fl Amresco Independence Funding, Inc., appeals a summary judgment dismissing its lawsuit against SPS Properties, L.L.C. (SPS). Amresco held a second position lien on real property. The first position lienholder sent a notice of nonjudicial foreclosure to Amresco’s attorney but not to Amresco’s address listed on the recorded deed of trust. At the foreclosure sale, SPS purchased the property. Amresco sued SPS to confirm its lien’s validity. SPS counterclaimed, seeking damages for slander of title. The trial court granted SPS’s motion for summary judgment, finding that Amresco had received adequate notice of the sale, and its lien was extinguished because it failed to act. We affirm.
FACTS
¶2 Donald and Sharlene Angeline gave Amresco Independence Funding, Inc., a promissory note for $640,200. A deed of trust to the Angeline’s real property in Tacoma
¶3 About a year later, Donald and Sharlene defaulted. Attorney Robert West commenced a foreclosure action against both properties on Amresco’s behalf in Pierce County Superior Court. During the foreclosure, Amresco recorded a lis pendens against the Puyallup property. This lis pendens shows West as Amresco’s attorney with an address for West Law Offices, P.S., in Auburn. The court entered a judgment against the Angelines, and it entered a decree of foreclosure directing both properties to be sold.
f4 A few months later, Northwest Trustee Services (Trustee) on behalf of Washington Mutual began a nonjudicial foreclosure on the Puyallup property. The Trustee’s title report showed Amresco’s recent judgment and West as Amresco’s attorney in the action. The Trustee recorded its notice of trustee’s sale and mailed the notice to Amresco, in care of West’s office in Auburn.
¶5 West acknowledged in deposition testimony that he received the notice; he believed his office calendared the sale date. But West did not monitor or follow up on the sale information, in part because he expected the Angelines to file for bankruptcy. Once the bankruptcy court dismissed the case, West continued Amresco’s judicial foreclosure action without checking on the trustee sale. Amresco then obtained a court order directing a sheriff’s sale, at which Amresco was the only bidder. On the same day as the sheriff’s sale, SPS won the bidding at the trustee’s sale.
¶6 Amresco sued, asking the court to confirm that its lien and deed of trust were still valid after the trustee’s sale because it had not received notice directly from the Trustee. SPS counter-claimed for slander of title. The court granted SPS summary judgment, ruling that Amresco had sufficient
ANALYSIS
I. Standard of Review
f 7 We review a summary judgment de novo. Enter. Leasing, Inc. v. City of Tacoma Fin. Dep’t,
¶8 This case focuses primarily on interpreting RCW 61.24.040. Our goal in interpreting a statute is “ ‘to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the legislature’ which is done by ‘first looking] to the plain meaning of words used in a statute.’ ” Enter. Leasing,
II. Deed of Trust Act
¶9 The deed of trust statutes (Act) codified in chapter 61.24 RCW allow a trustee to sell a property without a judicial process. Koegel v. Prudential Mut. Sav. Bank,
¶10 Despite the strict compliance requirement, a plaintiff must show prejudice before a court will set aside a trustee sale. Koegel,
¶11 The legislature enacted the nonjudicial foreclosure statutes to further three objectives: (1) to keep the nonjudicial foreclosure process efficient and inexpensive, (2) to provide an adequate opportunity for interested parties to prevent wrongful foreclosure, and (3) to promote the stability of land titles. Koegel,
¶12 To keep the process quick and inexpensive, yet protect all interested parties, the Act grants presale remedies for those wanting to enjoin or restrain a threatened sale. RCW 61.24.130; Koegel,
¶13 Challenging the trustee’s deeds after the sale undermines the policy of land title stability. Plein v. Lackey,
¶14 To uphold these objectives, courts have declined to invalidate sales even where trustees have not complied with the statute’s technical requirements. E.g., Koegel,
III. Notice under RCW 61.24.040
¶15 Amresco argues that the Trustee failed to comply with the statutory notice provisions because the Trustee sent a notice of sale to West in Auburn, not to Amresco’s Dallas address. The notice provision of the statute reads:
A deed of trust foreclosed under this chapter shall be foreclosed as follows:
(1) At least ninety days before the sale, the trustee shall:
(b) To the extent the trustee elects to foreclose its lien or interest, or the beneficiary elects to preserve its right to seek a deficiency judgment against a borrower or grantor under RCW 61.24.100(3)(a), and if their addresses are stated in a recorded instrument evidencing their interest, lien, or claim of lien, or an amendment thereto, or are otherwise known to the trustee, cause a copy of the notice of sale described in RCW 61-.24.040(1X0 to be transmitted by both first class and either certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, to the following persons or their legal representatives, if any, at such address:
*539 (i) The borrower and grantor;
(ii) The beneficiary of any deed of trust or mortgagee of any mortgage, or any person who has a lien or claim of lien against the property, that was recorded subsequent to the recordation of the deed of trust being foreclosed and before the recordation of the notice of sale;
(iv) The last holder of record of any other lien against or interest in the property that is subject to a subordination to the deed of trust being foreclosed that was recorded before the recordation of the notice of sale;
(v) The last holder of record of the lien of any judgment subordinate to the deed of trust being foreclosed;
(c) Cause a copy of the notice of sale described in RCW 61-.24.040(l)(f) to be transmitted by both first class and either certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, to the plaintiff or the plaintiff’s attorney of record, in any court action to foreclose a lien or other encumbrance on all or any part of the property, provided a court action is pending and a lis pendens in connection therewith is recorded in the office of the auditor of any county in which all or part of the property is located on the date the notice is recorded.
RCW 61.24.040 (emphasis added).
¶16 Amresco reasons that the phrase “at such address” in section (b) requires the Trustee to mail notices to parties or their legal representatives at the address in the recorded instruments. We disagree. The statute allows a foreclosing lienholder to serve notice on either the persons described in subparts (i) through (v) OR their legal representatives. And the statute allows a trustee to serve the necessary parties either at the addresses contained in the recorded instruments or addresses “otherwise known to the trustee.” Thus, the Trustee can serve a lienholder at its address in the recorded documents or the Trustee can serve the lienholder’s legal representative at an address otherwise known to the Trustee. Moreover, requiring the Trustee to serve the legal representative at the lienholder’s address
¶17 Amresco also argues that notice under part (c) to an attorney of record in a court action does not satisfy the obligation under part (b) to notify the holder of a lien or a deed of trust. As we have explained, however, the Trustee’s notice to Amresco’s attorney satisfied the notice requirements of (b).
¶18 We hold that notice to an interest holder’s legal representative at the representative’s address fulfills the statute’s notice requirement. Because the Trustee fully complied with the statute and Amresco did not act to preserve its lien, the trial court properly granted summary judgment to SPS. E.g., Plein,
IV. Costs and Attorney Fees
¶19 SPS seeks attorney fees and costs on appeal. Attorney fees and other legal costs incurred in clearing a slandered title are recoverable as damages. Rorvig v. Douglas,
¶20 Affirmed.
Morgan and Hunt, JJ., concur.
