Pacific Market International v. Tcam Core Property Fund

        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

PACIFIC MARKET INTERNATIONAL,
LLC, a Washington limited liability
company,                                     No. 74623-5-


                     Respondent,             DIVISION ONE


              v.
                                             UNPUBLISHED OPINION
TCAM CORE PROPERTY FUND
OPERATING LP, a Delaware limited             FILED: February 6, 2017
partnership,

                     Appellant.


        Becker, J. — This is the second appeal concerning the contractual rights

of the parties in a commercial lease involving parking spaces. In the first appeal,

we reversed a decision construing the lease in favor of the tenant. On remand,

the trial court complied with the mandate to enter declaratory judgment in favor of

the landlord. Based on a misunderstanding of our opinion, the trial court refused

to consider the landlord's request for a money judgment compensating for the

unpaid rent of the parking spaces. Again, we reverse. The tenant leased the

parking spaces and offers no legitimate excuse for refusing to pay the agreed

rent.
No. 74623-5-1/2


                                      FACTS

      The landlord and appellant is TCAM Core Property Fund Operating LP

(TCAM). The tenant and respondent is Pacific Market International LLC (PMI).

The details of the commercial real estate lease they entered into are set forth in

our first opinion, Pacific Market International. LLC v. TCAM Core Property Fund

Operating LP, noted at 186 Wn. App. 1050 (2015). To summarize, a dispute

arose over the parking payment obligation in the lease. In February 2012, PMI

filed a complaint requesting a declaratory judgment that the payment obligation

was only for the number of parking spaces PMI needed in any given month.

TCAM counterclaimed for declaratory judgment that the payment obligation was

for a specific number of parking spaces designated in the lease. On cross

motions for summary judgment, the trial court granted summary judgment to PMI.

TCAM appealed. On April 13, 2015, this court issued an opinion in favor of

TCAM. We held that the plain language of the agreement "obligates the tenant

to pay for a certain number of spaces every month whether or not the tenant

actually needs them." Pac. Mkt. Intl. slip op. at 1. We directed the trial court to

enter a declaratory judgment based on that holding.

       PMI had requested that the matter be remanded for trial on whether

TCAM had failed to mitigate its damages. In the last three paragraphs of the

opinion, we concluded there was no reason to remand for trial on that issue:

              PMI claims that even if TCAM's interpretation prevails, this
       matter must be remanded for trial because TCAM has failed to
       mitigate its damages. According to PMI, TCAM failed to make
       reasonable efforts to avoid damages from PMI's inability to use all
       34 parking spaces and even affirmatively ignored expressions of
       interest from a third party.
No. 74623-5-1/3


              The doctrine of avoidable consequences, or mitigation of
       damages, prevents an injured party from recovering damages that
       the party could have avoided through reasonable efforts. TCAM
       has not been injured. PMI has been paying under protest for the
       parking spaces it does not use. Because TCAM has not incurred a
       duty to mitigate, there is no reason to remand this matter for trial.
              In summary, the trial court erred by entering judgment for
       PMI. The case is remanded with instructions to enter judgment in
       favor of TCAM and to award TCAM its attorney fees and costs in
       accordance with the attorney fee provision of the lease. That
       award shall include TCAM's reasonable attorney fees for this
       appeal.

Pac. Mkt. Int'l, slip op. at 9-10 (citation omitted).

       On remand, in compliance with the opinion, the trial court entered a

declaratory judgment: "The plain language of the agreement obligates PMI to pay

for a certain number of spaces every month whether or not PMI actually needs

them." Clerk's Papers at 2872.

       TCAM then sought entry of a money judgment for about $195,000, the

amount PMI allegedly owed for the parking spaces plus interest and late

charges. The trial court ruled that TCAM had not followed proper procedure to

get relief beyond the declaratory judgment:

       In its Answer to the Complaint and its Counterclaim in this case
       TCAM asked for a declaratory judgment and attorneys' fees and
       costs under the lease. This relief has been granted herein. While
       there arguably was a way in which TCAM could have asked for
       additional relief, it was not proper for it to ask for relief not
       requested in its Answer and Counterclaim by filing a motion without
       oral argument asking this Court to resolve factual issues upon 8
       days' notice.

Clerk's Papers at 2875.
No. 74623-5-1/4


      The court not only ruled that TCAM's request for money damages was

procedurally wrong, but also concluded that this court, by stating "TCAM has not

been injured," had ruled out any grant of money damages:

      In addition the clear language of the decision of the Court of
      Appeals was that the case was remanded for the limited issue of
      entry of the declaratory judgment as requested and that if there was
      an issue about payment for the parking spaces, there would be a
      factual issue that needed to be resolved as to mitigation. However,
      since the Court of Appeals found that there was no issue raised as
      to damages (payment for the parking spaces) the case was not
      remanded for a trial on factual issues. It was inappropriate for
       TCAM to have filed the motion for additional relief which was,
       essentially, an end run around the decision of the Court of Appeals,
       civil court rules that would require as amendment to pleadings if a
       new cause of action was raised, civil court rules that would require
       at least 28 days' notice for a decision to be decided by summary
       judgment, and the right to trial on disputed factual issues, such as
       those that would arise if there was an issue about mitigation of
       damages.

Clerk's Papers at 2875.

       TCAM appeals. TCAM contends the trial court erred by refusing to enter a

money judgment.

                          DENIAL OF MONEY JUDGMENT

       In our first opinion, we did not intend to prohibit the trial court from granting

the monetary relief that TCAM is so clearly entitled to as the result of the

declaratory judgment. Unfortunately, by taking the language in our first opinion

out of context, PMI persuaded the trial court that our opinion prohibited TCAM

from seeking monetary relief on remand. Apparently, we did not set out the

scope of the remand with sufficient clarity. We will attempt to do so now.

       TCAM's first appeal in this case sought only declaratory judgment.

Damages, injury, and money judgment were not at issue. On remand, TCAM
No. 74623-5-1/5


asked the trial court to enter a money judgment as further relief under the

Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, RCW 7.24.080. TCAM employed proper

procedure. The act provides for further relief based on a declaratory judgment

after a show cause hearing:

       Further relief based on a declaratory judgment or decree may be
       granted whenever necessary or proper. The application therefor
       shall be by petition to a court having jurisdiction to grant the relief.
       When the application is deemed sufficient, the court shall, on
       reasonable notice, require any adverse party whose rights have
       been adjudicated by the declaratory judgment or decree, to show
       cause why further relief should not be granted forthwith.

RCW 7.24.080. The purpose of TCAM's declaratory judgment action was to

establish entitlement to damages for PMI's breach of the lease. TCAM's request

for a money judgment based on the declaratory judgment was "necessary" and

"proper" under RCW 7.24.080 because, after entry of the declaratory judgment in

favor of TCAM, PMI refused to pay the money owed. The "further relief provided

under RCW 7.24.080 can be money damages. United Nursing Homes. Inc. v.

McNutt, 35 Wn. App. 632, 640, 669 P.2d 476 ("Granting damages in the

declaratory action saved time and money and resolved the entire dispute"),

review denied. 100 Wn.2d 1030 (1983).

      The trial court ruling states that this court "found" that TCAM raised no

issue as to damages. This is inaccurate. Our statement that "TCAM has not

been injured" was in response to PMI's request that the matter of the declaratory

judgment be remanded for trial because TCAM failed to mitigate its damages.

We intended that statement to explain why we were not remanding the matter of

the declaratoryjudgment for trial. We did not intend that statement as a finding
No. 74623-5-1/6


that would prevent TCAM from establishing injury, damages, and entitlement to a

money judgment on remand once the declaratory judgment was entered.

       The statement that "TCAM has not been injured" was not a finding of no

injury. This court does not make factual findings. See, e.g.. Quinn v. Cherry

Lane Auto Plaza. Inc.. 153 Wn. App. 710, 717, 225 P.3d 266 (2009) (appellate

courts do not hear or weigh evidence or find facts), review denied. 168 Wn.2d

1041 (2010). The statement reflected this court's understanding, based on the

parties' briefs and oral argument, that PMI had been paying under protest for the

parking spaces it did not use in order to avoid termination of what PMI viewed as

a prime real estate lease. The parties now agree that at some point before the

trial court granted summary judgment in January 2014, PMI quit paying under

protest for the parking spaces it did not use.

       The misunderstanding arose in part from PMI's argument in the first

appeal that the matter should be remanded for trial on the issue whether TCAM

had mitigated its damages. TCAM responded that the only claims asserted in

the complaint and counterclaim were for declaratory judgment regarding the

meaning of the lease. According to TCAM, mitigation of damages "is only an

affirmative defense to a claim for damages and is not applicable to a claim for

declaratory judgment." Clerk's Papers at 2780. PMI argues that TCAM is now

taking an inconsistent position by making a claim for money damages. But

TCAM has never claimed that it was not injured or that it had no damages.

When defending its claim for declaratory judgment, TCAM argued that mitigation

is not a defense to a claim for declaratory judgment. TCAM now seeks a money
No. 74623-5-1/7


judgment on remand pursuant to RCW 7.24.080. TCAM acknowledges that PMI

may raise its mitigation argument at the show cause hearing under RCW

7.24.080, as mitigation is a defense to damages. This is not contradictory or

inconsistent with TCAM's earlier position.

      Without a corresponding money judgment to enforce TCAM's rights under

the declaratory judgment, the declaratory judgment would be hollow. The trial

court erred in refusing to consider TCAM's request for a money judgment.

                              MOTION TO DISMISS

      On March 25, 2016, PMI moved to dismiss TCAM's appeal as too late to

bring the final judgment up for review. We conclude the appeal is timely. We

deny the motion to dismiss.

      TCAM filed two successive motions for reconsideration in the trial court.

Both were timely filed within 10 days of the order for which reconsideration was

sought. The trial court denied both motions. TCAM's appeal was filed within 30

days of the order denying the second motion.

      The chronology of relevant dates is as follows.

      On October 27, 2015, the trial court entered a final judgment. Clerk's

Papers at 2790-94. As discussed above, the final judgment denied TCAM's

request for a money judgment.

      On November 6, 2015, TCAM timely moved for reconsideration of the

court's decision to deny its request for a money judgment. The motion stated,

"The Court denied TCAM's request, leaving TCAM with no way to recover the

unpaid parking charges in this action. To avoid the injustice this would cause,
No. 74623-5-1/8


TCAM requests that the Court either reconsider its denial or grant TCAM leave to

amend its pleading to assert a claim for breach of the Lease provision requiring

PMI to pay for all of its parking stalls." Clerk's Papers at 2795.

       On November 16, 2015, PMI emailed a letter to the court requesting

permission to respond to the motion and raising substantive arguments. Clerk's

Papers at 2820-21.

       On November 17, 2015, the trial court issued an order stating that the

motion for reconsideration was "denied as to the ruling re denial of further relief

(i.e., the money judgment), while at the same time requesting PMI to respond "as

to the issue of whether defendant should be allowed to amend its pleadings as

requested." Clerk's Papers at 2824.

       On November 24, 2015, TCAM filed a second motion for reconsideration.

This motion sought reconsideration of the November 17, 2015, order. As

authority for filing a motion to reconsider an order denying a motion for

reconsideration, TCAM cited Barry v. USAA, 98 Wn. App. 199, 203, 989 P.2d

1172 (1999) ("Nothing in CR 59 leads this court to declare a one-reconsideration

limit for trial court decisions.") Clerk's Papers at 2827.

       On November 25, 2015, PMI responded to the court's request for a brief

on TCAM's alternative motion for leave to amend. PMI asked the court to deny

the motion and bring the case to an end on the basis that this court's opinion

expressly foreclosed further litigation. Clerk's Papers at 2848. PMI did not

object to TCAM's filing of a second motion for reconsideration.
No. 74623-5-1/9


       On December 1, 2015, TCAM filed a reply, documenting alleged

distortions in PMI's presentation. Clerk's Papers at 2858-63.

       On December 18, 2015, the court issued an order denying TCAM's

second motion for reconsideration of the order dated November 17, 2015, insofar

as that order again denied the request for entry of a money judgment. The

December 18 order also denied, for the first time, TCAM's request for leave to

amend. Whether TCAM should be allowed to amend its pleadings was an issue

that had been left open by the order of November 17, 2015. The December 18

order stated:

      The Motion for Reconsideration is denied. The defendant evidently
      represented to the Court of Appeals that at least as of the date of
      argument remand to determine any amounts due was not
      appropriate or necessary because it had been compensated
       (incurred no damages). Based on that, the Court of Appeals
       refused the Plaintiff's request for remand. Therefore, it is not
       appropriate nor does it do substantial justice under these
       circumstances to re-open the case and allow defendants to amend
       their pleadings and their position with the Court of Appeals.

Clerk's Papers at 2865.

       On January 13, 2016, TCAM filed a notice of appeal. The notice

designated the order of December 18, 2015; the order of November 17, 2015;

and the judgment of October 27, 2015.

       PMI recognizes that TCAM's first motion for reconsideration, filed on

November 6, 2015, was timely under the 10-day deadline of CR 59(b). PMI also

recognizes that under RAP 5.2(e), the filing of that motion extended the deadline

for TCAM to file an appeal of the final judgment until 30 days after the court order

deciding the motion, that is, until December 17, 2015. PMI's motion to dismiss
No. 74623-5-1/10



argues that the rules do not allow the deadline for filing a notice of appeal to be

further extended by the filing of a second motion for reconsideration. If PMI is

correct, the notice of appeal filed on January 13, 2016, was too late to bring the

final judgment up for review.

       A motion for reconsideration must be filed "not later than 10 days after the

entry of the judgment, order, or other decision." CR 59(b) (emphasis added).

The potential for filing a motion to reconsider an order denying a motion for

reconsideration is within the express terms of the 10-day deadline in CR 59(b).

Consistent with this observation, this court has held that a trial court decision

may be the subject of more than one motion for reconsideration under CR 59.

Barry. 98 Wn. App. at 203.

       PMI argues that under Barry, there can be a second motion for

reconsideration only if it is brought by the party aggrieved by a court order that

grants a motion for reconsideration by another party. That was the fact pattern in

Barry, but the opinion does not limit its holding to the facts of the case. Barry

determined that the second motion for reconsideration in the case was allowed

because it did not come under any of the limitations of CR 59(j). Barry. 98 Wn.

App. at 203. CR 590) provides that if a motion for reconsideration is made and

heard before the entry of the judgment, "no further motion may be made" without

a showing of good cause. CR 59 places no similar limit on further motions if a

motion for reconsideration is made and heard after the entry of judgment. Thus,

neither Barry nor CR 59 support the argument that TCAM's second motion for




                                         10
No. 74623-5-1/11


reconsideration was ineffective to extend the deadline for filing an appeal from

the judgment.

       The appellant has 30 days to appeal from an order deciding a "timely"

motion for reconsideration. RAP 5.2(e). That rule is applicable here, because

TCAM's second motion for reconsideration was timely. It was filed on November

24, 2015, 7 days after the order for which reconsideration was sought—the

November 17, 2015, order denying TCAM's first motion for reconsideration. RAP

5.2(e) does not limit the effect of extending time to the first motion for

reconsideration.

       TCAM's notice of appeal designated the final judgment for review along

with the two orders denying the two motions for reconsideration. PMI provides

no rule-based reason for excluding the final judgment from the scope of our

review. Indeed, as TCAM points out, even if a final judgment is not designated in

the notice of appeal, it is brought up for review by a notice of appeal designating

an order deciding a timely posttrial motion for reconsideration. CR 2.4(c).

       TCAM asserts that "PMI's attempt to disjoint the Judgment and the orders

on the two motions for reconsideration is an overly manipulated argument that

does not comport with the Rules." Opposition to Motion to Dismiss at 6. We

agree. The policies behind the rules are not well served by PMI's proposed

interpretation. Posttrial motions give the trial court the opportunity to correct

errors in the proceedings without the necessity of an appeal. Koboski v. Cobb.

161 Wash. 574, 297 P. 771 (1931); 4 Karl B. Tegland, Washington Practice:

Rules Practice CR 59, at 52 (6th ed. Supp. 2016). "It would serve no purpose



                                          11
No. 74623-5-1/12


to require appellants to file a notice of appeal while a motion for reconsideration

or new trial was pending in the court below." Simonson v. Veit. 37 Wn. App. 761,

765, 683 P.2d 611, review denied. 102 Wn.2d 1013(1984).

       PMI contends that TCAM's 30-day appeal deadline began to run on

November 17, 2015, and expired on December 17, 2015. Such a result would be

particularly out of harmony with the spirit of the rules in the circumstances of this

case. TCAM's first motion for reconsideration was phrased in the alternative:

either allow TCAM to pursue a money judgment under the Uniform Declaratory

Judgments Act, or allow TCAM to amend its pleadings to ask for that relief.

While the November 17, 2015, order purported to be a denial of the first motion

for reconsideration, its effect was only to deny the first alternative, while leaving

open the possibility that leave to amend might yet be granted. It was not until

December 18, 2015, that the court foreclosed that option and denied the first

motion for reconsideration in full. TCAM filed its notice of appeal within 30 days

of that order.

       PMI contends that interpreting the rules to allow successive motions for

reconsideration will have the undesirable effect of allowing procrastinating

litigants to delay indefinitely the filing of their appeals by filing repetitive motions.

We regard the possibility of such abuse as remote. If it occurred, it would be

readily subject to control and sanctions by the trial court and the appellate court.

       PMI has filed a statement of additional authorities including decisions from

federal courts and the courts of other states that, in general, hold that a second

motion to reconsider does not toll the deadline to appeal the underlying final



                                            12
No. 74623-5-1/13


judgment. Because the cited decisions either rely on court rules that are worded

differently from Washington's or are distinguishable on their facts, they are not

helpful. Our conclusion that Washington's CR 59 contemplates successive

motions for reconsideration is supported by the drafters' comment to the 2005

amendments to that rule: "The suggested amendments to CR 59(j) allow the

court to consider more than one motion for reconsideration, motion for new trial,

or motion for judgment as a matter of law in some circumstances." 4 Karl B.

Tegland, Washington Practice: Rules Practice CR 59 drafters' cmt. at 561

(6th ed. 2013) (drafters' comment to 2005 amendments).

       We conclude the judgment and the two orders denying reconsideration

are all properly before this court on appeal.

       In summary, PMI's motion to dismiss the appeal is denied. The trial court

erred by denying TCAM's request for a money judgment. The case is remanded

with instructions to hold a show cause hearing under RCW 7.24.080 to determine

the appropriate money judgment, to award TCAM its reasonable attorney fees for

this appeal in accordance with the attorney fee provision of the lease, and for

other proceedings as may be consistent with this opinion.

       Reversed and remanded.