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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF W N O
DIVISION II
DALE A. WEEMS, No. 44713 -4 -II
Appellant,
v.
STATE OF WASHINGTON, BOARD OF
INDUSTRIAL INSURANCE APPEALS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION
Respondent.
WORSWICK, J. — Dale Weems sought judicial review of an order of the Board of
Industrial Insurance Appeals denying his application to reopen his claim for worker' s
compensation benefits. After a bench trial, the superior court entered findings of fact,
conclusions of law, and an order vacating the Board' s order because the Board failed to provide
Weems with appointed counsel at public expense during its administrative proceeding. Later
granting the Board' s motion to reconsider this ruling, however, the superior court vacated its
own findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order. The superior court did not enter new
findings and conclusions, nor did it enter a new judgment in any party' s favor.
Weems appeals from the superior court' s order granting the Board' s motion to
reconsider, arguing that both Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act' and the Washington
1
42 U. S. C. §§ 12131 - 12165 ( 2012).
No. 44713 -4 -II
Law Against Discrimination require appointment of counsel as an accommodation for Weems' s
mental disability. We decide that the superior court' s order is appealable, but we cannot review
it in the absence of findings of fact on disputed and material issues. Accordingly, we ( 1) vacate
to 2) vacate the superior
the superior court' s order granting the Board' s motion reconsider; (
court' s November 20, 2012 findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order; and ( 3) remand to the
superior court for entry of new findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment.
FACTS
In 1973, while Weems worked for Delson Lumber, Inc., a cable struck Weems in the
head, broke cartilage in his nose, and bruised his nose and face. Weems applied for and received
time -loss benefits compensating him for two days during which he was unable to work. The
Department of Labor and Industries then closed the claim without granting further benefits.
According to Weems, he was also involved in other accidents over the years. He testified
that in 1981 he fell 75 feet off of a water tower while working for a different company. He
further testified that his face struck a wall at home in 1997 or 1998, and this accident caused him
to
recall his 1973 injury for the first time. With assistance from his wife, whom he met in 1987,
3
Weems then reconstructed the events of his 1973 injury.
2 Chapter 49. 60 RCW.
3 Based on his reconstructed memories, Weems claimed that his 1973 injuries were more severe
than his medical records described. Specifically, Weems claimed that "[ his] face was tore off"
from the right ear to left cheek and "[ his] neck was shattered," resulting in 36 hours of
and 5 days of unconsciousness. Tr. ( Sept. 10, 2008) at 32, 47. He also
reconstructive surgery
claimed lasting brain damage. The industrial appeals judge did not credit these claims because
they lacked support in medical records or reliable testimony.
2
No. 44713- 4- 11
In 2007, Weems applied to reopen his claim due to the worsening of injuries allegedly
caused by the 1973 accident: neck pain, rhinitis, sinus infections, headaches, and depression. See
RCW 51. 32. 160. The Department denied Weems' s application.
Acting pro se, Weems appealed the Department' s denial to the Board of Industrial
Insurance Appeals. 4 The Board assigned an industrial appeals judge to preside over
administrative proceedings.
At the parties' first conference, the industrial appeals judge advised Weems that he was
entitled, at his own expense, to representation by an attorney or a qualified lay representative.
See WAC 263- 12- 020( 1)( a). Weems stated, " I' ve tried to get attorneys and they won' t take it."
Tr. (June 3, 2008) at 13.
Weems participated in the conference with assistance from his wife, but his performance
5
was erratic. According to Weems, he could read words and sentences, but he could not
understand paragraphs. The industrial appeals judge, Weems, and Ms. Weems discussed
whether an attorney should represent Weems:
JUDGE: .... You are held to the standard of an attorney in conducting any
discovery, all right? Mr. Weems, do you understand that?
MR. WEEMS: Yes.
So it' s that we do need an attorney. We do need
MRS. WEEMS: almost pertinent
an attorney, I' m sure.
JUDGE: I would say that I highly recommend an attorney to any-
4 Through a lay representative, Delson Lumber declined to participate in Weems' s appeal.
5 For example, at the industrial appeals judge' s request, Weems listed four witnesses he intended
to call: himself, his wife, and two doctors who had treated him. Later, Weems interjected to say
he local television show. Tr. (June
that he also intended to call " The Media," by which meant a
3, 2008) at 19 -20. The industrial appeals judge replied, " Well, a television show, Mr. Weems,
cannot be a witness." Tr. (June 3, 2008) at 20.
3
No. 44713 -4 -II
MRS. WEEMS: Because I don' t think Mr. Weems can represent himself. His
mental capacity is — I' ve said he wouldn' t be able to represent himself.
JUDGE: All right. He seems responsive today and seems very able to answer
questions. He seems to understand what' s going on.
MRS. WEEMS: He can answer questions, but I don' t think he fully can understand
the consequences or the procedures [ like the Department' s attorney can].
JUDGE: Well, As I indicated previously, unless you have specific legal
yes.
training, Mr. Weems, it' s unlikely that you would be able to—
MRS. WEEMS: Prevail?
JUDGE: Well, handle the case like an attorney would handle it just because you
don' t have the training and the understanding of the Workers' Compensation
laws. All right?
MR. WEEMS: Yeah, I imagine I don' t.
JUDGE: So I do recommend that you talk to an attorney or attorneys to see if you
can find someone to represent you because it would be to your benefit to do
so. All right?
Tr. (June 3, 2008) at 28 -29.
At the close of Weems' s case -in- chief, the industrial appeals judge granted the
Department' s motion to dismiss on the ground that Weems failed to establish a prima facie case
that his injury had worsened between 2003 and 2008. Weems petitioned the Board for review,
but the Board denied the petition and adopted the industrial appeals judge' s proposed decision
and order. The Board also denied Weems' s motion to reconsider its decision.
Weems then sought judicial review of the Board' s order. The superior court found that
Weems currently suffers from a mental health condition that [a] ffects his ability to fully and
represent himself and prosecute his labor and industries case." Board Record (BR) at
effectively
66. Accordingly, the superior court appointed counsel to represent Weems pursuant to GR 33
and the Americans with Disabilities Act.
4
No. 44713 -4 -II
The superior court also reversed the Board, concluding that Weems had in fact
established a prima facie case that the 1973 accident caused one or more injuries— namely
headaches, depression, or a mental health condition — that had worsened. Upon entering its
6
order, the superior court relieved Weems' s appointed counsel of all further representation.
On remand to the Board, an industrial appeals judge reopened the hearing to allow the
Department to present its case. The parties agreed to accept the results of a medical examination
Board - neurologist. However, the neurologist' s examination
performed by a commissioned
failed to address the issues on remand, and the industrial appeals judge ordered Weems to
participate in a psychiatric evaluation.
In the administrative proceedings following the superior court' s remand, Weems again
acted pro se with assistance from his wife. Weems and his wife became upset with the delay in
the proceedings, the Department' s refusal to offer a settlement, and their lack of representation:
We haven' t We' ll have to go find one. Because
Ms. WEEMS: got an attorney.
you guys [ i. e., the Department] have had an attorney in this court sitting
across from us, we' re sitting here without any representation all this time.
And you' ve made it last another year.
JUDGE: Well —
Ms. WEEMS: So we' re going to have to wait another year, and probably another
year, and another year, and then pretty soon we' ll be dead and there won' t be
anybody to give this money to, so then she can — then the State can keep it.
JUDGE: Well, look, I' d recommend that you get an attorney.
6
In his first appeal to superior court, Weems apparently did not argue that the Board should have
appointed counsel for him.
asserting, " We were forced to do
7
Weems' s wife later denied that he agreed to this examination,
that. We had no choice. We have no power, we have no attorney." Tr. (Apr. 7, 2011) at 10.
5
No. 44713 -4 -II
Ms. WEEMS: We should have did that at the beginning, instead of us playing this
game.
Tr. ( June 13, 2011) at 5.
Weems and his wife then accused the industrial appeals judge of forcing Weems to
proceed pro se, while Weems himself stated that he did not want to hire an attorney:
Ms. WEEMS: .... We have had no representation at all, and you wouldn' t allow
us to have representation. You told us we couldn' t have an attorney.
Remember?
JUDGE: No, I did not.
MS. WEEMS: You did that, sir.[81
JUDGE: Now, are you going to get an attorney?
MR. WEEMS: I don' t think so. I don' t think I need an attorney.
Ms. WEEMS: We' re going to go back to Superior Court.
MR.] WEEMS: I don' t think I have to share my money with anybody. I' ve
already won my case.
Ms. WEEMS: We' re going to go back to Superior Court.
JUDGE: Well, okay.
Tr. (June 13, 2011) at 7.
Similarly, shortly after the next conference began, Weems abruptly left the hearing room
9
because he was " not going to put up with this. " Tr. ( Aug. 29, 2011) at 4. Weems' s wife
remained; the industrial appeals judge explained the nature of his inquiry on remand, and then
the following exchange occurred:
Ms. WEEMS: And are we supposed to get an attorney? Is that what we' re
supposed to do? Are we supposed to get an attorney to look after our rights?
Or what?
JUDGE: If you get an attorney, you have to do that on your own.
8
Nothing in the record supports Ms. Weems' s assertion.
9 The record does not explain why Weems became frustrated. He left when the Department
requested a medical examination to determine whether the 1973 accident caused a psychiatric
injury.
6
No. 44713 -4 -II
Ms. WEEMS: I understand that, sir. I didn' t think you guys were going to pay for
anything.
JUDGE: So if you wish to get an attorney, you—
Ms. WEEMS: We' ll have to pay them ourselves, I know.
Tr. (Aug. 29, 2011) at 9. Weems still did not hire an attorney, and nothing in the record shows
that Weems requested the Board to appoint counsel for him.
Further, between August 5, 2010, and September 12, 2011, the industrial appeals judge
sent Weems 11 notices of various conferences and hearings. Each of the 11 notices stated,
NOTE: If you are a person with a disability and need assistance at the scheduled event, please
contact the judge' s assistant." BR at 68, 75, 76, 78, 79, 80, 105, 108, 120, 126, 130. But nothing
in the record shows that Weems requested assistance for any disability.
During its case, the Department called Dr. Thomas Dietrich and Dr. Richard Schneider to
testify as medical experts. They opined that (1) Weems' s 1973 injury did not cause his
headaches or any mental illness and ( 2) Weems' s mental state had not worsened between 2003
and 2008. Weems declined to cross -examine Dr. Dietrich because he believed that the testimony
had been favorable. Describing herself as " attorney illiterate," Ms. Weems also declined to
cross -examine Dr. Dietrich because she did not know what questions to ask. Tr. (Oct. 11, 2011)
at 19. But both Mr. Weems and Ms. Weems cross -examined Dr. Schneider.
The industrial appeals judge entered a proposed decision and order affirming the
Department' s denial of Weems' s application to reopen his claim. Weems filed a petition seeking
the Board' s review of the proposed decision and order. The Board denied the petition and
adopted the industrial appeals judge' s proposed decision and order.
7
No. 44713 -4 -II
Weems again sought judicial review of the Board' s order.10 Pursuant to GR 33, the
superior court again appointed counsel to represent Weems at public expense. Weems' s
appointed counsel and the Department delivered argument, but neither party presented additional
11
evidence in the superior court.
Without challenging the merits of the Board' s order, Weems argued for the first time in
the superior court that the Board' s order should be vacated and the case remanded for rehearing
with Weems represented by a GR 33 attorney because a mental disability prevented him from
meaningful participation in the administrative proceeding as required by. the Americans with
Disabilities Act and the Washington Law Against Discrimination. Initially agreeing with
Weems, the superior court entered findings of fact, conclusions of law, and an order vacating the
Board' s order on November 20, 2012. The superior court' s order further directed the Board to
appoint an attorney for Weems and rehear his application.
The Board then entered an appearance and moved for reconsideration of the superior
12
court' s order under CR 59( a)( 9). Determining that substantial justice had not been done
1° Weems' s complaint named only the " Board of Industrial Appeals" as defendant. CP at 9. The
Department promptly entered a notice of appearance with "[ sic]" in the caption, but the record
does not show that the Department was joined to the case as a defendant. CP at 10. The
Department and the Board have each filed a respondent' s brief in this appeal.
11 The record on appeal does not include the verbatim report of proceedings in the superior court.
The clerk' s minutes state merely that each side presented argument.
12 Because the Board is a quasi-judicial agency, it is generally inappropriate for the Board to
participate in judicial review of its decisions; however, the Board may participate when the
Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. Dep' t of
making process is at issue. Kaiser
integrity of its decision -
Labor & Indus., 121 Wn.2d 776, 781 - 82, 854 P. 2d 611 ( 1993). In this case, the Department
alone defended the Board' s order at first. After the Board' s procedures had become an issue, the
Board entered an appearance.
No. 44713 -4 -II
because it had committed an error of law, the superior court on March 8, 2013, granted the
Board' s motion and vacated its own findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order. The superior
court explained that " there is no requirement presently in constitution, statute, or rule requiring
the Board" to undertake a fact -finding investigation to determine whether Weems needed
appointed counsel as a reasonable accommodation. CP at 204. But the superior court did not
enter new findings of fact and conclusions of law, and it did not enter a new judgment in any
party' s favor.
Weems appeals from the superior court' s order granting the Board' s CR 59 motion to
reconsider the superior court' s findings, conclusions, and order. Three nonparties— Disability
Rights Washington, the Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality, and the Northwest
Justice Project —each received our permission to submit briefs as amici curiae in support of
Weems. The Department and the Board each answered the amici.
Before oral argument, this court' s clerk sent a letter advising all counsel of record that the
trial court made no findings of fact related to the legal issues argued in the briefs. The letter
further directed the parties to prepare to discuss at oral argument the appealability and
justiciability of this case, even though the briefs did not mention these issues.
ANALYSIS
Weems assigns error to the legal basis of the superior court' s March 8, 2013 order
granting the Board' s CR 59 motion to reconsider and vacating the findings of fact, conclusions
of law, and order entered on November 20, 2012. First addressing a threshold issue, we decide
that the superior court' s March 8 order was appealable. However, the superior court' s findings
of fact are inadequate to permit appellate review of Weems' s argument.
No. 44713 -4 -I1
A. The Superior Court' s Order Was Appealable
Weems' s notice of appeal designated only the superior court' s March 8 order granting the
Board' s CR 59 motion to reconsider. 13 This order was appealable.
RAP 2. 2( a) lists the types of decisions that are appealable as a matter of right. In re
Chubb, 112 Wn.2d 719, 721, 773 P. 2d 851 ( 1989). At oral argument, the Department argued
that the superior court' s March 8 order was appealable under RAP 2. 2( a)( 10). We agree.
RAP 2. 2( a)( 10) provides that "[ a] n order granting or denying a motion to vacate a
judgment" is appealable. Thus the March 8 order was appealable if the order it vacated — that is,
the November 20 findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order — was a judgment. A judgment
is a " final determination of the rights of the parties in the action." CR 54( a)( 1); see Dep' t of
661 P. 2d 133 ( 1983). The November
Labor & Indus. v. City of Kennewick, 99 Wn.2d 225, 228,
20 findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order was a judgment because it finally determined
that Weems was entitled to the remedy he sought on judicial review: a remand to the Board for
rehearing with counsel appointed to represent him in the administrative proceedings. Therefore
the March 8 order granting the Board' s motion to reconsider was appealable under RAP
14
2. 2( a)( 10).
Further, under RAP 2. 4( c), an appeal from an order deciding a CR 59 motion to _
reconsider allows us to consider the propriety of the underlying order. Davies v. Holy Family
13
Under CR 59( a), a party may move ( 1) to vacate a verdict and grant a new trial or (2) to vacate
and reconsider " any other decision or order."
14
Because the order was appealable under RAP 2. 2( a)( 10), we need not consider Weems' s
argument that the order was appealable under RAP 2. 2( a)( 3).
10
No. 44713 -4 -II
Hosp., 144 Wn. App. 483, 492, 183 P. 3d 283 ( 2008). Thus we may consider the November 20
findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order.
B. The Superior Court' s Findings ofFact Are Insufficient for Appellate Review
Weems claims that the superior court erred because the Board discriminated against him
in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Washington Law Against
Discrimination ( WLAD). We cannot review this claim because the record before us lacks
findings of fact on material issues.
Chapter 51. 52 RCW establishes a procedure for obtaining judicial review of the Board' s
orders. When a party appeals the Board' s order to the superior court, the superior court conducts
15
a trial de novo on the administrative record. RCW 51. 52. 115. The party challenging the
Board' s findings and decisions bears the burden of establishing that they are incorrect by a
preponderance of the evidence. Raysten v. Dep 't of Labor & Indus., 108 Wn.2d 143, 146, 736
P. 2d 265 ( 1987); see RCW 51. 52. 115. Thus the Board' s findings are prima facie correct only in
a limited sense: if the superior court decides that the evidence on an issue is evenly balanced, the
Board' s finding must stand. Groff v. Dep' t of Labor & Indus., 65 Wn.2d 35, 43, 395 P. 2d 633
1964).
Our review of the superior court' s decision following a bench trial is limited to
determining whether substantial evidence supports the superior court' s findings of fact and, if so,
whether the findings of fact support the conclusions of law. Ruse v. Dep' t of Labor & Indus.,
15 The superior court may take additional testimony " in cases of alleged irregularities in
procedure before the board, not shown in [ the administrative] record." RCW 51. 52. 115. But
here, neither party elicited additional testimony in the superior court.
11
No. 44713 -4 -II
138 Wn.2d 1, 5, 977 P. 2d 570 ( 1999). The precise issues that must be determined in findings of
fact will depend on the circumstances of each case. Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 40 ( quoting Kelley v.
Everglades Drainage Dist., 319 U. S. 415, 419, 63 S. Ct. 1141, 87 L. Ed. 1485 ( 1943)). But to
enable appellate review, the superior court must ( 1) enter findings of fact that resolve the
disputed issues of material fact and ( 2) apply the law to the facts it has found. Groff, 65 Wn.2d
at 40.
In Groff,the superior court' s findings of fact were inadequate for appellate review.
Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 40. In that case, a claimant' s application for benefits presented two factual
issues: ( 1) whether the claimant had a disabling injury and, if so, ( 2) whether the claimant' s
employment caused the injury. Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 36. The Board denied the application,
determining that the claimant failed to show causation. Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 37. The claimant
sought judicial review; but after a hearing de novo, the superior court entered findings of fact
that merely recited the procedural history and determined that the Board' s decision was correct
as to the facts and law. Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 37 -38. Although the superior court' s findings of fact
were enough to dispose of the case in that court, the findings were " completely inadequate" for
appellate review because the appellate court could not tell which facts determined the issues or
whether the superior court properly applied the law. Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 39 -40.
Here, the superior court vacated its November 20 findings of fact when it entered the
March 8 order granting the Board' s CR 59 motion to reconsider. Nonetheless, RAP 2.4(c)
allows us to consider those findings of fact. Davies, 144 Wn. App. at 492. But under the
circumstances of this case, those findings of fact are inadequate for us to consider Weems' s
argument that the Board discriminated against him in violation of the ADA and WLAD by
12
No. 44713 -4 -II
failing to appoint counsel at public expense as a reasonable accommodation for his mental
disability. See Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 40.
Whether the Board discriminated against Weems on the basis of his disability is a mixed
question of fact and law. Fell v. Spokane TransitAuth., 128 Wn.2d 618, 637, 911 P. 2d 1319
1996). To identify the factual issues that are material to Weems' s argument, we must consider
the elements of his ADA and WLAD claims. See Groff, 65 Wn.2d at 36.
Title II of the ADA, 42 U. S. C. §§ 12131 - 12165 ( 2012) ( Title II), prohibits public entities
16
from individuals with disabilities in public accommodations.
discriminating against qualified
Tennessee v. Lane, 541 U. S. 509, 517, 124 S. Ct. 1978, 158 L. Ed. 2d 820 ( 2004). A public
entity must provide a reasonable accommodation where necessary to provide meaningful access
to individuals with disabilities, including " an equal opportunity to participate in, and enjoy the
benefits of, a service, program, or activity conducted by a public entity." 28 C. F. R.
35. 160( b)( 1) ( 2009); see Randolph v. Rodgers, 170 F. 3d 850, 858 ( 8th Cir. 1999).
A person alleging a Title II violation must show that ( 1) he is a qualified individual with
a disability; ( 2) he was excluded from participation in or denied the benefit of a public entity' s
services, programs, or activities, or the public entity otherwise discriminated against him; and ( 3)
the exclusion, denial, or discrimination was by reason of his disability. Duvall v. Kitsap County,
260 F. 3d 1124, 1135 ( 9th Cir. 2001). When a public entity receives a request for an
16
Specifically, 42 U. S. C. § 12132 provides:
Subject to the provisions of this subchapter, no qualified individual with a
disability shall, by reason of such disability, be excluded from participation in or
be denied the benefits of the services, programs, or activities of a public entity, or
be subjected to discrimination by any such entity.
13
No. 44713- 4- 11
accommodation — or when " the need for accommodation is obvious, or required by. statute or
regulation " — it must conduct a fact -specific investigation to determine the appropriate
accommodation under the circumstances. Duvall, 260 F. 3d at 1139. But a public entity has an
affirmative defense if it shows that the requested accommodation would impose an undue
financial or administrative burden. Randolph, 170 F. 3d at 858.
Similarly, the WLAD requires all places of public accommodation to provide people with
disabilities an equal opportunity compared to people without disabilities. Fell, 128 Wn.2d at
631, 635. A plaintiff alleging disability discrimination must show that ( 1) he has a recognized
the defendant operates a place of public accommodation, ( 3) the defendant
disability, ( 2)
discriminated against the plaintiff by providing treatment that was not comparable to the level of
services enjoyed by persons without disabilities, and ( 4) the disability was a substantial factor
causing the discrimination. Fell, 128 Wn.2d at 637. But the defendant has not engaged in
unlawful disability discrimination if its failure to accommodate the plaintiff rests on a legitimate
and nondiscriminatory reason, including financial unfeasibility. Fell, 128 Wn.2d at 642.
The superior court' s findings of fact left material factual disputes undecided. 17 In
relevant part, the superior court found:
1. 1 At a scheduling conference held June 3, 2008, before the [ Board], [ Ms.
Weems] asked that court to appoint an attorney to represent [ Mr. Weems]. Ms.
Weems advised that court that [ Mr. Weems] lacked the mental capacity to
represent himself.
1. 2 No appropriate colloquy nor investigation was conducted by the [ Board] with
respect to whether [ was suffering from a mental condition that
Mr. Weems]
would impair his ability to proceed pro -se.
17 The parties do not dispute that the Board is ( 1) a public entity subject to Title II of the ADA
and ( 2) a place of public accommodation subject to the WLAD.
14
No. 44713 -4 -II
1. 6 [ In his first appeal to superior court, [ t] his court appointed an attorney to
represent [ Mr. Weems], pursuant to [ t]he Amercians [ w] ith Disabilities Act, after
f]inding that [ Mr. Weems] was unable to " fully and effectively" represent
himself.
1. 8 On remand, the [ Board] did not conduct an appropriate inquiry into [ Mr.
Weems' s] mental condition.
Mr.
1. 9 Ultimately, after once again exhausting his administrative remedies, [
Weems] timely appealed the [ Board' s] decision to this court, with the assistance
of his GR 33 appointed attorney.
18
CP at 135 -36.
These findings leave at least four material factual disputes unresolved. First, the superior
court did not determine whether Weems is a person with a " disability" as the statutes define that
term.
19
See 42 U. S. C. § 12102( 1); RCW 49. 60. 040( 7). Second, the superior court did not
determine whether Weems requested that the Board appoint him counsel as an accommodation
for his disability or whether Weems' s need for accommodation was " obvious" to the Board. See
Duvall, 260 F.3d at 1139. Third, the superior court did not decide whether the Board' s
alternatives to the appointment of counsel at public expense — such as Weems' s ability to hire an
20
attorney on a contingency fee basis, Ms. Weems' s assistance as a lay representative, and the
industrial appeals judge' s questioning of witnesses — either (a) failed to provide Weems with a
level of service comparable to that enjoyed by non -disabled claimants or (b) deliberately failed
18 The omitted findings merely recite the procedural history of the case.
19 The Department suggests that Weems does not have a disability because he has not been found
incompetent to represent himself. But Weems correctly observes that an individual may have a
disability yet still be competent.
20
Relying entirely on speculation, Weems and the Board dispute whether he could have hired an
attorney on a contingency fee basis.
15
No. 44713 -4 -II
to accommodate Weems' s disability so as to discriminate against him. Duvall, 260 F. 3d at 1138-
39; Fell, 128 Wn.2d at 639 -40. Fourth, the superior court did not determine whether the
appointment of counsel at public expense would unduly burden the Board. See Randolph, 170
F. 3d at 858; Fell, 128 Wn.2d at 642.
Notwithstanding the absence of findings of fact resolving these issues, the parties invite
us to make our own factual determinations. But we decline the invitation because it is not the
role of an appellate court to find facts. Quinn v. Cherry Lane Auto Plaza, Inc., 153 Wn. App.
710, 717, 225 P. 3d 266 ( 2009). On the record before us, we cannot consider Weems' s
21
argument.
C. Remedy
Having concluded that the findings of fact here are inadequate to support appellate
review, we must now fashion an appropriate remedy. In Groff, our Supreme Court ( 1) set aside
the superior court' s judgment and the findings of fact and conclusions of law on which it was
based and ( 2) remanded the case for the superior court to enter adequate findings of fact,
appropriate conclusions of law, and a new judgment. 65 Wn.2d at 47. The remand in Groff did
not prejudice the right of any party to appeal from the new judgment. 65 Wn.2d at 47.
Likewise, we vacate ( 1) the March 8, 2013 order granting the Board' s motion to
reconsider and ( 2) the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order entered on November 20,
2012. We remand this case to the superior court for the entry of new findings of fact, new
21 Weems further requests an award of reasonable attorney fees and costs on appeal. The
prevailing party on appeal may recover attorney fees and costs when applicable law authorizes
the award. RAP 18. 1( a). But because Weems has not prevailed, we deny his request.
16
No. 44713 -4 -II
conclusions of law, and a new judgment. Any party aggrieved by the superior court' s decision
on remand seek review as provided by the Rules of Appellate Procedure. RAP 2. 1( a), 3. 1.
may
A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
2. 06. 040, it is so ordered.
We concur:
17