Court Opinion

ID: 4285559
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-06-18 19:56:11.823977+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:36:21.510085
License: Public Domain

'FILED                         •
                                              COURT OF APPEALS OW I       •    .

                                               STATE OF WASHINGTON

                                               2018 JUN 18 Ali 9: 35

       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

JOYCE DUCHESNEAU                        )
                                        )    No. 76304-1-1
                    Appellant,          )
                                        )    DIVISION ONE
             and                        )
                                        )
ELISA CHAN, as personal                 )
representative of the ESTATE OF         )
BENNETT C. TSE,                         )    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
                                        )
                    Respondent.         )   FILED: June 18, 2018
                                        )

       BECKER, J. — Joyce Duchesneau appeals from a summary judgment

order dismissing her malpractice claim against the estate of a deceased attorney.

Duchesneau has identified no basis for reversal. We affirm.

       Appellant Joyce Duchesneau had a personal relationship with Randal

Cole. She described herself as Cole's "girl Friday" who then became his

girlfriend. Cole died in 2011. Duchesneau prepared a creditor's claim seeking

$21,288.50 from his estate for providing care and services to him and to his

minor son.

      A claimant must(1) submit a creditor's claim to the personal

representative and (2)file it in the court in which the probate proceedings were

commenced. RCW 11.40.070(3). Duchesneau complied with the first
No. 76304-1-1/2

requirement by sending her claim to Bennett Tse, the attorney for the personal

representative of Cole's estate, Brigitte Gerrior. Tse received the claim on

August 15, 2011. According to Duchesneau, Tse informed her that he would file

it in probate court on her behalf. He did not do so, nor did Duchesneau file the

claim herself. The time frame in which she was required to do so elapsed. See

RCW 11.40.051(1).

       Tse withdrew as counsel for the personal representative. New counsel,

Ray Rainey, was substituted in July 2013. On March 7, 2014, Duchesneau

received notice from Gerrior that her claim had been rejected: "The Personal

Representative rejects the foregoing claim(s) because they were not properly

served and filed, they are untimely, they are unsupported by consideration, and

they are barred by applicable statutes of limitations."

       Tse died on April 5, 2015. Respondent Elisa Chan was appointed

personal representative of Tse's estate. Duchesneau submitted a creditor's

claim for $21,288.50, the same amount she unsuccessfully sought from Cole's

estate. The attorney for Chan rejected this claim on December 16, 2015.

       Acting pro se, Duchesneau then filed this suit against Chan, as personal

representative for Tse's estate, on January 13, 2016. Her complaint alleged that

when Tse failed to timely file her creditor's claim against Cole's estate, Tse acted

as her lawyer and was negligent. Chan denied liability. She asserted that no

attorney-client relationship existed between Duchesneau and Tse and he

therefore had no duty to file her claim. Chan raised affirmative defenses

including failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.

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No. 76304-1-1/3

Interrogatories sent by Chan in August 2016 asked Duchesneau to identify

experts that she intended to call; Duchesneau responded "no expert."

      Trial was set for January 9, 2017. On November 1, 2016, Chan moved for

dismissal by summary judgment. She argued: (1)the dead man's statute barred

Duchesneau from testifying that she and Tse had an attorney-client relationship,

and she had no other evidence of that relationship, and (2) the deadline for

disclosure of witnesses had passed and Duchesneau had not identified any

experts who could testify that Tse's conduct breached the standard of care. A

hearing on the summary judgment motion was set for December 2, 2016.

      A copy of the summary judgment motion and a notice of the hearing were

sent by regular and certified mail to Duchesneau's home address on November

1, 2016. On November 18, 2016, Duchesneau contacted Chan's attorney bye-

mail. She said she had received notices indicating that the postal service had

attempted to make a delivery when she was not home to provide a signature.

Chan's attorney responded,"The documents our firm sent you by certified mail,

return receipt requested, are identical to the summary judgment documents we

also sent to you by regular mail the same day." Duchesneau answered, "I never

got a mailing from you guys and I don't know what you're talking about a

summary judgment I have not received anything." Duchesneau asked counsel to

send the documents to her work address and suggested that they should delay

going "forward to court." In a response e-mail, Chan's attorney attached

electronic copies of the documents and agreed to send hard copies to

Duchesneau's work address. The e-mail said,"We do plan on going forward with

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No. 76304-1-1/4

our Motion for Summary Judgment. Trial is scheduled for January 9, 2017, and it

is imperative that the court hear our motion before the deadline to hear

dispositive motions."

       On November 21, 2016, the summary judgment motion and hearing notice

were delivered to Duchesneau's work address; she signed to acknowledge

receipt. The notice stated the hearing date but not the time. Under local court

rules, a hearing notice must include both the date and time. LCR 7(b)(5)(A).

       Duchesneau did not file a timely response to the summary judgment

motion. The motion proceeded for hearing on December 2, 2016. Duchesneau

did not appear. The court entered an order dismissing her complaint.

       Duchesneau moved for reconsideration. She claimed in her brief(not by

declaration or affidavit) that she believed she had more time to respond to the

motion because she informed counsel that "1 have not received whatever it was

he was sending me at my house and to please send it to me at my work." She

also argued that the hearing notice was deficient because it did not include a

time for the hearing.

       The court denied reconsideration by order dated December 12, 2016:

              When plaintiff Joyce Lanette Duchesneau filed this case
      alleging professional malpractice against an attorney(now
      deceased), it was assigned to this Department and given a trial
      date of January 9,2017. Along with this information, the plaintiff
      also received case scheduling documents requiring that all
      witnesses be disclosed by August and September of 2016 and
      directing that all discovery be completed by November 21. Despite
      this, she has not disclosed any witnesses in this case and, in
      particular, she evidently did not have a witness who could give the
      requisite expert testimony as to a failure of the defendant to meet
      the professional standard of care. Without this, it would be

                                        4
No. 76304-1-1/5

       impossible for her case to proceed to trial. (And, of course, the
       deadline for seeking a continuance of trial date is also well past.)
               Based upon the obvious deficiency in the plaintiff's case, the
       defendant brought a timely motion for summary judgment. The
       plaintiff did not submit any written response to the motion nor did
       she contact the Court or appear in person for the hearing. Shortly
       after the Court had granted the unopposed motion on December 2,
       the plaintiff—having received word of that development—did
       contact the court to inquire as to her options. She has now sought
       reconsideration of the Order, asserting some confusion regarding
       the time scheduled for the summary judgment hearing. However,
       nothing she has put before the Court would show, or even hint at,
       any basis upon which the above-noted deficiencies could be
       overcome.

       Duchesneau then filed this appeal, seeking review of the order granting

summary judgment and the denial of reconsideration.

       Chan argues that review on the merits is not warranted given deficiencies

in Duchesneau's opening brief. An appellate brief must include "argument in

support of the issues presented for review, together with citations to legal

authority and references to relevant parts of the record." RAP 10.3(6).

Duchesneau's brief includes assignments of error challenging the summary

judgment order and Chan's alleged failure to provide adequate notice of the

hearing. There are no issue statements pertaining to these assignments of error,

as required under RAP 10.3(4). There are minimal citations to the appellate

record, and those that are included generally do not support the claims asserted.

The remainder of the brief includes a "Statement of Case" section and a request

for attorney fees. There is no argument section. At the conclusion of the facts

section, Duchesneau asserts that a hearing notice must include the time in

addition to the date. But she makes no argument and cites no authority to show

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No. 76304-1-1/6

that violation of this rule, without more, warrants reversal of a summary judgment

order, nor does she argue that reversal is warranted on any other basis.

       A party's technical violation of the appellate rules "should normally be

overlooked and the case should be decided on the merits." State v. Olson, 126
Wash. 2d 315, 319, 893 P.2d 629 (1995). Cases will not be determined on the

basis of noncompliance except in compelling circumstances. RAP 1.2(a). "This

result is particularly warranted where the violation is minor and results in no

prejudice to the other party and no more than a minimal inconvenience to the

appellate court." Olson, 126 Wash. 2d at 319; see also Daughtry v. Jet Aeration

Co., 91 Wash. 2d 704, 710, 592 P.2d 631 (1979)(appellate review is not barred if

"the nature of the challenge is perfectly clear"). But when an appellant fails to

raise an issue in connection with assignments of error and fails to present any

argument on the issue or provide any legal citation, an appellate court will not

consider the merits of that issue. Olson, 126 Wash. 2d at 321.

       Duchesneau's appeal is one of those rare cases in which technically

deficient briefing prevents meaningful review. The lack of issue statements

combined with the lack of argument as to why reversal is warranted makes the

nature of her challenge unclear. We are mindful of the difficulties inherent in self-

representation. But pro se litigants are generally held to the same standards as

attorneys, including that they are expected to comply with the rules governing

appellate review. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Avery, 114 Wash. App. 299,

310, 57 P.3d 300 (2002). In this instance, Duchesneau's serious noncompliance

with RAP 10.3 has made it very difficult for Chan to know how to respond.

                                          6
No. 76304-1-1/7

       To the extent we can discern what Duchesneau is trying to argue, we

conclude the trial court had a sound basis for ordering dismissal. Duchesneau

claims to have received inadequate notice of the summary judgment hearing, but

she has failed to rebut the ample evidence showing that she was properly served

in accordance with the rules. She knew a hearing on the motion was scheduled

for December 2, 2016, yet she took no action to defend against the motion and

she did not seek a continuance.

       As the trial court observed, Duchesneau at no point presented evidence in

support of her legal malpractice claim. To substantiate a legal malpractice claim,

a plaintiff must prove the existence of an attorney-client relationship. Hizey v.

Carpenter, 119 Wash. 2d 251, 260, 830 P.2d 646 (1992). The plaintiff must also

present expert testimony to establish a breach of the standard of care. Walker v.

Bangs, 92 Wash. 2d 854, 857-58, 601 P.2d 1279(1979). Duchesneau lacks proof

of both.1

       Given the complete lack of evidence supporting Duchesneau's

malpractice claim, we would hold that summary judgment dismissal was proper

even if we could get past the deficiencies of her briefing. Young v. Key Pharm.,

Inc., 112 Wash. 2d 216, 225, 770 P.2d 182(1989).

       Chan requests attorney fees under RAP 18.9 based on the filing of a

frivolous appeal. We decline to award fees.

       1 The documents submitted by Duchesneau to this court include part of a
transcript from a hearing that occurred in a 2016 suit between Duchesneau and
Gerrior, the personal representative of Cole's estate. Because the transcript was
not submitted to the trial court, we decline to consider it. RAP 9.12.
                                         7
No. 76304-1-1/8

      Affirmed.

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WE CONCUR:

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