FILED
APRIL 9, 2020
In the Office of the Clerk of Court
WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION THREE
SARA RHODES, an individual, )
) No. 35920-4-III
Appellant/Cross Respondent, ) (consolidated with
) No. 36227-2-III)
v. )
)
BARNETT & ASSOCIATES, P.S., ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
a Washington corporation, and )
RYAN BARNETT AKA RYAN )
MOOSBRUGGER, a married individual, )
)
Respondents/Cross Appellants. )
SIDDOWAY, J. — Sara Rhodes appeals the dismissal of her complaint as a
discovery sanction, after she requested an extension of time rather than comply with an
order setting a deadline for her response to discovery. We reverse the dismissal, which
was not warranted under the Burnet1 factors. We also reverse the underlying order, since
a discovery master, whose recommendations were adopted by the trial court, did not give
meaningful consideration to Ms. Rhodes’s objections to discovery and request for a
protective order. We provisionally reverse four fee and cost awards, without constraining
the trial court’s authority to revisit them in future proceedings.
1
Burnet v. Spokane Ambulance, 131 Wn.2d 484, 494, 933 P.2d 1036 (1997).
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
FACTS
According to her amended complaint for damages, Sara Rhodes became employed
by Barnett & Associates on August 11, 2014, after it acquired the business of her former
employer, for whom she had worked as an administrative assistant and bookkeeper. The
complaint alleges that Ryan Barnett, who became Ms. Rhodes’s supervisor, began
making unwanted sexual advances toward her the first week they worked together. It
alleges that Mr. Barnett’s conduct quickly escalated to unremitting sexual harassment,
including nonconsensual sex. Ms. Rhodes alleges that her last day of work for Barnett &
Associates was October 15, 2014, and that she was constructively discharged as a result
of the hostile work environment.
Within two weeks of the last day of her short tenure at Barnett & Associates,
lawyer Kevin Roberts, then of the law firm of Dunn Black & Roberts, P.S., sent a
demand letter to Mr. Barnett, threatening suit if Ms. Rhodes was not paid almost $1
million in settlement. Mr. Barnett’s lawyer has characterized this as a “shakedown” over
sex that occurred, but was consensual. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 564.
PROCEDURE
2014 — 2016
When the claim did not settle, Ms. Rhodes filed the action below in December
2014. She alleged, among other claims, sexual harassment in violation of chapter 49.60
RCW, assault, and battery.
2
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Mr. Barnett removed the action to federal court,2 but the district court found
removal to be improper and remanded the case to the superior court in February 2015.
Mr. Barnett moved for reconsideration of the remand order, filing a notice with the
superior court clerk that he was challenging the remand. After reconsideration was
denied, he appealed an award of attorney fees against him to the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals.
On October 6, 2015, Mr. Barnett served Ms. Rhodes in the action below with
interrogatories and requests for production, via e-mail directed to Mr. Roberts at
dunnandblack.com. A week earlier, however, on October 1, Mr. Roberts left that law
firm to start another firm, Roberts | Freebourn PLLC. On October 15, 2015, the law firm
of Dunn Black & Roberts filed a notice of intent to withdraw as Ms. Rhodes’s counsel,
effective October 26, 2015. The notice indicated that Ms. Rhodes’s last known name and
address was in care of Mr. Roberts at Roberts | Freebourn. When answers and objections
were not received to the discovery, Mr. Barnett took no action to compel responses for
over a year and a half. His lawyer, Mary Schultz, later explained, “[W]e did not want to
incur defense costs unnecessarily if [Ms. Rhodes] ultimately did not intend to [pursue the
action].” CP at 516.
2
This action, and certain others, were taken by Mr. Barnett and by related
codefendants. For convenience, we attribute joint actions of defendants to Mr. Barnett.
3
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Ms. Rhodes’s briefing on appeal attributes the hiatus in state court proceedings to
the Ninth Circuit appeal. Mr. Barnett’s theory in the federal appeal was that attorney fees
should not have been imposed because he properly removed the case to federal court, and
the district court erred in ruling otherwise. But as his opening brief in the Ninth Circuit
acknowledged, Mr. Barnett could effectively appeal only the fee award; appeal of the
remand order was precluded by statute. Appellant’s Opening Br., Rhodes v. Barnett, No.
15-35340 (9th Cir. Sept. 29, 2015) (ECF No. 12).
The action nonetheless remained almost entirely dormant on both sides. Roughly
a year of inaction was self-attributed by superior court Judge James Triplett to a mistaken
understanding in his chambers that the state court matter was stayed.
2017
On May 24, 2017, lawyers for the parties were notified by the Ninth Circuit Court
that Mr. Barnett’s appeal, which had been set for oral argument on June 8, would be
submitted without oral argument instead. See Order, Rhodes v. Barnett, No. 15-35340
(9th Cir. May 24, 2017) (ECF No. 35). The federal district court’s fee award against Mr.
Barnett was affirmed in a decision filed a couple of weeks later.
On June 7, Mr. Roberts’s legal assistant forwarded a stipulated motion to amend
Ms. Rhodes’s complaint to Ms. Schultz. Ms. Schultz responded that she would not agree
to amendment until she received answers to her discovery. Mr. Roberts replied,
4
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
I will look at the discovery. I don’t recall what the procedural issues
were, but now that we are remanded and the case is getting back on track I
will meet with my client and get them answered. I will be out of the office
[on] a vacation with my children the week of June 19 but have them to you
by June 30, 2017.
CP at 694. Ms. Rhodes did not provide the promised responses by June 30 or for several
months thereafter.
Mr. Barnett moved to compel responses to the written discovery a couple of
months later, on September 5, 2017. Ms. Schultz struck the hearing after Mr. Roberts
agreed to provide responses by September 20.
Two weeks later, Mr. Barnett moved to amend the case schedule order and
continue the trial date. Ms. Schultz’s supporting declaration stated that the parties were
in agreement to modify the discovery cutoff or continue the trial date as necessary.
On September 20, responses and objections, signed by Ms. Rhodes and Mr.
Roberts, were delivered to Ms. Schultz as agreed. Many objections were interposed. The
42 interrogatories and 18 requests for production were responded to as follows:
10 interrogatories were answered without objection,
5 interrogatories and 3 requests for production were objected to, but without
waiving the objection, were answered,
1 request for production was objected to, but without waiving the objection, was
partially answered,
2 interrogatories and 3 requests for production were responded to as “needs to be
limited” in scope or time, and
25 interrogatories and 11 requests for production were objected to in their entirety.
5
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
See CP at 568-84.
In response to the many objections, Mr. Barnett supplemented and renoted his
earlier-served motion to compel. He argued that Ms. Rhodes’s objections were
interposed in bad faith and asked that a judgment of default be entered against her as a
discovery sanction. Ms. Rhodes responded, arguing that Mr. Barnett had not met and
conferred before filing the motion as required by CR 26(i) and LCR 37(a). She cross
moved for a protective order, arguing that the purpose of Mr. Barnett’s discovery was “to
annoy, embarrass and harass,” characterizing the discovery as “includ[ing] requests about
Ms. Rhodes sexual history, veiled accusations of illegal activity, and [as] seek[ing] to
embarrass her by asking about her children and financial assistance.” CP at 695-96.
The several motions were on for hearing before Judge Triplett on October 18. In
the limited time he had available, he first addressed Mr. Barnett’s unopposed motion to
amend the case schedule order. The lawyers agreed to set the trial more than a year out,
to begin on November 5, 2018. The case schedule order generated that day set a
discovery cutoff of August 31, 2018.
Turning to the discovery cross motions, Judge Triplett, who said he had read all
the parties’ submissions, expressed concern about his schedule and the time that would be
required to address all of the discovery requests and objections. He told the lawyers:
I’m a little worried about, number one, being able to just literally work my
way through every one of these, and what do we have, 35 of the 40—40
interrogatories, 42 interrogatories, 18 requests for productions, most of
6
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
which have objections to. I would have to work my way through each one
of these and at least get some idea as to—I will have to make a call as to,
first off, whether they’re relevant or could lead to relevant evidence.
Report of Proceedings (RP) (Oct. 18, 2017) at 13. He continued, “I’m not sitting here
saying that, you know, every one of these questions are going to lead to relevant
evidence. So I literally have to go through each one.” Id. He informed the parties that
his availability “would be very limited” and solicited the lawyers’ thoughts on appointing
a discovery master. RP (Oct. 18, 2017) at 14. After hearing them out, he decided to
appoint one.
Two individuals were suggested as possible discovery masters and Judge Triplett
spoke to both telephonically, during the hearing, on the record. The judge explained to
the discovery master who was thereafter appointed:
The defendant who is being accused of rape in the complaint is wanting to
get into asking some discovery questions about other behaviors that they
believe will lead to relevant evidence, and the plaintiff is opposing those,
feeling that they are harassing and overly broad and not intended to result
in relevant evidence, and at this point, there is 40-some questions and 18
requests for productions. There’s going to be a deposition where a lot of
these same objections may come up, and I just need a discovery master to
help resolve those issues.
RP (Oct. 18, 2017) at 43. He also told the prospective discovery master, “I have moved
the trial date to November of ’18, so we do have time to work our way through things.”
RP (Oct. 18, 2017) at 45. The discovery master was appointed by stipulated order on
October 25.
7
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
A hearing before the discovery master took place on November 30. During the
hearing, the process contemplated by Judge Triplett—working through each request and
objection—was not followed. Ms. Schultz, who the discovery master heard from first,
argued that such a process was unnecessary, and given Ms. Rhodes’s delay in responding
to the discovery, “I really almost don’t even see the complaint and the underlying claims
as being particularly relevant.” CP at 1074. Recounting that the discovery was served in
October 2015, that Mr. Roberts agreed but failed to provide answers and objections by
June 30, 2017, and that in responding on the second agreed deadline, he provided more
objections than answers, she argued:
[F]rom our perspective, any objections to the questions and any objections
to any of the requests for production are waived because there was simply
no privilege raised with anything, there’s no protective order request that
was made before the due date of the answers.
CP at 1077.3
When it was his turn to respond, Mr. Roberts suggested that since there had been
no meet and confer process before the motion to compel was filed, the discovery master
should order that process to take place “so that we can limit it down to what’s really at
issue.” CP at 1081. He said, “If there are specific issues remaining after that, then we
3
The federal rules of civil procedure (which permit a party to pose only 25
interrogatories) provide for waiver of objections to interrogatories in the event of an
untimely response, although they also allow the court to excuse untimeliness. Fed. R.
Civ. P. 33(b)(4). CR 33 does not include the federal rule’s language.
8
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
can address it at a subsequent hearing.” Id. He argued, “There’s no prejudice, we’ve
continued the trial.” Id.
Before the discovery master or either lawyer addressed any individual discovery
request, the discovery master stated, “I’m going to go ahead and make some findings that
much of the information that is requested is appropriate.” CP at 1093. It continued, “I
have seen very similar questions, many, many questions in personal injury cases from the
defense merely because allegations are made.” Id.
After this preliminary ruling, Mr. Roberts asked for a protective order allowing
him to provide at least some of Ms. Rhodes’s answers as “Attorney Eyes Only,” with Mr.
Barnett able to contest the designation. CP at 1095-96. Ms. Schultz objected to any
interference with her clients’ free use of any information received.
As the hearing continued, only 13 of the challenged interrogatories and requests
for production were opened up for what was mostly very limited argument.
There was some discussion of interrogatory 32, which asked if Ms. Rhodes had
been involved in any way in sexual trafficking or prostitution activity, and to
“describe such involvement, with dates and activity.” CP at 580.
Interrogatory 2, which requested Ms. Rhodes’s social security number was raised.
Ms. Schultz observed that her client probably already had the number as Ms.
Rhodes’s former employer, and Mr. Roberts withdrew Ms. Rhode’s objection to
that request.
Mr. Roberts brought up interrogatory 37, which inquired about his dealings with
Ms. Rhodes. He had no objection to identifying the date when Ms. Rhodes sought
his legal representation, but objected to the questioning about “where and how you
met him, on what legal matters you had used him previously, and whether you
9
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
socialized with him, or had business or personal dealings with him prior to filing
your action.” CP at 581.
The discovery master inquired about interrogatory 38, which asked Ms. Rhodes to
identify “all attorneys you have used for any purpose” and “all legal matters that
each of those attorneys handled or for which they provided consultation.” CP at
581.
There was brief discussion of two interrogatories (40 and 41) and two requests for
production (17 and 18), which asked about Ms. Rhodes’s fee and cost
arrangements with Mr. Roberts, all payments made to him, and who had made the
payments. The production requests sought copies of the fee agreement and initial
correspondence.
There was discussion about discovery into Ms. Rhodes’s employment history,
which Mr. Roberts explained was objectionable because it was overbroad; he was
requesting a shorter time frame than presented by request for production 3, which
asked Ms. Rhodes to produce all applications for employment submitted or
resumes used since 2005.
There was discussion about interrogatories 9 and 17, the first of which sought
information about “financial assistance” Ms. Rhodes had received in the past five
years, and the second of which sought identification of “any and all forms of state
or federal government aid” she had ever received, “including Public Assistance,
food stamps, [and] state medical, educational grants.” CP at 571, 575.
Mr. Roberts raised interrogatory 13, which asked about any employers in the prior
10 years with whom Ms. Rhodes had engaged in consensual or nonconsensual
sexual contact or a sexual relationship, and interrogatory 31, which asked if Ms.
Rhodes was “involved in any way in, alleged to be involved in, [or] contacted by
police . . . or . . . any investigator” regarding sting operations “related to alleged
sexual trafficking, sex industry involvement, and/or prostitution activity.” CP at
573, 580.
The discussion of these 13 discovery requests appears on approximately 19 pages
of the 63-page transcript of the hearing. The remaining 23 discovery requests to which
Ms. Rhodes objected were never discussed.
10
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
The discovery master’s report and recommendation to the court was filed on
December 10. It recommended that “[d]espite [Ms. Rhodes’s] compelling arguments,”
she be ordered to answer all of Mr. Barnett’s discovery requests without narrowing, and
to execute a medical release by December 21, 2017. The December 21 date was arrived
at based on Mr. Roberts’s report at the hearing that he had a jury trial that was expected
to run from December 11 to 15, and before December 11 would be “focused on that.”
CP at 1129. The report and recommendation was that Ms. Rhodes’s request for a
protection order be denied, but that “the parties and the Discovery Master hold a
telephonic conference, once the responses are completed and served, to discuss if certain
information should be held as confidential and for ‘attorneys’ eyes only.’” CP at 816. It
recommended that Mr. Barnett’s fees incurred in preparing and filing the motion be
granted.
Judge Triplett entered the report and recommendation as the order of the court on
December 18. He did not have a transcript of the hearing before the discovery master. It
was not prepared until late February 2018, and was not filed with the court until March
16, 2018, after this appeal was filed.
On December 20, 2017, Mr. Roberts e-mailed to the discovery master and Ms.
Schultz a motion for extension of time, requesting 30 additional days to provide
responses to the discovery. His supporting declaration attached a December 1, 2017
article from The Spokesman-Review reporting on the arrest of a Spokane police officer,
11
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Nicholas Spolski, who had been charged with fourth degree domestic violence assault
after allegedly hitting his girlfriend. The newspaper article stated that a no-contact order
had been issued. Mr. Robert’s declaration explained that Ms. Rhodes and her children
had been living with Nicholas Spolski and that she was the victim of the assault. It stated
that she was “currently in the process of recovering from it and focusing on finding a
home for her children and working through the issues associated with this crisis” and
concluded, “Given the length of time before trial, this will cause no prejudice.” CP at
1313.
Mr. Roberts informed the discovery master that he would be leaving town for
holiday travel. Electronic mail suggests that he would be traveling for two weeks and
that the discovery master agreed his reply brief on the extension issue could be filed on
January 4.
On December 28, Mr. Barnett’s response to the motion for extension was e-mailed
to the discovery master and Mr. Roberts. Mr. Barnett made a renewed request that a
default judgment of dismissal be entered. The response was supported by filings from
two other legal proceedings involving Ms. Rhodes, which it characterized as relevant
because they reflected Ms. Rhodes’s appearance and participation in other legal matters
at times when she was not responding to discovery from Mr. Barnett.4
4
One proceeding began in 2009 as a parentage proceeding involving Ms.
Rhodes’s older child and appears to have involved ongoing custody disputes culminating
12
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
The discovery master conducted a telephonic hearing on January 10. There is no
transcript or even a recording of the call.5 The discovery master’s report and
recommendation, filed two days later, recommended that Ms. Rhodes’s complaint be
dismissed in the event she did not provide “complete and unequivocal” answers and
production by January 16 at 5:00 p.m., reasoning that there had been “a sustained period
of discovery noncompliance on Plaintiff’s part.” CP at 846, 850. The discovery master
observed that the behavior alleged by Ms. Rhodes against Mr. Barnett was egregious and
noted “the length of time that has gone by with such claims remaining public and
unresolved.” Id. at 846. It pointed out that it had previously found defense discovery
requests were “relevant inquiries, and, in many cases, near standard issue.” Id. It
discounted Mr. Roberts’s motion for an extension of time because Ms. Rhodes “herself
provided . . . no declaration, testimony or evidence.” Id. It recommended that further
fees be imposed against Ms. Rhodes and awarded to the defendants.
in a November 2017 trial. The other appears to have been a protection order action by
Ms. Rhodes against the father of her younger child that began in August 2013, and was
concluded in September 2013, when neither party appeared for a hearing.
5
This was confirmed by counsel during oral argument. Because the discovery
master, not the parties, requested an early morning telephonic hearing, we do not fault the
parties for the lack of a record. Wash. Court of Appeals oral argument, Rhodes v. Barnett
& Assocs., No. 35920-4-III (Dec. 5, 2019), at 17 min., 15 sec. to 17 min., 25 sec.; 18 min.
50 sec. to 18 min., 57 sec., available at https://www.courts.wa.gov/appellate_trial_courts
/appellateDockets/index.cfm?fa=appellateDockets.showOralArgAudioList&courtId=a03
&docketDate=20191205.
13
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Mr. Barnett moved the trial court to adopt the discovery master’s January 12
recommendations. Ms. Rhodes challenged the recommendations. In the body of Mr.
Barnett’s response, he included a request for CR 11 sanctions against Mr. Roberts.
Judge Triplett had assumed the position of chief criminal judge, so the report and
recommendations and the parties’ submissions were considered by another judge. When
contacted by the newly-appointed judge about whether there would be oral argument, Mr.
Roberts conceded that the stipulation and order did not provide for it. Ms. Rhodes’s
challenge to the recommendation had been “based on the pleadings presented in
Plaintiff’s Motion for Extension of Time,” CP at 864, but like many materials submitted
to the discovery master, Ms. Rhodes’s motion and counsel’s supporting declaration were
not filed with the clerk of court, so the trial court did not have Ms. Rhodes’s briefing
before it in ruling on the cross motions.6
6
The court might have thought it did, because Mr. Barnett filed what he
characterized as “copies of communications between counsel and the Discovery Master
leading to the hearing on that request,” that did not include Ms. Rhodes’s motion or its
supporting declaration. CP at 884. We do not fault the defense for that submission,
which comprised communications other than the parties’ briefing. We only observe that
it might explain why the trial court entered an order without questioning why it did not
have the materials on which Ms. Rhodes relied.
The fact that Ms. Rhodes’s motion for extension was missing from the record was
noted on appeal, and the record was supplemented with the motion, which was filed with
the trial court on December 6, 2019. In preparing the opinion, we realize that a reply
from Ms. Rhodes on the extension issue also apparently exists, but remains absent from
the record. E.g., CP at 857, 847.
14
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
The trial court adopted the discovery master’s report and recommendations,
signing the form of judgment and order presented by Mr. Barnett on February 9.7
Included in that judgment and order and in additional judgments entered thereafter were
the following judgment amounts in favor of Mr. Barnett and the discovery master:
Judgment
Summary #; Filed Date Amount Representing
creditor
Judgment Feb. 15, 2018 $4062.50 Fees and costs incurred up
Summary I; to the Dec. 10, 2017 date of
Defendant Barnett discovery master’s first
report and recommendation
Judgment Feb. 28, 2018 $7,477.50 Fees and costs incurred from
Summary III; Dec. 10, 2017 to Jan. 12,
Defendant Barnett 2018
Judgment Feb. 28, 2018 $3,812.50 Discovery master fees
Summary IV;
Discovery Master
Ms. Rhodes timely appealed the December 18, 2017 order adopting the discovery
master’s first report and recommendations; the February 9, 2018 order filed on February
15, adopting the discovery master’s second report and recommendations; and the
February 28, 2018 order on supplemental fees and discovery master fees.
7
The order with judgment summaries signed on February 9, 2018, was entered on
February 15, 2018, because court staff was under the impression that the original order
had been misplaced. See CP at 1192. The record on appeal reveals that the original order
was not misplaced, and two copies of the order, which differ only in the notation in Mr.
Roberts’s signature block, are presently in the record. They appear to have been given
different judgment numbers. Compare CP at 1012-15 (#18901100-1) with CP at 1022-25
(#18901245-7).
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
After the appeal was filed, Mr. Roberts claims to have become aware for the first
time that the court’s February 9 order imposed CR 11 sanctions against him. Contending
that no motion ever requested that relief and it could not have been the court’s intent, Ms.
Rhodes moved under CR 60 to amend the judgment and order to remove him as a
judgment debtor. After considering the arguments of counsel and the record, the trial
court agreed that there was good cause for the requested amendment. It nonetheless
ordered Mr. Roberts to pay Mr. Barnett’s fees, since the infirmity was apparent in Mr.
Barnett’s proposed order and was not raised before the order was entered.
Mr. Barnett appealed the decision granting the motion to amend the February 15
order, the amendment, and an order denying his motion for reconsideration. Ms. Rhodes
filed a supplemental notice of appeal challenging the trial court’s award to Mr. Barnett of
fees and costs incurred in responding to the motion to amend the judgment.
ANALYSIS
APPEAL
I. THE RECORD DOES NOT SUPPORT THE BURNET FACTORS, SO THE COMPLAINT
SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN DISMISSED
Generally, “the court may impose only the least severe sanction that will be
adequate to serve its purpose in issuing a sanction.” Teter v. Deck, 174 Wn.2d 207, 216,
274 P.3d 336 (2012). To dismiss an action as a sanction for discovery violations, “‘it
must be apparent from the record’ that (1) the party’s refusal to obey the ‘discovery order
16
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
was willful or deliberate,’ (2) the party’s actions ‘substantially prejudiced the opponent’s
ability to prepare for trial,’ and (3) the trial court ‘explicitly considered whether a lesser
sanction would probably have sufficed.’” Rivers v. Wash. St. Conf. of Mason
Contractors, 145 Wn.2d 674, 686, 41 P.3d 1175 (2002) (quoting Burnet, 131 Wn.2d at
494).
We review a trial court’s imposition of discovery sanctions for abuse of discretion
and should not disturb their use absent a clear showing that a trial court’s discretion was
manifestly unreasonable or exercised on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons.
Mayer v. Sto Indus., Inc., 156 Wn.2d 677, 684, 132 P.3d 115 (2006). In this case, since
the trial court adopted the discovery master’s recommendations, we review whether the
discovery master’s recommendation of dismissal was tenable. The discovery master
applied the correct legal standard, so we focus on whether its findings were based on
unsupported facts.
Substantial prejudice to ability to prepare for trial. The record does not support
the discovery master’s finding that Ms. Rhodes’s failure to comply with the December
18, 2017 order substantially prejudiced Mr. Barnett’s ability to prepare for trial. The
prejudice found by the discovery master was that Mr. Barnett was entitled to “a full rules
discovery period” that was lost due to the long passage of time after the discovery was
initially served. CP at 849. Elsewhere, it noted the egregious nature of Ms. Rhodes’s
allegations and the “length of time that has gone by with such claims remaining public
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and unresolved.” CP at 846. But beginning on November 4, 2015, Mr. Barnett could
have moved to compel responses to the discovery at any time. CR 33(a), 34(b)(3),
37(a)(2). Cf. Bus. Servs. of Am. II v. WaferTech LLC, 174 Wn.2d 304, 312, 274 P.3d
1025 (2012) (in reversing the dismissal of a complaint for five years’ inaction, the court
observed that after a year, defendant “could have moved at any time to dismiss
[plaintiff’s] claim for want of prosecution”).
Ms. Rhodes had a duty under the rules to respond with objections and answers
within 30 days, to be sure. But by suffering the discovery to go unanswered for over a
year and a half before moving to compel responses, Mr. Barnett’s argument that it was
more reasonable for Ms. Rhodes’s complaint to be dismissed than for him to wait another
month for discovery responses rings hollow. More than six months remained before the
discovery deadline. Ten months remained before trial.
Lesser sanctions. The record does not support the discovery master’s finding that
lesser sanctions would not suffice. It reasoned:
Plaintiff has been accommodated by Defendants with additional time to
respond last summer and again in early fall, and this accommodation did
not result in answers. The trial continuance from Dec. 7th, the Court’s
referral of the compel motion to this Discovery Master, the order of
directing compliance itself—all allowed Plaintiff additional time. The
Court’s order awarding fees for non-compliance affirmed the seriousness of
this matter. Plaintiff has not responded to any of these accommodations.
CP at 849.
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Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Repeated accommodations followed by unexplained failures to respond would be
a basis for finding that imposing yet another deadline is not a viable sanction. But in this
case, there had not been the five or six unexplained responses to accommodations
suggested by the discovery master.
Ms. Rhodes did fail to provide responses by the June date promised by Mr.
Roberts. But she responded by the deadline promised in September. Given the
aggressive nature of the written discovery, objections and a request for a protective order
were to be expected.8 Once the objections were made and the protective order was
requested, Ms. Rhodes was entitled to have those matters heard.
The trial continuance until November 2018 was ordered before the discovery
master was appointed; the discovery master was even told about it when first contacted
by Judge Triplett. It is not clear what the discovery master means by “the order directing
compliance . . . allowed Plaintiff additional time.” Id. Once the ruling was made on the
cross motions to compel and for a protective order, Ms. Rhodes and her lawyer obviously
needed time to comply with the ruling. Given Mr. Roberts’s report of an impending trial,
8
We do not approve of the extent to which, in objecting, Ms. Rhodes then failed
to provide requested information to the extent it was not objectionable. On the other
hand, given the nature of the case, the number and scope of the written discovery requests
is questionable. None of Mr. Barnett’s written discovery was needed or was used to
determine Ms. Rhodes’s allegations against him, which had been laid out in detail in
October 2014 in her demand letter and complaint to police.
19
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
the three weeks afforded was a reasonable but not an overly-generous period for
compliance.
While the discovery master was dismissive of Ms. Rhodes’s need for an extension
of time to respond in December, the request for the additional 30 days was explained and
was made before the original deadline. In short, of the five or six “accommodations” to
which Ms. Rhodes allegedly did not respond, she failed to respond only in June 2017.
She either responded or timely claimed and explained an inability to respond thereafter.
The adopted recommendation that Ms. Rhodes could avoid dismissal only by
providing complete and unequivocal answers by January 16 effectively deprived her of
her right to challenge the recommendation. The order appointing the discovery master
gave a party five court days within which to challenge a discovery master
recommendation. The discovery master’s Friday, January 12 recommendation that Ms.
Rhodes must answer all of the discovery by the next Wednesday (following the Martin
Luther King holiday) or have her complaint dismissed left Ms. Rhodes with only two
court days within which to not only challenge the recommendation, but also obtain court
review.
Mr. Barnett’s original motion to compel identified a different sanction that would
have sufficed: a deadline for responses and execution of the medical release, with Ms.
Rhodes’s deposition to take place within a fixed time frame thereafter, sufficiently in
advance of the discovery deadline. See CP at 515. And as Mr. Roberts suggested at oral
20
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
argument, if the discovery master viewed it as dispositive that it see something from Ms.
Rhodes personally, then a lesser sanction would be to let him know it viewed that as
dispositive—and give him a time frame within which to respond. Wash. Court of
Appeals oral argument, supra, at 12 min., 19 sec. to 12 min., 33 sec.9
Willful failure. Finally, the finding by the discovery master of a “willful” failure
to comply with the December 21 deadline is poorly explained and documented. CP at
877. “A party’s disregard of a court order without reasonable excuse or justification is
deemed willful.” Rivers, 145 Wn.2d at 698.
Ms. Rhodes moved for an extension of time on the day before the original
response deadline. Mr. Roberts’s supporting declaration with its attached newspaper
article was evidence of a disruption in Ms. Rhodes’s and her children’s living situation
that might be significant. The discovery master had been made aware of and had agreed
to accommodate Mr. Roberts’s two week holiday travel. These are excuses and
justifications. Unless unreasonable, they negate willfulness. The discovery master does
not explain why they were unreasonable, although it alludes to the absence of a
9
In a declaration filed in May 2018, Ms. Rhodes responded to Ms. Schultz’s
argument that she had abandoned her claim and Mr. Roberts was taking unilateral
unauthorized actions in her name. She testified, “I hired Kevin Roberts to represent me,
as he still does”; “Kevin Roberts is my lawyer and has been acting as such in this case.
There is no basis for Mary Schultz to suggest otherwise”; “In reviewing Mary Schultz’s
most recent claims that I am unaware of my lawyers’ actions, I want the Court to know
that is not true and I have been kept informed by my lawyers and made decisions
presented to me about my case and how to proceed.” CP at 1254.
21
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
declaration from Ms. Rhodes. We find nothing in the record that should have signaled to
Mr. Roberts that relying on his own declaration instead of one from his client would
prove dispositive to Mr. Barnett’s dismissal request. On procedural matters courts
routinely rely on representations from lawyers about their clients’ situations.
The discovery master’s second report and recommendations state that during the
telephonic hearing on the extension request, it gleaned from Mr. Roberts’s answers and
his refusal to disclose some communications that he was not in contact with his client.
This was evidently the basis for the willfulness finding.10 Mr. Roberts concedes he was
sometimes unable to contact Ms. Rhodes during December 2017, but asserts he was in
contact with her before the telephonic hearing on the extension request. Unfortunately,
we have no record of the telephonic hearing. At a minimum, the finding of a willful
failure to comply is poorly supported by the record.
10
Beginning in January, Mr. Barnett informally advanced the contention that Ms.
Rhodes had abandoned her complaint. Dismissal for want of prosecution is addressed by
CR 41(b), under which a defendant can file a motion based on a lack of action required
under that rule. The rule contemplates that the issue will be squarely presented by a
motion on 10 days’ notice and that the dismissal, if ordered, is without prejudice.
The rule also authorizes a trial court to dismiss an action for noncompliance with a
court order or court rules. But it is the general policy of Washington courts not to resort
to dismissal lightly. Woodhead v. Disc. Waterbeds, Inc., 78 Wn. App. 125, 130, 896 P.2d
66 (1995). Where a court has found that a party has acted in willful and deliberate
disregard of reasonable and necessary court orders and has prejudiced the other side by
doing so, dismissal has been upheld as justified. Id.
Whatever the basis for a request for dismissal under CR 41(b), a plaintiff is
entitled to have it squarely presented, by a motion, to which the plaintiff can respond.
22
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
A lack of support for any one of the Burnet factors makes the severe sanction of
dismissal unwarranted. The judgment of dismissal must be reversed.
II. MS. RHODES DID NOT GET THE CONSIDERATION OF HER OBJECTIONS AND
PROTECTIVE ORDER REQUEST TO WHICH SHE IS ENTITLED UNDER COURT RULES
Ms. Rhodes also challenges the trial court’s order on the discovery master’s first
report and recommendation, which compelled responses to all of Mr. Barnett’s discovery
requests, without narrowing, and denied her request for a protective order.
Article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution provides that “[n]o person shall
be disturbed in his private affairs . . . without authority of law.” “Authority of law”
generally includes authority granted by “a valid, (i.e., constitutional) statute, the common
law or a rule of [the Supreme Court].” State v. Gunwall, 106 Wn.2d 54, 68-69, 720 P.2d
808 (1986) (emphasis omitted). The civil rules dealing with discovery provide authority
of law for intruding into private affairs, but as the United States Supreme Court observed
in Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, it is important to view the discovery rules in their
entirety:
Liberal discovery is provided for the sole purpose of assisting in the
preparation and trial, or the settlement, of litigated disputes. Because of the
liberality of pretrial discovery permitted by Rule 26(b)(1), it is necessary
for the trial court to have the authority to issue protective orders conferred
by Rule 26(c). It is clear from experience that pretrial discovery by
depositions and interrogatories has a significant potential for abuse. This
abuse is not limited to matters of delay and expense; discovery also may
seriously implicate privacy interests of litigants and third parties. . . .
23
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
467 U.S. 20, 35, 104 S. Ct. 2199, 81 L. Ed. 2d 17 (1984) (footnote omitted). Privacy
rights are a matter “implicit in the broad purpose and language” of CR 26(c). Id. n.21.
Article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution protects individuals from intrusions
into “private affairs,” a privacy interest “that the court necessarily evaluates when
considering a motion for a protective order under CR 26(c).” T.S. v. Boy Scouts of Am.,
157 Wn.2d 416, 431, 138 P.3d 1053 (2006).
The discovery rules gave Mr. Barnett the right to obtain discovery regarding “any
matter, not privileged, which [was] relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending
action.” CR 26(b)(1). And it was “not ground for objection that the information sought
[would] be inadmissible at the trial if the information sought appear[ed] reasonably
calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.” Id. In this case, ER 412,
which imposes a heightened standard of probativeness before evidence of a victim’s
sexual behavior or sexual predisposition can be admitted, would inform the analysis of
CR 26(b)(1) relevance.11
The rules gave Ms. Rhodes the right to respond to written discovery with
objections if she believed Mr. Barnett’s interrogatories or requests for production sought
11
ER 412 provides that the probative value of the evidence must substantially
outweigh the danger of harm to any victim and of unfair prejudice to any party. It also
provides that the proceedings on whether the evidence can be offered must be sealed
unless the court orders otherwise.
24
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
information that did not appear reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of
admissible evidence. CR 33(a), 34(b)(3)(B). And those rules gave her the right to move
the court for a protective order against annoyance, embarrassment or oppression,
including an order providing that discovery not be had, that certain matters not be
inquired into, or that the responsive information be treated confidentially. CR 26(c).
While the superior court rules give a party the right to serve discovery, a responding
party’s right to judicial review of the discovery is essential to the rules’ constitutionality
under article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution. State v. Reeder, 184 Wn.2d
805, 819, 365 P.3d 1243 (2015). Mr. Barnett’s right to obtain discovery was not more
important than Ms. Rhodes’s right to object that he was exceeding its proper scope or that
the intrusive nature of the discovery warranted protection under CR 26(c).
In adopting the discovery master’s report and recommendations, Judge Triplett did
not have an opportunity to review the transcript of the hearing conducted by the
discovery master. We do. By adopting the discovery master’s report and
recommendation, the court’s order is reviewed against the discovery master’s record.
Where the harsh remedy of dismissal is imposed, discovery decisions are
appealable as a matter of right; otherwise, only discretionary review is possible—and
rare. When discovery orders are eligible for review, we review them for manifest abuse
of discretion. Gillett v. Conner, 132 Wn. App. 818, 822, 133 P.3d 960 (2006). “Judicial
discretion ‘means a sound judgment which is not exercised arbitrarily, but with regard to
25
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
what is right and equitable under the circumstances and the law, and which is directed by
the reasoning conscience of the judge to a just result.’” T.S., 157 Wn.2d at 423 (quoting
State ex rel. Clark v. Hogan, 49 Wn.2d 457, 462, 303 P.2d 290 (1956)). A trial court
necessarily abuses its discretion if it applies the incorrect legal standard. Id. at 423-24.
The discovery master abused its discretion by failing to address, in a balanced
way, Mr. Barnett’s right to discovery against Ms. Rhodes’s right to object and seek
protection. Most of Ms. Rhodes’s objections were never addressed at all.12 Those that
were did not receive meaningful consideration. For example, when Mr. Roberts raised
Mr. Barnett’s interrogatory asking if Ms. Rhodes was ever contacted about, involved in
any way, or alleged to have been involved in any way in a sexual trafficking sting
operation, the discovery master gingerly asked about the possible relevance to Mr.
Barnett’s defense and accepted an unhelpful response:
[DISCOVERY MASTER:] Ms. Schultz, without conveying strategy
that you may feel compelled to keep confidential with your client and assert
privilege, is there information in that regard that you feel is relevant that
you know of?
MS. SCHULTZ: There’s a concern.
DISCOVERY MASTER: Okay.
CP at 1122.
12
We are satisfied from review of the hearing transcript that this was not because
Ms. Rhodes failed to raise the objections. The discovery master telegraphed early on that
it had already concluded that the discovery requests were, as it would later describe them,
“relevant . . . and, in many cases, near standard issue.” CP at 846.
26
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Ms. Schultz’s overarching explanation for why Mr. Barnett was entitled to
discovery into, e.g., the father of Ms. Rhodes’s children, any prior consensual
relationships with employers, any public assistance she had received, and other personal
matters, was not persuasive:
[MS. SCHULTZ:] . . . [O]n the one side here’s Mr. Barnett who,
you know, got himself into a despicable position because he had an affair,
he was having an affair on his wife, his pregnant wife, in California, who’s
a dentist. Okay? So, you know, the jury’s not going to be looking at him
as though he’s, you know, a particularly above-board kind of guy.
And here’s, you know, who counsel wants to represent as, you
know, this poor unassuming victim that worked for him. Well, the playing
field has to be leveled here. He’s done some bad things; she’s put them all
over the pleadings here and accused him of rape and then filed it in the
Spokane Superior Court and blown up his business.
So does he now get to understand who this person is and to be able
to explain to the jury who this person is? And I think he does.
CP at 1124-25 (emphasis added).
Turning to Ms. Rhodes’s request to be able to provide some responses
provisionally as “attorneys’ eyes only,” the discovery master’s recommendation that it
and the parties confer about that possibility “once the responses are completed and
served” gave Ms. Rhodes no protection at all. CP at 1053. The horse would be out of the
barn. Ms. Schultz was clear that Mr. Barnett was participating in preparing his case and
argued for the right to make any use of the information obtained in discovery. Even
where a court might not ultimately grant protection, a more reasonable approach to
discovery into truly private affairs is to allow confidential designations provisionally,
27
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
subject to review and rejection by the court. See, e.g., the following decisions in sexual
harassment cases: Simpson v. Univ. of Colo., 220 F.R.D. 354, 361 (D. Colo. 2004) (some
diary entries ordered disclosed, but for attorneys’ eyes only); Sanchez v. Zabihi, 166
F.R.D. 500, 503 (D.N.M. 1996) (interrogatory about prior romantic or sexual advances
narrowed, limited to three years, and with response for attorneys’ eyes only);
Herchenroeder v. Johns Hopkins Univ. Applied Physics Lab., 171 F.R.D. 179, 182 (D.
Md. 1997) (two narrowed interrogatories ordered answered, but not until a protective
order/confidentiality agreement was in place).
We do not suggest that in ruling on discovery objections a trial court must always
entertain argument and orally rule on an objection-by-objection basis. Sometimes it is
clear from the nature of the case that the discovery sought is relevant within the meaning
of CR 26(b)(1) and is not overbroad. Sometimes it will be clear that no privacy interest is
implicated that warrants protection. That is not the case with Mr. Barnett’s discovery,
however. While he might ultimately provide persuasive explanations for much and
perhaps all of his discovery, it does intrude into private affairs. Some of the discovery,
given the nature of the case, appears overbroad. Ms. Rhodes’s objections and request for
protection could not reasonably be rejected out of hand.
Sometimes the parties’ briefing, informed by meeting and conferring as required
by CR 26(i), will provide a trial court with enough information to assess CR 26(b)(1)
relevance and the need, if any, for a protective order. But there was no CR 26(i)
28
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
conference in this case.13 While the discovery master’s report characterized the parties as
having “briefed their positions extensively,” CP at 816, Mr. Barnett’s briefing was
general in nature. In none of his briefing did he undertake to explain how specific
requests were reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.
Providing meaningful review of a responding party’s objections and request for
protection is required not only to protect their rights under the discovery rules, but to
safeguard their even more basic right to access to the courts. As our Supreme Court
observed in Seattle Times v. Rhinehart, individuals who learn that their privacy concerns
will be rejected out of hand, may, rather than expose themselves, “forgo the pursuit of
their just claims. The judicial system will thus have made the utilization of its remedies
so onerous that the people will be reluctant or unwilling to use it.” 98 Wn.2d 226, 254,
654 P.2d 673 (1982), aff’d, 467 U.S. 20, 104 S. Ct. 2199, 81 L. Ed. 2d 17 (1984).
We reverse the trial court’s December 18, 2017 order adopting the discovery
master’s report and recommendation, and remand for a rehearing of the parties’ cross
motions to compel and for a protective order.
13
We reject Ms. Rhodes’s argument that Mr. Barnett’s motion to compel should
automatically fail on account of his failure to comply with CR 26(i). We agree with the
decision of Division One in Amy v. Kmart of Wash., LLC, 153 Wn. App. 846, 858, 223
P.3d 1247 (2009) that refusing to hear a party’s motion to compel because it failed to
comply with CR 26(i) is discretionary with the trial court.
29
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
ATTORNEY FEES AND SANCTIONS:
APPEAL AND CROSS APPEAL
Following the trial court’s entry of an amended judgment and order on September
7, 2018, the following monetary judgments and orders are operative:
Judgment Summary #;
creditor and debtor Filed Date Amount Representing
Judgment Summary I Feb. 15, 2018 $4062.50 Fees and costs incurred
Creditor: Barnett up to the Dec. 10, 2017
Debtor: Roberts and date of discovery
Rhodes master’s first report and
recommendation
Judgment Summary III Sept. 7, 2018 $7,477.50 Fees and costs incurred
Creditors: Barnett from Dec. 10, 2017 to
Debtor: Rhodes Jan. 12, 2018
Judgment Summary IV Sept. 7, 2018 $3,812.50 Discovery master fees
Creditor: Discovery
Master
Debtor: Rhodes
Order Re: Opinion on Sept. 7, 2018 $6,082.50 Fees and costs incurred
Reconsideration &c in responding to motion
Creditor: Barnett to amend judgment
Debtor: Roberts
Ms. Rhodes appeals all the fee and cost awards. She appeals the fee and cost
awards against her in Judgment Summaries I, III and IV on grounds that the trial court’s
orders adopting the discovery master’s reports and recommendations were both in error.
She challenges the imposition on Mr. Roberts of Mr. Barnett’s fees incurred in
responding to her motion to amend Judgment Summary I on grounds he should not have
to pay fees and costs on a motion on which Ms. Rhodes prevailed.
30
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Mr. Barnett cross appeals the trial court’s decision granting Ms. Rhodes’s motion
to amend Judgment Summary I to remove Mr. Roberts as a joint debtor.
We begin with the trial court’s order granting the motion to amend Judgment
Summary I to remove Mr. Roberts as a joint debtor and imposing on Mr. Roberts the fees
incurred by Mr. Barnett in responding to the motion.
III. THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT ERR OR ABUSE ITS DISCRETION IN REMOVING MR.
ROBERTS AS A JOINT DEBTOR IN JUDGMENT SUMMARY I BUT MIGHT HAVE ABUSED
ITS DISCRETION IN IMPOSING FEES
The discovery master’s January 12, 2018 report and recommendation said the
following about attorney fees and costs:
The Discovery Master recommends that further fees be imposed
against Plaintiff and awarded to the Defendants for the continued necessity
of their pursuit of answers to their 2015 first set of interrogatories.
CP at 1155 (emphasis added). There was no recommendation to impose CR 11 sanctions
on Mr. Roberts.
On January 18, 2018, Mr. Barnett filed a “Motion to Adopt Discovery Master
Recommendations, Dismiss Claims, Award Defendants’ Fees and Costs, and Assess
Discovery Master Fees.” CP at 825. The motion did not ask for CR 11 sanctions against
Mr. Roberts.
After Ms. Rhodes filed a motion challenging the discovery master’s report and
recommendation on January 23, 2018, Mr. Barnett filed “Defendant’s Response to
Plaintiff’s Motion Challenging Special Master’s Recommendation.” CP at 869. The
31
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
caption did not identify the submission as including a motion for CR 11 sanctions.
Nonetheless, in the body of the response, Mr. Barnett asked the court to impose CR 11
sanctions on Mr. Roberts, asserting that Ms. Rhodes had abandoned her claims and Mr.
Roberts’s “[c]ontinued litigation . . . after his client has abandoned the claims is litigation
interposed for an improper purpose.” CP at 872. Mr. Barnett was aware, and even
pointed out in his response, that under the stipulation and order appointing the discovery
master, Ms. Rhodes was not entitled to reply to his response nor have oral argument
without leave of court.
Notes for hearing were served and filed that set Mr. Barnett’s motion to adopt the
discovery master’s recommendation and Ms. Rhodes’s challenge to the recommendation
for hearing at the same time on February 9, 2018. The record on appeal contains no note
for hearing of a motion under CR 11. Mr. Barnett’s proposed order addressing the
matters noted for hearing bears the footer, “Order Adopting Discovery Master’s
Recommendations.” CP at 1022. It was captioned “Order Adopting Discovery Master’s
Recommendations, Dismissing Plaintiff’s Claims and Awarding Fees.” Id. The trial
court signed Mr. Barnett’s proposed order.
In moving for relief from the order under CR 60, Mr. Roberts admitted he misread
Mr. Barnett’s proposed order and did not realize it imposed fees against him as a CR 11
sanction. In granting his request for relief, the trial court found “good cause to amend the
judgment and find that only the Plaintiff’s name, Sara Rhodes, shall be listed as the
32
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
judgment debtor.” CP at 1259. Given Mr. Roberts’s failure to review the proposed
orders and judgments prior to their entry, however, it also found good cause to impose
costs on Mr. Roberts for Mr. Barnett’s expense incurred in responding.
With the adoption of the civil rules, a court’s inherent power to modify a judgment
to make it conform to the judgment actually rendered was embodied in CR 60. Philip A.
Trautman, Vacation and Correction of Judgments in Washington, 35 WASH. L. REV. 505-
06 (1960). CR 60(a) provides that “[c]lerical mistakes in judgments . . . and errors
therein arising from oversight or omission may be corrected by the court at any time of its
own initiative or on the motion of any party.” The test for distinguishing between
“clerical” error, which can be corrected, and “judicial” error, which cannot, is whether,
based on the record, the judgment embodies the trial court’s intention. In re Marriage of
Getz, 57 Wn. App. 602, 604, 789 P.2d 331 (1990). Clerical error can include verbiage in
an order that was intentionally entered by the court if the record supports the trial court’s
position that inclusion of the challenged verbiage was never its intention. In re Estate of
Kramer, 49 Wn.2d 829, 830, 307 P.2d 274 (1957).
A trial court’s decision whether to vacate a judgment or order under CR 60 is
reviewed for abuse of discretion. Shaw v. City of Des Moines, 109 Wn. App. 896, 900,
37 P.3d 1255 (2002). In considering whether to grant a motion to vacate under CR 60, a
trial court should exercise its authority liberally and equitably to preserve the parties’
substantial rights. Id. at 901.
33
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
The trial court’s position that the language imposing CR 11 sanctions was not
relief it intended is supported by the record. CR 11(a) provides that sanctions can be
imposed upon “motion” by a party. Two motions were before the court for decision on
February 9, and neither was, or included, a motion under CR 11. Mr. Barnett included
his request for CR 11 sanctions in the body of a response to which Ms. Rhodes was not
permitted to reply or be heard in oral argument. A court imposing CR 11 sanctions must
make explicit findings as to which pleadings violated CR 11, how they constituted a
violation, and what conduct was sanctionable. N. Coast Elec. Co. v. Selig, 136 Wn. App.
636, 649, 151 P.3d 211 (2007). The trial court did not make the required findings here.
Mr. Barnett argued below and argues on appeal that Mr. Roberts was disqualified
from bringing the motion to correct the judgments, relying on a distinguishable decision,
In re Marriage of Wixom, 182 Wn. App. 881, 899, 332 P.3d 1063 (2014). This court held
in Wixom that “[i]f attorney and client disagree about who is at fault and point their
fingers at each other in response to a request for sanctions, the interests of the two are
clearly adverse,” and the client will need new counsel to represent her against her former
counsel in the proceedings to determine fault. Id. at 901. We cautioned that a conflict
does not exist every time the opposing party targets a sanction motion against attorney
and client, lest sanction motions be used as a tactic to harass. Id. We held only that “if
and when an attorney seeks to limit a sanction award against only his or her client, the
attorney must withdraw from representing the client.” Id.
34
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
Mr. Roberts was not pointing a finger at Ms. Rhodes, suggesting she was at fault.
His contention was that the trial court had not intended to impose CR 11 sanctions
against anyone. It was implicit in his motion that if the trial court intended to impose
sanctions, then the sanctions would be against him.
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting relief under CR 60.
We question whether the trial court had grounds to order Mr. Roberts to pay Mr.
Barnett’s fees incurred in responding to the motion, however. In State v. Gassman, 175
Wn.2d 208, 211, 283 P.3d 1113 (2012), our Supreme Court set boundaries on the
authority of Washington trial courts to impose sanctions, including attorney fees, when
exercising their inherent authority to control and manage their calendars, proceedings,
and parties. Gassman involved an appeal from a criminal prosecution in which the State
charged several defendants with crimes alleged to have taken place “on or about” one
date, and then moved on the morning of trial to charge them as having been committed
“on or about” a later date. Defense counsel objected, arguing their defenses relied on
alibis for the date originally charged. The court allowed amendment of the information,
continued trial, and—calling the State’s conduct “careless”—awarded $2,000 to each
defense lawyer as attorney fees for extra time required to deal with the alibi defense.
Id. at 210.
The Supreme Court reversed the fee awards. It observed that Washington courts
have followed federal case law in holding that a sanction of attorney fees imposed under
35
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
the court’s inherent authority must be based on a finding of conduct that is “at least
‘“tantamount to bad faith.”’” Id. at 211 (quoting State v. S.H., 102 Wn. App. 468, 474, 8
P.3d 1058 (2000) (quoting, in turn, Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 447 U.S. 752, 767,
100 S. Ct. 2455, 65 L. Ed. 2d 488 (1980))). “Under federal case law, courts may assess
attorney fees as an exercise of inherent authority only where a party engages in willfully
abusive, vexatious, or intransigent tactics designed to stall or harass.” Id. (citing
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 45-47, 111 S. Ct. 2123, 115 L. Ed. 2d 27
(1991)). It has been suggested that the reason federal courts limit fee shifting as a
sanction to bad faith conduct is “as a means of preventing erosion or evasion of the
American Rule.” Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. at 59 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
Gassman holds that when a sanction is imposed under the court’s inherent powers,
we may uphold it absent express findings if an examination of the record establishes that
the court found conduct equivalent to bad faith. We are unable to conclude that the trial
court found bad faith here. It appears possible, if not likely, that the trial court found
carelessness or recklessness on Mr. Roberts’s part. We therefore reverse the award of
fees to Mr. Barnett and remand with leave to the trial court to reimpose the fees only if it
makes a finding of conduct tantamount to bad faith.
36
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
IV. THE REMAINING FEE AND COST AWARDS ARE REVERSED INCIDENT TO OUR
REVERSAL OF THE UNDERLYING ORDERS ON THE MERITS
We reverse the remaining orders awarding fees and costs incident to our reversal
of the December 18, 2017 and February 9, 2018 orders on their merits. The trial court is
not foreclosed from taking into consideration prior fees and costs incurred in connection
with the parties’ discovery disputes in making any awards of fees and costs hereafter.
We reverse in whole or in part the following orders:
Order on Discovery Master’s Report and Recommendations re: Reverse
Defendant’s Motion to Compel, Plaintiff’s Request for Protective
Order, and Defendant’s Supplemental Motion for an Order of
Default and Fees entered December 18, 2017
Order Adopting Discovery Master’s Recommendations, Dismissing Reverse
Plaintiff’s Claims and Awarding Fees dated February 9, 2018, and
entered February 15, 2018
Order on Supplemental Fees and Fee Bill and Discovery Master Reverse
Fees entered February 28, 2018
Order Re: Opinion on Reconsideration on Motion to Amend Reverse in part
Judgment entered February 28, 2018, dated September 4, 2018
Amended Judgment and Order on Supplemental Fees and Fee Bill Reverse
and Discovery Master Fees dated September 4, 2018
Order Re: Opinion on Reconsideration on Motion to Amend Reverse in part
Judgment entered on February 28, 2018, dated September 7, 2018
Amended Judgment and Order on Supplemental Fees and Fee Bill Reverse
and Discovery Master Fees dated September 7, 2018
Order Re: Opinion on Reconsideration on Motion to Amend Reverse in part
Judgment entered February 28, 2018, dated September 4, 2018
37
No. 35920-4-III (consol w/ No. 36227-2-III)
Rhodes v. Barnett & Assocs.
We otherwise affirm the orders appealed. We direct the trial court to take any
action required to vacate the order and judgment entered on February 9, 2018, as
described in footnote 7. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
2.06.040.
dZdhw.~/ ft_.
ddoway,J.
WE CONCUR:
y? . A.. ' c..-:s:
Pennell, C.J. (result only)
38