85 Wn.2d 152, CHARLES A. PAPPAS et al, Petitioners, v. E. A. HERSHBERGER et al, Respondents

[No. 43185. En Banc.      Supreme Court      January 23, 1975.]

CHARLES A. PAPPAS et al, Petitioners, v. E. A. HERSHBERGER
et al, Respondents.

[1] Appeal and Error - Assignments of Error - Argument in Support -Necessity. An assignment of error that is not argued in the brief is considered to have been abandoned.

[[2] Appeal and Error - Review - Issues Not Raised in Trial Court - In General. An issue not presented to the trial court and raised for the first time during the appellate process will not be considered on appeal.

Review of a decision of the Court of Appeals, January 21, 1974, 10 Wn. App. 1010. Affirmed.

The Court of Appeals affirmed, by unpublished opinion, a judgment of the Superior Court for King, County, No. 733353, Howard J. Thompson, J., entered May 5, 1972. The appellants (plaintiffs) petitioned the Supreme Court for review.

Action for damages. The plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Appeals from a judgment in favor of the defendants.

Merrick, Hofstedt & Lindsey, by Gary R. Eliasen and Thomas V. Harris, for petitioners.

Webster, Kroum, Granberg, Bass & Mack, by Stephen A. Mack and Eric Lee Clauson, for respondents.

PER CURIAM. -

This case comes before us on a petition for review of an unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals.


See 5 Am. Jur. 2d, Appeal and Error § 649.]

 Jan. 1975]         PAPPAS v. HERSHBERGER               153 
85 Wn.2d 152, 530 P.2d 642

Originally we granted the petition for review based on appellants-petitioners' contention that the cause was controlled by Foisy v. Wyman, 83 Wn.2d 22, 515 P.2d 160 (1973). Petitioners conceded Foisy involved an implied warranty of habitability of an older house in a combined landlord-tenant, vendor-purchaser situation. It was urged, however, that even though the instant case involved an implied warranty of structural fitness in the sale of a new building by a vendor (who was not the builder) to the first purchaser, Foisy requires a holding that an implied warranty of structural fitness cannot be waived.

[1] Our review of the record reveals that on appeal to the Court of Appeals only two assignments of error were made, neither of which raised the issue now urged by appellants-petitioners. One assignment of error was concerned with a finding of fact which appellants-petitioners failed to set forth as required by CAROA 43. The Court of Appeals properly refused to consider it. The second assignment of error pertained to a conclusion of law unrelated to the issue raised in the instant petition for review. Further, it was not argued in appellants-petitioners' brief and thus is deemed abandoned. In re Kennedy, 80 Wn.2d 222, 492 P.2d 1364 (1972); Dickson v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co., 77 Wn.2d 785, 466 P.2d 515 (1970); Fosbre v. State, 70 Wn.2d 578, 424 P.2d 901(1967).

Neither of the matters assigned as error in the Court of Appeals is again raised in the petition for review. Thus, we shall not consider them here.

[2] Turning to the instant petition for review, the issue raised therein was not presented to the trial court, i.e., whether an implied warranty of structural fitness may be waived by the first purchaser of a new building from a vendor (who is not also the builder). The issue was raised for the first time upon appellants-petitioners' petition for rehearing in the Court of Appeals.

 154    LAPLANTE v. STATE         [Jan. 1975 
           85 Wn.2d 154, 531 P.2d 299

Having failed to properly raise or preserve the present issue in either the trial court or Court of Appeals, we will not consider it here for the first time on appeal. The petition for review was improvidently granted. We do not pass upon the applicability of Foisy v. Wyman, supra.

The Court of Appeals is affirmed.