Court Opinion

ID: 2715332
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-08-06 17:21:13.961666+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:12:47.118182
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

LANE POWELL PC, an Oregon
professional corporation,                       No. 69837-1-1

                    Respondent,                 DIVISION ONE

MARK DeCOURSEY and CAROL                        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
DeCOURSEY, individually and the
marital community composed thereof,             FILED: April 21, 2014

                    Appellants.

       Becker, J.— Judges must recuse themselves when their impartiality may

reasonably be questioned. Where an allegation of partiality rests on speculation

and illogical assumptions, it is not reasonable. The appellants in this matter have

not established either an appearance of unfairness or a violation of their due

process right to an impartial decision maker. We therefore hold that their motion

for recusal was properly denied and affirm the judgment.

      The law firm of Lane Powell PC agreed to represent appellants Mark and

Carol DeCoursey in their case against Windermere Real Estate S.C.A. Inc. and

its agent Paul Stickney. On September 19, 2007, the DeCourseys signed a fee

agreement whereby they agreed to pay Lane Powell on an hourly basis. A jury
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trial took place in 2008, Judge Michael Fox presiding. On October 30, 2008, the

jury returned a verdict for the DeCourseys, awarding $522,200 in damages.

         The DeCourseys at this time had a large outstanding balance on fees

owed to Lane Powell. On December 30, 2008, Lane Powell and the DeCourseys

entered into a revised fee agreement. Lane Powell agreed to continue to

represent the DeCourseys in efforts to collect on the judgment and to assist with

possible appeals. The DeCourseys agreed to release $200,000 to be paid on

account to Lane Powell from the $275,000 currently in their Lane Powell trust

account. The remaining $75,000 was disbursed to the DeCourseys. They

agreed that Lane Powell would be paid first out of any settlement proceeds or

payment of any judgment. Lane Powell agreed to forbear for a "reasonable time"

the collection of the balance of fees owed by the DeCourseys.

         On February 27, 2009, Judge Fox entered judgment for the DeCourseys

for $522,200 in damages and $463,427 in reasonable attorney fees, including a

multiplier of 30 percent.

         Windermere appealed. On November 28, 2010, this court affirmed. V&E

Med. Imaging Servs., Inc. v. Birgh, noted at 158 Wash. App. 1027 (2010), review

denied. 171 Wash. 2d 1019 (2011).

         Windermere filed a petition for review. On April 27, 2011, Windermere's

petition for review was denied. Ultimately, the DeCourseys were awarded

reasonable attorney fees on appeal at the Court of Appeals and the Supreme

Court.
No. 69837-1-1/3

        On August 2, 2011, Lane Powell e-mailed the DeCourseys to inform them

that Windermere was contemplating making a payment "to cut off post-judgment

interest on the amount paid while we wait for the Supreme Court to rule on the

fees award, the mandate to issue, and the parties to resolve the remaining issues

on remand."

        On August 3, 2011, the DeCourseys fired Lane Powell and retained new

counsel. That day, Lane Powell filed an attorney fee lien for $384,881.66.

        On October 5, 2011, Lane Powell filed a complaint for breach of contract,

quantum meruit, and foreclosure of an attorney fee lien against the DeCourseys.

Lane Powell's complaint claimed $389,042.68 in fees owed as of September 10,

2011.

        The case was assigned to Judge Richard D. Eadie in October 2011. The

DeCourseys asserted a number of affirmative defenses and counterclaims. As

the litigation progressed, the DeCourseys refused to comply with various court

orders. Eventually, the court struck their affirmative defenses and counterclaims

as a sanction for contempt and discovery violations.

        On November 10, 2011, the DeCourseys filed a satisfaction of judgment,

acknowledging receipt of $1,211,038.18 from Windermere. They arranged for
Windermere to deposit into the registry of the court the sum of $384,881.66, the

face amount of Lane Powell's lien, without provision for interest and without

notice to Lane Powell.

        On August 9, 2012, the DeCourseys moved for Judge Eadie's recusal

after discovering he is married to a Windermere agent. On September 5, 2012,
No. 69837-1-1/4

Judge Eadie issued a written order denying the recusal motion on the ground

that Windermere was not a party to Lane Powell's action against the DeCourseys

for attorney fees:

               This case, Lane Powell v. DeCoursey, involves Plaintiff law
       firm's claim that Defendants have not paid the fees due Plaintiff for
        legal services rendered in a lawsuit involving Windermere Real
        Estate Company. Defendants, while they were being represented
        by Plaintiff, prevailed in that lawsuit and received a judgment in
        their favor that has now been satisfied as between Windermere and
        the parties to this action and concerning which all appellate
        remedies have been exhausted. As Plaintiff points out, both the
        Plaintiff and Defendants in this case were adverse to Windermere
        in the previous action.
               Plaintiff's complaint in the case before this court makes no
        claims for relief from Windermere, nor does the Defendants'
        comprehensive and detailed Answer, Affirmative Defenses and
        Counterclaims. The present case was when filed, and remains
        today, an action brought by a law firm against a former client that it
        contends is obligated to it for unpaid fees. Windermere is not now,
        and never has been a party to this action.
               Defendants' Motion to Vacate and Recuse is DENIED.

        On October 19, 2012, Lane Powell filed a motion for summary judgment.

        On November 16, 2012, Judge Eadie held a hearing on Lane Powell's

motion. Judge Eadie made comments during the hearing in which he recognized
that his wife's occupation as a Windermere agent was a sensitive issue and he

indicated that he would re-evaluate whether deciding Lane Powell's entitlement

to attorney fees would put him in a position of evaluating the Windermere

litigation.1

        Judge Eadie asked the parties to submit supplemental briefing on the
reasonableness of fees that had not already been determined reasonable by

either Judge Fox, the Court of Appeals, or the Supreme Court.

        1 Report of Proceedings (Nov. 16, 2012) at 57-58.

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No. 69837-1-1/5

      On November 30, 2012, Lane Powell filed its supplemental brief.

      On December 4, 2012, the DeCourseys filed a second motion for recusal.

      On December 6, 2012, the DeCourseys submitted their response to Lane

Powell's supplemental brief.

      On December 12, 2012, Judge Eadie denied the second motion to recuse.

      On December 14, 2012, Judge Eadie entered an order granting Lane

Powell's motion for summary judgment. The judgment was for breach of contract

in the amount of $422,675.45. The judge noted on the order his finding that

"Windermere Real Estate has no interest, direct or indirect, in the determination

of the reasonableness of these fees or of the hourly rates charged."2

       The DeCourseys appeal. Their primary argument is that Judge Eadie

erred by denying their motions for recusal. They ask this court to reverse the
judgment, vacate all orders, and remand for a new trial before a different judge.
       The parties dispute the standard of review applicable to the recusal issue.
The DeCourseys assert that we review the recusal issue de novo, citing In re
Disciplinary Proceeding Against King, 168 Wash. 2d 888, 899, 232 P.3d 1095

(2010) ("Questions as to whether undisputed facts violate due process or the
appearance of fairness doctrine are legal and reviewed de novo."). Lane Powell
asserts that we review the recusal issue for an abuse of discretion under Tatham

v. Rogers, 170 Wash. App. 76, 87, 283 P.3d 583 (2012) ("Recusal decisions lie

        Clerk's Papers at 5526, 5527.
No. 69837-1-1/6

within the sound discretion of the trial court.") We will apply the de novo standard

here.

        The Code of Judicial Conduct provides that a judge must disqualify him or

herself "in any proceeding in which the judge's impartiality* might reasonably be

questioned." CJC 2.11(A) (The asterisk refers to the Code's definition of

"impartiality.") The law goes further than requiring an impartial judge; it also

requires that the judge appear to be impartial. State v. Madrv. 8 Wash. App. 61,

70, 504 P.2d 1156 (1972). In determining whether recusal is warranted, actual

prejudice need not be proven—a mere suspicion of partiality may be enough.

Sherman v. State, 128 Wash. 2d 164, 205, 905 P.2d 355 (1995). The question is

whether a reasonably prudent, disinterested observer would conclude that the

parties received a fair, impartial, and neutral hearing. State v. Gamble. 168
Wash. 2d 161, 187, 225 P.3d 973 (2010); In re Disciplinary Proceeding Against

Sanders. 159 Wash. 2d 517, 524-25, 145 P.3d 1208 (2006), cert denied, 552 U.S.
821 (2007). This test assumes that the reasonably prudent disinterested

observer knows and understands all relevant facts. Sherman. 128 Wash. 2d at 206.

        The DeCourseys contend that a reasonably prudent, disinterested

observer would conclude that Judge Eadie's marriage to a Windermere agent

biased him against them because of their history of hostility to Windermere.

They list the following circumstances as determinative:

               •   The defendants had conducted a continuing negative
                   publicity campaign against the company that employed
                   the trial judge's wife, and the employees of that company;
               •   For many years the defendants had operated, and they
                   continued to operate during the proceedings, websites
No. 69837-1-1/7

                    which conveyed the message that company employees
                    routinely committed illegal, unethical and deceptive acts;
                •   The defendants testified against the judge's wife's
                    employer before the state legislature;
                •   The defendants campaigned to persuade government
                    agencies to bring civil enforcement actions against the
                    company; and
                •   The defendants themselves had successfully sued the
                    judge's wife's employer and had obtained a judgment
                    against it for over $1 million.131

      The DeCourseys argue that a judge is naturally going to be biased against

a party appearing before him when the judge knows the party is an antagonist of

the judge's wife's employer:

       It is obviously reasonable to think that the judge will react in this
      fashion:
                •   You have accused my spouse's co-workers of being
                    crooks, cheats, felons, and unscrupulous law breakers;
                •   You have accused the people—such as my wife—who
                    work for Windermere as regularly and routinely engaging
                    in such misconduct;
                •   Thus you have accused my wife of being an
                    unscrupulous, unethical, lawbreaker.
      A judge who thinks a party has defamed his spouse in such a
      manner is going to be hard pressed to be impartial toward such a
       party.
             Every objectively reasonable observer would doubt such a
      judge's ability to be impartial in such a case. Even putting aside the
      judge's reason to be economically concerned about the effect that
      the party's negative publicity campaign is likely to have on his wife's
      employer, on his wife's income, and thus on his own community
      property share of his wife's income—the natural human tendency to
      be biased against people who attack one's close family members
      makes it impossible for such a judge to act with the requisite
      appearance of impartiality.'41

       This argument assumes too much. Windermere had no interest in the

litigation between the DeCourseys and Lane Powell. No reasonable person

       3 Br. of Appellant at 5.
       4 Br. of Appellant at 39-40.
No. 69837-1-1/8

knowing and understanding all the relevant facts would draw from the

DeCourseys' hostility toward Windermere a personalized inference that the

DeCourseys were accusing every single Windermere agent, including those such

as Judge Eadie's wife who had no involvement in the previous litigation, of being

an unscrupulous, unethical lawbreaker.

      The DeCourseys further argue that the judge's failure to recuse himself

violated due process because he had a personal pecuniary interest in the

outcome of the case:

      Windermere employees such as the judge's wife, benefitted from a
      decision in favor of [Lane Powell] because it took money out of the
      DeCourseys' pockets, thereby reducing the funds available for their
       anti-Windermere campaign, which would cause Windermere to
       suffer a loss of customers and revenue. Thus, indirectly, the trial
       judge's decision caused benefits to flow to Windermere real estate
       brokers, such as the judge's wife, and thus to himself as well.[5]
       Judges must recuse themselves when they have a direct, personal, and

substantial pecuniary interest in a case. Tatham. 170 Wash. App. at 90; Tumev v.

Ohio. 273 U.S. 510, 523, 47 S. Ct. 437, 71 L. Ed. 749 (1927). Even where

judges have financial interests falling short of what would be considered personal

or direct, due process may still require recusal. Tatham. 170 Wash. App. at 90-91;

accord Lilieberg v. Health Servs. Acguisition Corp., 486 U.S. 847, 108 S. Ct.
2194, 100 L. Ed. 2d 855 (1988).

       Lilieberg shows that a trial judge's connection to a nonparty that stands to

benefit financially from the judge's decision may be sufficient to require recusal.

In Lilieberg. Loyola University was in talks to sell a parcel of land to Liljeberg.

       5 Br. of Appellant at 47.

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No. 69837-1-1/9

Liljeberg intended to build a hospital on the land. To build a hospital, he needed

a certificate of need from the State of Louisiana. He claimed he had a certificate

of need, but Health Services Corporation filed suit for declaratory judgment

against Liljeberg, asking the trial judge to find that it was the owner of the

certificate, not Liljeberg. The trial judge entered judgment for Liljeberg. Several

months later, Health Services Corporation discovered that the trial judge was a

member of the Loyola University Board of Trustees. Health Services filed a

motion to vacate under FRCP 60(B)(6). The trial judge denied the motion. The

Fifth Circuit reversed, holding that the motion to vacate should have been

granted. Because the success and benefit to Loyola of their negotiation with

Liljeberg turned, in large part, on Liljeberg prevailing in the litigation at issue, the

Supreme Court found that the judge had an obvious conflict of interest and

affirmed the Court of Appeals. Lilieberg. 486 U.S. at 867-69, citing 28 U.S.C. §

455(a) ("Any justice, judge, or magistrate of the United States shall disqualify

himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be

questioned.")

       This case is not like Lilieberg. The conflict there was directly connected to

the trial judge's ruling, in that the university with which he was allied as a trustee

derived a concrete financial benefit from the judge's ruling in favor of Liljeberg.

Here, the alleged conflict is speculative. The Windermere agent with whom

Judge Eadie is allied through marriage did not derive any concrete benefit from

Judge Eadie's ruling in favor of Lane Powell.
No. 69837-1-1/10

      To establish that Judge Eadie had a pecuniary interest in the outcome of

this case, the DeCourseys ask this court to assume that (1) if the DeCourseys

prevailed against Lane Powell and did not have to pay a judgment for attorney

fees, they would have more money with which to finance their anti-Windermere

campaign and (2) their expenditures in that regard would necessarily result in a

loss of business by Mrs. Eadie, a Windermere agent.

      The record simply does not support the existence of a chain of causation

by which an order requiring the DeCourseys to pay their bill to Lane Powell ends

up benefitting the Eadies financially. The possible benefit is too speculative and
attenuated to constitute a personal pecuniary interest requiring recusal.

       We conclude that the trial judge did not violate the DeCourseys' due

process right to a trial before an impartial decision maker.

       As an alternative basis for seeking reversal of the summary judgment for

attorney fees, the DeCourseys contend that they did not breach their contract

with Lane Powell. They claim their nonperformance of the contract to pay

attorney fees was excused because Lane Powell repudiated it. It is not clear that
this issue is properly before us because the trial courtstruckthe DeCourseys'
defenses as a sanction and they have not appealed that order. The argument

also fails when considered on the merits.

       In December 2008, Lane Powell negotiated with the DeCourseys the

terms by which the firm would forbear collecting the attorney fees due under the
hourly fee agreement. In a letter dated December 5, 2008, attorney Brent
Nourse proposed that Lane Powell would forbear collection until Windermere

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No. 69837-1-1/11

paid the judgment. According to the DeCourseys, the letter of December 5 was

the contract, and Lane Powell repudiated it by filing suit on October 11, 2011,

one month before Windermere paid the judgment. However, the record reflects

that the actual contract revising the fee agreement was a subsequent letter from

Lane Powell to the DeCoursey dated December 31, 2008, that was signed by

both the DeCourseys. That agreement required Lane Powell to forbear for "a

reasonable time." Lane Powell filed suit four years after winning the case for the

DeCourseys and two years after being fired by the DeCourseys. This was a

reasonable time to forbear collection efforts, and the DeCourseys do not argue

otherwise. In their reply brief, they contend the December 31 letter was too

vague to be a contract. We decline to address this argument. Cowiche Canyon

Conservancy v. Boslev. 118 Wash. 2d 801, 809, 828 P.2d 549 (1992).

       The trial court did not err in concluding there were no material issues of

fact warranting trial on Lane Powell's claim of breach of contract.

       Affirmed.

WE CONCUR:

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