Diana Cole Cherry, V. Weyerhaeuser Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 17, 2025
Docket87028-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Diana Cole Cherry, V. Weyerhaeuser Company (Diana Cole Cherry, V. Weyerhaeuser Company) 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.

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Diana Cole Cherry, V. Weyerhaeuser Company, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIANA COLE CHERRY, No. 87028-9-I Appellant, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION MCKENNON LAW GROUP PC; ROBERT J. MCKENNON; and NICHOLAS A. WEST,

Defendants,

WEYERHAEUSER COMPANY,

Respondent.

DÍAZ, J. — Diana Cole Cherry twice attempted to enforce pro se a California

subpoena against Weyerhaeuser Company (Weyerhaeuser). The trial court

concluded the subpoena was unenforceable and granted two requests from

Weyerhaeuser for fees and costs associated with Cherry’s attempts. In total, it

ordered Cherry to pay Weyerhaeuser more than $27,000. Still pro se, she does

not challenge the court’s finding of unenforceability, the basis upon which it

awarded fees, or the amounts, but claims only that Weyerhaeuser missed requisite

deadlines for its cost bills. Because the record and relevant civil rules establish

otherwise, we affirm. No. 87028-9-I/2

I. BACKGROUND

In March 2023, Cherry brought a lawsuit in California superior court against

her former attorneys. The California superior court dismissed that lawsuit on

October 20, 2023, although Cherry continued to file documents in that matter.

Among such documents, Cherry apparently caused the court to issue a subpoena

duces tecum to Weyerhaeuser for documents related to the annuity and life

retirement trust plan of her late husband, who was an employee of Weyerhaeuser.

Cherry then filed the present lawsuit in King County Superior Court and she

attempted to enforce that foreign subpoena, first in March 2024 and then again in

June 2024.

Specifically, she filed two motions in connection with the subpoena: to

“compel discovery” and, after that was denied in April 2024, a “notice” for a

discovery conference and sanctions, which was denied in July 2024. In the latter

order, the court provided two reasons why it concluded the subpoena was invalid

as a matter of law. First, the court held that Cherry had not sought permission

from the court to issue a foreign subpoena, as required by RCW 5.56.010 for pro

se litigants. Second, the court held that CR 45(a)(1)(B) requires any subpoena

issued in Washington to have an active underlying case, which Cherry did not

have.

In the first of two orders granting Weyerhaeuser fees and costs, the court

awarded Weyerhaeuser $13,226.00, and, in the second order, it awarded an

additional $14,544.94, finding “the first award of fees and costs has not deterred

Ms. Cherry’s filings.” The court also deemed Cherry to be a vexatious litigant and

2 No. 87028-9-I/3

enjoined her from filing further papers with the court without prior approval.

II. ANALYSIS

A. The Awarded Fees

Cherry assigns several errors to the trial court’s award of fees, but prevails

on none of them. 1

We first note that Cherry is a pro se litigant, and “a pro se litigant is held to

the same standard as an attorney.” Kelsey v. Kelsey, 179 Wn. App. 360, 368, 317

P.3d 1096 (2014). Moreover, this court “will decide a case only on the basis of

issues set forth by the parties in their briefs.” RAP 12.1(a); see also Orwick v. City

of Seattle, 103 Wn.2d 249, 256, 692 P.2d 793 (1984) (holding that a party should

1 Weyerhaeuser argues that we should reject Cherry’s appeal without reaching a

review of its merits for several reasons, which we decline to adopt. First, it argues we should strike Cherry’s opening brief because it is incomprehensible and that we should decide the appeal on that basis alone. We do not conclude it reaches that level of incomprehensibility. See State v. Mode, 55 Wn.2d 706, 710, 349 P.2d 727 (1960) (describing an entire opening brief as “a mixed up confused mass of verbi[age] . . . impossible . . . to intelligently answer.”). Second, Weyerhaeuser argues Cherry’s designation of incomplete clerk’s papers is so deficient it warrants dismissal under RAP 9.10. That rule requires an appellant to make a good faith effort to provide those portions of the record necessary for presenting the issues raised on review. We hold Weyerhaeuser has not established Cherry failed to comply with this requirement. Third, Weyerhaeuser argues Cherry is time barred by RAP 2.4 from appealing the first of the court’s two fee awards, because she did not file her notice of appeal within the 30 days afterward. And, Weyerhaeuser avers, the late notice of appeal was not tolled by a subsequent motion for revision which she filed below because it claims it never received notice of that revision motion. And it notes the record does not include an e-certificate of service for that motion. But the case Weyerhaeuser relies upon did not toll a late notice of appeal where there was actual evidence in the record that service on a motion for reconsideration had been filed late. See Schaefco, Inc. v. Columbia River Gorge Comm’n, 121 Wn.2d 366, 368, 849 P.2d 1225 (1993). No such affirmative evidence exists here, as to whether or not service on Cherry’s revision motion was proper. We therefore reach the merits of Cherry’s appeal.

3 No. 87028-9-I/4

not “expect[] the court to research all possible theories of legal liability and apply

them to the hypothetical facts. It is not the function of trial or appellate courts to

do counsel’s thinking and briefing.”); Port Susan Chapel of the Woods v. Port

Susan Camping Club, 50 Wn. App. 176, 188, 746 P.2d 816 (1987) (“It is not the

responsibility of this court to attempt to discern what it is appellant may have

intended to assert that might somehow have merit.”).

Accordingly, we emphasize that Cherry does not assign error to the court’s

finding of the invalidity of the subpoena, the basis upon which it found the

subpoena invalid or awarded fees, or the amounts. Nor does she challenge the

trial court’s determination she is a vexatious litigant. None of these issues are

before us. Instead, as far as we can tell, Cherry asserts that Weyerhaeuser did

not follow the required process for the court to impose the fees after

Weyerhaeuser’s motion for fees was granted. See Br. of Appellant at i, 3. That is,

all of her assignments of error appear to rest upon the claim that Weyerhaeuser

did not timely file its fees and costs bill.

Specifically, Cherry assigns error to the court for even considering the

statement for fees because she claims Weyerhaeuser missed the filing deadline

and did not request an extension. And she claims the court erred by granting

them for the same reason, purporting that Weyerhaeuser’s motions were untimely

without any excuse to justify extension. Cherry raises another, seemingly

equivalent, claim that the court erred by determining the judgment did not “‘trigge[r]’

CR 54(d)(2),” by which she appears to mean that the court wrongly determined the

rule’s deadlines did not apply.

4 No. 87028-9-I/5

CR 54(d)(2) states, “Claims for attorneys' fees and expenses . . . shall be

made by motion . . . [and] the motion must be filed no later than 10 days after entry

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Related

Schaefco, Inc. v. Columbia River Gorge Commission
849 P.2d 1225 (Washington Supreme Court, 1993)
Orwick v. City of Seattle
692 P.2d 793 (Washington Supreme Court, 1984)
State v. Mode
349 P.2d 727 (Washington Supreme Court, 1960)
McCoy v. Kent Nursery, Inc.
260 P.3d 967 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)
Tiffany Family Trust Corp. v. City of Kent
119 P.3d 325 (Washington Supreme Court, 2005)
In re the Marriage of Schnurman
316 P.3d 514 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2013)
Kelsey v. Kelsey
317 P.3d 1096 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2014)
Port Susan Chapel v. Port Susan Camping Club
746 P.2d 816 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1987)

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