Christopher English v. State Of Washington, Dept Of Corrections

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 6, 2017
Docket50031-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Christopher English v. State Of Washington, Dept Of Corrections (Christopher English v. State Of Washington, Dept Of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christopher English v. State Of Washington, Dept Of Corrections, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 6, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II CHRISTOPHER ENGLISH, an individual, No. 50031-1-II

Appellant,

v.

DENNIS ALVIN BUSS, individually, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent,

STATE OF WASHINGTON, Department of Corrections, STATE OF WASHINGTON, Department of Social and Health Services,

Defendants.

JOHANSON, P.J. — Christopher English filed a motion to amend a negligence complaint

to add Dennis Buss as a defendant. The existing defendants, Department of Social and Health

Services (DSHS) and Department of Corrections (DOC), did not oppose the amendment. Superior

Court Judge Vicki Hogan granted the unopposed motion allowing the amendment and ruled that

the amended complaint related back to the original complaint. This relation-back ruling defeated

Buss’s potential statute of limitations defense. After Buss was served notice of the lawsuit, he

filed a CR 60 motion for relief from the relation-back order and requested summary judgment

based on the statute of limitations. Superior Court Judge Edmund Murphy struck the relation-back No. 50031-1-II

ruling and granted summary judgment with respect to English’s claim against Buss on statute of

limitations grounds.

English appeals Judge Murphy’s order vacating Judge Hogan’s relation-back ruling and

Judge Murphy’s summary judgment dismissal of English’s claims against Buss. English argues

that (1) Judge Murphy violated Pierce County Local Rule (PCLR) 7(c)(5) when he reviewed Judge

Hogan’s relation-back order and (2) Judge Murphy improperly reviewed the CR 15(c) relation-

back ruling under a CR 60 motion for relief. English also argues that (3) even if Judge Murphy

could have reviewed the relation-back order, he erred when he concluded that English did not meet

the relation-back requirements and granted summary judgment.

We hold that (1) English did not preserve the PCLR 7(c)(5) issue and (2) to the extent

Judge Murphy relied on CR 60, he erred when he reviewed the CR 15(c) relation-back ruling

because such interlocutory orders are not reviewable under CR 60. However, Judge Murphy had

the authority to address a due process violation and therefore properly considered Buss’s motion

for relief. Finally, (3) Judge Murphy properly found that English did not meet the relation-back

requirements and properly granted summary judgment. We affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

In 2011, Buss, a DSHS employee, directed four DOC inmates, including English, to help

him dismantle a travel trailer that was given to him for his personal use. Buss did not have DSHS

approval to use DOC inmates for his private purposes. On June 8, while breaking down the trailer,

English was seriously injured.

2 No. 50031-1-II

From June 2011 and throughout 2012, DSHS and the Washington State Executive Ethics

Board investigated this incident. DSHS concluded that Buss demonstrated significant lapses in

judgment and acted negligently when he directed the inmates to perform work for his individual

benefit and when he did not ensure they used proper safety equipment. DSHS attempted to

terminate Buss, but eventually allowed him to resign. The Ethics Board concluded that Buss

violated Washington statutory prohibitions regarding conflicts of interests, securing special

privileges from his public service employment, and using state resources for personal benefit.

II. ORIGINAL COMPLAINT, ANSWER, DISCOVERY, AND SUMMARY JUDGMENT

On June 3, 2014, English filed a complaint alleging negligence related to the June 8, 2011

incident. The complaint designated DSHS and DOC as the defendants under the “Parties and

Jurisdiction” section. English served notice of the complaint on DSHS and DOC. In this same

section, the complaint stated, “DENNIS ALVIN BUSS (‘DSHS Supervisor Buss’), was an

employee of the STATE OF WASHINGTON Department of Social and Health Services acting

within the course and scope of his employment at all relevant times herein.” 1 Clerk’s Papers (CP)

at 2. But the complaint did not name Buss as a defendant in his individual capacity, although the

complaint referred to Buss’s actions leading to English’s injury throughout the complaint. Buss

was not named in the caption of the complaint. English did not serve Buss with notice of the

complaint at this time.

DSHS and DOC filed an answer, admitted Buss was a former DSHS employee, denied that

Buss had acted within the scope of employment during the June 8 incident, and referred to Buss

as a “nonparty.” For 15 months, English, DSHS, and DOC engaged in discovery. Buss did not

3 No. 50031-1-II

participate in the discovery proceedings. On September 18, 2015, DSHS and DOC filed a motion

for summary judgment in which they claimed Title 51 RCW immunity.

III. AMENDED COMPLAINT

On September 24, 10 weeks before trial, English filed a motion to amend his complaint.

English asked to bring additional claims against DSHS and DOC and also requested to add Buss

in his individual capacity as a defendant in order to bring claims “that will not be subject to Title

51 immunity.” 1 CP at 45.

English requested under CR 15(c) that the amendment relate back to the original complaint

filing date. English argued that Buss would not be prejudiced if added because “[Buss] will most

likely be defended by the attorney general’s office.” 1 CP at 51. English further contended that

the complaint related back because Buss, DSHS, and DOC shared a community of interest and

because the amendment merely represented a change in Buss’s capacity when he was already

named in the original complaint’s parties section. Neither DSHS, DOC, nor English served Buss

with notice of the motion to amend the complaint.

DSHS and DOC did not oppose the motion. On October 2, Judge Hogan granted the

motion to amend without a hearing. The order stated, “[T]hat the Amendments relate back to the

original filing of this case under [CR] 15(c).” 1 CP at 147.

English filed the amended complaint and served Buss with the summons and complaint on

October 13. Trial was set for December 1. An attorney appeared for Buss on October 23. On

November 18, he filed a motion to dismiss, or in the alternative, to continue the trial date and

reopen discovery. In the motion, Buss argued that English’s amended complaint ran afoul of the

4 No. 50031-1-II

statute of limitations because English could not meet the requirements under CR 15(c) for the

amended complaint against Buss to relate back to English’s original complaint.

Also on November 18, DSHS and DOC submitted a notice of settlement that also stated

that Buss remained a defendant. The superior court entered a stipulated judgment against DSHS

and DOC. On December 1, English and Buss stipulated to an order to continue the trial date to

May 1, 2016. The new case schedule provided that discovery would end February 29.

IV. BUSS’S CR 60 MOTION FOR RELIEF

In January, Buss filed a CR 60 motion for relief from Judge Hogan’s relation-back order

granting English’s motion to amend the complaint. In his motion, Buss sought summary judgment

dismissal of the claim against him, raised a statute of limitations defense, and sought relief under

CR 60(b)(1), (4), and (11). The superior court transferred the motion and the case to Judge Murphy

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