Hidalgo v. Barker

309 P.3d 687, 176 Wash. App. 527
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 10, 2013
DocketNo. 30544-9-III
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 309 P.3d 687 (Hidalgo v. Barker) 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
Hidalgo v. Barker, 309 P.3d 687, 176 Wash. App. 527 (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Siddoway, A.C.J.

¶1 Manuel Hidalgo was convicted of being a participant in the much-publicized “Wenatchee sex ring” and served over four years in prison before his judgment and sentence was reversed on the basis of the newly discovered evidence that discredited the “sex ring” investigation and resulting charges.1 Mr. Hidalgo then brought this malpractice action against his public defenders and their law firm. The malpractice case was settled, but since the law firm and its lawyers had exhausted their malpractice insurance coverage, Mr. Hidalgo settled his case against Edward Stevensen, his principal public defender, for Mr. Stevensen’s agreement to a multimillion dollar judgment that Mr. Hidalgo promised to collect only from Westport Insurance Corporation, Mr. Stevensen’s insurer. The trial court found the multimillion dollar settlement amount to be excessive and that a reasonable settlement amount was $688,875, ultimately resulting in a covenant judgment against Mr. Stevensen in that amount.

¶2 Mr. Hidalgo’s appeal and Westport’s cross appeal raise two questions of first impression.

¶3 The first, raised by Mr. Hidalgo, is whether a trial court that has conducted one hearing at which it determines a reasonable settlement amount is statutorily required to revisit that amount if the parties reach a new and different settlement agreement. We hold that RCW 4.22-.060 does not require that a reasonable settlement amount be redetermined any time the settling parties modify the terms of their agreement. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to reconsider its determination here.

¶4 The second, raised by Westport, is whether the reasonable settlement amount should bear prejudgment interest. We hold that the trial court may provide for prejudg[532]*532ment interest as a component of a reasonable settlement amount, as it did here. Postjudgment interest was properly awarded at the contract rate.

¶5 For those reasons, and because the trial court’s determination of a reasonable settlement amount is supported by substantial evidence and did not require more detailed findings, we affirm the trial court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶6 Mr. Hidalgo was charged with the first degree rape and first degree child molestation of M.E., the older of two sisters whose allegations of sexual abuse by their parents and other family members ultimately led to broader allegations and charges against several dozen adults in Chelan and Douglas Counties. Mr. Hidalgo was married to the girls’ older half sister.

¶7 The law firm of Barker & Howard PS, Chelan County’s contract public defender, was appointed to represent Mr. Hidalgo, who was indigent. The law firm assigned the case internally to an associate attorney, Edward Stevensen. Jeffrey Barker supervised Mr. Stevensen and participated to a limited extent in representing Mr. Hidalgo.

¶8 The theory of defense that ultimately proved successful in the Wenatchee sex ring trials and postconviction challenges was to target improper interview techniques and irregularities in the investigation, particularly on the part of Robert Perez, a detective with the Wenatchee Police Department who became a foster parent of M.E. and her sister, D.E. The improper interview techniques cast doubt on the reliability of the girls’ allegations.

¶9 Mr. Barker attended meetings of the lawyers representing defendants accused by the girls at which a defense strategy of challenging the conduct of the investigation was discussed. He did not embrace it for his firm’s clients even though it proved successful very shortly before Mr. Hidalgo’s trial in the trial of Honnah Sims, a Sunday school [533]*533teacher who was the first of the alleged sex ring participants to be acquitted. Mr. Stevensen defended Mr. Hidalgo by relying on a different theory: he acknowledged the girls’ prior abuse by others but argued that in an irrational response to it, they falsely accused virtually every adult that they knew, including Mr. Hidalgo.

¶10 Mr. Hidalgo was initially charged in April 1995 and was tried less than four months later, having agreed to one continuance but having rejected Mr. Stevensen’s recommendation that they seek another. The day before Mr. Hidalgo’s trial was to begin, the State added charges that he had raped and molested M.E.’s younger sister, D.E. That same day, Mr. Stevensen moved for a continuance of trial but his request was denied. On the second day of trial, Mr. Stevensen informed the trial court that Mr. Hidalgo wished to substitute a private lawyer, Mr. Tyler Firkins, and that Mr. Firkins requested a two-week continuance. The request to allow the substitution of Mr. Firkins was also denied, with the trial court observing that Mr. Stevensen was “doing a good job with this defense and if [Mr. Firkins] wanted to be part of this case he had better have been here.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 2388.

¶11 At the conclusion of a three-day trial, Mr. Hidalgo was convicted of one count: molesting D.E. The jury deadlocked on the five remaining counts. Mr. Hidalgo was sentenced to 68 months in prison. This court upheld his conviction on appeal. State v. Rodriguez, noted at 86 Wn. App. 1011, 1997 WL 1110380, 1997 Wash. App. LEXIS 763.2

Postconviction Relief

¶12 About a year into Mr. Hidalgo’s incarceration, M.E., who, with her sister, had been placed through foster care in the home of Detective Perez, ran away from the Perez home [534]*534to the home of her grandparents. She told her grandparents that she had lied about the sexual abuse, having been pressured by Detective Perez to make the accusations. Her grandparents arranged for the recantation to be videotaped by a television reporter. Upon being returned to the custody of the State, however, M.E. recanted her recantation.

¶13 Nonetheless, based on her initial recantation and other evidence, several defendants filed for postconviction relief. In late 1997, personal restraint petitions (PRPs) filed by M.E. and D.E.’s parents were referred by this court for fact-finding. Following a seven-day reference hearing, Judge Wallis Friel, to whom the fact-finding was referred, concluded that M.E.’s recantation was believable and the State had used improper techniques in interviewing the girls.

¶14 Following that determination and with the assistance of new lawyers — including one from Mr. Firkins’s firm, which would represent Mr. Hildago in this malpractice action — Mr. Hidalgo filed a PRP relying on newly discovered evidence and ineffective assistance of counsel. In December 1998, this court ordered a reference hearing on Mr. Hidalgo’s PRP, which was referred to Judge Friel. Judge Friel found that the State had improperly influenced the testimony of M.E. and D.E. and that material evidence, sufficient to change the result, was newly discovered.

¶15 This court adopted Judge Friel’s conclusions, reversed Mr. Hidalgo’s convictions, and remanded the case for a new trial. In re Pers. Restraint of Rodriguez, noted at 98 Wn. App. 1025, 1999 WL 1314781, 1999 Wash. App. LEXIS 2061. The State declined to retry the case and dismissed the charges.

The Present Malpractice Lawsuit

¶16 Mr. Hidalgo then filed this action, asserting legal malpractice and other claims against the Barker & Howard firm, Mr. Stevensen, and Mr. Barker.

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Bluebook (online)
309 P.3d 687, 176 Wash. App. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hidalgo-v-barker-washctapp-2013.