(1) Any private moorage facility operator may take reasonable
measures, including the use of chains, ropes, and locks, or
removal from the water, to secure vessels within the private
moorage facility so that the vessels are in the possession and
control of the operator and cannot be removed from the facility. These procedures may be used if an owner mooring or storing a
vessel at the facility fails, after being notified that charges
are owing and of the owner's right to commence legal proceedings
to contest that such charges are owing, to pay charges owed or to
commence legal proceedings. Notification shall be by two
separate letters, one sent by first-class mail and one sent by
registered mail to the owner and any lienholder of record at the
last known address. In the case of a transient vessel, or where
no address was furnished by the owner, the operator need not give
notice prior to securing the vessel. At the time of securing the
vessel, an operator shall attach to the vessel a readily visible
notice. The notice shall be of a reasonable size and shall
contain the following information:
(a) The date and time the notice was attached;
(b) A statement that if the account is not paid in full
within ninety days from the time the notice is attached the
vessel may be sold at public auction to satisfy the charges; and
(c) The address and telephone number where additional
information may be obtained concerning release of the vessel.
After a vessel is secured, the operator shall make a
reasonable effort to notify the owner and any lienholder of
record by registered mail in order to give the owner the
information contained in the notice.
(2) A private moorage facility operator, at his or her
discretion, may move moored vessels ashore for storage within
properties under the operator's control or for storage with a
private person under their control as bailees of the private
moorage facility, if the vessel is, in the opinion of the
operator, a nuisance, in danger of sinking or creating other
damage, or is owing charges. The costs of any such procedure
shall be paid by the vessel's owner.
(3) If a vessel is secured under subsection (1) of this
section or moved ashore under subsection (2) of this section, the
owner who is obligated to the private operator for charges may
regain possession of the vessel by:
(a) Making arrangements satisfactory with the operator for
the immediate removal of the vessel from the facility or for
authorized moorage; and
(b) Making payment to the operator of all charges, or by
posting with the operator a sufficient cash bond or other
acceptable security, to be held in trust by the operator pending
written agreement of the parties with respect to payment by the
vessel owner of the amount owing, or pending resolution of the
matter of the charges in a civil action in a court of competent
jurisdiction. After entry of judgment, including any appeals, in
a court of competent jurisdiction, or after the parties reach
agreement with respect to payment, the trust shall terminate and
the operator shall receive so much of the bond or other security
as agreed, or as is necessary, to satisfy any judgment, costs,
and interest as may be awarded to the operator. The balance
shall be refunded immediately to the owner at the last known
address.
(4) If a vessel has been secured by the operator under
subsection (1) of this section and is not released to the owner
under the bonding provisions of this section within ninety days
after notifying or attempting to notify the owner under
subsection (1) of this section, the vessel is conclusively
presumed to have been abandoned by the owner.
(5) If a vessel moored or stored at a private moorage
facility is abandoned, the operator may authorize the public sale
of the vessel by authorized personnel to the highest and best
bidder for cash as follows:
(a) Before the vessel is sold, the vessel owner and any
lienholder of record shall be given at least twenty days' notice
of the sale in the manner set forth in subsection (1) of this
section if the name and address of the owner is known. The
notice shall contain the time and place of the sale, a reasonable
description of the vessel to be sold, and the amount of charges
owed with respect to the vessel. The notice of sale shall be
published at least once, more than ten but not more than twenty
days before the sale, in a newspaper of general circulation in
the county in which the facility is located. This notice shall
include the name of the vessel, if any, the last known owner and
address, and a reasonable description of the vessel to be sold. The operator may bid all or part of its charges at the sale and
may become a purchaser at the sale.
(b) Before the vessel is sold, any person seeking to redeem
an impounded vessel under this section may commence a lawsuit in
the superior court for the county in which the vessel was
impounded to contest the validity of the impoundment or the
amount of charges owing. This lawsuit must be commenced within
sixty days of the date the notification was provided under
subsection (1) of this section, or the right to a hearing is
deemed waived and the owner is liable for any charges owing the
operator. In the event of litigation, the prevailing party is
entitled to reasonable attorneys' fees and costs.
(c) The proceeds of a sale under this section shall be
applied first to the payment of any liens superior to the claim
for charges, then to payment of the charges, then to satisfy any
other liens on the vessel in the order of their priority. The
balance, if any, shall be paid to the owner. If the owner cannot
in the exercise of due diligence be located by the operator
within one year of the date of the sale, the excess funds from
the sale shall revert to the department of revenue under chapter 63.29 RCW. If the sale is for a sum less than the applicable
charges, the operator is entitled to assert a claim for
deficiency, however, the deficiency judgment shall not exceed the
moorage fees owed for the previous six-month period.
(d) In the event no one purchases the vessel at a sale, or a
vessel is not removed from the premises or other arrangements are
not made within ten days of sale, title to the vessel will revert
to the operator.
(6) The rights granted to a private moorage facility
operator under this section are in addition to any other legal
rights an operator may have to hold and sell a vessel and in no
manner does this section alter those rights, or affect the
priority of other liens on a vessel.
[1993 c 474 § 2.]