 
    375 P.2d 154
     (1962).
    Janicki points out that its principal testified that the value of the timber was less
    than $1,000 and that even the Robertsons acknowledged, in an email, that “[t]he
    amount of timber taken is small.” But competing evidence in the record indicates
    that the value of the timber was $4,212.87, a nontrivial amount and, in any event,
    “small” is not the same as trivial. Therefore, the de minimis rule does not provide
    a basis to affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the Robertsons’ timber trespass
    claim. Cf. Guay v. Wash. Nat. Gas Co., 
    62 Wn.2d 473
    , 478, 
    383 P.2d 296
    (1963) (relying on the de minimis rule and declining to award treble damages
    where the trial court properly awarded only $1 in nominal damages as a basis for
    allowing costs “for an otherwise harmless trespass”).
    DENIAL OF THE ROBERTSONS’
    SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTIONS
    The Robertsons contend that the trial court erred by denying their motions
    for summary judgment. Meanwhile, JYD argues that the trial court’s denial of the
    Robertsons’ motions is not properly before this court on appeal. We agree with
    JYD.
    Under RAP 2.2(a), “[u]nless otherwise prohibited by statute or court rule”
    and subject to exceptions that do not apply here, a party may appeal from only
    certain, enumerated superior court decisions. Orders denying summary
    judgment are not listed in RAP 2.2 and generally are not appealable. See Sea-
    17
    No. 79613-5-I/18
    Pac Co. v. United Food & Commercial Workers Local Union 44, 
    103 Wn.2d 800
    ,
    801-02, 
    699 P.2d 217
     (1985).
    Here, the Robertsons cite to no statute or other court rule to support our
    review of the trial court’s orders denying their motions for summary judgment, nor
    do they argue that discretionary review is warranted. Cf. Sunbreaker Condo.
    Ass’n v. Travelers Ins. Co., 
    79 Wn. App. 368
    , 380, 
    901 P.2d 1079
     (1995) (“When
    the trial court denies summary judgment on one issue, but enters a final
    judgment on a distinct, dispositive issue, a party seeking review of the summary
    judgment determination must establish that discretionary review is warranted.”).
    Furthermore, because we are reversing the trial court’s dismissal of the
    Robertsons’ claims, the issues raised in the Robertsons’ motions remain pending
    trial and can be reviewed once a final judgment is entered. Therefore, we
    decline to review the trial court’s orders denying the Robertsons’ motions for
    summary judgment.
    The Robertsons contend that their appeal from the trial court’s “final
    judgment” dismissing the entire case “trigger[ed] jurisdiction over all interlocutory
    orders.” But the Robertsons point to no court rule or statute that supports this
    proposition, and the two cases they cite do not support it. Specifically, in
    Gardner v. First Heritage Bank, Division Two explained, in an admittedly
    confusing footnote, that it would, under the circumstances of that case, review an
    oral ruling granting the defendant’s motion for summary judgment even though
    the plaintiff did not assign error to that oral ruling until his opening brief. 
    175 Wn. App. 650
    , 658 & n.15, 
    303 P.3d 1065
     (2013). And in DGHI, Enterprises v. Pacific
    18
    No. 79613-5-I/19
    Cities, Inc., the Supreme Court declined to review a denial of summary judgment,
    observing that the order was interlocutory in nature and that the issue with regard
    to which summary judgment was sought could be reviewed after trial in an
    appeal from the final judgment. 
    137 Wn.2d 933
    , 949, 
    977 P.2d 1231
     (1999).
    Neither of these cases supports the Robertsons’ contention that the trial court’s
    orders denying the Robertsons’ motions for summary judgment are appealable at
    this juncture.
    CONCLUSION
    We hold, as matters of law, that (1) Trillium’s assignment of its trespass
    claims, as described in the Assignment Agreement, did not merge into the Deed,
    (2) the REPSA’s “as is” clause did not bar the Robertsons from pursuing their
    claims against JYD and Janicki, and (3) the de minimis rule does not apply to the
    Robertsons’ timber trespass claims. Additionally, because merger, the “as is”
    clause, and the de minimis rule are the only arguments advanced by JYD and
    Janicki to challenge the Robertsons’ standing to bring their claims, we hold that
    the trial court erred by dismissing the Robertsons’ claims.
    19
    No. 79613-5-I/20
    We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
    WE CONCUR:
    20