Edward Hartnett, V. Department Of Labor And Industries ( 2024 )


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  • IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    EDWARD HARTNETT,
    No. 85972-2-I
    Appellant,
    DIVISION ONE
    v.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    WASHINGTON STATE,
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR &
    INDUSTRIES,
    Respondent.
    BIRK, J. — Edward Hartnett challenges the superior court’s decision to deny
    his CR 60 motion to vacate final judgment. The court denied his motion for being
    untimely. Because the superior court did not abuse its discretion in reaching its
    decision, we affirm.
    I
    In 2001, Hartnett suffered an industrial injury while working as a journeyman
    carpenter. The Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) allowed the injury claim
    and provided treatment until the claim was first closed in May 2009. L&I awarded
    Hartnett a 22 percent permanent partial disability (PPD) of his left arm. Hartnett
    unsuccessfully appealed the order and it became final with an effective closing
    date of May 21, 2009. In November 2011, Hartnett successfully applied to have
    his claim reopened by L&I.      On July 14, 2014, L&I issued an order closing
    No. 85972-2-I/2
    Hartnett’s claim with a category 2 PPD award for injury-related mental health
    impairment, in addition to the earlier PPD award for his left arm.
    Hartnett appealed the order, which had denied him time loss benefits for the
    period between March 17, 2014 to July 14, 2014, to the Snohomish County
    Superior Court. While represented by counsel, Hartnett agreed to settle with L&I
    by agreeing to keep his claim closed effective July 14, 2014, in exchange for paid
    time loss benefits for the March to July period, and an increase in his mental health
    PPD award from category 2 to category 3. The court issued an agreed order
    remanding the case to L&I to implement the settlement agreement (2016
    Settlement). L&I implemented the settlement agreement through a further order,
    which the parties agreed would not be appealable.
    Four months later, in February 2017, Hartnett requested to reopen the claim
    and received a written response from L&I stating that the claim could be reopened
    for medical treatment but that any other benefits would only be granted at the
    discretion of L&I’s director (Director). Under RCW 51.32.160(1)(a), claims brought
    by a worker more than seven years after the first closing order for the claim are
    considered “over seven.” Dep’t of Lab. & Indus. v. Higgins, 21 Wn. App. 2d 268,
    274-75 n.2, 
    505 P.3d 579
     (2022). An over seven claim is still eligible for medical
    benefits, but other benefits are available only subject to the discretion of the
    Director. Id. at 274-75. Hartnett appealed L&I’s decision that his claim was over
    seven.
    2
    No. 85972-2-I/3
    In June 2018, Hartnett filed a motion for summary judgment with the Board
    of Industrial Appeals (Board), arguing that he should be relieved of the over seven
    status because he had not realized that the 2016 Settlement would render his
    claims over seven. In December 2018, the Board sent Hartnett a notice of the
    proposed decision on his appeal. Hartnett’s motion had been denied, and L&I’s
    opposing motion for summary judgment was granted. Hartnett petitioned the
    Board to review the decision, which was denied in January 2019, making the order
    final. Hartnett did not appeal the administrative decision to the superior court.
    In January 2020, the Director determined that discretion would not be
    exercised to provide nonmedical benefits. Starting in 2021, Hartnett engaged in
    litigation to compel the Director to exercise discretion to reopen his nonmedical
    benefits claim. .
    In May 2023, Hartnett returned to superior court, filing a CR 60 motion to
    have the 2016 Settlement vacated. The superior court denied the motion, stating
    Hartnett could raise the motion again with additional evidence that the motion was
    being made within a reasonable time. In August 2023, Hartnett renewed his
    motion, citing CR 60(b)(1), (4), (11), and 60(c). Hartnett asserted the motion was
    filed within a reasonable time because he was unaware of, or misled as to, the
    over seven implications when he agreed to the 2016 Settlement, he had been
    challenging the 2016 Settlement regularly since 2017, L&I was not prejudiced by
    the delay, and he filed the CR 60 motion as soon as he learned that it was the
    proper method to challenge the order.
    3
    No. 85972-2-I/4
    The court denied his motion because it had not been brought within a
    reasonable time, as required by CR 60. The court ruled that Hartnett’s delay was
    unreasonable because Hartnett first had notice his claim was over seven in
    February 2017, he actively litigated the issue in 2018, and the Board told Hartnett
    of its final decision on over seven status in January 2019. The court found waiting
    four to six years to bring a CR 60 motion was not reasonable. Furthermore, the
    court was concerned about prejudice to L&I, from the deprivation of the use of the
    settlement funds, but also for having had to defend years of litigation, which would
    be rendered invalid by the motion, and which could have been prevented by a
    timely CR 60 motion. The court was also skeptical as to the viability of unwinding
    a settlement agreement, the validity of which was an underlying assumption to
    years of subsequent litigation. Hartnett appeals.
    II
    Hartnett claims that the superior court abused its discretion by denying his
    CR 60(b) motion and by refusing to grant relief under CR 60(c).
    Orders on motions to vacate a judgment may be appealed under RAP
    2.2(10). “ ‘On appeal, a trial court’s disposition of a motion to vacate will not be
    disturbed unless it clearly appears that it abused its discretion.’      ‘Abuse of
    discretion means that the trial court exercised its discretion on untenable grounds
    or for untenable reasons, or that the discretionary act was manifestly
    unreasonable.’ ” Hor v. City of Seattle, 18 Wn. App. 2d 900, 911, 
    493 P.3d 151
    4
    No. 85972-2-I/5
    (2021) (citation omitted) (quoting Lindgren v. Lindgren, 
    58 Wn. App. 588
    , 595, 
    794 P.2d 526
     (1990)), review denied, 
    198 Wn.2d 1038
    , 
    501 P.3d 142
     (2022).
    In this court Hartnett asserts only CR 60(b)(4) (fraud) and CR 60(b)(11) (any
    other reason justifying relief). For these provisions, the rule requires that the
    motion “shall be made within a reasonable time.” CR 60(b). “What constitutes a
    reasonable time depends on the facts and circumstances of each case.” Luckett
    v. Boeing Co., 
    98 Wn. App. 307
    , 312, 
    989 P.2d 1144
     (1999). The critical period in
    analyzing whether the motion to vacate was brought within a reasonable time is
    “the period between when the moving party became aware of the judgment and
    the filing of the motion.” 
    Id.
     Two major considerations in determining a motion’s
    timeliness are “(1) prejudice to the nonmoving party due to the delay; and (2)
    whether the moving party has good reasons for failing to take appropriate action
    sooner.”     
    Id. at 312-13
     (four month delay was unreasonable, despite lack of
    prejudice to the nonmoving party, because the movant had no good reason to
    delay).
    Hartnett argues that (1) he did not know that he needed to file a CR 60
    motion, (2) he did not seek to vacate the judgment because L&I’s closing order
    invited him to appeal to the Board if he disagreed with the order, (3) he was actively
    fighting the over seven status through appeals and litigation with the Board, and
    (4) he filed his CR 60 motion as soon as he learned that it was the appropriate
    remedy.
    5
    No. 85972-2-I/6
    “[I]t is well settled that a person is presumed to know the law such that
    ignorance of the law is not a defense.” Dellen Wood Prods., Inc. v. Dep’t of Lab.
    & Indus., 
    179 Wn. App. 601
    , 629, 
    319 P.3d 847
     (2014). “Absent fraud, the actions
    of an attorney authorized to appear for a client are binding on the client at law and
    in equity. The ‘sins of the lawyer’ are visited upon the client.” Rivers v. Wash.
    State Conf. of Mason Contractors, 
    145 Wn.2d 674
    , 679, 
    41 P.3d 1175
     (2002)
    (footnote omitted) (quoting Taylor v. Illinois, 
    484 U.S. 400
    , 433, 
    108 S. Ct. 646
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 2d 798
     (1988) (Brennan, J., dissenting)).
    Hartnett does not contest that the 2016 Settlement happened, that he
    approved of it, or that he was represented by counsel during it. He claims both
    L&I misrepresented to him that he would still be eligible for benefits after settling,
    and his lawyer never advised him of the over seven consequences of settling. And
    he claims that had he known about the consequence of the 2016 Settlement, he
    never would have agreed to it. But Hartnett received a written response from L&I
    in February 2017, notifying him that his claim was over seven, and that nonmedical
    benefits were now at the discretion of the Director. More than six years elapsed
    before he first filed a CR 60 motion. In 2018 he argued that his unawareness as
    to the effects of the 2016 Settlement offered a basis for relief. In January 2019,
    the Board’s rejection of Hartnett’s over seven argument became final. In 2021 to
    2023, Hartnett alternatively sought to compel the Director to exercise discretion to
    grant him nonmedical benefits.
    6
    No. 85972-2-I/7
    Nothing in the record excuses such a lengthy delay in waiting to file a CR
    60 motion. Whether counting from February 2017, June 2018, or January 2019 as
    the triggering event which signaled Hartnett’s awareness of the effects of the 2016
    Settlement, the result is the same. Hartnett’s 2023 motion is untimely as to any
    one of them.
    Hartnett’s CR 60 motion, if granted, would prejudice L&I. L&I agreed to
    settle Hartnett’s claim in 2016. It agreed to pay disability benefits in exchange for
    Hartnett keeping his claim closed. Since 2016, L&I has been deprived of those
    funds, while Hartnett has had use of them. L&I would also be prejudiced by having
    years of litigation, premised on the 2016 Settlement being valid, undone. If the
    2016 Settlement were vacated then new litigation would presumably unfold
    between L&I and Hartnett. L&I would be prejudiced by Hartnett’s avoidable delay.
    The superior court did not abuse its discretion by denying Harnett’s CR
    60(b) motion as untimely.
    III
    Hartnett claims CR 60(c) provides another means of relief from the
    settlement order. The rule states that it “does not limit the power of a court to
    entertain an independent action to relieve a party from a judgment, order, or
    proceeding. CR 60(c) (emphasis added). Relief under CR 60(c) “assume[s] that
    a party will commence a separate action.” Krueger Eng’g, Inc. v. Sessums, 
    26 Wn. App. 721
    , 724, 
    615 P.2d 502
     (1980).
    7
    No. 85972-2-I/8
    Hartnett cites no independent action that has been commenced that would
    permit the court to invoke CR 60(c). The only mention of CR 60(c) in Hartnett’s
    trial motion was in a footnote without any additional explanation. The only basis
    for CR 60(c) cited in Hartnett’s brief on appeal is RCW 51.52.130, an attorney and
    witness fee statute. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Hartnett’s
    motion to vacate under CR 60(c).
    Affirmed.
    WE CONCUR:
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 85972-2

Filed Date: 9/30/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/1/2024