Birney Dempcy, Et Ux. v. Chris Avenius ( 2016 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    BIRNEY DEMPCY and MARIE DEMPCY,
    husband and wife, and their marital                   No. 73869-1-1
    community,
    DIVISION ONE
    Appellants,
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    v.
    CHRIS AVENIUS and NELA AVENIUS,
    husband and wife, and their marital
    community,
    Respondents,
    JACK SHANNON, an individual; and
    RADEK ZEMEL, an individual,
    Defendants.                       FILED: September 26, 2016
    Appelwick, J. — The Dempcys sued their neighbors, the Aveniuses, to
    establish their right to an easement over part of the Aveniuses' property and to
    require the Aveniuses to remove a hedge, fence, trellis, and 11 trees from their
    property. The trial court dismissedthe Dempcys' easement claim and their request
    to remove the trellis and 11 trees. The court ordered the Aveniuses to remove the
    hedge and fence. The Dempcys moved for attorney fees under the CC&Rs that
    govern the neighborhood. The court denied that motion, reasoning that each party
    prevailed on a major issue so there was no prevailing party. We affirm.
    No. 73869-1-1/2
    FACTS
    Birney and Marie Dempcy and Chris and Nela Avenius are neighbors. The
    Aveniuses' property is immediately adjacent to and north of the Dempcys' property.
    Both properties are part of the Pickle Point Association.
    The Pickle Point Association is governed by a declaration of protective
    covenants, restrictions, easements, and agreements (the CC&Rs). The CC&Rs
    contain a provision relating to fences. This provision prohibits the construction of
    fences, walls, hedges, and mass plantings between the Dempcy property and the
    Avenius property, unless both affected owners approve. It also restricts all fences,
    walls, hedges, or mass plantings from extending higher than six feet above the
    ground. The CC&Rs also permit the prevailing party in an action enforcing the
    CC&Rs to recover attorney fees.
    The Dempcys sued the Aveniuses alleging that the Aveniuses' fence,
    hedge, trellis, and 11 of their trees violated the CC&Rs provisions pertaining to
    fences. And, the Dempcys asserted that the Aveniuses were interfering with an
    easement that gives the Dempcys the right to use the Aveniuses' property for
    ingress and egress and for utilities as may be reasonably necessary.            The
    Dempcys argued that this easement also permitted them to use a different portion
    of the Aveniuses' property to walk from the east part of their own property to the
    west yard.
    After a bench trial, the trial court rejected the Dempcys' claim that the
    easement permitted them to use a different strip of the Aveniuses' property. The
    No. 73869-1-1/3
    trial court also ruled that the fence and hedge between the Dempcy and Avenius
    properties violated the CC&Rs.    But, the court determined that the Aveniuses'
    trellis and 11 trees did not violate the CC&Rs. Accordingly, the court ordered that
    the Aveniuses must remove the fence and hedge and denied with prejudice all
    other requested relief.
    Following the trial court's decision, the Dempcys requested an award of
    attorney fees and costs pursuant to the CC&Rs.         The trial court denied the
    Dempcys' motion for attorney fees. It noted that with regard to the claims relating
    to the CC&Rs, each side won in part and lost in part. As a result, the court held
    that there was no prevailing party, and an award of attorney fees was not
    appropriate.
    The Dempcys appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    The Dempcys assert that the trial court erred in determining that they were
    not the prevailing party and therefore denying their motion for attorney fees. And,
    both parties contend that they are entitled to reasonable attorney fees on appeal.
    The determination of which party was the prevailing party below is a mixed
    question of law and fact that we review under the error of law standard. Sardam
    v. Morford, 
    51 Wash. App. 908
    , 911, 
    756 P.2d 174
    (1988); Eaale Point Condo.
    Owners Ass'n v. Coy, 
    102 Wash. App. 697
    , 706, 
    9 P.3d 898
    (2000).
    Attorney fees are not available unless permitted by a contract, statute, or
    recognized ground of equity. City of Seattle v. McCreadv, 
    131 Wash. 2d 266
    , 273-
    No. 73869-1-1/4
    74, 
    931 P.2d 156
    (1997).      When authorized by contract, the trial court has
    discretion to determine a reasonable fee award.     Newport Yacht Basin Ass'n of
    Condo. Owners v. Supreme Nw., Inc., 
    168 Wash. App. 86
    , 97-98, 
    285 P.3d 70
    (2012). Generally, the prevailing party is the party that receives a favorable
    judgment. 
    Sardam, 51 Wash. App. at 911
    .
    In this case, the CC&Rs contained a provision permitting the prevailing party
    in any action to enforce the CC&Rs to collect attorney fees and costs. Therefore,
    the issues related to the CC&Rs only could support an award of attorney fees.
    The Dempcys assert that, because they were the only party that received
    an affirmative judgment on a claim, they are the prevailing party. They point to the
    court's order requiring the Aveniuses to remove the fence and hedge as evidence
    of an affirmative judgment in their favor. They argue that under Washington law,
    a party who does not receive the full amount of relief sought is still the prevailing
    party. See Silverdale Hotel Assocs. v. Lomas &Nettleton Co., 
    36 Wash. App. 762
    ,
    774, 
    677 P.2d 773
    (1984) (noting that a party need not recover its entire claim to
    be the prevailing party); Stott v. Cervantes, 
    23 Wash. App. 346
    , 347, 349, 
    595 P.2d 563
    (1979) (plaintiffs who recovered damages of $3,419 in suit for $10,000 were
    prevailing party).
    However, Washington case law recognizes that a defendant can be a
    prevailing party by successfully defending against a claim. Marassi v. Lau, 71 Wn.
    App. 912, 918, 
    859 P.2d 605
    (1993), abrogated on other grounds by Wachovia
    SBA Lending. Inc. v. Kraft, 
    165 Wash. 2d 481
    , 
    200 P.3d 683
    (2009). The defendant
    No. 73869-1-1/5
    need not have made a counterclaim for affirmative relief to recover as a prevailing
    party. Newport 
    Yacht, 168 Wash. App. at 99
    . When both parties prevail on major
    issues, attorney fees are not appropriate. 
    Marassi, 71 Wash. App. at 916
    .
    Here, the Dempcys prevailed on whether the CC&Rs prohibited the
    Aveniuses' fence and hedge. The Aveniuses prevailed on whether the CC&Rs
    prohibited the trellis and 11 trees.
    The Dempcys respond that the CC&Rs issue constituted a single claim, and
    the trial court erred in treating them as two separate issues so as to deny their
    motion for attorney fees. However, the record does not contain a transcript of the
    trial pertaining to these claims. Our review is limited to the pleadings in the record
    and the trial court's oral ruling, memorandum decision, and order. The Dempcys
    alleged two violations of the CC&Rs: the Aveniuses' "fence structure and mass
    plantings between the Dempcy property and the Avenius property." The trial court
    found in their favor on the fence and hedge, but denied the Dempcys' other
    requested relief with prejudice. In denying the Dempcys' motion for attorney fees,
    the court ruled that both sides prevailed on major issues related to the covenant.
    On this record, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that both sides
    prevailed on major issues.
    Alternatively, the Dempcys contend that the trial court failed to follow the
    appropriate procedure for awarding attorney fees in a multiple claim case. They
    argue that under International Raceway, Inc. v JDFJ Corp., 
    97 Wash. App. 1
    , 970
    No. 73869-1-1/6
    P.2d 343 (1999), the trial court is required to provide findings of fact and
    conclusions of law to support the allocation of fees among the claims.
    JDFJ Corp. does not apply on these facts. In that case, each party made a
    separate and distinct claim against the other. JDFJ 
    Corp., 97 Wash. App. at 4
    . The
    trial court determined that neither party prevailed on one issue, and International
    Raceway won on the other issue, jd. at 7. Reasoning that the issue on which
    International Raceway prevailed constituted two-thirds of the action, the court
    awarded International Raceway two-thirds of its attorney fees. Id On appeal, the
    court held that this proportionality approach is appropriate in cases where multiple
    distinct and severable claims are at issue. 
    Id. at 8-9.
    This case did not involve multiple distinct and severable claims made by
    each party. Instead, the Dempcys claimed that the Aveniuses violated the CC&Rs
    in multiple ways. They were successful in part and unsuccessful in part. The
    applicable rule here is that stated in Marassi: where both parties prevail on major
    issues, an attorney fee award is not 
    appropriate. 71 Wash. App. at 916
    . The trial
    court properly applied the Marassi rule to these facts.
    The Dempcys and the Aveniuses both seek attorney fees on appeal under
    RAP 18.1. RAP 18.1(a) permits attorney fees on appeal if authorized by applicable
    law. Where a contract allows for attorney fee awards in the trial court, the
    prevailing party before this court may seek reasonable attorney fees incurred on
    appeal. Viking Bank v. Firgrove Commons 3, LLC, 
    183 Wash. App. 706
    , 717-18, 
    334 P.3d 116
    (2014). Here, the CC&Rs authorize attorney fee awards in any action to
    No. 73869-1-1/7
    enforce it, so the prevailing party on appeal may also recover attorney fees.
    Because we hold that the trial court did not err in denying the Dempcys' motion for
    attorney fees, the Aveniuses are the prevailing party on appeal. They are entitled
    to reasonable attorney fees for the costs of appeal.
    We affirm.
    WE CONCUR:
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