[WSBARP] Litigation and Statute of Frauds

Paul Neumiller pneumiller at hotmail.com
Tue Apr 18 15:53:07 PDT 2023


NJP attorney is arguing that they don’t have to prove a purchase and sale agreement because title is not the issue.  NJP is arguing that they are presenting the testimony that T is buying the property as a defense that Plaintiff must overcome because Plaintiff has the burden of proof and T is not asserting it as a counter-claim.  Any thoughts?  I’m arguing it is two sides of the same coin.


[cid:image001.jpg at 01D9720D.BF71D530]



From: wsbarp-bounces at lists.wsbarppt.com <wsbarp-bounces at lists.wsbarppt.com> On Behalf Of Stromberg, Spencer
Sent: Tuesday, April 18, 2023 3:00 PM
To: WSBA Real Property Listserv <wsbarp at lists.wsbarppt.com>
Subject: Re: [WSBARP] Litigation and Statute of Frauds

I agree with Kelby. I represented a defendant in a UD case several years back who claimed he had an agreement to buy the property, and we lost because we didn't satisfy the statute of frauds. My client had an email or two and his testimony that it was a "rent to own" situation (plaintiff was his sister!). Is it too late for SJ? If discovery hasn't produced a signed agreement that adequately identifies the property and the terms of sale, you should win on SJ. At trial, I don't think there's much weighing of evidence - there's either a written contract or there isn't. If there is a written contract, the judge should then be the one to weigh the evidence as a matter of law only in the event there is some question about whether a written agreement adequately describes the property or the terms.

Spencer A. W. Stromberg
Attorney at Law

[https://ci3.googleusercontent.com/mail-sig/AIorK4wMRe_ukoUDSfEk1B9GOtzEv1ZmETJ5W4aT8G-i1q6fL7AkhPL9-7Q-uOEqpeS39zB_6R0N47HVfeKJTfKSM6im7XYlsivfchznVeSWqQ]
1403 S. Grand Blvd., Suite 201-S
Spokane, WA 99203-2278

P: 509.455.3713
D: 509.828.4644
F: +1.509.455.3718 (must dial 1 before area code)
E: spencer at lucentlaw.com<mailto:spencer at lucentlaw.com>

lucentlaw.com<https://www.lucentlaw.com/>
Facebook<https://www.facebook.com/lucentlaw>
LinkedIn<https://www.linkedin.com/company/lucent-law>
Twitter<https://twitter.com/LucentLaw>

CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email and any attachments are confidential and may be protected by legal privilege. If you are not the intended recipient, be aware that any disclosure, copying or distribution, or use of this email or any attachment is prohibited. If you have received this email in error, please notify me and delete it from your system.


On Fri, Apr 14, 2023 at 11:36 AM Kelby Derenick <kelby at derenicklaw.com<mailto:kelby at derenicklaw.com>> wrote:
I would think that whether a contract exists for the sale of the property would be a question of fact.  So, if you are representing the Plaintiff in the trial, when your client testifies and in anticipation of what the Defendant is going to argue, have the Plaintiff provide testimony that there was no contract for the
sale of the property.  Then, after the Defendant is finished with presenting his/her defense and counterclaims and introduces whatever documents into evidence, you can recall your client to provide rebuttal testimony to address whatever the Defendant introduced.  After the evidentiary part of the trial is over, if there was no evidence of a contract, move the court for dismissal of that counterclaim under CR 41 or CR 50 Judgment as a Matter of Law if there is a jury (for non-unlawful detainer trials).

If the judge won't dismiss it, then just argue at closing that the Defendant cannot prevail on the counterclaim because there was no contract and the statute of frauds case law requires a contract (cite and argue statute of frauds case law).

Kelby J. Derenick
Attorney

9414 State Ave., Suite E
Marysville, WA 98270
Ph: (206) 659-5061

14 E. Main Street, Suite 207
Walla Walla, WA 99362
Ph: (509) 676-9805

CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:  This electronic mail message contains information that (a) is or may be legally privileged, confidential, proprietary in nature, or otherwise protected by law from disclosure, and (b) is intended only for the use of the Addressee(s) named herein. If you are not the intended recipient, an addressee, or the person responsible for delivering this to an addressee, you are hereby notified that reading, using, copying, or distributing any part of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this electronic mail message in error, please contact me immediately and take the steps necessary to delete the message completely from your computer system.  Thank you.



On Thu, Apr 13, 2023 at 4:07 PM Paul Neumiller <pneumiller at hotmail.com<mailto:pneumiller at hotmail.com>> wrote:
So I have a trial coming up where the occupant says occupant is buying the house and I represent the LL who says the occupant is renting the house and therefore subject to unlawful detainer.  The occupant has little to show that occupant is buying the house and therefore the statute of frauds kicks in.  But how?  Is it a “weight of the evidence type of thing” where the occupant can still present oral testimony and a couple of documents which don’t meet the requirements of the statute of limitations?  Or, can I object (on what grounds?) to the evidence from being presented at trial in the first place because it fails to rise to the level of documentation required by the statute of frauds?  In other words, I have this thing called the statute of frauds.  On a practical basis, how do I use it at trial?

BTW, I have read many sources regarding the statute and none have addressed how it is used at trial.


[cid:image001.jpg at 01D9720D.BF71D530]


***Disclaimer: Please note that RPPT listserv participation is not restricted to practicing attorneys and may include non-practicing attorneys, law students, professionals working in related fields, and others.***

_______________________________________________
WSBARP mailing list
WSBARP at lists.wsbarppt.com<mailto:WSBARP at lists.wsbarppt.com>
http://mailman.fsr.com/mailman/listinfo/wsbarp
***Disclaimer: Please note that RPPT listserv participation is not restricted to practicing attorneys and may include non-practicing attorneys, law students, professionals working in related fields, and others.***

_______________________________________________
WSBARP mailing list
WSBARP at lists.wsbarppt.com<mailto:WSBARP at lists.wsbarppt.com>
http://mailman.fsr.com/mailman/listinfo/wsbarp
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/wsbarp/attachments/20230418/f9ef8cee/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 14264 bytes
Desc: image001.jpg
URL: <http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/wsbarp/attachments/20230418/f9ef8cee/image001.jpg>


More information about the WSBARP mailing list