Tammy Blakey & Flying T. Ranch, Inc. v. Reginald Wren & Brenda Wren ( 2017 )


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  •                                                        FILED
    cnuRT flF APPUt_f:•. nt‘,
    STATE OF             C
    ``•"'SEP          I
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    REGINALD K. WREN and BRENDA M. )
    WREN, husband and wife,         )              No. 75449-1-1
    )
    Respondents, )              DIVISION ONE
    )
    v.                       )
    )              UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    TAMMY S. BLAKEY, an unmarried   )
    person, and FLYING T RANCH,     )
    INC., a Washington corporation, )
    )
    Appellants.  )              FILED: September 5, 2017
    )
    LEACH, J. — Tammy Blakey and Flying T Ranch Inc. (collectively Blakey)
    appeal the trial court's denial of a March 2016 motion to vacate an April 2013
    judgment in favor of Reginald and Brenda Wren. Blakey claims that the Wrens'
    misconduct in withholding evidence entitles her to a new trial. Because the
    Wrens have shown that the withheld evidence does not help Blakey's case, any
    failure to produce it in discovery did not prevent Blakey from fully and fairly
    presenting her case. We affirm.
    FACTS
    The Wrens and Blakey own adjacent parcels of real property in rural
    Snohomish County. Blakey acquired her parcel in 1989 at a sheriffs sale. She
    took possession of it in 1990. The Wrens acquired their parcel in 2004.
    No. 75449-1-1/ 2
    Since the 1930s, a barbed wire fence has separated the parcels. Over
    time, a hedgerow grew along this fence and engulfed it. The hedgerow was
    approximately 12 feet high and between 50 and 70 feet wide. The occupants of
    the property farmed each parcel up to the hedgerow.
    Blakey testified that in 1990 she removed some of the hedgerow and
    repaired the fence at its original location. But before 2009, the hedgerow had
    grown back. In 2009, Blakely destroyed the hedgerow and built a new barbed
    wire fence. She again claimed that she had merely replaced the fence in the
    same location. The Wrens protested Blakey's construction, asserting that Blakey
    installed the new fence west of the boundary about 50 feet into the Wrens'
    property.
    The Wrens sued Blakey for trespass and to quiet title to the disputed
    property. Blakey counterclaimed. She asserted she acquired title to the property
    east of the 2009 fence by adverse possession. After a bench trial, the court
    quieted title in the Wrens, finding that Blakey had failed to prove her adverse
    possession claim:
    The only evidence presented on the subject of possession of the
    land in the disputed area by anybody in the last fifty years was the
    1990 incursion and fence destruction and replacement undertaken
    by the defendant. The area being then left to the blackberries,
    [Blakey's] activities do not amount to actual possession and
    [Blakey] has not begun to make out a case of adverse possession.
    -2-
    No. 75449-1-1/3
    The court also found that Blakey had trespassed on the Wrens' property)
    Finally, the court found that Blakey's destruction of the hedgerow and installation
    of a barbed wire fence injured the property and prevented the Wrens from
    continuing to use their land to pasture horses because the horses might injure
    themselves on the wire. The court awarded the Wrens $180,017.84. This sum
    included treble damages under RCW 4.24.630 and attorney fees and litigation
    costs.
    In June 2013, Blakey moved for reconsideration. The trial court denied
    that motion.
    Blakey appealed. We affirmed the trial court's decision that Blakey failed
    to establish a claim of adverse possession:
    Here, there was substantial evidence that the property
    owners, present and former, used the land only up to the
    hedgerow. Blakey does not challenge finding of fact 12 describing
    the hedgerow as 12 feet high and 70 feet wide. A photograph
    exhibit showed the fence line visible in 1983. Thus, it is clear that
    Blakey could not have exerted the requisite dominion and control
    required to establish adverse possession.[2]
    In September 2014, Blakey filed a CR 60(b) motion, which the trial court
    also denied.
    1 The court observed that "the defendant's statement that she owned the
    property by adverse possession amounts to an acknowledgement that she did
    not have rightful possession of the property."
    2 Wren v. Blakey, No. 70691-8-1, slip op. at 9 (Wash. Ct. App. Aug. 11,
    2014)(unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/706918.pdf.
    -3-
    No. 75449-1-1/4
    In January 2015, Blakey sued the Wrens after they built a new fence on
    the section line described as the common boundary in the parties' deeds. Blakey
    alleged that the common boundary was the "historic fence" and not the section
    line. The court found that res judicata barred her action and dismissed it. It also
    found the lawsuit frivolous and awarded the Wrens attorney fees.
    In the 2015 action, the court ordered the Wrens to produce discovery and
    sanctioned them for discovery violations. To comply with the order, the Wrens
    delivered seven photographs of the fence and hedgerow taken in 2009. Blakey
    claims that the Wrens withheld two aerial photographs taken in May 2009 and
    August 2011.
    In March 2016, relying on these photographs and the Wrens'failure to turn
    them over, Blakey moved to vacate the judgment against her under CR 60(b)(4).
    The trial court denied Blakey's motion. It awarded the Wrens attorney fees and
    costs and prohibited Blakey from filing a suit against the Wrens or their attorneys
    arising out of or related to the same facts or cause of action without first seeking
    permission of the court.
    Blakey appeals.
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    No. 75449-1-1 /5
    ANALYSIS
    CR 60(b)
    First, Blakey challenges the trial court's denial of her motion to vacate.
    We review a superior court's decision on a CR 60(b) motion for manifest abuse
    of discretion.3 A superior court abuses its discretion if it makes a manifestly
    unreasonable decision or bases that decision on untenable grounds or untenable
    reasons.4
    Blakey asked for relief under CR 60(b)(4), which provides,
    On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a
    party or the party's legal representative from a final judgment,
    order, or proceeding for the following reasons:
    (4) Fraud (whether heretofore denominated intrinsic or
    extrinsic), misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse
    party.
    "The rule is aimed at judgments which were unfairly obtained, not at those which
    are factually incorrect."5    To obtain relief, "the fraudulent conduct or
    3   In re Guardianship of Adamec, 
    100 Wash. 2d 166
    , 173, 
    667 P.2d 1085
    (1983).
    4 In re Schuoler, 
    106 Wash. 2d 500
    , 512, 723 P.2d 1103(1986).
    5 Peoples State Bank v. Hickey, 
    55 Wash. App. 367
    , 372, 
    777 P.2d 1056
    (1989).
    -5-
    No. 75449-1-1 /6
    misrepresentation must cause the entry of the judgment such that the losing
    party was prevented from fully and fairly presenting [her] case or defense."6
    Blakey is not entitled to relief because she received a full and fair hearing
    on all issues. The crux of Blakey's argument is that the Wrens wrongfully
    withheld evidence that shows the original location of the fence and thus
    establishes her adverse possession claim.        While discovery violations can
    constitute misconduct for purposes of CR 60(b)(4) relief, a discovery violation
    alone does not warrant vacation of judgment.7
    Our decision in Peoples State Bank v. Hickey8 is instructive. In Hickey, we
    found that Peoples had misrepresented the status of the lien on Hickey's
    property but still refused to vacate the judgment.9 We explained,
    Although Peoples misrepresented the status of Hickey's lien, there
    is no connection between the bank's misrepresentation and
    Hickey's failure to respond to the complaint or employ an attorney.
    There is no evidence that Hickey relied on the misrepresentation or
    was misled by People's statements in the complaint. . . . The
    misrepresentation having nothing to do with her failure to respond
    to the summons and complaint, Hickey cannot meet the
    requirement that the misrepresentation must have operated to
    prevent her from fully and fairly presenting her case.E19]
    6  Lindgren v. Lindgren, 
    58 Wash. App. 588
    , 596, 
    794 P.2d 526
    (1990)
    (emphasis omitted)(citing 
    Hickey, 55 Wash. App. at 372
    ).
    7 Roberson v. Perez, 
    123 Wash. App. 320
    , 332-33, 
    96 P.3d 420
    (2004);
    
    Hickey, 55 Wash. App. at 371
    .
    8 
    55 Wash. App. 367
    , 
    777 P.2d 1056
    (1989).
    9 
    Hickey, 55 Wash. App. at 371
    .
    10 
    Hickey, 55 Wash. App. at 372
    .
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    No. 75449-1-1 /7
    This case is like Hickey because the identified misconduct is harmless and does
    not support a motion to vacate.
    Having the missing photographs would not have helped Blakey prove the
    unproven element of her adverse possession claim.            To establish adverse
    possession, Blakey had to show that she possessed the disputed property for at
    least 10 years in a manner that is "(1) open and notorious, (2) actual and
    uninterrupted, (3) exclusive, and (4) hostile.'"11 "The ultimate test is the exercise
    of dominion over the land in a manner consistent with actions a true owner would
    take."12 Blakey asserts that the withheld photographs show the location of the
    original fence and establish that she did not construct the 2009 fence in a new
    location. But construction of the 2009 fence does not help establish Blakey's
    claim for two reasons. First, after 1990 Blakey allowed the hedgerow to grow
    back and did not show occupation up to this fence. Second, 10 years did not
    elapse between the construction of this fence and the start of Wrens' lawsuit to
    quiet title.
    The trial court explained why the location of the fence does not matter in
    its memorandum decision:
    11Gorman v. City of Woodinville, 
    175 Wash. 2d 68
    , 71, 283 P.3d 1082(2012)
    (quoting ITT Ravonier, Inc. v. Bell, 
    112 Wash. 2d 754
    , 757, 
    774 P.2d 6
    (1989));
    Anderson v. Hudak, 
    80 Wash. App. 398
    , 401, 
    907 P.2d 305
    (1995).
    12 ITT 
    Rayonier, 112 Wash. 2d at 759
    .
    -7-
    No. 75449-1-1/ 8
    The Court concludes that this is not a case about a historical fence
    that either is or is not on a boundary line. It is about a 2009 fence
    that was placed west of the true boundary line, and a disputed area
    to the east of the fence and to the west of the boundary line. The
    issue is a matter of whether the plaintiff adversely possessed the
    disputed area or did not. And the Court concludes she did not.
    It would make no difference if the issue were framed as the
    defense now frames it. Even if the 2009 fence had been placed on
    the same line as the historic fence, and each fence stood several
    feet to the west of the true boundary, the defendant would still have
    to show she adversely possessed the area between her fence and
    the true boundary. She did not show this either.
    We agree that anything the photographs show about the location of past fences
    would not cure the deficiencies in Blakey's evidence about her adverse
    possession claim.
    Blakey also claims that the photographs show that she did not destroy the
    hedgerow on the Wrens' side of the fence. This matters because the trial court
    based its award of damages on its finding that "[t]he plaintiffs keep horses, and
    horses are apt to be injured on barbed wire." The court reasoned that "[Necause
    the land in the disputed area formerly contained livestock and, following the
    destruction of the hedgerow, it no longer can, the land has been injured." Blakey
    suggests that if she did not destroy the hedgerow, then the Wrens' horses were
    not exposed to the danger of the barbed wire fence, and the award of damages
    was incorrect. The Wrens respond that the photographs show both that some
    portions of the hedgerow remain and that gaps exist in it, exposing their horses
    to barbed wire. The photographs do show that some of the hedgerow was
    -8-
    No. 75449-1-1 /9
    removed, exposing the barbed wire. The photographs do not help Blakey's case
    on the issue of damages.
    Blakey asserts that she does not need to show that the photographs
    would have affected the trial's outcome. We agree that CR 60(b)(4) does not
    require showing that the misconduct did affect the outcome of the tria1.13 But the
    Wrens have the opportunity to show that their discovery violations did not deprive
    Blakey of a fair trial. They have met this burden.
    We distinguish the cases Blakey relies on for comparison. First, she cites
    Taylor v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,14 in which a jury found that Cessna was not liable
    for a plane crash. Division Three reversed the trial court's decision denying a
    new trial based on Cessna's misconduct in withholding evidence.15           Taylor
    asserted that the undisclosed evidence would have supported an entirely new
    theory about the cause of the plane crash.16         But, unlike Taylor, here the
    evidence relates only to theories that Blakey has already tried and is not relevant
    
    13 Taylor v
    . Cessna Aircraft Co., 
    39 Wash. App. 828
    , 836, 
    696 P.2d 28
    (1985) ("A new trial based upon the prevailing party's misconduct does not
    require a showing the new evidence would have materially affected the outcome
    of the first trial."); see also 
    Roberson, 123 Wash. App. at 336
    (comparing the
    materiality requirement for newly acquired evidence (CR 60(b)(3) and
    misconduct(CR 60(b)(4)).
    14 
    39 Wash. App. 828
    , 830-31, 
    696 P.2d 28
    (1985).
    15 
    Taylor, 39 Wash. App. at 833
    .
    16 
    Taylor, 39 Wash. App. at 835
    .
    -9-
    No. 75449-1-1/ 10
    to the element she failed to prove, so its unavailability did not harm Blakey's
    case.
    In Roberson v. Perez,17 Division Three affirmed the trial court's decision to
    grant a new trial because, although the moving party did not prove that a
    discovery violation changed the case's outcome, the violation was "substantial"
    and the withheld files were material to the plaintiffs' fair presentation of the case.
    As explained above, here the withheld evidence was not material and its
    absence did not affect a fair presentation of Blakey's case.
    Blakey also claims that the trial court should have concluded as a matter
    of law that based on the new photographic evidence, she established ownership
    of the property through adverse possession.18 Again, the location of past fences
    makes no difference in her adverse possession claim. The record contains
    insufficient evidence about possession. Further, courts may not grant affirmative
    relief—like a finding that Blakey established her adverse possession claim—in a
    CR 60(b) order.18
    The trial court properly denied Blakey's CR 60(b) motion.
    
    123 Wash. App. 320
    , 336, 
    96 P.3d 420
    (2004).
    17
    Blakey also claims that she has met the elements of mutual recognition
    18
    and acquiescence. But she did not properly raise that claim, so we do not
    consider any arguments related to it.
    19 Geonerco, Inc. v. Grand Ridge Props. IV, LLC, 
    159 Wash. App. 536
    , 542,
    248 P.3d 1047(2011).
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    No. 75449-1-1/ 11
    Prefiling Restrictions
    Next, Blakey challenges the trial court's imposition of restrictions on
    Blakey's ability to file future claims against the Wrens.
    Washington courts have the power to "provide for the orderly conduct of
    proceedings before it or its officers."2° Thus, courts have discretion to "place
    reasonable restrictions on any litigant who abuses the judicial process."21 For
    instance, "trial courts have the authority to enjoin a party from engaging in
    litigation upon a 'specific and detailed showing of a pattern of abusive and
    frivolous litigation.'"22 We review a trial court order limiting a party's access to the
    court for abuse of discretion.23
    Here, the trial court found that Blakey's "dogged pursuit of claims that
    have been rejected on numerous occasions is an abuse of the judicial system."
    It concluded that Blakey's "attempts to relitigate the issues decided in this case,
    either at the original trial, in the subsequent post-trial motions, or in the appeal of
    the decisions rendered, constitute [a] pattern of abusive and frivolous litigation."
    The court noted that the assessment of more than $120,000 in attorney fees
    against Blakey had not deterred her from repeatedly asserting the same claim.
    20RCW 2.28.010(3).
    21Yurtis v. Phipps, 
    143 Wash. App. 680
    , 693, 181 P.3d 849(2008).
    22 
    Yurtis, 143 Wash. App. at 693
    (quoting Whatcom County v. Kane, 31 Wn.
    App. 250, 253,640 P.2d 1075 (1981)).
    
    23 Bay v
    . Jensen, 
    147 Wash. App. 641
    , 657, 196 P.3d 753(2008).
    -11-
    No. 75449-1-1/ 12
    Thus, the court restricted Blakey from filing a suit against the Wrens or their
    attorneys "arising out of or related to the same facts or cause of action as those
    herein. . . without first seeking permission of the court." Given Blakey's repeated
    attempts to litigate her adverse possession claim, the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion by imposing this restriction.
    Discovery Sanctions
    Blakey contends that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to
    sanction the Wrens for their discovery violation. She asserts that CR 26 requires
    sanctions.24 But the court already sanctioned the Wrens for failing to produce the
    photographs in the second action. The court did not abuse its discretion when it
    declined to award Blakey additional sanctions.25
    Attorney Fees
    The Wrens ask the court to award attorney fees under RCW 4.24.630 and
    RAP 18.1. RAP 18.1 allows the Court of Appeals to award attorney fees on
    appeal when applicable law authorizes them.           RCW 4.24.630 states that a
    trespasser is liable for reasonable attorney fees. We grant the Wrens' request
    for attorney fees subject to their compliance with RAP 18.1.
    24 Carlson v. Lake Chelan Cmty. Hosp., 
    116 Wash. App. 718
    , 737, 75 P.3d
    533(2003).
    25 Even if Blakey were correct that the Wrens should be sanctioned again
    for essentially the same discovery violation, she may not seek that relief in a
    CR 60(b) motion. 
    Geonerco, 159 Wash. App. at 542
    (holding that courts may not
    grant affirmative relief under CR 60(b)).
    -12-
    No. 75449-1-1/ 13
    Blakey also seeks attorney fees but because she does not prevail, we
    deny her request.
    CONCLUSION
    Because any failure by the Wrens to produce photographs did not harm
    Blakey's ability to present her case, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
    denying CR 60(b) relief. And in light of Blakey's voluminous and vexatious
    _
    litigation history, during which she repeatedly asserted the same theories and
    arguments, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by imposing prefiling
    restrictions. We affirm.
    WE CONCUR:
    -13-