City Of Tacoma v. Kathleen Mancini ( 2019 )


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  •  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    KATHLEEN MANCINI, a single woman,
    DIVISION ONE
    Respondent,
    No. 77531-6-1
    V.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    CITY OF TACOMA, a municipal entity
    and political subdivision of the State of
    Washington; TACOMA POLICE
    DEPARTMENT; and RON
    RAM DSDELL, individually and in his
    official capacity as chief of Tacoma
    Police,
    FILED: May 13, 2019
    A   ellant.
    DWYER, J. — Following an incident wherein Tacoma police officers raided
    Kathleen Mancini's home under the mistaken belief that it was home to a
    suspected drug dealer, Mancini filed a lawsuit against the City of Tacoma
    asserting several tort claims, including negligence. At trial, the jury found in favor
    of Mancini on only her negligence claim. On appeal, the City contends that
    Mancini's negligence claim should not have been submitted to the jury because,
    as tried, it was a claim for negligent investigation, which is not cognizable in
    Washington. Because the evidence of negligence adduced at trial (and the
    theory of negligence urged on the trial court in response to the City's motion to
    dismiss) concerned negligence committed during the evidence gathering aspects
    of the police investigation, we conclude that Mancini's negligence claim, as tried,
    was a claim of negligent investigation, was not cognizable, and should not have
    No. 77531-6-1/2
    been submitted to the jury. Therefore, we reverse the judgment and remand for
    dismissal of Mancini's negligence claim.
    In early December 2010, Officer Kenneth Smith of the Tacoma Police
    Department was in contact with a confidential informant who told him that an
    individual named "Matt," a white male approximately 30 years of age, was selling
    dealer size quantities of methamphetamine. In early January 2011, the
    confidential informant further claimed to have been inside Matt's apartment at
    28625 16th Avenue SW,Apartment B1 in Federal Way, and to have observed
    Matt selling quantities of methamphetamine.
    Officer Smith and his partner drove the confidential informant to the
    aforementioned location to have the confidential informant identify Matt's
    apartment in person. The apartment unit was located in an apartment complex
    with multiple buildings. Upon arriving at the complex, the confidential informant
    identified both the B1 apartment unit and a vehicle parked in the parking lot of the
    complex, a black four-door Dodge Charger, as where the informant had observed
    Matt with dealer size quantities of methamphetamines. The confidential
    informant further described Matt's apartment to Officer Smith as dirty and gross
    and explained that Matt had rented the apartment in his mother's name so that
    no one could figure out where he was.
    In addition to having the confidential informant verify the location of Matt's
    apartment in person, Officer Smith also attempted to verify the confidential
    informant's information by checking it on several online databases. As a result of
    2
    No. 77531-6-1/3
    these searches, Officer Smith learned that the apartment identified by the
    confidential informant was rented by Kathleen Mancini. Officer Smith believed
    that Mancini was Matt's mother,1 and decided to obtain a search warrant for the
    apartment identified by the confidential informant. He did not perform any
    surveillance on the apartment or the vehicle before seeking a warrant, nor did he
    attempt to set up a controlled buy, even though he utilized these procedures
    before seeking a warrant in roughly 95 percent of his cases. In his warrant
    application, Officer Smith identified Mancini's apartment as the place he sought
    permission to search in order to discover evidence of Matt's illicit drug activity. A
    Pierce County superior court judge then signed the warrant authorizing a search
    of Mancini's apartment.
    On January 5, 2011, Officer Smith led a team of armed officers to execute
    the search warrant at Mancini's apartment at 28625 16th Avenue SW,Apartment
    B-1. The officers used a battering ram to breach the door to Mancini's
    apartment, entered the apartment, handcuffed Mancini, and moved her out of the
    apartment. However, immediately after he entered the apartment, Officer Smith
    knew that his team was in the wrong apartment because the apartment was "the
    exact opposite" of how the confidential informant had described Matt's
    apartment. Matt actually resided in apartment Al, not apartment B1. The
    confidential informant had misidentified the apartment.
    Mancini subsequently filed a lawsuit against the City of Tacoma, the
    Tacoma Police Department and the chief of the Tacoma Police Department (the
    I Smith never verified this belief before proceeding to obtain a search warrant.
    3
    No. 77531-6-1/4
    City). Her complaint pled the following causes of action: negligence, breach of
    duty to train and supervise, assault and battery, false imprisonment, defamation,
    false light, invasion of privacy, outrage, violation of RCW 49.60.030,2 and
    violations of numerous provisions of the Washington State Constitution. Mancini
    v. City of Tacoma, No. 71044-3-1, slip op. at 6(Wash. Ct. App. June 8, 2015)
    (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.qov/opinions/pdf/710443.pdf (hereinafter
    Mancini!). She sought an award of damages resulting from the police raid of her
    apartment.
    The City moved for partial judgment on the pleadings, and the trial court
    dismissed Mancini's negligent training and supervision claim and her
    constitutional claims. Mancini!, No. 71044-3-1, slip op. at 6. Subsequently, the
    City moved for summary judgment on all of Mancini's remaining claims.
    Mancini 1, No. 71044-3-1, slip op. at 9. The trial court granted the motion and
    Mancini appealed. Mancini 1, No. 71044-3-1, slip op. at 10-11.
    On appeal, we concluded that dismissal on summary judgment was
    proper as to her claims of defamation and outrage, but unwarranted as to her
    remaining claims of negligence, battery, assault, false imprisonment, and
    invasion of privacy. Mancini!, No. 71044-3-1, slip op. at 11. Pertinently, we
    concluded that Mancini's negligence claim was not barred by the public duty
    doctrine, that the City had not established that she alleged a claim for negligence
    that encompassed only a noncognizable claim of negligent investigation, and that
    there was sufficient evidence of a genuine dispute of material fact regarding her
    2 Washington   Law Against Discrimination, ch. 49.60 RCW.
    4
    No. 77531-6-1/5
    negligence claim to preclude summary judgment. Mancini 1, No. 71044-3-1, slip
    op. at 18-19 n.12. We remanded the negligence and the four intentional tort
    claims to the trial court.
    At trial, as pertaining to the negligence claim, Mancini presented testimony
    from Officer Smith and from expert witness former Seattle Police Chief Norm
    Stamper.
    During Officer Smith's testimony, he explained that he conducted
    surveillance on targeted addresses in 95 percent of his drug investigations, but
    did not do so here. Similarly, he testified that he did not perform a controlled
    buy3 before seeking a warrant to search Mancini's apartment, even though he
    normally did so in 95 percent of his drug investigations. Officer Smith also
    testified that he ran database searches on both Matt and the address identified
    by the confidential informant. The searches revealed that the apartment
    identified by the informant was rented by Mancini. Officer Smith explained that,
    at the time, he believed that this information supported, rather than contradicted,
    the confidential informant's identification because the confidential informant had
    explained that Matt's apartment was rented in his mother's name and Mancini
    was approximately the right age and race to have potentially been Matt's mother.
    During Chief Stamper's testimony, he testified that it was his expert
    opinion that Officer Smith should have performed both surveillance and a
    controlled buy before obtaining a warrant. According to Chief Stamper, Officer
    3 As explained by Chief Stamper, a controlled buy occurs when a confidential informant is
    provided with marked money, equipped with a wire for audio recording, and sent into a residence
    to purchase drugs. After leaving the residence, the confidential informant immediately meets with
    officers to provide them with the drugs and explain the events that occurred.
    5
    No. 77531-6-1/6
    Smith's mistake was in trusting the information provided by the confidential
    informant and not verifying that information through proper investigatory steps
    before relying on it to obtain a warrant.
    Following the close of Mancini's case in chief, the City moved for judgment
    as a matter of law on the negligence claim, asserting that all of the evidence
    presented on the negligence claim pertained to investigative acts and that
    negligent investigation was not a cognizable claim in Washington. In response to
    the motion, Mancini defended her claim by stating:
    There was virtually no police work done here. They put a drug
    informant in a car, drove her by four identical buildings and said,
    "Point out which one is where you saw the drugs." That was the
    extent of the investigation.
    What is negligence on the part of the officer? The officer
    admitted that he does surveillance in 95 percent of his cases, and
    he did none here. They did not attempt a controlled buy. They
    didn't do anything, and they haven't shown us that they've done
    anything.
    And it certainly is a question that gets to the jury, and the
    plaintiff has sustained her burden of proof with Chief Stamper's
    testimony that this should never happen, and that there are many,
    many ways to have seen to it that it didn't. And he went through
    where else you could have surveilled. And, sure, Your Honor has
    seen the picture I have of the parking lot and the entry to the stairs
    and the parking lot that go down to Ms. Mancini's apartment. If
    there had been drug activity and they had surveilled that parking lot
    at all, they would have at least gotten the right building, and they
    didn't.
    The trial court denied the City's motion.4 After the close of all the
    evidence, the City renewed its motion on the same ground. The motion was
    again denied.
    4 Although the trial court did not state a precise reason for its ruling, it did indicate that it
    believed that we had ruled in Mancini I that Mancini's claim was not a negligent investigation
    claim and was following that decision.
    6
    No. 77531-6-1/7
    The jury returned a verdict in favor of Mancini on her negligence claim,
    awarding her damages of $250,000, but found against her on each of her
    intentional tort claims. The City appeals.5
    II
    The City contends that the trial court should have granted its motion for
    judgment as a matter of law because Mancini failed to establish facts at trial upon
    which relief could be granted on her negligence claim.6 This is so, the City
    asserts, because the evidence adduced at trial established that Mancini's
    negligence claim, as tried, was a claim for negligent investigation. Specifically,
    the City asserts that the evidence adduced at trial showed negligence only during
    the evidence gathering portion of Officer Smith's investigation prior to the filing of
    the application for a warrant to search Mancini's apartmene and that evidence of
    negligent investigation of criminal activity does not support a cognizable
    negligence claim against law enforcement in Washington. We agree.
    A
    When reviewing a trial court's decision to deny a motion for judgment as a
    matter of law, we apply the same standard as the trial court. Indus. Indem. Co.
    of the Nw., Inc. v. Kallevici, 
    114 Wash. 2d 907
    , 915, 
    792 P.2d 520
    (1990). Although
    not cited to us by the City in its Appellant's Brief, CR 50 provides for the
    resolution of claims by judgment as a matter of law:
    5 Mancini does not appeal from the adverse verdicts on the intentional tort claims.
    6A  claim that the opposing party failed to "establish facts upon which relief can be
    granted" can always be raised on appeal. RAP 2.5(a).
    7 We agree with the City's assertion that any evidence of police wrongdoing occurring
    during and after the entry to the apartment was material to Mancini's intentional tort claims, not
    the negligence claim.
    7
    No. 77531-6-1/8
    (a) Judgment as a Matter of Law.
    (1) Nature and Effect of Motion. If, during a trial by jury, a
    party has been fully heard with respect to an issue and there is no
    legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to find or
    have found for that party with respect to that issue, the court may
    grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law against the party on
    any claim, counterclaim, cross claim, or third party claim that
    cannot under the controlling law be maintained without a favorable
    finding on that issue. Such a motion shall specify the judgment
    sought and the law and the facts on which the moving party is
    entitled to the judgment. A motion for judgment as a matter of law
    which is not granted is not a waiver of trial by jury even though all
    parties to the action have moved for judgment as a matter of law.
    (2) When Made. A motion for judgment as a matter of law
    may be made at any time before submission of the case to the jury.
    "Granting a motion for judgment as a matter of law is appropriate when,
    viewing the evidence most favorable to the nonmoving party, the court can say,
    as a matter of law, there is no substantial evidence or reasonable inference to
    sustain a verdict for the nonmoving party." Sing v. John L. Scott, Inc., 
    134 Wash. 2d 24
    , 29, 948 P.2d 816(1997)(citing Indus. lndem. 
    Co., 114 Wash. 2d at 915-16
    ).
    Evidence is substantial if it would convince "an unprejudiced, thinking mind."
    Hoiem v. Kelly, 
    93 Wash. 2d 143
    , 145, 
    606 P.2d 275
    (1980).
    "In general, Washington common law does not recognize a claim for
    negligent investigation because of the potential chilling effect such claims would
    have on investigations."8 Janaszak v. State, 
    173 Wash. App. 703
    , 725, 
    297 P.3d 8
    There are two exceptions to this general rule. First, our Supreme Court implied such a
    cause of action for parents suspected of child abuse and their children in Tyner v. Dep't of Soc. &
    Health Servs., 
    141 Wash. 2d 68
    , 82, 1 P.3d 1148(2000). The scope of this claim was then
    narrowed to negligent investigations resulting in harmful placement decisions. M.W. v. Dep't of
    Soc. & Health Servs., 
    149 Wash. 2d 589
    , 602, 
    70 P.3d 954
    (2003). Second, if an employer is
    contractually obligated to provide reasons for dismissal to an employee, the employer may be
    held liable for failing to conduct a reasonable investigation prior to terminating the employee.
    Lambert v. Morehouse,68 Wn. App. 500, 505-06, 
    843 P.2d 1116
    (1993). However, when an
    8
    No. 77531-6-1/9
    723(2013)(citing Ducote v. Dep't of Soc. & Health Servs., 
    167 Wash. 2d 697
    , 702,
    
    222 P.3d 785
    (2009). In particular, we have declined to recognize a cognizable
    claim for negligent investigation against law enforcement officials. Fondren v.
    Klickitat County, 
    79 Wash. App. 850
    , 862-63, 
    905 P.2d 928
    (1995); Donaldson v.
    City of Seattle, 
    65 Wash. App. 661
    , 671, 
    831 P.2d 1098
    (1992); Dever v. Fowler, 
    63 Wash. App. 35
    , 44-45, 
    816 P.2d 1237
    , 
    824 P.2d 1237
    (1991).
    Our Supreme Court has yet to explicitly define the scope of that which
    constitutes a negligent investigation claim. Similarly, no Washington appellate
    opinion purports to set forth the precise boundaries of this forbidden claim.
    Indeed, in its briefing to us, the City did not offer a definition of the forbidden tort.
    When questioned at oral argument as to whether the City was then prepared to
    offer a definition of the forbidden tort, grounded in the case law, the City indicated
    that it was not prepared to do so. With all this being said, it is apparent that a
    negligent investigation claim must encompass, at minimum, assertions of
    negligence occurring during the authorized evidence gathering aspects of police
    work.9
    The evidence of negligence adduced by Mancini at trial was directed at
    establishing negligence during the evidence gathering portion of the police
    investigation, prior to the service of the warrant to search Mancini's apartment.
    Officer Smith, while testifying, explained that he performed surveillance and a
    employment relationship is at will, then this exception does not apply. 
    Lambert, 68 Wash. App. at 506
    .
    9 The focus must be on the duty alleged to have been breached. Where that duty was to
    "investigate better," in our view, a negligence claim has become a negligent investigation claim.
    9
    No. 77531-6-1/10
    controlled buy in roughly 95 percent of his drug investigation cases, but did not
    do so herein. Chief Stamper, Mancini's expert witness, explained that it was bad
    police work when Officer Smith relied on information provided by a confidential
    informant without performing necessary steps to verify that information.
    Specifically, Chief Stamper testified that Officer Smith should have performed
    surveillance on the apartment and on Matt's vehicle and should have done a
    controlled buy to confirm that the confidential informant had identified the correct
    apartment. Chief Stamper explicitly stated that it was his opinion that Officer
    Smith should have taken additional steps during his investigation to verify the
    confidential informant's information.
    Mancini's argument in response to the City's motion for judgment as a
    matter of law on her negligence claim makes it plain that her claim, as tried, had
    become one concerning negligence in the evidence gathering aspects of Officer
    Smith's investigation.10 In response to the motion, Mancini explained her claim
    thusly:
    There was virtually no police work done here. They put a drug
    informant in a car, drove her by four identical buildings and said,
    "Point out which one is where you saw the drugs." That was the
    extent of the investigation.
    What is negligence on the part of the officer? The officer
    admitted that he does surveillance in 95 percent of his cases, and
    he did none here. They did not attempt a controlled buy. They
    didn't do anything, and they haven't shown us that they've done
    anything.
    And it certainly is a question that gets to the jury, and the
    10 We review the ruling on the later of the City's two motions for judgment as a matter of
    law. See Chaney v. Providence Health Care, 
    176 Wash. 2d 727
    , 731-32, 
    295 P.3d 728
    (2013). In
    so doing, we consider the entire record—both as to the evidence and the arguments—extant at
    that time and, thus, presumed to be within the contemplation of the trial judge at the time the
    challenged ruling was made.
    10
    No. 77531-6-1/11
    plaintiff has sustained her burden of proof with Chief Stamper's
    testimony that this should never happen, and that there are many,
    many ways to have seen to it that it didn't. And he went through
    where else you could have surveilled. And, sure, Your Honor has
    seen the picture I have of the parking lot and the entry to the stairs
    and the parking lot that go down to Ms. Mancini's apartment. If
    there had been drug activity and they had surveilled that parking lot
    at all, they would have at least gotten the right building, and they
    didn't.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Because the evidence of negligence presented at trial related to the
    evidence gathering aspects of Officer Smith's investigation, and the legal
    theories advanced were consistent with this view of the evidence, Mancini's
    negligence claim, as tried, became a noncognizable claim of negligent
    investigation. Lacking evidence of negligence outside of the evidence gathering
    aspects of the police investigation, Mancini did not present sufficient evidence at
    trial to support a claim upon which relief could be granted. The City's motion for
    judgment as a matter of law was meritorious. The judgment entered on the jury's
    verdict must be vacated.
    III
    Although the sufficiency of the evidence analysis set forth in section 11
    entirely governs our decision, to be clear as to the bases for our decision, it is
    necessary for us to explicate as to the inapplicability of certain arguments
    advanced by the parties.
    A
    We first address issues raised by Mancini.
    11
    No. 77531-6-1/12
    Mancini asserts that the City did not properly preserve its claim of error for
    appeal. This contention fails for two reasons. First, the record makes clear that,
    consistent with the requirements of CR 50, the City moved for dismissal both
    after Mancini rested and at the close of all of the evidence. By so doing, the
    issue was properly brought to the attention of the trial court, thus preserving the
    claim of error.
    Second, even had the City failed to bring a proper CR 50 motion, a
    plaintiff's alleged failure to establish facts upon which relief can be properly
    granted is a claim of error that can be asserted for the first time on appeal. RAP
    2.5(a)(2).
    Mancini next asserts that our decision in the prior appeal foreclosed the
    City from asserting its claim in this appeal. Mancini's assertion again fails for
    several reasons.
    In this litigation, we denied the City's request for pretrial dismissal of
    Mancini's negligence claim. Mancini 1, No. 71044-3-1, slip op. at 18. The case
    was remanded to the trial court. The case was tried. Based on the trial court
    evidentiary record and the arguments of counsel—both at trial and on appeal—
    we have ruled that the City is entitled to a dismissal of the claim against it. This
    procedure has been employed and approved of by our Supreme Court.
    Roberson v. Perez, 
    156 Wash. 2d 33
    , 42-44, 
    123 P.3d 844
    (2005)(analyzing the
    decisions rendered in Roberson v. Perez, 
    119 Wash. App. 928
    , 
    83 P.3d 1026
    (2004), and Rodriquez v. Perez, 
    99 Wash. App. 439
    , 
    994 P.2d 874
    (2000)). The
    City was not foreclosed from presenting its claim to us.
    12
    No. 77531-6-1/13
    Moreover, the City correctly notes that the evidentiary record—and the
    arguments of counsel—extant at the close of the trial was both fixed and more
    complete than was the record presented in Mancini I. Our decision is based on
    the record of the case, as tried.
    In arguing that the City is foreclosed from raising the dispositive issue,
    Mancini evidences a misapprehension concerning the nature of our prior
    decision. Mancini argues as if we had granted her affirmative relief in Mancini I.
    But this was not so.
    In the prior appeal, only the City sought affirmative relief. As pertaining to
    the negligence claim, the request was for pretrial dismissal of the claim. We
    denied the request. Mancini I, No. 71044-3-1, slip op. at 18. That decision
    restored the parties to the position they occupied prior to the trial court's grant of
    summary judgment. The decision did not affirmatively grant either party any
    relief on the negligence claim.
    Our decision was guided by several factors. First, the "objective of a
    summary judgment is to avoid a useless trial," State v. Shanks, 
    27 Wash. App. 363
    ,
    365, 618 P.2d 102(1980), not to preclude a warranted one. Jacobsen v. State,
    
    89 Wash. 2d 104
    , 108, 569 P.2d 1152(1977). Thus, the burden is on the moving
    party to establish that a trial would be useless. Preston v. Duncan, 
    55 Wash. 2d 678
    , 682, 
    349 P.2d 605
    (1960). This the City did not do.
    The City asserted that Mancini's negligence claim must have been a
    forbidden negligent investigation cause of action. But Mancini denied this. In so
    doing, she correctly pointed out that she had not pleaded the cause of action as
    13
    No. 77531-6-1/14
    one for negligent investigation. Her denial was strengthened by the fact that all
    but one of the negligent investigation cases cited to us involved circumstances in
    which either negligent investigation was explicitly pleaded as a cause of action by
    the plaintiff or the plaintiff conceded that negligent investigation was, in fact, the
    claim alleged.11
    In addition, the City expended no effort to attempt to define exactly what a
    negligent investigation claim was. Mancini's protestation that she was the master
    of her own pleadings and that she could not be forced to adopt the City's
    categorization of her claim as an undefined noncognizable claim, coupled with
    the fact that she had not, in fact, pleaded the claim as such, had merit.
    Moreover, the Mancini I briefing appeared to support a claim, premised on the
    principles underlying the decision in Turnqren v. King County, 
    104 Wash. 2d 293
    ,
    
    705 P.2d 258
    (1985), that, if adopted by the jury, would render unconsented
    (having neither actual nor judicial consent) the forced entry into Mancini's home.
    Nothing in the City's appellate presentation foreclosed this possibility. And we
    11 The parties cited to several cases discussing the forbidden claim of negligent
    investigation: M.W. v. Dep't of Social & Health Servs., 
    149 Wash. 2d 589
    , 
    70 P.3d 954
    (2003);
    Rodriquez v. Perez, 
    99 Wash. App. 439
    , 
    994 P.2d 874
    (2000), Lavmon v. Dep't of Nat. Res., 
    99 Wash. App. 518
    , 994 P.2d 232(2000); Corbally v. Kennewick Sch. Dist., 
    94 Wash. App. 736
    , 
    973 P.2d 1074
    (1999); Fondren v. Klickitat County, 
    79 Wash. App. 850
    , 
    905 P.2d 928
    (1995);
    Donaldson v. City of Seattle, 
    65 Wash. App. 661
    , 
    831 P.2d 1098
    (1992); Dever v. Fowler, 63 Wn.
    App. 35, 
    816 P.2d 1237
    , 
    824 P.2d 1237
    (1991). Of these cases, all but Donaldson and Fondren
    considered explicit claims of negligent investigation. Furthermore, in Fondren, the plaintiffs
    conceded that their negligence claim was, in fact, a negligent investigation claim. And Donaldson
    involved a negligence claim based on the alleged violation of a limited statutory duty to protect
    victims of domestic violence, which was not pertinent to Mancini's claim. Thus, none of the case
    authority cited to us could be described as being "on point." Additionally, our most recent
    published decisions analyzing the claim of negligent investigation all involved explicitly pleaded
    claims of negligent investigation. See Janaszak v. State, 
    173 Wash. App. 703
    , 712, 725, 297 P.3d
    723(2013); Ducote v. Dep't of Soc. & Health Servs., 
    144 Wash. App. 531
    , 533, 
    186 P.3d 1081
    (2008), aff'd, 
    167 Wash. 2d 697
    , 222 P.3 785(2009); Lewis v. Whatcom County, 
    136 Wash. App. 450
    ,
    452, 149 P.3d 686(2006).
    14
    No. 77531-6-1/15
    did not envision such a claim as lying within the unclear boundaries of a
    negligent investigation claim.
    But, again, our decision granted Mancini no affirmative relief. She
    retained the obligation to prove her negligence claim without it becoming one for
    negligent investigation. As set forth in section 11, this was not accomplished.
    B
    We next address several contentions raised by the City.
    As previously noted, the City's briefing does not set forth the provisions of
    CR 50 or discuss case authority applying the rule. It does not set forth the
    standard for granting such a motion. Instead, arguing from the verdicts rendered
    by the jury, the City asserts that the trial judge must have been wrong to deny its
    motion to dismiss. This analytical approach is misguided for several reasons.
    First, the City's assignment of error—that the trial court improperly denied
    its motion for judgment as a matter of law on Mancini's negligence claim—is to a
    trial court ruling made before Mancini's negligence claim was submitted to the
    jury. We review that ruling. What the jury did matters not. All action by the jury
    took place after the challenged ruling was made.
    Second, the jury's decisions on Mancini's intentional tort claims could
    have no bearing on the trial court's application of CR 50 to determine whether
    Mancini's negligence claim was supported by sufficient evidence to warrant its
    submission to the jury. The rule is clear that
    [i]f, during a trial by jury, a party has been fully heard with respect to
    an issue and there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a
    reasonable jury to find or have found for that party with respect to
    15
    No. 77531-6-1/16
    that issue, the court may grant a motion for judgment as a matter of
    law against the party on any claim.
    CR 50(a)(1)(emphasis added). The rule is the same whether utilized to consider
    one claim amongst many or the only claim in the case. Thus, Mancini's
    intentional tort claims were irrelevant as to whether Mancini presented sufficient
    evidence on her negligence claim to avoid judgment as a matter of law.
    Third, even were we to consider the City's assertions about inconsistent
    jury verdicts impacting a ruling made prior to the submission of the case to the
    jury, the sole relief available when inconsistent jury verdicts have been rendered
    is a new trial on all causes of action resolved by the inconsistent verdicts.
    Gosney v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 
    3 Wash. App. 2d
    828, 856, 
    419 P.3d 447
    ,
    review denied, 
    191 Wash. 2d 1017
    (2018). The City does not request this. Instead,
    the City asks that we uphold the verdicts on Mancini's intentional tort claims while
    striking down the verdict on Mancini's negligence claim. Picking and choosing
    between a jury's inconsistent verdicts is not a task we are empowered to
    perform.
    Finally, the City's contentions regarding inconsistent verdicts fail because
    the City did not assign error to any trial court rulings related to inconsistent
    verdicts. It is a long standing rule that appellate courts will "not review the trial
    court's action as to questions not submitted to it." Timm v. Gilliland, 
    53 Wash. 2d 432
    , 434, 334 P.2d 539(1959)(citing Lewis Pac. Dairymen's Ass'n v. Turner, 
    50 Wash. 2d 762
    , 
    314 P.2d 625
    (1957); Braman v. Kuper, 
    51 Wash. 2d 676
    , 
    321 P.2d 275
    (1958)). The City's assignments of error address only the trial court's denial of
    the City's motion for judgment as a matter of law prior to the submission of
    16
    No. 77531-6-1/17
    Mancini's claims to the jury. Thus, our decision in this matter is based on the
    analysis of the trial court's denial of the motion for judgment as a matter of law
    set forth in section II.
    IV
    As tried, Mancini's negligence claim became one for negligent
    investigation. Such a cause of action is not cognizable. Accordingly, the
    judgment entered on the verdict must be vacated.
    Reversed with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the City.
    We concur: