Filed
Washington State
Court of Appeals
Division Two
September 14, 2021
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION II
SERPANOK CONSTRUCTION, INC., a No. 54413-0-II
Washington corporation, (consolidated with No. 54833-0-II)
Respondent,
v.
POINT RUSTON, LLC, a Washington limited
liability company; POINT RUSTON PHASE II,
LLC, a Washington limited liability company;
CENTURY CONDOMINIUMS, LLC, a
Washington limited liability company; and
MICHAEL A. COHEN,† an individual,
Appellants,
CHICAGO TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY, a foreign corporation; ADDISON
CONSTRUCTION SUPPLY, INC., a
Washington corporation; JM CORP & SON, PART PUBLISHED OPINION
INC., a Washington corporation; GLACIER
NORTHWEST, INC. d/b/a CALPORTLAND,
a Washington corporation; RICHARD
MATZEN and EDELGARD MATZEN,
husband and wife, and the marital community
comprised thereof; C2 STRATEGIES, LLC, a
Washington limited liability company;
STACEY POLAND and SHERI POLAND, a
married couple; USAA FEDERAL SAVINGS
BANK, a federal savings association; FIRST
AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY, a foreign corporation;
INTERNATIONAL FIDELITY INSURANCE
COMPANY, a foreign corporation; STONER
ELECTRIC, INC., a foreign corporation,
Defendants.
†
Michael Cohen passed away on December 6, 2020.
Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
GLASGOW, A.C.J.––Point Ruston LLC, Point Ruston Phase II LLC (Phase II), and Century
Condominiums (hereinafter collectively referred to as Point Ruston parties) were separate but
related real estate companies developing the Point Ruston area in Pierce County. Serpanok
Construction Inc. was a concrete and steel construction subcontractor on the project.
Phase II and Century fell behind in payments to Serpanok. Point Ruston LLC then
guaranteed a portion of Phase II and Century’s debt to induce Serpanok to keep working. Serpanok
also filed a mechanic’s lien on a parking garage it was constructing.
Serpanok then sued the Point Ruston parties for breach of contract due to failure to pay.
An arbitrator awarded Serpanok over $4.6 million (before attorney fees and interest). The arbitrator
limited the total recovery from all defendants to the total amount due under the subcontracts and
granted Serpanok’s request to foreclose on the garage mechanic’s lien. The arbitrator collectively
awarded the Point Ruston parties $1.2 million (before attorney fees and interest), comprised of a
sanctions award and recovery for its successful counterclaims against Serpanok.
The trial court confirmed the arbitration award, entering a total judgment of approximately
$5.2 million (including prejudgment interest) against the three Point Ruston parties, who were
jointly and severally liable. Serpanok then foreclosed on its mechanic’s lien and purchased the
garage at the sheriff’s sale with a credit bid of $3.4 million. The trial court adhered to the
arbitrator’s determination that the total payment from all Point Ruston parties could not exceed the
$5.2 million owed under the subcontracts plus interest and fees. The trial court confirmed the
foreclosure sale, determined that the sale proceeds fully satisfied the mechanic’s lien, and reduced
the total underlying debt, as well as Point Ruston LLC’s guaranty obligation, to a remaining
balance of $1.8 million.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
The Point Ruston parties appeal the arbitration award and related orders. The Point Ruston
parties also appeal the postjudgment allocation of foreclosure sale proceeds, claiming the trial
court erred by not subtracting the $3.4 million foreclosure sale proceeds from Point Ruston LLC’s
guaranty and releasing Point Ruston LLC entirely from its obligations as a guarantor. Both the
Point Ruston parties and Serpanok request attorney fees on appeal.
In the published portion of this opinion, we affirm the allocation of foreclosure sale
proceeds. Point Ruston LLC remains a secondary obligor liable for the remaining $1.8 million
balance on the underlying debt. In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we affirm the
underlying arbitration award and reject the Point Ruston parties’ other claims. Therefore, we affirm
both the arbitration award, as well as the trial court’s allocation of foreclosure proceeds and
judgment. We grant Serpanok’s request for attorney fees on appeal.
FACTS
A. Background
The Point Ruston parties constructed apartment buildings, condominiums, retail
businesses, a movie theater, a parking garage, and other structures on the site of the former Asarco
copper smelter. Michael Cohen was the project manager. Larry Hutchinson was the construction
manager and oversaw the Point Ruston projects from 2013 to 2015. Hutchinson negotiated
subcontracts, approved change orders, was authorized to “exercise discretion and independent
judgment,” and owed the Point Ruston parties fiduciary duties. Clerk’s Papers (CP (I))1 at 1472.
1
The clerk’s papers in cause no. 54413-0-II are referred to as “CP (I).” The clerk’s papers in cause
no. 54833-0-II are referred to as “CP (II).”
3
Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
In 2014, Phase II and Serpanok signed subcontracts for the movie theater (Building 1A)
and the parking garage.2 Both subcontracts had arbitration clauses. Shortly after the signing of the
Building 1A subcontract, title of that building was transferred to Century, making it the real party
in interest. Century was not a party to the garage subcontract, and Point Ruston LLC was not a
party to either subcontract.
B. Kickbacks, Change Orders, and Promissory Notes
From 2013 to 2015, Serpanok paid Hutchinson about $80,000 in kickbacks in exchange
for information that would assist Serpanok in obtaining contract awards and change order decisions
favorable to Serpanok. The Point Ruston parties learned of Hutchinson’s misconduct in November
2015, investigated possible claims against Hutchinson and Serpanok, and fired Hutchinson. Phase
II nonetheless executed additional change orders with Serpanok after terminating Hutchinson.
Phase II also “insist[ed] that Serpanok continue to perform under the subcontracts, [and] accept[ed]
the valuable work . . . by Serpanok.” CP (I) at 2746. Serpanok completed all of its “work for
competitive prices (or better).” CP (I) at 2766. And even after discovering the misconduct between
Serpanok and Hutchinson, Cohen praised Serpanok for the speed and quality of its work.
Phase II continued to fall behind in payments, owing more than $2 million for Serpanok’s
work on the garage by spring 2015. To persuade Serpanok to continue working, Point Ruston LLC
(a separate entity from Point Ruston Phase II, the entity directly contracting with Serpanok), issued
two promissory notes to Serpanok guaranteeing the amounts due under the subcontracts. Serpanok
2
When reviewing an arbitrator’s award, courts are “bound by the arbitrator’s findings of fact.”
Int’l Union of Operating Eng’rs, Local 286 v. Port of Seattle, 176 Wn.2d 712, 724, 295 P.3d 736
(2013). As a result, our recitation of the facts tracks the arbitrator’s findings.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
also filed a mechanic’s lien on the garage worth approximately the amount it was owed under the
garage subcontract.
Serpanok stopped working on the garage in May 2016 because the Point Ruston parties
refused to execute a change order authorizing additional work. Serpanok left behind some
construction equipment at the site that could not be safely removed. The equipment was later
returned to Serpanok.
C. Complaint, Counterclaims, and Affirmative Defenses
In late 2016, Serpanok sued the Point Ruston parties and Cohen, alleging that Phase II
breached the Building 1A and garage subcontracts by failing to fully pay Serpanok for its work.
Serpanok also brought a conversion claim against Phase II and Cohen, claiming they improperly
possessed and refused to return Serpanok’s construction equipment. Additionally, Serpanok
sought foreclosure of the mechanic’s lien on the garage.
In the answer, the Point Ruston parties denied all of Serpanok’s claims and asserted
affirmative defenses and counterclaims, including a fraud counterclaim, an affirmative defense of
illegality, and other counterclaims alleging Serpanok aided and abetted Hutchinson in breaching
his fiduciary duties, breached the duty of good faith and fair dealing, and violated Washington
public policy. Concerning the fraud counterclaim, the Point Ruston parties argued that “they were
the victims of a fraud perpetrated by [Serpanok] and Mr. Larry Hutchinson” in which “Serpanok
made secret and improper payments to Mr. Hutchinson in return for his assistance” and they
“reasonably relied on the fraud and suffered damages.” CP (I) at 2736-37. The illegality defense
alleged the subcontracts, change orders, and notes were unenforceable because they were the
product of the illegal kickback scheme between Serpanok and Hutchinson. The Point Ruston
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
parties also sought disgorgement of Serpanok’s profits, an award equal to the amount of the
kickback payments and “the compensation . . . paid to Mr. Hutchinson,” and a “refund [of] all of
the payments made under the Notes.” CP (I) at 2737.
The Point Ruston parties successfully moved to compel arbitration under the subcontracts.
Although Cohen did not sign the subcontracts, the trial court found he was subject to the arbitration
clauses because he was the Point Ruston parties’ agent.
D. Arbitration Hearing and Interim Award
During the arbitration hearing, Serpanok’s owner, Igor Kunitsa, misinformed all counsel
and the arbitrator about the information captured in Serpanok’s bookkeeping records regarding the
kickbacks. It became clear that he had not provided complete records in response to discovery
requests. Kunitsa then tried to alter records to conceal damaging information about the kickback
payments to Hutchinson.
The arbitrator entered an interim decision setting forth “the principal reasons for the relief
awarded.” CP (I) at 362. The arbitrator deemed the kickback scheme “deplorable,” CP (I) at 365,
and found that Serpanok aided and abetted Hutchinson’s breach of his fiduciary duties, but
concluded, “The evidence presented did not prove by ‘clear, cogent, and convincing evidence’ that
the two subcontracts were fraudulently induced” or that fraud occurred later, during the “change
order/performance phases of the two subcontracts, either before or after Mr. Hutchinson’s
termination,” CP (I) at 362. The Point Ruston parties failed to meet the elements of fraud because
“[t]he evidence did not establish that the terms of the two Serpanok subcontracts, as originally
executed, damaged [them] by requiring them to pay a higher price for the specified work than they
could have obtained by contracting with a different subcontractor.” CP (I) at 363. The arbitrator
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
found there was no “non-speculative” evidence that the Point Ruston parties had any “then-
available options with other willing contractors to do the specified work for less.” Id.
The arbitrator also found that the two promissory notes were “intended to persuade
Serpanok to keep working despite the fact that payments to Serpanok at the time under the
subcontracts were massively late (over $2 million in arrears on each subcontract at the time Note
2 was issued).” CP (I) at 373. Because “the Notes . . . were issued as guaranties,” obligating Point
Ruston LLC to pay the amounts due under the subcontracts if Phase II and Century failed to do so,
the arbitrator concluded that “the ‘economic reality’ of the Notes transactions was that they were
not intended as investments by the parties but rather were entered into as ancillary components of
ordinary ‘commercial transactions’ - i.e., were intended to assure complete payment of
construction subcontract invoices already due to the Subcontractor.” Id. (emphasis omitted).
The arbitrator concluded that Serpanok had established its breach of contract claims arising
from the subcontracts and notes. The arbitrator rejected Serpanok’s tortious conversion claim
because Phase II and Cohen only temporarily possessed the construction equipment until it could
be safely removed.
The arbitrator rejected the Point Ruston parties’ affirmative defenses and all but two
counterclaims. The arbitrator did not find that Serpanok breached its duty of good faith and fair
dealing because, based on the totality of the evidence presented, the Point Ruston parties failed to
establish that the alleged breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing proximately caused them
any recoverable damages with respect to the work provided under the subcontracts. The arbitrator
rejected the Point Ruston parties’ public policy tort counterclaim primarily because “it has not
7
Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
been clearly established that Washington law recognizes the existence of the ‘public policy torts’
on which this counterclaim depends.” CP (I) at 378.
The arbitrator did find, however, that the Point Ruston parties prevailed on two
counterclaims—the claim that Serpanok aided and abetted Hutchinson’s breach of his fiduciary
duties and the claim based on a lien improperly filed on Building 1A. The arbitrator also found
that “Kunitsa engaged in an improper act of spoliation of evidence and related discovery abuse,”
entitling the Point Ruston parties to a sanctions award. CP (I) at 379.
E. The Point Ruston Parties’ Motion for Reconsideration and Final Arbitration Award
The Point Ruston parties filed a motion for reconsideration, which the arbitrator denied in
a final award that incorporated and copied much of the interim award verbatim. In particular, the
Point Ruston parties asserted the interim award erroneously rejected its illegality defense and
should have instead concluded that the subcontracts could not be enforced because they violated
public policy.
The arbitrator again denied the Point Ruston parties’ illegality affirmative defense because
they “did not establish that [they] overpaid for the two subcontracts, or the change orders, or the
Notes.” CP (I) at 2766. The arbitrator reasoned that the Point Ruston parties “failed to prove that
[Serpanok’s and Hutchinson’s] misconduct . . . fraudulently induced or otherwise caused the
parties to enter” any of the agreements, and “similarly failed to prove that the misconduct
proximately caused actionable contract overpayments, improper work, or the like.” CP (I) at 2765.
The arbitrator held, “The damages . . . on the aiding and abetting counterclaim must be limited to
the damages actually proven to have been caused by that misconduct, all of which were confined
to Mr. Hutchinson’s employment relationship with his employer.” Id.
8
Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
The arbitrator separately concluded that declining to enforce the contracts entirely would
have been “neither just nor equitable,” and the arbitral rules the parties agreed to authorized him
to “‘grant any remedy or relief that the arbitrator deems just and equitable and within the scope of
the agreement of the parties.’” CP (I) at 2767 (quoting Am. Arbitration Ass’n, Commercial
Arbitration Rules and Mediation Procedures R-47(a) (Oct. 1, 2013), https://adr.org/sites/
default/files/CommercialRules_Web-Final.pdf. (Rule R-47(a)). The arbitrator observed that the
Point Ruston parties “aggressively and repeatedly” insisted that Serpanok finish construction even
after discovering Hutchinson’s misconduct, so it would be unfair to permit the Point Ruston parties
“to escape their duty to pay for millions of dollars worth of valuable work done on their buildings
in accordance with the parties’ contracts.” CP (I) at 2766.
Under the final arbitration award, Serpanok received a total award of approximately $4.6
million, based on the subcontracts, the guaranty/notes, and the garage mechanic’s lien. For the
subcontract-based awards, Serpanok received $4,646,062 (comprised of $3,426,303 against Phase
II under the garage subcontract and $1,219,759 against Century and Phase II under the Building
1A subcontract). For the guaranty/notes awards, Serpanok received a total of $2,184,039 against
Point Ruston LLC (comprised of $895,311 under Note 2 and $1,288,728 under Note 3). And for
the garage mechanic’s lien award, Serpanok was awarded $3,178,179 against Phase II.
The guaranty/notes and the lien provided alternative avenues for recovery, so the arbitrator
clarified that Serpanok’s total relief under all the awards could not exceed the approximately $4.6
million it was owed under the two subcontracts, plus attorney fees and costs, arbitration expenses,
and postjudgment interest.
9
Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
The arbitrator also awarded damages to the Point Ruston parties on three counterclaims.
Century received $481,870 on the improper lien counterclaim. Century, Phase II, and Point Ruston
LLC collectively received $311,894 for the aiding and abetting counterclaim award. And Century,
Phase II, Point Ruston LLC, and Cohen collectively received a $500,000 sanctions award based
on Kunitsa’s misconduct during the arbitration hearing. The total award in favor of the Point
Ruston parties was $1,293,764.
The arbitrator denied Cohen’s request for attorney fees, although he prevailed on the
conversion tort claim asserted against him and Phase II. The arbitrator concluded that Cohen could
not enforce the subcontracts’ attorney fee provisions to recover attorney fees on this claim because
he never signed the subcontracts, and, alternatively, he was not the substantially prevailing party
on the claims as a whole.
F. Trial Court’s Confirmation of the Arbitration Award and Final Judgment
The Point Ruston parties sought to vacate the arbitrator’s award in superior court, and
Serpanok asked the trial court to confirm the award. The trial court confirmed the award, denying
the motion to vacate. The trial court exercised its discretion under RCW 4.56.060 to enter a setoff
award, reducing the amount owed to Serpanok by the amount owed to the Point Ruston parties.
Under Serpanok’s setoff analysis, the maximum subcontract debt owed by Phase II and Century,
as well as the maximum guaranty provided by Point Ruston LLC under the notes, was reduced by
the amount Serpanok owed the Point Ruston parties, including the $500,000 sanction that had been
awarded jointly to the Point Ruston parties.
10
Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
After subtracting amounts due to the Point Ruston parties under the setoff and then adding
interest accrued to date, the trial court entered an amended final judgment with the following
awards:
Subcontract-based judgment
$5,003,370.09 against Phase II under garage and Building 1A subcontracts (comprised
of $2,937,061.61 principal judgment after setoff + $709,031.68 in attorney fees
and costs + $1,357,276.80 in prejudgment interest)
$732,444.01 of this amount was jointly owed by Century under the Building 1A
subcontract (comprised of $700,214.60 principal judgment after setoff +
$32,229.40 in prejudgment interest)
Total due under subcontracts after setoff, attorney fees, costs, and interest: $5,003,370.09
Guaranty/notes-based judgment
$2,470,449.69 against Point Ruston LLC (comprised of $2,105,769.29 in principal after
setoff and attorney fees/costs + $364,680.40 in prejudgment interest)
Garage mechanic’s lien
$3,281,135.00 against Phase II (comprised of $2,236,847.00 in principal + $1,044,288.00
in prejudgment interest)
Total award in favor of Serpanok: $5,003,370.09 + $63,232.15 in attorney fees and costs for
judgment entry proceedings.
Following the arbitrator’s mandate, the final judgment capped Serpanok’s total recovery at
the amount due under the subcontracts, which was then $5,003,370.09, plus postjudgment interest,
which would accrue as described in the order. The trial court awarded Serpanok an additional
$63,232.15 in attorney fees for postjudgment litigation. The Point Ruston parties were jointly and
severally liable for the award.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
Serpanok proceeded to foreclose on the mechanic’s lien. Then in July 2020, Serpanok
purchased the garage at a sheriff’s sale for a credit bid of $3.4 million. The trial court confirmed
the sale.3
At the time of the sheriff’s sale, the judgment balances had further increased to reflect
additional postjudgment interest and the total award in favor of Serpanok had increased to
$5,194,360.36. The total amount guaranteed under the notes was $2,602,067.40.
The Point Ruston parties then moved to apply the foreclosure sale proceeds to ensure that
“nothing further is owed by Point Ruston, LLC [the party that had provided the guaranty,] which
is entitled to a satisfaction of judgment.” CP (II) at 3305. The Point Ruston parties argued, “[T]he
Court must ensure that the proceeds of the Garage foreclosure are applied against the amounts
awarded under the Garage subcontract (owed by [Phase II]) and the Notes (owed by Point Ruston,
LLC).” CP (II) at 3308. The Point Ruston parties proposed that the approximately $3.4 million
foreclosure sale proceeds be applied to fully satisfy Point Ruston LLC’s approximately $2.6
million guaranty.
Serpanok countered that the $3.4 million in foreclosure sale proceeds should be applied to
reduce the overall debt owed by Phase II under the subcontracts from around $5.2 million to a
balance of approximately $1.8 million. Serpanok contended that Point Ruston LLC’s obligation as
3
To the extent the Point Ruston parties sought a ruling from this court before June 19, 2021, when
Phase II’s redemption rights related to this sale were set to expire, this request was impossible to
honor because one of these now-consolidated cases was set for oral argument on June 29, 2021.
The Point Ruston parties did not file a motion to accelerate either case before or after oral argument
was set. To the extent the Point Ruston parties intended the request in its brief to be a motion to
accelerate, a motion to accelerate is not a dispositive motion under RAP 10.4(d), so it cannot be
brought in a brief. See Money Mailer, LLC v. Brewer, 194 Wn.2d 111, 130, 449 P.3d 258 (2019)
(citing RAP 17.4(d), which is identical to RAP 10.4(d)).
12
Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
a guarantor would therefore be reduced to equal the $1.8 million subcontract balance, but not
eliminated.
The trial court denied the Point Ruston parties’ motion, adopted Serpanok’s position that
the foreclosure sale reduced Phase II’s judgment on the mechanic’s lien to zero, and reduced the
judgment against the Point Ruston parties to the difference between the maximum award and the
value of the foreclosure sale proceeds, about $1.8 million. After applying the garage foreclosure
sale proceeds, the trial court determined that the obligations of the various Point Ruston parties
were as follows:
Subcontract-based judgment
$1,759,216.87 against Phase II ($5,194,360.36 - $3,435,143.49)
$821,740.73 of this amount was jointly owed by Century on the Building 1A subcontract
Total still owed under the subcontracts: $1,759,216.87
Guaranty/notes-based judgment against Point Ruston LLC
$1,759,216.87
Garage mechanic’s lien claim (against Phase II)
$0
Total remaining balance against the Point Ruston parties: $1,759,216.87.
The Point Ruston parties appeal the trial court’s decision to affirm the arbitrator’s award,
as well as the trial court’s denial of its motion to discharge the entirety of Point Ruston LLC’s debt
as a guarantor under the notes.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
ANALYSIS
A. Guaranties Generally
A guaranty “arises when one assumes an obligation to pay the debt of another.” Tr. of
Strand v. Wel-Co Grp. Inc., 120 Wn. App. 828, 836, 86 P.3d 818 (2004); see also RESTATEMENT
(THIRD) OF SURETYSHIP & GUAR. § 1 cmt. b (AM. LAW INST. 1996). “[T]he secondary obligation .
. . protect[s] the obligee against the actual or potential nonperformance of the underlying obligation
by giving the obligee recourse against the secondary obligor.” RESTATEMENT § 1 cmt. h.
A secondary obligor does not have to guarantee the full amount of the principal obligor’s
debt. Id. at cmt. k. “The secondary obligation can be for a smaller amount or of a different
character” so long as the arrangement “protect[s] the obligee against the actual or potential
nonperformance of the underlying obligation by giving the obligee recourse against the secondary
obligor.” Id. A guarantor is discharged from liability “to the extent the borrower satisfies the
underlying obligation. This is because the creditor has the right to only one performance.” Strand,
120 Wn. App. at 836-37; see also RESTATEMENT §§ 1(1)(b), 19(a) & cmt. a.
Taken together, these general principles emphasize that the purpose of a guaranty is to
ensure the creditor is protected from nonperformance of the principal obligor.
B. Trial Court’s Denial of the Motion for Discharge of Point Ruston LLC
The Point Ruston parties contend the trial court should have found that the foreclosure sale
proceeds fully satisfied Point Ruston LLC’s guaranty obligations to Serpanok. We disagree.
1. Background on foreclosure sale proceeds and guarantor liability
While there are no Washington cases directly on point, case law from other jurisdictions
holds that where foreclosure sale proceeds reduce but do not eliminate the underlying debt, the
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
guarantor remains obligated to the extent of the remaining debt, up to the maximum of the
guaranty, until the principal obligor discharges the entirety of its debt.
In Ralston-Purina Co. v. Bertie, a poultry farm, Northwestern Poultry Growers, entered
into a contract with a feed provider, Purina, while John and Irene Bertie provided “a personal
guaranty . . . promising [to pay] any liabilities to Purina incurred by Northwestern” up to $95,000.
541 F.2d 1363, 1364 (9th Cir. 1976). Northwestern declared bankruptcy and “was unable to pay
$141,597[] of its debt to Purina.” Id. Purina recouped a portion of its debt through a sale of
Northwestern’s inventory and other collateral, but Northwestern still owed approximately
$78,000. Id. at 1365. A jury found that, as guarantors, the Berties were thus liable for the $78,000
deficiency. Id.
On appeal, the Berties argued that the $95,000 cap on their guaranty obligation “limited
the total amount of debt which Purina could extend to Northwestern and still remain within the
total coverage of the Berties’ guaranty.” Id. at 1365. The Berties asserted that “the amount realized
from the collateral should . . . have been subtracted from $95,000 not from $141,597[] to determine
the extent of their liability for Northwestern’s remaining debt to Purina.” Id. The Ninth Circuit
rejected this argument, reasoning that the guaranty agreement “can only reasonably be construed
to limit the guarantors’ potential liability to $95,000. The limitation is to the guarantors’ agreement
and in no way purports to limit or affect the underlying obligations of the customer.” Id. Thus,
Ralston-Purina supports Serpanok’s argument that a guarantor remains liable until the last dollars
owed are paid, up to the total amount that the guarantor has chosen to guaranty.
In Southern Bank & Trust Co. v. Harley, 292 S.C. 340, 341, 343, 356 S.E.2d 410 (Ct. App.
1987), the South Carolina Court of Appeals relied on Ralston-Purina to reject an argument almost
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
identical to the one presented here. In Harley, a bank lent money to an investment company. Id. at
341. Three separate guarantors guaranteed the loan up to $775,000. Id. The investment company
also secured its debt with a real estate mortgage. Id. The investment company defaulted, and the
bank foreclosed on the mortgage. Id. at 342. The foreclosure sale plus an additional payment netted
$762,416 in proceeds, which was less than the $790,556 owed by the investment company to the
bank. Id. at 341-42. The bank sued the guarantors for the deficiency. Id. at 342.
The court subtracted the amount recovered through the foreclosure sale “from the total
amount owed by the debtor, not from the contractual limit on the guaranty.” Id. at 343 (emphasis
added). The court explained that “[r]equiring the Guarantors to pay this sum [would] not impose
on them a liability greater than they agreed to assume” and would not “result in a double recovery
to Southern” because “[i]f the Guarantors pay the full amount of the deficiency, the debt is not
being paid twice; it is merely being paid in full.” Id. at 342-43.
By contrast, in BankEast v. Michalenoick, 138 N.H. 367, 370-71, 639 A.2d 272 (1994),
foreclosure sale proceeds extinguished a guarantor’s liability where the guaranty agreement
specifically provided, “‘This guarantee shall be reduced to the extent of any principal pay[]down
on the Obligations’” and the guaranty applied only to the first $100,000 of principal to be paid on
the loan. Because the guaranty did “not specify the source of the pay[]down required to reduce the
$100,000 and release the guarantor, or that foreclosure proceeds might be otherwise applied than
to the front end of the note’s obligations,” the court held that “the guarantee requires reduction by
the application of the foreclosure proceeds.” Id. at 371.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
Because the parties do not contest the underlying facts, the allocation of foreclosure sale
proceeds here is a question of law that we review de novo. See In re Tr’s Sale of Real Prop. of
Upton, 102 Wn. App. 220, 222-23, 6 P.3d 1231 (2000).
2. The trial court correctly allocated the foreclosure sale proceeds
We find Ralston-Purina and Harley persuasive and hold that the trial court properly
subtracted the amount of foreclosure sale proceeds from the underlying debt, rather than from the
amount of Point Ruston LLC’s guaranty. See Ralston-Purina, 541 F.2d at 1365; Harley, 292 S.C.
at 343. Unlike in BankEast, where the guaranty agreement expressly stated that the guaranty was
subject to a pay down provision, there is no evidence that Point Ruston LLC guaranteed only the
first portion of any principal payment. Point Ruston LLC therefore remained obligated as a
guarantor for the deficiency until it is paid, subject to the maximum total amount Point Ruston
LLC agreed to pay. As a result, Point Ruston LLC was obligated to pay the amount that remained
after subtracting the foreclosure sale proceeds from the underlying debt.
As Serpanok has explained, the Point Ruston parties “would have this Court hold that if
John owes $10, and Mary has guaranteed $5 of John’s debt, then John’s $6 payment discharges
Mary’s guaranty rather than being reduced to $4. That is not how a guaranty works.” Br. of Resp’t
(cause no. 54833-0-II) at 19. Rather, we agree with Serpanok that
nothing in our law, or in equity[,] . . . authorizes a guarantor of a partially secured
debt and an unsecured debt to mandate that proceeds from collateral sale on the
partially secured debt be applied to discharge its guaranty on unsecured debts. If it
were allowed to do so, it would put a guarantor in control of applying payments by
others, and turn a guaranty from being a guaranty of the last dollars owed by a
debtor, to a guaranty limited to the first dollars paid.
Id. at 20. We decline to adopt a “first dollars paid” approach to a guaranty unless the instrument,
here the promissory note, contains an express agreement to that effect. The Point Ruston parties
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
point to no such language in the promissory notes at issue here.
Nor do we agree with the Point Ruston parties that the trial court’s order allows Serpanok
double recovery. As Division Three noted in Strand, “the creditor has the right to only one
performance.” 120 Wn. App. at 837. The secondary obligor’s duty to perform is “discharged to
the extent the [principal obligor] satisfies the underlying obligation.” Id. at 836-37; see also
RESTATEMENT § 19(a) & cmt. a.
Here, the guaranteed obligation was not fully satisfied, and the trial court prevented double
recovery by partially reducing Point Ruston LLC’s obligation, but the trial court appropriately left
intact Point Ruston LLC’s obligation to the extent some of the guaranteed debt remained unpaid.
As in Harley, Point Ruston LLC’s continuing liability for the amount remaining on the underlying
obligation will not “result in a double recovery” for Serpanok because if Point Ruston LLC pays
“the full amount of the deficiency, the debt is not being paid twice; it is merely being paid in full.”
292 S.C. at 342-43.
We also reject the Point Ruston parties’ suggestion that the trial court erred by applying
the proceeds of the foreclosure sale “‘to a debt unrelated to the source from which such proceeds
were generated.’” Opening Br. of Appellants Point Ruston LLC, Point Ruston Phase II LLC, and
Century Condominiums LLC (cause no. 54883-0-II) (Opening Br. of Appellants) at 8 (quoting
Ellingsen v. W. Farmers Ass’n, 12 Wn. App. 423, 427, 529 P.2d 1163 (1974)). The Point Ruston
parties are correct that the proceeds of a foreclosure sale generally must be applied to the debt
secured by the foreclosed property. See Cummings v. Erickson, 116 Wash. 347, 350, 199 P. 736
(1921) (Where a creditor has secured part of their debt with a lien subject to a foreclosure sale “the
presumption must be that the proceeds will be applied to the secured debt.”); see also RCW
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
60.04.181(2). Here, the trial court properly applied the foreclosure sale proceeds to the debt owed
by Phase II under the mechanic’s lien and the garage subcontract. The Point Ruston parties offer
no evidence to support their contention that the mechanic’s lien also secured Point Ruston LLC’s
guaranty.
Finally, to the extent the Point Ruston parties argue that the trial court’s imposition of joint
and several liability on Phase II, Century, and Point Ruston LLC requires extinguishing Point
Ruston LLC’s liability entirely, we disagree. The principle of “joint and several liability” provides
that “each liable party is individually responsible for the entire obligation” but recognizes that the
obligee cannot receive more than the total relief. BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1098 (11th ed. 2019).
The combined effect of the trial court’s final judgment imposing joint and several liability and its
order confirming the foreclosure sale is that, after subtracting the $3.4 million recouped through
the foreclosure sale from the $5.2 million underlying debt, Phase II and Point Ruston LLC properly
remain jointly and severally liable for the $1.8 million balance.
In sum, the trial court properly confirmed the foreclosure sale and allocated its proceeds.
C. Judicial Estoppel
The Point Ruston parties argue that the trial court erred by not granting their motion for
allocation of the foreclosure sale proceeds under judicial estoppel because Serpanok advanced
inconsistent arguments at different stages of the proceedings. According to the Point Ruston
parties, Serpanok should have been estopped from arguing that the foreclosure sale proceeds did
not fully satisfy Point Ruston LLC’s debt because Serpanok previously acknowledged it was only
entitled to a single satisfaction of the maximum amount due under the subcontracts. The Point
Ruston parties also claim judicial estoppel on the basis that Serpanok previously argued that the
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
$500,000 sanction award in favor of the Point Ruston parties should be set off against the amount
owed by Century and asserted that “‘[f]ull payment to one of multiple co-obligees satisfies the
debt to all oblige[es].’” Opening Br. of Appellants at 13 (first alteration in original). We disagree.
Judicial estoppel precludes a party from “‘asserting one position in a court proceeding and
later seeking an advantage by taking a clearly inconsistent position.’” Miller v. Campbell, 164
Wn.2d 529, 539, 192 P.3d 352 (2008) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Arkison v. Ethan
Allen, Inc., 160 Wn.2d 535, 538, 160 P.3d 13 (2007)). “The purpose of the doctrine is ‘to preserve
respect for judicial proceedings’ and ‘to avoid inconsistency, duplicity, and . . . waste of time.’”
Id. 540 (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Arkison, 160 Wn.2d at
538). In determining whether to apply judicial estoppel, courts consider three factors:
“(1) [W]ether a party’s later position is clearly inconsistent with its earlier position;
(2) whether judicial acceptance of an inconsistent position in a later proceeding
would create the perception that either the first or the second court was misled; and
(3) whether the party seeking to assert an inconsistent position would derive an
unfair advantage or impose an unfair detriment on the opposing party if not
estopped.”
Id. at 539 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Arkison, 160 Wn.2d at 538-39). We review
the applicability of judicial estoppel for an abuse of discretion. Id. at 536.
1. Single satisfaction argument
In its arbitration brief, Serpanok said it was “entitled only to one satisfaction of [all the
awards it sought] such that a payment on one of these obligation types, for example a payment on
the Garage contract, reduces the obligations on the others (Garage lien and notes).” CP (II) at 3322.
Serpanok then requested a total award of damages equal to the damages it sought on the basis of
the subcontract based claims, “subject to one payment satisfaction.” CP (II) at 3358.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
In context, Serpanok’s previous request for damages at the arbitration hearing was entirely
consistent with its argument that the foreclosure sale proceeds should reduce the Point Ruston
parties’ total collective obligation on their remaining claims. The Point Ruston parties offer no
evidence that Serpanok ever advocated for subtracting an entire partial payment from Point Ruston
LLC’s guaranteed debt, which could reduce Serpanok’s total recovery below the total subcontract-
based award. This is not a reasonable interpretation of Serpanok’s position at any time in the
proceeding, and the trial court properly rejected this judicial estoppel argument.
2. Setoff argument
Likewise, Serpanok’s previous argument about the setoff award was not inconsistent with
its position on applying foreclosure sale proceeds. In its motion to confirm the arbitration award,
Serpanok asked the trial court to subtract the amount it owed to the Point Ruston parties from the
amount they owed Serpanok. Serpanok argued that applying the setoff to Century’s debt fully
discharged Serpanok’s obligation to the Point Ruston parties “because the discharge of the whole
obligation to one joint obligee, here Century, discharges that whole obligation to the other joint
obligees in a joint judgment.” CP (II) at 1028 (emphasis added).
Serpanok’s setoff argument was not inconsistent with its foreclosure sale argument because
the two situations are not comparable. The setoff accounted for the entire award owed by Serpanok
to the joint defendants, fully discharging Serpanok’s obligations to the Point Ruston parties. By
contrast, the foreclosure sale proceeds represented only a portion of Phase II’s debt to Serpanok.
This claim would only have been inconsistent if Serpanok argued that payment of the full
underlying debt by Phase II did not discharge Point Ruston LLC’s liability as a secondary obligor.
But that is not what Serpanok argued and the trial court correctly rejected this claim.
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CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court’s allocation of foreclosure sale proceeds. In the unpublished
portion of this opinion below, we affirm the underlying arbitration award and resolve the remaining
claims in Serpanok’s favor.
A majority of the panel having determined that only the foregoing portion of this opinion
will be printed in the Washington Appellate Reports and that the remainder shall be filed for public
record in accordance with RCW 2.06.040, it is so ordered.
Unpublished text follows
The Point Ruston parties appeal the trial court’s confirmation of the arbitration award and
final judgment, arguing the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or undue means, the
arbitrator exceeded his authority, and the award violated public policy. We reject the Point Ruston
parties’ claims.
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
“‘[W]hen parties voluntarily submit to binding arbitration, they generally believe that they
are trading their right to appeal an arbitration award for a relatively speedy and inexpensive
resolution to their dispute.’” Int’l Union of Operating Eng’rs, Local 286 (IUOE) v. Port of Seattle,
176 Wn.2d 712, 720-21, 295 P.3d 736 (2013) (alteration in original) (quoting Clark County Pub.
Util. Dist. No. 1 v. Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers, Local 125, 150 Wn.2d 237, 247, 76 P.3d 248
(2003)). Arbitration awards are thus subject to limited judicial review to avoid “call[ing] into
question the finality of arbitration decisions and undermin[ing] alternative dispute resolution.” Id.
at 720.
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We apply the same standard of review as the trial court that confirmed the award and
consider only “‘whether any of the statutory grounds for vacation exist.’” Salewski v. Pilchuck
Veterinary Hosp., Inc., 189 Wn. App. 898, 903-04, 359 P.3d 884 (2015) (quoting Cummings v.
Budget Tank Removal & Envtl. Servs., LLC, 163 Wn. App. 379, 388, 260 P.3d 220 (2011)). “The
party seeking to vacate the award bears the burden of showing that such grounds exist.” Id. at 904.
RCW 7.04A.230(1)(a) and (d) set forth grounds requiring a court to vacate an arbitration
award, including where “[t]he award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means,”
or the “arbitrator exceeded [their] powers.” To vacate an award as exceeding the arbitrator’s
powers, the challenger must establish an error apparent on the face of the arbitration award.
Salewski, 189 Wn. App. at 904. Vacating an arbitration award on the basis of facial legal error is
exceedingly rare because the “‘facial legal error standard is a very narrow ground for vacating an
arbitral award’” that “does not extend to a potential legal error that depends on the consideration
of the specific evidence offered or to an indirect sufficiency of the evidence challenge.” Id.
(quoting Broom v. Morgan Stanley DW, Inc., 169 Wn.2d 231, 239, 236 P.3d 182 (2010)).
The Washington Supreme Court has held that limiting judicial review of arbitration awards
to facial error furthers “the purposes of arbitration” while simultaneously avoiding “obvious legal
error.” Broom, 169 Wn.2d at 239. “Courts are not permitted to conduct a trial de novo when
reviewing the award, they ‘do not look to the merits of the case, and they do not reexamine
evidence.’” Salewski, 189 Wn. App. at 904 (quoting Broom, 169 Wn.2d at 239). This means “‘[t]he
error should be recognizable from the language of the award, as, for instance, where the arbitrator
identifies a portion of the award as punitive damages in a jurisdiction that does not allow punitive
damages.’” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Cummings, 163 Wn. App. at 389). Any
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
closer “review of arbitration decisions ‘would weaken the value of bargained for, binding
arbitration and could damage the freedom of contract.’” IUOE, 176 Wn.2d at 721 (quoting Kitsap
County Deputy Sheriff’s Guild v. Kitsap County, 167 Wn.2d 428, 435, 219 P.3d 675 (2009)). But
see Salewski, 189 Wn. App. at 904 (“‘Where a final award sets forth the arbitrator’s reasoning
along with the actual dollar amounts awarded, any issue of law evident in the reasoning may also
be considered as part of the face of the award.’” (quoting Cummings, 163 Wn. App. 389)).
Because judicial review is limited to assessing whether the award contains a facial legal
error, we do not reexamine the evidence supporting the arbitration award; we are instead “bound
by the arbitrator’s findings of fact.” IUOE, 176 Wn.2d at 724; see also RCW 7.04A.230(1)(a)-(f).
We also do not second-guess the arbitrator’s exercise of discretion in crafting an appropriate
remedy. See Clark County, 150 Wn.2d at 247, 249; see also Rule R-47(a) (“The arbitrator may
grant any remedy or relief that the arbitrator deems just and equitable and within the scope of the
agreement of the parties.”).
B. Corruption, Fraud, or Other Undue Means under RCW 7.04A.230(1)(a)
Point Ruston parties argue the trial court erred by not vacating the arbitration award under
RCW 7.04A.230(1)(a) because it claims the arbitration award was procured by corruption, fraud,
or other undue means. We disagree.
The Point Ruston parties do not allege that corruption, fraud, or other undue means
occurred in the arbitration process itself. They instead allege that corruption and fraud occurred
during the formation and performance of the underlying contracts. But RCW 7.04A.230(1)(a)
vacation addresses corruption, fraud, or other undue means in the process of the arbitration, not
the underlying facts of the dispute. Because the Point Ruston parties point to no facts suggesting
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
the arbitrator’s award was obtained through corruption, fraud, or other undue means, the award
could not be reversed on this basis.
C. Authority of the Arbitrator Under RCW 7.04A.230(1)(d)
1. Illegality defense
The Point Ruston parties argue that the award contains a facial error because the arbitrator
applied the wrong legal standard to their affirmative defense of illegality. According to the Point
Ruston parties, the arbitrator improperly assessed whether the illegal conduct proximately caused
damages to them when he should have instead determined whether the contracts grew out of the
illegal conduct. We disagree.
The Point Ruston parties are correct that courts generally do not enforce illegal contracts
or contracts that grow out of illegal acts. See Golberg v. Sanglier, 96 Wn.2d 874, 879, 639 P.2d
1347, 647 P.2d 489 (1982). But the “‘doctrine of severability’ . . . is a limited exception to the rule
that courts will not enforce an illegal contract.” Brougham v. Swarva, 34 Wn. App. 68, 79, 661
P.2d 138 (1983). In Sherwood & Roberts-Yakima, Inc. v Cohan, Division One held that if the
contract being enforced “is related to an illegal transaction, but is not illegal in and of itself” the
party seeking enforcement may still recover “notwithstanding the related illegal transaction” so
long as “the aid of the illegal transaction is not relied upon or required, or if the promise sued upon
is remote from or collateral to the illegal transaction, or is supported by independent
consideration.” 2 Wn. App. 703, 710, 469 P.2d 574 (1970); see also Ten Bridges, LLC v. Guandai,
15 Wn. App. 2d 223, 239 n.46, 474 P.3d 1060 (2020) (citing Sherwood to describe the doctrine of
severability), review denied, 197 Wn.2d 1011 (2021). “[S]o long as ‘a party can show a right of
recovery without relying on the illegal contract and without having the court sanction the same
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
[they] may recover in any appropriate action.’” Brougham, 34 Wn. App. at 80 (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting Melton v. United Retail Merchants, 24 Wn.2d 145, 162, 163 P.2d 619
(1945)).
Here, the arbitrator did not specifically recite the severability test or cite severability cases
but, nonetheless, the arbitrator effectively addressed severability. The arbitrator evaluated whether
the subcontracts were “induced” by the illegal agreement between Serpanok and Hutchinson, or
whether they were collateral to it. See, e.g., CP (I) at 2764. For example, the arbitrator
acknowledged that Serpanok improperly paid kickbacks to Hutchinson, but observed that the
kickback scheme did not ultimately impact the formation of the subcontracts. Although Serpanok
aided and abetted Hutchinson’s breach of his fiduciary duties to the Point Ruston parties, the
arbitrator noted that this misconduct did not automatically “render all contracts in which the
employee had any role in the counterparty’s performance ‘illegal contracts.’” CP (I) at 2764. In
order for the subcontracts to be unenforceable under the defense of illegality, there would need to
be some evidence that the kickback scheme “fraudulently induced or otherwise caused the parties
to enter into the two construction subcontracts, change orders, or Notes.” CP (I) at 2765. Because
there was no evidence this occurred, the arbitrator concluded the subcontracts were collateral to
the illegal kickback scheme and thus enforceable.
The arbitrator found that Cohen’s conduct after firing Hutchinson was persuasive evidence
that the subcontracts were collateral to the illegal kickback scheme. The Point Ruston parties knew
about Hutchinson’s misconduct by November 2015 and yet continued to “execute[] numerous
additional subsequent change orders[,] . . . accept[] . . . valuable work done for them by Serpanok[,]
. . . and then later . . . assert[] subcontract‐based counterclaims in this arbitration.” CP (I) at 364.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
Through this conduct, the arbitrator concluded, the Point Ruston parties “ratif[ied] and insist[ed]
upon continued performance of the two subcontracts.” Id.
The arbitrator further pointed out that Hutchinson was not the only Point Ruston official to
approve the subcontracts, even while he was carrying out his illegal scheme. Yuchun Santory, a
Point Ruston manager not implicated in the kickback scheme, deemed Serpanok’s bids more
desirable than the next available options. The “next closest bid to Serpanok’s on Building 1A was
$4.9 million higher, prompting Mr. Santory to remark ‘we are looking really good for this . . .
YIKES.’” CP (I) at 363 (alteration in original). Similarly, the arbitrator found “the evidence
presented concerning the Garage subcontract was less dramatic but also did not establish that the
terms of that subcontract, as finalized, damaged [Phase II] when compared to its other alternatives
documented in the evidence.” Id.
The arbitrator’s rejection of the Point Ruston parties’ illegality defense does not reflect a
facial legal error apparent in the language of the award. See Salewski, 189 Wn. App. at 904. By
reviewing whether the subcontracts Serpanok sued to enforce were collateral to Serpanok’s and
Hutchinson’s illegal agreement, the arbitrator’s legal analysis was consistent with the doctrine of
severability articulated in Sherwood. 2 Wn. App. at 710. Even if the arbitrator did not explicitly
refer to the doctrine of severability, any failure to properly name the doctrine is nothing like the
examples of facial legal errors that permit courts to vacate arbitration awards, such as imposing
punitive damages in a jurisdiction that does not permit them. Salewski, 189 Wn. App. at 904.
The Point Ruston parties encourage us to reevaluate the evidence and make a different
determination as to whether the kickback scheme was collateral to or severable from the
subcontracts, change orders, and notes. But we may not reexamine the arbitrator’s factual findings
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
supporting its conclusion that the subcontracts were collateral to the illegality. Id. We also do not
reweigh the evidence when reviewing an arbitrator’s award. Id.; IUOE, 176 Wn.2d at 724.
We therefore reject the Point Ruston parties’ argument that the arbitrator improperly
considered whether the subcontracts, change orders, and notes were “proximately caused” by the
kickback scheme rather than whether they “grew immediately out of” the kickbacks. See Am.
Opening Br. of Appellants Point Ruston LLC, Point Ruston Phase II LLC, Century Condominiums
LLC, and Michael Cohen (cause no. 54413-0-II) (Am. Opening Br. of Appellants) at 23-24. The
arbitrator concluded that the subcontracts, change orders, and promissory notes were collateral to
the kickback scheme, which was equivalent to rejecting the Point Ruston parties’ assertion that the
contracts grew out of the kickbacks. Severability is an exception to the illegality defense precisely
because there is no reason to void collateral contracts that did not grow out of illegal conduct. See
Brougham, 34 Wn. App. at 81. The arbitrator’s evaluation of whether the subcontracts, change
orders, and notes were collateral to the illegal conduct was consistent with the “grew out of”
standard and does not give rise to a reversible facial error.
The Point Ruston parties’ reliance on GMB Enterprises, Inc. v. B-3 Enterprises, Inc., 39
Wn. App. 678, 695 P.2d 145 (1985), also does not establish that this arbitration award was invalid.
The GMB court concluded that the contract in that case grew out of an illegal act and was void. Id.
at 684, 688. The trial court relied on equity and public policy principles because the court was
concerned that enforcing the contract would undermine efforts to deter similar illegal transactions
in the future. Id. at 687-88. By contrast, the arbitration award here did not allow Serpanok to walk
away from its kickback scheme unpunished. The arbitrator’s award in favor of the Point Ruston
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
parties included not only the amount of the kickbacks but also the amount that Hutchinson was
compensated while he was breaching his fiduciary duties and attempting to benefit Serpanok.
Finally, the arbitrator had broad independent authority to issue equitable relief under Rule
R-47(a), and the award explicitly referenced this authority when denying the Point Ruston parties’
illegality defense. The arbitrator stated it “would not be ‘just and equitable’” to determine “that
the subcontracts, change orders, and Notes” were “‘illegal contracts’” and thus to “deny
[Serpanok] recovery for millions of dollars due and owing under the parties’ contracts in return
for valuable work done and accepted.” CP (I) at 2767. The arbitrator awarded over $1.2 million to
the Point Ruston parties for the illegal kickback scheme, improper lien filing, and sanctions.
Regardless of the doctrine of severability, the arbitrator’s independent authority to craft equitable
relief under Rule R-47(a) supports the overall award. And we do not evaluate an arbitrator’s
exercise of discretion in crafting its remedies––we look only for legal errors apparent on the face
of the arbitration award. Clark County, 150 Wn.2d at 247; Broom, 169 Wn.2d at 239.
In sum, the arbitrator properly rejected the illegality defense.
2. Denial of counterclaims for fraud and breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing
The Point Ruston parties claim the arbitration award was facially erroneous because the
arbitrator required them to prove actual damages stemming from Serpanok’s conduct in order to
prevail on its counterclaims for fraudulent inducement and breach of the duty of good faith and
fair dealing. The Point Ruston parties rely on Amtruck Factors v. International Forest Products,
which held, “[I]t is not necessary to show out-of-pocket loss in order to prove damages where a
kickback scheme is alleged.” 59 Wn. App. 8, 15, 795 P.2d 742 (1990), abrogated on other grounds
by Ross v. Kirner, 162 Wn.2d 493, 172 P.3d 701 (2007). The Point Ruston parties contend that the
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
existence of a kickback scheme was sufficient for the arbitrator to find subcontracts were
fraudulently induced and unenforceable, regardless of whether they otherwise established the
elements of fraud. According to the Point Ruston parties, the existence of the kickback scheme
was also enough for them to prevail on their breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing
counterclaim, even if the evidence did not otherwise establish this claim. The Point Ruston parties
mischaracterize the ultimate holding of Amtruck, and we reject this argument.
Amtruck holds only that a court cannot dismiss a claim in a kickback case on the grounds
that the defendant did not suffer out-of-pocket damages. Id. at 15-16. The issue in Amtruck was
whether the measure of damages resulting from a kickback scheme was limited to the amount of
unreasonable and unagreed to charges, requiring a showing of out-of-pocket loss, or whether the
measure was the amount paid in kickbacks. Id. at 14-16. The court acknowledged that, generally,
the measure of damages in a case involving fraud is “whatever losses were proximately caused by
the fraud or misrepresentation.” Id. at 14. But Division One articulated a different rule for kickback
cases, drawing on case law from other jurisdictions and “hold[ing] that it is not necessary to show
out-of-pocket loss in order to prove damages where a kickback scheme is alleged.” Id. at 15.
Under Amtruck, a claimant must still meet the elements of whatever claim they are
asserting, but they can receive damages measured by the amount of the kickback payments if they
cannot show an out-of-pocket loss. See id. Division One did not hold that the defendants actually
prevailed on their counterclaims, only that they should have been permitted to assert them, and the
trial court erred by dismissing them as a matter of law under the assumption that the defendants
could not prevail unless they showed out-of-pocket damages in excess of the kickback payments.
See id. at 13, 17. Nor did the Amtruck court suggest a party could be absolved of all burdens under
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
a contract where it had already received all of the benefits. Amtruck’s actual holding—that
kickback payments could define the measure of damages if the defendants could not otherwise
show harm—was narrower than the Point Ruston parties contend.
Contrary to the Point Ruston parties’ arguments, the arbitrator here did award the relief
authorized by Amtruck. The Point Ruston parties prevailed on the counterclaim alleging that
Serpanok aided and abetted Hutchinson’s breach of fiduciary duties because they presented
evidence sufficient to meet all of the elements of this claim. The Point Ruston parties’ damages
correspond to both the $80,000 in kickbacks paid to Hutchinson and the amount of compensation
that Hutchinson was paid for his work during the time Serpanok was aiding Hutchinson’s breach
of his fiduciary duties, for a total award of more than $300,000. The arbitrator properly rejected
the Point Ruston parties’ breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing and fraudulent
inducement counterclaims not because it refused to award them damages equal to the kickback
payments, but because it had already granted this relief and because, unlike the aiding and abetting
counterclaim, the arbitrator found the Point Ruston parties failed to meet all required elements of
these other counterclaims.
The arbitrator properly rejected the Point Ruston parties’ breach of the duty of good faith
and fair dealing counterclaim because he found that they failed to prove the kickback scheme
proximately caused harm beyond the breach of fiduciary duties. In addition, the arbitrator found
the evidence presented in support of the common law fraud counterclaim did not establish three of
the nine required elements of common law fraud by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence. CP
(I) at 363 (citing Williams v. Joslin, 65 Wn.2d 696, 697, 399 P.2d 308 (1965)). The arbitrator found
that the Point Ruston parties failed to show reliance on a representation, the right to rely on it, and
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
consequent damages. We do not reweigh the evidence. IUOE, 176 Wn.2d at 724; Salewski, 189
Wn. App. at 904.
The arbitrator properly denied the Point Ruston parties’ counterclaims for fraud and breach
of the duty of good faith and fair dealing.
3. Public policy tort counterclaim
The arbitrator declined to adopt the Point Ruston parties’ admittedly novel legal theory that
they should be able to recover based on a public policy created by Washington’s commercial
bribery statute. The Point Ruston parties concede that no such public policy tort exists or existed
at the time of the arbitration award, but it faults the arbitrator for not recognizing one. We disagree.
The arbitrator’s decision not to grant relief under a novel theory of liability does not create
a legal error on the face of the award. See Salewski, 189 Wn. App. at 904; Broom, 169 Wn.2d at
239. To the extent the Point Ruston parties rely on Federated Services Insurance Co. v. Estate of
Norberg, 101 Wn. App. 119, 125, 4 P.3d 844 (2000), that reliance is misplaced. In Norberg, the
arbitration panel addressed a novel legal question, noting that the law on the issue was “sparse,”
and the arbitrators encouraged the parties to seek judicial review. Id. at 124-25. But Norberg does
not stand for the proposition that the presentation of a novel legal theory always warrants judicial
intervention. In Norberg, there was an error of law on the face of the arbitration award because the
arbitration panel had improperly recognized a new avenue for obtaining damages in a survival
action. Id. Here, the arbitrator declined to recognize a novel claim, and the arbitrator’s decision
did not conflict with existing law. The arbitrator did not commit facial legal error or exceed his
authority.
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D. Whether the Arbitration Award Violated Public Policy
The Point Ruston parties argue that the arbitrator’s award violated “long-established
Washington public policy that courts do not condone corrupt and fraudulent acts like bribery and
kickbacks and they will not lend their aid to the perpetrators of these acts.” Am. Opening Br. of
Appellants at 41. The award, according to the Point Ruston parties, condones fraudulent conduct
and is therefore against public policy because it “enforced contracts growing immediately out of
that illegal conduct” and awarded “Serpanok millions of dollars in damages.” Id. at 42. We
disagree.
Although judicial review of arbitration awards is generally limited to the statutory grounds
in RCW 7.04A.230(1), “like any other contract—an arbitration decision . . . can be vacated if it
violates public policy.” Kitsap County, 167 Wn.2d at 435. But an arbitration award will only be
vacated on public policy grounds if it violates an “‘explicit,’ ‘well defined,’ and ‘dominant’ public
policy, not simply ‘general considerations of supposed public interests.’” Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting E. Associated Coal Corp. v. United Mine Workers of Am., 531 U.S. 57,
62, 121 S. Ct. 462, 148 L. Ed. 2d 354 (2000)).
Here, the Point Ruston parties recovered more than $1 million in damages and sanctions
arising out of the kickback scheme and Serpanok’s attempts to cover up the kickback payments,
as well as the improper placement of a lien. The arbitrator did not ignore Serpanok’s bad acts.
Because there were no facial errors and the arbitrator properly exercised his powers and discretion
to award just and equitable relief to both sides, there is no reason to hold that the arbitration award
violated public policy.
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E. Denial of Cohen’s Request for Attorney Fees
The Point Ruston parties argue that the trial court committed facial error by confirming the
arbitrator’s decision not to award attorney fees to Cohen, who prevailed on the conversion claim
asserted jointly against him and Phase II. The Point Ruston parties assert that because this was the
only claim against Cohen, he should have been considered a substantially prevailing party as to
that claim and he was therefore entitled to attorney fees. We reject this argument.
Under Rule R-47(d), “The award of the arbitrator(s) may include . . . an award of attorneys’
fees if all parties have requested such an award or it is authorized by law or their arbitration
agreement.” Both subcontracts’ arbitration clauses contained identical attorney fees provisions
stating, “‘The arbitrator shall determine that one party has substantially prevailed and shall award
to that party in addition to any other relief granted, that part[y’s] actual attorney’s fees and costs
of arbitration.’” CP (I) at 2771 (quoting subcontracts).
The arbitrator held that Cohen was “not subject to the . . . ‘one party’ fee-shifting procedure
because he is not a party to the subcontracts . . . [or] Notes.” CP (I) at 2772. Alternatively, the
arbitrator concluded Cohen was not entitled to attorney fees because, although Serpanok “did not
prevail on all issues,” it “prevail[ed] on the central issues.” CP (I) at 2772. For that reason, the
arbitrator reasoned, “[E]ven if Mr. Cohen’s application could be allowed to proceed pursuant to
[the attorney fees provision of the subcontracts] on a third-party beneficiary or similar basis, his
application would still fail because it would then become subject to the ‘one-party’ determination
procedure required” under the subcontracts’ attorney fees provision. CP (I) at 2773.
To the extent the Point Ruston parties cite case law suggesting the arbitrator should have
assessed attorney fees on a claim-by-claim basis, this argument fails because the arbitration
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
agreement was the applicable authority for attorney fees in this case. See Rule R-47(d). And here,
the attorney fees provision in the arbitration agreement did not allow for separate attorney fees
awards on individual claims. The arbitrator properly deemed Serpanok the substantially prevailing
party overall and therefore correctly denied Cohen’s request for attorney fees on the conversion
claim. The trial court therefore did not err by confirming the arbitrator’s attorney fees award.
F. Sanctions Award Setoff
The Point Ruston parties argue that the trial court erred by applying the arbitrator’s
$500,000 sanction awarded in their favor as a setoff against the amount Century owed to Serpanok.
They claim the superior court modified the arbitration award without authority and abused its
discretion because it inequitably “deprived Cohen of any proceeds from the sanctions he was
jointly awarded.” Am. Opening Br. of Appellants at 48. The Point Ruston parties claim at least
some portion of the $500,000 sanction should have been awarded directly to Cohen, or the parties
should have been permitted to allocate the sanction award among them and Cohen however they
saw fit. We disagree.
Under RCW 4.56.060, “[i]f the amount of the setoff [in favor of the defendant], duly
established, be . . . less than the [amount owed to the] plaintiff[] . . . the plaintiff shall have
judgment for the residue only.” “The determination of whether to set off one judgment against
another rests within the discretion of a court exercising equity powers.” Olmsted v. Mulder, 72
Wn. App. 169, 182, 863 P.2d 1355 (1993).
Here, the arbitration award stated, “Respondents are hereby awarded $500,000 as an
appropriate monetary sanction against [Serpanok] on account of [Serpanok’s] acts of spoliation
and discovery abuse.” CP (I) at 2768. The arbitration award expressly stated it was not deciding
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
how awards would be allocated among the various codefendants or plaintiffs. In a section titled
“Net Relief Awarded,” the award stated, “Distinctions between the individual parties’ separate
payment responsibilities aside for the moment, and including the interest and bond costs awarded,
and excluding the awards of fees and expenses, [Serpanok] is awarded a total recovery of
$4,646,062, and [Point Ruston] Respondents are awarded a total recovery of $1,293,764.” CP (I)
at 2774-75 (boldface and underscore omitted).
To the extent the Point Ruston parties assign error to the setoff award, we reject that
argument because the trial court also ordered that “Defendants Point Ruston Phase II, LLC,
Century Condominiums, LLC, and Point Ruston, LLC, [were] jointly and severally liable” for the
judgments against them. CP (I) at 2890. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “joint and several
liability” as:
Liability that may be apportioned either among two or more parties or to only one
or a few select members of the group, at the adversary’s discretion. Thus, each
liable party is individually responsible for the entire obligation, but a paying party
may have a right of contribution or indemnity from nonpaying parties.
BLACK’S, supra, 1098. Accordingly, the setoff award reduced the entire obligation for which each
of the jointly and severally liable defendants was responsible. This is reflected in the calculations
that Serpanok proposed and the trial court adopted because the setoff was ultimately credited
against the amount owed for each of the Point Ruston parties.
With regard to Cohen, the trial court’s setoff order does prevent him from personally
collecting any portion of the $500,000, but this result is not inequitable. Cohen’s involvement as
a defendant was limited to the conversion claim on which he prevailed. Nothing in the arbitrator’s
award suggests that the sanctions, which were imposed because Kunitsa hid evidence of the
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
kickback payments, had anything to do with the conversion claim. Cohen was not among the
jointly and severally liable defendants. Given the facts of this case, we conclude the trial court did
not abuse its discretion by including the sanction award in the amount to be set off against the
judgment in favor of Serpanok. See Olmsted, 72 Wn. App. at 182. We hold that the trial court did
not abuse its discretion by including the $500,000 sanction in the set off determination.
G. Attorney Fees on Appeal
The Point Ruston parties and Serpanok each request appellate attorney fees under RAP
18.1 and the attorney fee provisions in the subcontracts. We grant Serpanok’s request for appellate
attorney fees for its claims in both the published and unpublished portions of this opinion and in
both of the consolidated appeals.
“Attorney fees may be awarded at the appellate level only when authorized by a contract,
a statute, or a recognized ground of equity.” Workman v. Klinkenberg, 6 Wn. App. 2d 291, 308,
430 P.3d 716 (2018). Both promissory notes contained attorney fees provisions allowing the
prevailing party to collect reasonable attorney fees and costs “incurred in collecting or enforcing
this Note and protecting or realizing on any collateral,” including fees and costs associated with
appeal and postjudgment collection proceedings. CP (I) at 1707. Moreover, RCW 60.04.181(3)
provides that a prevailing party in an action to enforce a mechanic’s lien, in both arbitration and
judicial proceedings, is entitled to reasonable attorney fees and costs, which also authorizes
awarding attorney fees on the claims arising from the foreclosure sale. Because we affirm in
Serpanok’s favor, we also grant Serpanok’s request for attorney fees as a prevailing party on all
claims.
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Nos. 54413-0-II and 54833-0-II
CONCLUSION
We affirm the arbitration award and the trial court’s judgment and grant Serpanok’s request
for attorney fees on appeal.
Glasgow, A.C.J.
We concur:
Cruser, J.
Veljacic, J.
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