IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
LARRY BANGERTER; ALEX AND ELENA ) No. 79264-4-I
BORROMEO; CAMP FIRE SNOHOMISH )
COUNTY; CAROL BRITTEN; JAMES )
WAAK, individually and as lot owners and
)
derivatively on behalf of HAT ISLAND )
COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION, a ) DIVISION ONE
Washington non-profit corporation, )
)
Plaintiffs, )
)
MATT SUROWIECKI, SR., )
) PUBLISHED OPINION
Appellant, )
)
v. )
)
HAT ISLAND COMMUNITY )
ASSOCIATION, a Washington non-profit )
corporation; and CHUCK MOTSON, an )
individual, )
)
Respondents, )
)
KAREN CONNER, an individual; ALAN )
DASHEN, an individual; SUSAN DAHL, an )
individual; and JOHN DOES 1-10, )
individuals, )
)
Defendants. )
)
ANDRUS, A.C.J. — Matt Surowiecki, Sr.—the owner of several lots on Hat
Island, a private island located off Everett, Washington—appeals the dismissal of
Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material.
No. 79264-4-I/2
his claims against Hat Island Community Association (HICA), the nonprofit entity
that maintains the roads and other amenities on Hat Island.
As a member of HICA, Surowiecki pays an annual operating assessment
levied by the association. Historically, HICA has levied assessments based on a
uniform, per lot structure. Surowiecki brought this declaratory judgment action,
seeking a judicial determination that HICA’s uniform, per lot assessment structure
violates HICA’s governing documents, which mandate that annual operating
assessments be “equitable.” 1 He also brought derivative claims on behalf of HICA
against the board of trustees and its manager, Chuck Motson, alleging they
breached fiduciary duties owed to HICA by mismanaging the association’s
financial affairs. Finally, Surowiecki sought to invalidate a settlement agreement
he entered into with HICA in 2012, alleging he had been fraudulently induced to
enter into that agreement.
Surowiecki argues the trial court erred in dismissing his challenge to HICA’s
assessment structure, erred in concluding he lacks standing to bring derivative
claims, erred in dismissing his breach of fiduciary duty claim against HICA, and
erred in awarding attorney fees to HICA. 2
1
Six other plaintiffs joined Surowiecki’s suit. Surowiecki, however, is the only appellant. In addition,
the suit named members of HICA’s board of trustees and its manager, Chuck Motson, as individual
defendants. Surowiecki later voluntarily dismissed, without prejudice, the individual trustees. And
although he listed in his notice of appeal the trial court’s June 14, 2018 order granting Motson’s
motion for partial summary judgment, which dismissed Motson as a party, Surowiecki abandoned
his appeal relating to Motson by not assigning error to the June 14, 2018 order or otherwise
addressing the order in his briefing. As a result, for simplicity, this opinion refers to Surowiecki as
the sole plaintiff/appellant and to HICA as the sole defendant/respondent.
2
The trial court also awarded attorney fees to Motson. We affirm the attorney fee award to Motson
as Surowiecki abandoned his appeal relating to Motson. See supra note 1. Furthermore,
Surowiecki addresses only the court’s award to HICA in his briefing.
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Because the trial court applied an incorrect legal standard when ruling on
Surowiecki’s assessment claim, we reverse the order granting summary judgment
on that claim only. We vacate in part the award of attorney fees to HICA. 3 We
otherwise affirm the trial court.
FACTS
A. Background of Dispute
1. HICA’s Governance
HICA is a nonprofit homeowner association that owns and maintains the
common areas on Hat Island—including platted roads, a golf course, a marina, a
ferry, and a water treatment and distribution facility. Lots within HICA are subject
to Restrictive Covenants Running with Land and Easements (Covenants),
originally recorded in 1962. HICA operates pursuant to its articles of incorporation
and bylaws as well as the Washington Nonprofit Corporation Act 4 (WNCA) and the
Homeowners’ Association Act. 5
Under HICA’s articles of incorporation, the association is required to
maintain the island’s infrastructure, including roads, recreational facilities,
transportation, and water system “in a fiscally responsible manner.” Anyone
owning a lot subject to HICA’s Covenants is automatically a member of the
association and responsible for “dues or assessments for the construction or
reconstruction, or capital additions to or capital improvements of any of the facilities
3
We affirm the attorney fee award relating to the dismissal of Surowiecki’s fraudulent inducement
claims under the 2012 settlement agreement as Surowiecki has not appealed the dismissal of that
claim.
4
Ch. 24.03 RCW.
5
Ch. 64.38 RCW.
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to be administered by [HICA], or monthly or annual charges for the upkeep
thereof.” Each member, regardless of the number of lots owned, has one vote.
HICA, which has the powers granted to nonprofit corporations and
homeowner associations under Washington law, is managed by a board of
trustees. HICA’s bylaws provide that it has “the power to levy and collect
assessments against its members,” for the purposes set out in the articles of
incorporation. The board of trustees is responsible for managing and controlling
the affairs of the association, including charging or assessing parcels of land and
their owners.
HICA’s board manages the association’s revenue and expenses. Under
the Covenants, the company that originally developed the island agreed to provide
roads for ingress and egress, a golf course, water supply, electric service, and ferry
transportation to the island. When these facilities were turned over to the Hat
Island Country Club, HICA’s predecessor, the Covenants granted the club
the power to charge and assess its members on an equitable basis
for the operation and maintenance of said facilities . . . and to charge
and assess its members on an equitable basis for such additional
recreational and other facilities as shall be duly authorized by its
membership for the mutual benefit of all its members.
Between 2002 and 2010, article VIII of HICA’s bylaws, entitled
“Assessments and Charges,” provided in pertinent part:
SECTION 1. The Board of Trustees shall annually establish an
assessment against each and every lot on a uniform basis. The
amount of such assessment levied shall in no event, except as
hereinafter provided, exceed in any one month the sum of [t]wenty
one dollars and twenty five cents ($21.25) per lot. Assessments will
be established and levied upon all properties following the affirmative
vote of a simple majority (50% plus 1) of all members in good
standing. Assessments shall be collected and expended pursuant
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to the Articles of Incorporation and these By-Laws. Members shall
be liable for the payment of any and all assessments applicable to
their respective lots.
....
Special assessments may be levied upon the affirmative vote of a
majority of members in good standing voting at a meeting of
members of the corporation. Special assessments do not need to be
uniform, and may apply only to those lots specially benefited;
provided, that in such cases the special assessments must be
authorized by a vote of a majority of the members in good standing
who own lots which will be subject to the special assessments.
In 2010, HICA’s members amended section 1 of article VIII to remove the
uniformity requirement. Section 1, in pertinent part, now provides:
SECTION 1. The Board of Trustees shall annually determine the
proposed amount of the annual operating assessment against each
and every lot for the subsequent year. Such proposed annual
operating assessment, if changed from the prior year assessment
amount, will be presented to the community for approval during the
annual meeting of the Association as provided in Article V, Section
3. . . .
The paragraph regarding special assessments remained substantially the same,
including the language that special assessments need not be uniform.
2. Levying Assessments
Each year HICA’s board meets to develop a budget for the upcoming year.
It estimates operating expenses and the total estimated income from use-based
fees, such as green fees charged for the golf course, moorage fees for the marina,
fees paid for water use, fees for annual water hook-up, and ferry ticket sales (Use-
Based Fees). HICA deems Use-Based Fees to be a fair way to allocate the
expenses of operating and maintaining these amenities to only those HICA
members who use them. In recent years, Use-Based Fees have covered about
50 percent of HICA’s total operating expenses.
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After HICA’s board determines the amount of money HICA can anticipate
from Use-Based Fees, it then evaluates the remaining income it will need to
generate from HICA members through annual operating assessments. The board
submits the budget to the association members for ratification. The trustees have
recommended, and the members have voted to approve, the levying of uniform,
per lot annual operating assessments against all lots since at least 1967. If the
members do not approve a proposed increase in assessments, the assessments
continue to be levied at the rate approved the previous year. Between 2008 and
2015, the members voted to increase the assessments four times. Annual per lot
assessments were $339 in 2008 and 2009, and increased to $472 per lot for the
years 2013 through 2015.
The largest expense HICA has had in the recent past is a marina renovation
and expansion project. HICA members have, over the years, approved two special
assessments totaling $4,210 per lot for the improvement project.
3. Hat Island Lots and Surowiecki’s Membership
There are 974 lots on Hat Island, and 946 lots are currently owned and
assessed. There is some evidence that 249 of these lots are not buildable. Only
268 lots currently have houses, with roughly 40 as full-time residences. While
there are water connections for 461 lots, the island’s current infrastructure is “not
capable of producing sufficient water for the simultaneous, fulltime occupancy of
all 461 residences allowed.” Because HICA must add new water production
sources to raise the state-mandated cap on water hookups, residential
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No. 79264-4-I/7
development is stalled at roughly 460 lots. Thus, under current regulations, the
remaining 512 lots without water connections cannot be developed.
Surowiecki and more than 100 entities he manages (limited liability
companies, limited partnerships, corporations, and a living trust) own over 271 of
the 974 lots on Hat Island. In 2012, Surowiecki challenged the marina
improvement special assessments. In a settlement agreement arising out of that
dispute, the parties identified the lots Surowiecki controls, reached a resolution of
the amount of assessments he would pay for these lots, and agreed Surowiecki
would have a total of 30 votes for all of the lots he controls. 6 In exchange,
Surowiecki waived his claim that the membership votes to approve the marina
assessments were invalid or inequitable. But Surowiecki has continued to
complain about the marina project costs, alleging that board members have hidden
the true costs from HICA members. 7
The record indicates that, in response to grievances over its assessments,
HICA and its board considered requests by lot owners to modify the assessment
structure. It specifically considered Surowiecki’s request that the assessments be
allocated based on each lot’s tax-assessed value. The board held several
community meetings seeking owner input into the issue of the assessment
allocation. As Scott Holte, HICA’s former board president, testified:
There are many differing opinions as to what [HICA’s] assessment
structure should or could be in the future. Some owners promote
6
As far as the record shows, he is the only member who has more than one vote.
7
In August 2012, Surowiecki’s son and Surowiecki’s now-wife, sued HICA, challenging the validity
of the marina assessment votes and seeking to enjoin the marina projects. That suit was dismissed
shortly thereafter on HICA’s CR 12(b)(6) motion. HICA obtained an award of $22,266 in attorney
fees against Surowiecki’s son.
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No. 79264-4-I/8
including tax assessment values into the equation. Others promote
higher assessments for lots with a home. Still others believe the
current structure is appropriate. There are undoubtedly multiple
potential assessment and fee structures.
Holte testified that HICA’s board decided, in the absence of an amendment to the
bylaws, to continue its historic practice of allocating assessments equally among
lots.
B. Procedural History
In 2014, Surowiecki filed this lawsuit—individually as a Hat Island lot owner
and derivatively on behalf of the homeowner association—against HICA, HICA’s
manager Motson, and past and current members of the board of trustees. 8 He
alleged HICA violated its articles of incorporation, bylaws, and the Covenants by
failing to charge assessments “on an equitable basis,” violated the covenant of
good faith and fair dealing implied in the governing documents, and committed
corporate waste. Surowiecki also sought to invalidate the 2012 settlement
agreement, alleging he was fraudulently induced to enter into that contract based
on misrepresented facts concerning the marina project costs.
As against the individually named defendants, Surowiecki alleged that they
had breached fiduciary duties owing to both HICA and its members, and that they
had fraudulently or negligently misrepresented the estimated costs of the marina
project and HICA’s general financial condition. Finally, Surowiecki sought an order
compelling an accounting of the association’s financial records.
8
Surowiecki stipulated to the dismissal without prejudice of his claims against the trustees,
“reserv[ing] all rights of appeal with respect to [his] derivative claims and all other claims that have
previously been dismissed on summary judgment in whole or in part by the [c]ourt.”
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In December 2015, HICA originally moved to dismiss any claim that it did
not levy assessments on an “equitable basis,” contending that its governing
documents “allow, if not require, uniform assessments against all Lots.” HICA
argued that it had a 48-year history of levying uniform assessments and that
“interpreting [HICA’s] Governing Documents to require disproportionate
assessments against some Lots, based on an Owner’s use of their Lot or Island
amenities, would re-write [HICA’s] Governing Documents to the benefit of some
owners and the detriment of others.”
Surowiecki opposed the motion, arguing that the owners of undeveloped
and undevelopable lots were carrying the financial load for the island, that the
assessment structure was inequitable as a result, and that the inequitable
assessment structure was the result of the board failing to run the island in a fiscally
responsible manner, as required by HICA’s articles of incorporation. Surowiecki
submitted declarations and deposition testimony from several lot owners to support
these arguments.
In January 2016, the trial court denied HICA’s motion for summary
judgment. The record on this motion indicates only that the court found “that there
is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether these assessments are being
made in an equitable fashion.”
HICA later moved to dismiss any derivative claims Surowiecki asserted on
behalf of HICA, arguing he lacked standing to bring the claims. HICA contended
that the WNCA does not confer on any individual the right to bring a derivative
action on behalf of a nonprofit corporation, that derivative claims cannot be
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No. 79264-4-I/10
asserted against the corporate entity, and that the limited statutory exception for
challenging ultra vires actions of corporate officers or directors under RCW
24.03.040(2) 9 did not apply to claims against the corporation. The trial court
granted the motion in part, dismissing all derivative claims, except any claims
alleged under RCW 24.03.040(2).
In May 2017, HICA moved to dismiss any claims that it, Motson, or any
board member misrepresented the actual costs of the marina project, including
any claim that HICA fraudulently induced Surowiecki to enter into the April 2012
settlement agreement. The court dismissed these claims, concluding Surowiecki
had not relied on HICA’s representations to his detriment when voting on the
marina projects.
In January 2018, HICA again sought to dismiss Surowiecki’s claims that the
assessments were inequitable. In this renewed motion, HICA argued the business
judgment rule applied to its decision on how to allocate assessments. It further
argued that, under that rule, for the assessments to be deemed inequitable,
Surowiecki had to prove “fraud, dishonesty, or incompetence” on the part of the
HICA board.
The court concluded HICA’s decision to impose a uniform, per lot
assessment was governed by the business judgment rule, citing Riss v. Angel, 131
Wn.2d 612, 934 P.2d 669 (1997). It held that Surowiecki failed to show that HICA’s
9
“No act of a corporation . . . shall be invalid by reason of the fact that the corporation was without
capacity or power to do such act . . . , but such lack of capacity or power may be asserted . . . [i]n
a proceeding by the corporation, whether acting directly or through a receiver, trustee, or other
legal representative, or through members in a representative suit, against the officers or directors
of the corporation for exceeding their authority.”
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No. 79264-4-I/11
board breached its duty of care, which required evidence of fraud, dishonesty, or
incompetence. The court determined no such evidence had been presented—
“Ultimately, there was a vote among members and [Surowiecki’s] position did not
prevail.” The evidence, it concluded, supported the proposition that “the dispute
being waged is one of opinion only—not over fraud, dishonesty or incompetence.”
In November 2018, Surowiecki voluntarily dismissed all remaining claims
under CR 41. The trial court subsequently granted HICA’s motion for attorney
fees, awarding $13,694 against Surowiecki based on the 2012 settlement
agreement. And based on RCW 64.38.050, the trial court awarded $688,423.11
in favor of HICA and $240,923.65 in favor of Motson against Surowiecki and the
remaining plaintiffs, Carol Britten and Elena and Alex Borromeo, jointly and
severally.
Surowiecki appeals.
ANALYSIS
Surowiecki raises four issues on appeal. First, he contends the trial court
erred in concluding that HICA’s decision to maintain a uniform, per lot assessment
structure is governed by the business judgment rule. He argues the business
judgment rule applies to claims against individual corporate officers or directors
but not to claims against the corporation itself. He maintains there are genuine
issues of material fact regarding whether HICA’s assessments are “equitable,” and
asks us to reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to HICA. Second,
Surowiecki argues the trial court erred in dismissing his derivative claims for lack
of standing. Third, he contends there are genuine issues of material fact regarding
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No. 79264-4-I/12
HICA’s breach of fiduciary duty when it failed to provide budgets for projects and
failed to perform statutorily-required audits. And, finally, Surowiecki challenges the
trial court’s award of attorney fees. We address each argument in turn.
A. Business Judgment Rule
We review a trial court’s order on a motion for summary judgment de novo.
Wilkinson v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass’n, 180 Wn.2d 241, 249, 327 P.3d 614 (2014).
A court may grant summary judgment if the evidence, viewed in a light most
favorable to the nonmoving party, establishes that there is no genuine issue of any
material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
CR 56(c); Wilkinson, 180 Wn.2d at 249.
The business judgment rule limits the liability of corporate management
where (1) the decision to undertake a transaction is within the power of the
corporation and the authority of its management; and (2) there is a reasonable
basis to indicate the transaction was made in good faith. Scott v. Trans-System,
Inc., 148 Wn.2d 701, 709, 64 P.3d 1 (2003). If the rule applies, a plaintiff may only
challenge a decision if made through fraud, dishonesty, or incompetence. Id. The
rule is based on the notion that “neither the directors nor the other officers of a
corporation are liable for mere mistake[s] or errors of judgment, either of law or
fact.” Nursing Home Bldg. Corp. v. DeHart, 13 Wn. App. 489, 498-99, 535 P.2d
137 (1975) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting W. FLETCHER, PRIVATE
CORPORATIONS §§ 1039, at 621-25 (perm. ed. 1974)).
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Surowiecki argues the business judgment rule applies only to officers and
directors serving a corporation and does not apply to claims against the
corporation itself. Washington law supports this argument.
Generally, the business judgment rule applies to any decisions made by
corporate management, including officers and directors of the entity. Para-Medical
Leasing, Inc. v. Hangen, 48 Wn. App. 389, 395, 739 P.2d 717 (1987); see also
Interlake Porsche & Audi, Inc. v. Bucholz, 45 Wn. App. 502, 508-09, 728 P.2d 597
(1986). Washington courts have applied the business judgment rule in the context
of claims against individual officers or directors, not in the context of claims against
the corporation itself. See, e.g., Scott, 148 Wn.2d at 705, 708-09 (minority
shareholder sought dissolution of corporation based on allegations that majority
shareholders wasted corporate assets); McCormick v. Dunn & Black, P.S., 140
Wn. App. 873, 877-78, 887, 167 P.3d 610 (2007) (law firm minority shareholder
suit against two majority shareholders seeking to dissolve the corporation based
on the majority shareholders’ allegedly “illegal, oppressive or fraudulent conduct”);
Shinn v. Thrust IV, Inc., 56 Wn. App. 827, 829, 832-37, 786 P.2d 285 (1990)
(business judgment rule did not apply to protect general partner from liability where
limited partners sued general partner for breach of fiduciary duty to partnership);
Para-Medical Leasing, Inc., 48 Wn. App. at 390 (corporation sued certified public
accountant for mismanagement of its business); Interlake Porsche & Audi, Inc., 45
Wn. App. at 506, 509 (minority shareholder sued majority shareholder for spending
corporate funds for personal use); Schwarzmann v. Ass’n of Apartment Owners of
Bridgehaven, 33 Wn. App. 397, 401, 655 P.2d 1777 (1982) (condo owners
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precluded from suing board directors and members individually under business
judgment rule); Nursing Home Bldg. Corp., 13 Wn. App. at 490-91, 498-500
(receiver for corporation sued former shareholders for fraudulent misappropriation
of corporate assets).
The rule clearly applies to managerial decisions made by individual officers
or directors of a corporation. It is less clear, however, if the rule applies to a
homeowner association’s decision—ratified by a vote of its members—that its
governing documents require a particular assessment structure or that the adopted
assessment structure complies with the discretion afforded in its governing
documents.
HICA relies on Riss for the proposition that the business judgment rule
precludes a member within a homeowner association from suing the association
for decisions made by that association. But this is an overstatement of Riss’s
holding. In that case, the covenants gave the association’s board of directors the
power to approve or disapprove any lot owner’s proposed construction plans and
allowed an owner aggrieved by a board decision to appeal to the members, who
then had the power to affirm or reverse the board’s decision by a majority vote.
131 Wn.2d at 616-17. Riss, a lot owner, sued every single member of the
homeowner association—not the association itself—claiming that the covenant at
issue was unenforceable and, alternatively, that the members’ rejection of his
building plans was unreasonable and arbitrary. Id. at 615, 619.
After a trial, the trial court affirmed the covenant’s validity but found the
members had unreasonably rejected Riss’s plans by failing to compare them to
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other homes permitted in the same neighborhood, by failing to conduct an
adequate investigation into the plans’ compliance with the covenants, and by
relying on inaccurate information. Id. at 620.
Our Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s findings, holding that the
members’ discretionary rejection of Riss’s plans was subject to a reasonableness
test. Id. The court concluded the record supported the trial court’s findings that
the homeowners had acted unreasonably in voting to disapprove Riss’s plans. Id.
at 628. The court rejected the individual members’ argument that they could not
be held personally liable for their vote to disapprove the plans because they acted
in good faith and consistent with the business judgment rule. Id. at 631. It
concluded that “good faith is not the sole criteria for [the] exercise of discretion
under a consent to construction covenant.” Id.
In discussing the applicability of the business judgment rule, the court
stated, “The role of the business judgment rule where homeowners associations
is concerned is the subject of ongoing debate.” Id. It concluded, “[W]hether or not
the business judgment rule should be applied to property owners associations, the
decisions of these associations must be reasonable.” Id. at 632, 681. It went on
to state that even under the business judgment rule, “[r]easonable care is
required.” Id. “[T]he rule if applied here would not exonerate the homeowners for
their unreasonable decision to reject [Riss’s] proposal. At the least, their failure to
adequately investigate would remove them from the rule’s insulating effect.” Id. at
633.
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Riss did not definitively apply the business judgment rule to decisions made
by homeowner associations. And the facts of the case show the court was
addressing the issue of liability of individual members, not the liability of the
corporate entity itself.
Furthermore, we cannot find a published decision applying the business
judgment rule to the corporate entity. Although Division Two stated, in passing, in
Shorewood West Condominium Ass’n v. Sadri, 92 Wn. App. 752, 966 P.2d 372
(1998), reversed on other grounds, 140 Wn.2d 47, 992 P.2d 1008 (2000), that the
business judgment rule applied to actions of a homeowner association, that
statement is dicta and, thus, of limited precedential value. Id. at 753-54, 757
(concluding that condominium association’s bylaw amendment, prohibiting leasing
of condos, could be enforced against owners who purchased before amendment
passed).
Additionally, several cases support the conclusion that the business
judgment rule does not apply to homeowner associations’ interpretations of their
governing documents and that courts have authority to interpret an association’s
governing documents.
First, Riss clearly held that when the governing documents give a
homeowner association the discretion to take a particular action, the exercise of
that discretion must be reasonable. 131 Wn.2d at 628, 630. It acknowledged that
a court may not substitute its judgment for that of the association, but it may
consider the manner in which the decision was made and the information the
association members had before them to determine if the decision was
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reasonable. Id. at 630. In cases since Riss, this court has held that the
reasonableness of an association’s actions is a question of fact. See, e.g., Green
v. Normandy Park, 137 Wn. App. 665, 693-95, 151 P.3d 1038 (2007) (“Questions
regarding the ‘reasonableness’ of the decision made . . . focus on the process
employed and the facts considered.”).
Moreover, in Roats v. Blakely Island Maintenance Commission, Inc., 169
Wn. App. 263, 266, 279 P.3d 943 (2012), property owners sued a homeowner
association, challenging that association’s authority under its governing
documents to create a limited liability company for the purpose of leasing the
operation of a marina, fuel dispensers, and a general store. We held that the
governing documents of a corporation are interpreted in accordance with accepted
rules of contract interpretation and that the appellate court’s review is de novo. Id.
at 273-74. Based on these standards from Roats, courts are not required by the
business judgment rule to defer to a homeowner association’s interpretation of its
articles of incorporation, bylaws, and covenants.
Lastly, in Ackerman v. Sudden Valley Community Ass’n, 89 Wn. App. 156,
158-59, 163-64, 944 P.2d 1045 (1997), this court interpreted an association’s
governing documents to evaluate the validity of a dues structure adopted by the
association’s members. There, one member, Katherine Yurica, challenged the
board’s decision to amend the dues structure to charge higher annual dues to
owners of improved lots than charged to owners of unimproved lots. Id. at 160.
Yurica argued the two-tiered dues structure violated the covenants and the
association’s articles of incorporation. Id. 159-60. The covenant language at issue
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there was identical to that set out in HICA’s Covenants: “[Sudden Valley
Community Association (SVCA)] shall have the power to charge and assess its
members on an equitable basis for the operation and maintenance of said
facilities . . . and to charge and assess its members on an equitable basis for such
additional recreational or other facilities. . . .” Id. at 163-64.
The trial court concluded that the covenants, which required that dues
assessments be “equitable,” did not prohibit a tiered dues structure but the articles
of incorporation did. Id. at 160. An intervening lot owner appealed the court’s
interpretation of the articles of incorporation; Yurica cross appealed the court’s
interpretation of the covenants. Id. at 161.
This court held that the association’s covenants vested discretion in SVCA
to assess its members but that this discretion “is limited only by the requirement
that such assessments be on an equitable basis.” Id. at 164. It defined “equitable”
as “characterized by equity: fair to all concerned.” Id. (internal quotation marks
omitted) (quoting WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 769 (1969)).
This court rejected the argument that the covenant language mandated equal and
uniform assessments to all lot owners.
There is nothing in this governing scheme which necessarily
leads one to conclude that the original intent of the covenant
language was to impose a rigid formula of, for example, equal
assessments for all lots. Equality is not the sole, or even a necessary
cornerstone of equity under all circumstances.
Id. at 164. And it went on to conclude, “The founders of Sudden Valley intentionally
vested SVCA with discretion to annually establish assessments on an equitable
basis, depending upon circumstances then prevailing. Such a declaration is clear
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and unambiguous, and will be given its manifest meaning.” Id. at 165. This court
affirmed the trial court’s interpretation of the covenants as permitting a tiered dues
structure. It reversed the trial court’s interpretation of the articles of incorporation,
concluding that they too permitted a multi-tiered dues system, “if equitable.” Id. at
168.
These cases clearly stand for the proposition that the interpretation of a
homeowner association’s governing documents is a question of law and not a
decision to which judicial deference is owed under the business judgment rule.
This conclusion is further supported by HICA’s governing documents themselves.
Paragraph 17 of the Covenants provides that enforcement of the Covenants “shall
be by proceedings at law or in equity against any person or persons violating or
attempting to violate any covenant, either to restrain violation or to recover
damages, or both.” When an association’s bylaws or covenants provide that
individuals may invoke the jurisdiction of the court to resolve covenant disputes,
the court may substitute its judgment for that of the homeowner association board.
Wimberly v. Caravello, 136 Wn. App. 327, 335-36, 149 P.3d 402 (2006).
Our review of Washington precedent shows that the business judgment rule
limits only personal liability of individuals. As a result, we conclude the business
judgment rule does not immunize corporations. Furthermore, courts need not
defer to a homeowner association’s interpretation of its own governing documents.
The interpretation of articles of incorporation, bylaws, and covenants presents a
question of law, and the business judgment rule plays no role in this interpretive
process. The trial court erred in so concluding.
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No. 79264-4-I/20
B. Reasonableness of HICA’s Decision to Impose Uniform, Per Lot
Assessment Structure
Although Surowiecki correctly contends the business judgment rule does
not preclude us from interpreting HICA’s governing documents, Surowiecki
incorrectly maintains that a trier of fact should decide whether any particular
assessment structure is “equitable.” Under Ackerman, the homeowner association
and its members have the discretion to decide what type of assessment structure
is “equitable.” Riss clearly holds that this type of discretionary decision is subject
to review only for its reasonableness. And whether a homeowner association’s
decision to adopt any particular assessment structure is reasonable depends not
on the substance of the decision but rather on the “the process employed and the
facts considered.” Green, 137 Wn. App. at 695.
HICA argued below that its bylaws mandate the uniform, per lot assessment
structure. We disagree with this interpretation of its bylaws.
Interpreting covenants is a question of law, and we employ rules of contract
interpretation to determine the drafter’s intent, which is a question of fact.
Wilkinson, 180 Wn.2d at 249-50. “‘[I]nterpretation of a particular covenant is
largely dependent upon the facts of the case at hand.’” Id. at 253 (quoting Mains
Farm Homeowners Ass’n v. Worthington, 121 Wn.2d 810, 827, 854 P.2d 1072
(1993)). Where the dispute is between homeowners who are jointly governed by
the covenants, “‘[t]he court’s goal is to ascertain and give effect to those purposes
intended by the covenants.’” Id. at 250 (alteration in original) (quoting Riss, 131
Wn.2d at 623). “[W]e give covenant language ‘its ordinary and common use’ and
will not construe a term in such a way ‘so as to defeat its plain and obvious
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No. 79264-4-I/21
meaning.’” Id. (quoting Mains Farm, 121 Wn.2d at 826; Riss, 131 Wn.2d at 623).
Special emphasis is placed on “arriving at an interpretation that protects the
homeowners’ collective interests.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
Riss, 131 Wn.2d at 623-24). “[W]here reasonable minds could reach but one
conclusion, questions of fact may be determined as a matter of law.” Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted) (quoting Ross v. Bennett, 148 Wn. App. 40, 49, 203 P.3d
383 (2009)).
The plain language of HICA’s assessment provision requires annual
operating assessments to be “equitable.” It says nothing about them needing to
be uniform. HICA’s interpretation of its bylaws is based on the language of the
“special assessments” provision of its bylaws which provides:
Special assessments may be levied only upon the affirmative vote of
a simple majority of members in good standing voting in person or
by proxy at a meeting of members of the Association. Special
assessments do not need to be uniform, and may apply only to those
lots specially benefitted[.]
HICA contends if special assessments “do not need to be uniform,” then that
implies the annual operating assessments must be uniform. Holte, HICA’s former
board president, testified that the HICA board interprets this bylaw as precluding
non-uniform assessments. Although he recognized that people’s opinions differed
on the most appropriate assessment structure, “[u]nless and until [HICA’s] Bylaws
are amended, the Board intends to continue allocati[ng] expenses between Annual
Operating Assessments, Special Assessments and Use-Based Fees as set forth
in its governing documents.”
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No. 79264-4-I/22
But HICA’s argument ignores the context of the “special assessments”
language. The 2002 version of HICA’s bylaws stated:
The Board of Trustees shall annually establish an assessment
against each and every lot on a uniform basis. The amount of such
assessments levied shall in no event, except as hereinafter provided,
exceed in any one month the sum of [t]wenty one dollars and twenty
five cents ($21.25) per lot. Assessments will be established and
levied upon all properties following the affirmative vote of a simple
majority (50% plus 1) of all members in good standing. . . .
....
Special assessments . . . do not need to be uniform, and may apply
only to those lots specially benefitted[.] . . .
(Emphasis added). When these two paragraphs are read in context, it is clear the
“special assessments do not need to be uniform” language was intended to clarify
that the uniformity requirement only applied to the annual assessments.
But in 2010, the members amended the bylaws to remove the uniformity
requirement for annual assessments. The special assessments provision was not
changed. Thus, the “special assessments do not need to be uniform” language
cannot logically imply that annual assessments must be uniform when the
members explicitly chose to delete that requirement in 2010.
We conclude there is nothing in HICA’s bylaws requiring it to impose
uniform, per lot annual operating assessments. HICA’s governing documents
require only that the membership determine that the adopted assessment structure
is equitable. As we held in Ackerman, “equitable” does not mean “equal” or
“uniform.” 89 Wn. App. at 164.
From this record, it is impossible to determine if HICA’s board and its
members ever made a formal decision to retain the existing assessment structure
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No. 79264-4-I/23
or to reject Surowiecki’s proposed alternative. And we cannot determine if the
members have voted to maintain this system because they have considered the
options and deem it to be equitable or because they were advised that uniformity
was mandated by HICA’s bylaws.
If HICA’s board and its members erroneously believed its bylaws mandate
uniform assessments, a trier of fact could conceivably find that the decision to
retain this structure was not well-founded legally and thus unreasonable. If,
however, HICA retained this uniform structure because, after a thorough vetting at
community meetings, the membership concluded the current structure is as
equitable as any other, then a trier of fact could conclude that “the process
employed and the facts considered” were reasonable. We therefore reverse
summary judgment of Surowiecki’s assessment claim. 10
C. Standing for Derivative Claims
Next, Surowiecki argues the trial court erred by dismissing his derivative
claims for lack of standing. We disagree. In Mohandessi v. Urban Venture LLC,
12 Wn. App. 2d 625, 459 P.3d 407 (2020), as amended on reconsideration, 2020
WL 3496564, at *7-8 (June 29, 2020), we concluded that individual condominium
association members do not have derivative standing. In that case, the
condominium association of a mixed use building was incorporated under the
WNCA. Id. at *1, *7. Individual members of the association brought derivative
claims on behalf of the association. Id. at *3. This court held that the WNCA does
10
Because the trial court applied the incorrect standard to HICA’s motion for summary judgment,
we do not address the admissibility of any of the evidence Surowiecki presented. Admissibility of
this evidence needs to be re-evaluated in light of the proper legal test.
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No. 79264-4-I/24
not authorize members to bring derivative actions on behalf of the nonprofit
corporation against third parties. Id. at *8; see also Lundberg v. Coleman, 115 Wn.
App. 172, 176-78, 60 P.3d 595 (2002) (similarly concluding no common law right
for derivative actions on behalf of nonprofit corporations exists), review denied,
150 Wn.2d 1010, 79 P.3d 446 (2003). Mohandessi and Lundberg are dispositive
of this claim.
D. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Next, Surowiecki argues the trial court erred in dismissing his breach of
fiduciary duty claim against HICA. He contends he presented evidence that HICA
breached this duty by failing to govern the association “in a fiscally responsible
manner.” But Surowiecki did not assert a breach of fiduciary duty claim against
HICA.
In Surowiecki’s Third Amended Complaint, his first cause of action sought
a declaratory judgment that HICA’s governing documents require it to operate Hat
Island in a “fiscally responsible manner.” And he alleged HICA failed to comply
with this provision of the governing documents. He did not allege that this
noncompliance violated a fiduciary duty owed to him.
In his second cause of action, 11 Surowiecki alleged the individual board
members—not HICA—breached fiduciary duties owed to HICA in their
11
Surowiecki’s fiduciary duty claim specifically stated:
By the virtue of defendant Motson’s position as Manager, and other
Individual Defendants’ positions on the Board of Trustees . . . , the Defendants
owe or owed statutory and common law duties to all lot owners, including the duty
to act as a fiduciary in regard to the Association’s affairs and to manage the
Association in a fair, just, and equitable manner; to act in furtherance of the best
interests of Association and its members; and to refrain from abusing any position
of control.
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No. 79264-4-I/25
management of the association. 12 But he did not allege HICA, the corporate entity,
did so.
The closest Surowiecki came to asserting a fiduciary duty claim against
HICA was his sixth cause of action for corporate waste. He alleged that HICA had
misused and wasted corporate assets through mismanaging the marina
improvement projects, purchasing a ferry that needs constant significant repairs,
failing to settle a claim with the Puget Sound Yacht Club (PSYC), and conducting
an illegal recall election in 2014.
The final judgment describes the disposition of the sixth cause of action:
6. Sixth Claim: Corporate Waste
• Plaintiffs’ claims for Corporate Waste related to HICA’s charging of
assessments were dismissed on partial summary judgment by order
dated June 14, 2018.
• Plaintiffs’ claims for Corporate Waste related to the [PSYC]
Settlement were dismissed on partial summary judgment by order
dated June 27, 2017.
• Plaintiffs’ claims for Corporate Waste related to the 2014 Recall
Election were dismissed on partial summary judgment by order
dated June 27, 2017.
Surowiecki did not appeal the June 27, 2017 orders relating to the PSYC
settlement or the 2014 recall election. Although there is no mention in the final
By virtue of the acts and conduct alleged herein, Defendants have
breached their fiduciary duties of care, loyalty, and accountability to the
Association and its members.
The trial court dismissed this claim in its June 14, 2018 order granting Motson’s partial motion for
summary judgment. As previously discussed, Surowiecki abandoned his appeal relating to this
order. See supra note 1.
12
Even assuming Surowiecki meant to challenge the individual defendants’ alleged breach of
fiduciary duty, he failed to clearly address this claim in his opening brief. He inconsistently
referenced HICA’s board and HICA as an entity, but his arguments focused solely on HICA.
Furthermore, he failed to preserve this claim because in the September 29, 2017 order voluntarily
dismissing the individual defendants, he reserved only his rights to appeal derivative claims and
claims previously dismissed on summary judgment. The trial court did not dismiss the breach of
fiduciary duty claim on summary judgment until almost nine months later.
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No. 79264-4-I/26
judgment regarding Surowiecki’s claim that HICA committed corporate waste by
mismanaging the marina projects, the trial court dismissed Surowiecki’s claim that
he was fraudulently induced into settling his claim regarding the marina project
special assessments, concluding he presented no proof of any fraud. Surowiecki
did not appeal this order either. And the final judgment provides that Surowiecki
voluntarily dismissed all claims not previously dismissed. We conclude that
Surowiecki did not allege below that HICA breached any fiduciary duties owing to
its members and that he has not preserved for appeal any claim of corporate
waste.
E. Attorney Fee Award
Finally, Surowiecki challenges the attorney fees awarded to HICA and
Motson. Because we reverse and remand the trial court’s summary judgment
ruling on Surowiecki’s assessment claim against HICA, we necessarily vacate the
association’s attorney fees award—with the exception of the award based on the
2012 settlement agreement and Surowiecki’s failed fraudulent inducement claim.
We affirm the fee award in favor of Motson.
“Washington follows the American rule ‘that attorney fees are not
recoverable by the prevailing party as costs of litigation unless the recovery of such
fees is permitted by contract, statute, or some recognized ground in equity.’”
Panorama Vill. Condo. Owners Ass’n Bd. of Dirs. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 144 Wn.2d
130, 143, 26 P.3d 910 (2001) (quoting McGreevy v. Or. Mut. Ins. Co., 128 Wn.2d
26, 35 n.8, 904 P.2d 731 (1995)). We apply a two-part review of attorney fee
awards—(1) a de novo review of whether there is a legal basis in contract, statute,
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No. 79264-4-I/27
or equity, and (2) an abuse of discretion review as to the reasonableness of the
attorney fee award. Gander v. Yeager, 167 Wn. App. 638, 647, 282 P.3d 1100
(2012).
The trial court based its award to HICA of $13,694 against Surowiecki on
the 2012 settlement agreement between Surowiecki and HICA. “A prevailing party
may recover attorney fees pursuant to a contractual fee-shifting provision if the
action involves claims ‘on the contract.’” Boyd v. Sunflower Props., LLC, 197 Wn.
App. 137, 150, 389 P.3d 626 (2016) (quoting Hemenway v. Miller, 116 Wn.2d 725,
742-43, 807 P.2d 863 (1991)). An action is on a contract if it arose out of the
contract and the contract is central to the dispute. Burns v. McClinton, 135 Wn.
App. 285, 309-10, 143 P.3d 630 (2006).
Surowiecki’s eighth claim for fraud in the inducement alleged that the 2012
settlement was void because HICA, Motson, and other defendants “intentionally
misrepresented or omitted material facts concerning the marina projects, including
its anticipated costs, to induce” Surowiecki to enter into a settlement agreement in
April 2012. He sought a judicial determination that the agreement was void based
on this alleged fraudulent inducement.
HICA succeeded in having this claim dismissed on summary judgment,
arguing statements regarding anticipated costs of the marina project were not
actionable statements of fact and Surowiecki did not reasonably rely on these
statements. The court concluded:
Surowiecki is on record as being openly in opposition to the marina
improvement project. This is [an] undisputed material fact. The
court’s view is that in order to viably maintain any sort of fraud or
misrepresentation cause of action[,] [Surowiecki] would have had to
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No. 79264-4-I/28
rely on HICA’s representations and voted or acted in support to his
detriment. This never happened.
It concluded that any expressions of opinion regarding future costs or benefits of
the marina were not actionable and that Surowiecki failed to present evidence that
he ever actually relied on any of HICA’s marina cost estimates. The court
dismissed Surowiecki’s fraudulent inducement claim on these grounds, and
Surowiecki has not appealed the order dismissing this claim.
Paragraph 12 of the 2012 settlement stated:
The non-prevailing party in any judicial proceeding to enforce any of
the provisions or rights under or pursuant to this Agreement,
including without limitation any claim for declaratory relief or
rescission, shall be fully responsible for and pay the prevailing
Party’s reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses, including,
without limitation, those incurred preliminary to the institution of any
such action or proceeding and with respect to any appeal arising
therefrom, which attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses awarded
hereunder shall be included as a part of any ruling, award, or
judgment.
We conclude the trial court did not err in awarding HICA attorney fees
incurred in enforcing its rights under the 2012 settlement agreement. First, the
fraudulent inducement claim “arose out of the contract.” Surowiecki sought to
nullify the promises he made to HICA in that agreement.
Second, the contract was central to the dispute. HICA had to bring its
summary judgment motion to enforce its rights under the agreement. Surowiecki
argues that because the 2012 settlement agreement related to special
assessments for the marina project, the agreement is inapplicable to determining
the validity of the annual operating assessments. This argument, of course,
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No. 79264-4-I/29
ignores Surowiecki’s eighth claim, in which he sought a determination that the
2012 agreement was void.
Surowiecki also argues that the lawsuit was not one “to enforce any
provisions or rights under or pursuant to [the 2012] [a]greement.” We disagree.
The clause refers to “judicial proceeding,” not to a particular lawsuit. Surowiecki
brought a lawsuit seeking to invalidate the entire agreement; HICA initiated a
judicial proceeding to enforce its rights under the agreement by moving for
summary judgment on the fraudulent inducement claim. Thus, we affirm the trial
court’s attorney fee award of $13,694 in favor of HICA because Surowiecki did not
appeal the order dismissing his eighth cause of action to invalidate the 2012
settlement agreement.
We also affirm the trial court’s award of $240,923.65 in favor of Motson
against Surowiecki, Britten, and the Borromeos, jointly and severally. The trial
court based its fee award to Motson under RCW 64.38.050, which gives the trial
court the discretion to award reasonable attorney fees to the prevailing party.
Surowiecki did not explain how awarding fees to Motson constituted an abuse of
discretion. Even if Surowiecki had not abandoned his appeal as to Motson, he
specifically argued below that Motson owed him a fiduciary duty under chapter
64.38 RCW. He cannot now argue that there is no legal basis for an attorney fee
award pursuant to RCW 64.38.050 when he specifically invoked that chapter
against Motson as the basis for his claim against him. We therefore affirm the fee
award to Motson.
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No. 79264-4-I/30
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court’s dismissal of Surowiecki’s claims with the
exception of his claim that HICA has unreasonably determined that a uniform, per
lot assessment is equitable. We vacate the attorney fee award, except as to the
$13,694.00 the trial court awarded to HICA solely against Surowiecki pursuant to
the 2012 settlement agreement and as to the $240,923.65 awarded to Motson
against Surowiecki, Britten, and the Borromeos, jointly and severally.
Because HICA is not the prevailing party on appeal, we deny its request for
attorney fees. Surowiecki’s request for costs is granted subject to his submission
of a cost bill pursuant to RAP 14.4. Motson’s request for costs is denied.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
WE CONCUR:
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