Hundtofte v. Encarnacion

280 P.3d 513, 169 Wash. App. 498
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 16, 2012
DocketNo. 66428-0-I
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 280 P.3d 513 (Hundtofte v. Encarnacion) 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
Hundtofte v. Encarnacion, 280 P.3d 513, 169 Wash. App. 498 (Wash. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Dwyer, J.

¶1 Article I, section 10 of the Washington Constitution confers upon the public the right to open judicial proceedings and records. This presumption of openness, although not absolute, may be limited only by significant countervailing interests. In determining whether restricted access is justified, the trial court must engage in a five-step analysis in which the asserted interest is weighed against the public’s constitutional right. Because openness is presumed, the determination of whether restricted access is justified must be made on a case-specific basis.

[502]*502¶2 Here, the trial court granted a motion to redact a court record, ordering that the full names of the defendants in an unlawful detainer action be replaced with their initials in the court’s electronic records index. Because nothing distinguishes these particular defendants from other defendants in unlawful detainer actions who were also not ultimately evicted, the relief afforded by the trial court, if deemed appropriate, would similarly be available to all such litigants. However, no statutory or constitutional provision protects the interest asserted by the applicants for relief herein. Consequently, such wide-ranging relief is inappropriate. Moreover, such a de facto “automatic limitation” on the public’s right to open courts effectively precludes the case-specific analysis mandated by article I, section 10.

¶3 The trial court abused its discretion by overvaluing the asserted interest when weighing that interest against the public’s constitutional right, in effect negating the presumption of the open administration of justice. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order granting the motion to redact.

I

¶4 On September 10, 2009, the owners of an apartment building in Burien, Aaron Hundtofte and Kent Alexander, filed an unlawful detainer action against Ignacio Encarnación and Norma Karla Farias, who were, at the time, building tenants. The parties resolved the case by stipulation and entry of an agreed order on November 12, 2009. Encarnación and Farias were not evicted from the apartment. Pursuant to the agreed order, the tenants agreed to leave the apartment by December 1,2009; in exchange, they retained their rent payments for the months of September, October, and November. Hundtofte and Alexander also agreed to provide Encarnación and Farias with a favorable rental reference.

[503]*503¶5 Encarnación and Farias thereafter filed a motion to redact the court record in the unlawful detainer case. Specifically, they sought an order requiring the substitution of their initials for their full names in the Superior Court Management Information System (SCOMIS), the court’s publicly available electronic record index. Encarnación and Farias alleged that they had been denied rental housing based upon the SCOMIS record of the unlawful detainer action, which shows that such an action had previously been filed against them. They contended that redaction of the SCOMIS record was justified because the existence of the record entry impaired their access to rental housing.

¶6 Encarnación and Farias filed their motion to redact with the Ex Parte and Probate Department of the King County Superior Court. On May 26,2010, a commissioner of the court granted the unopposed motion, directing the superior court clerk to replace Encarnación’s and Farias’s names with their initials in the SCOMIS index. An attorney representing the King County Superior Court Office of Judicial Administration1 thereafter provided briefing to the trial court, opposing the ordered redaction. The Clerk contended that such a redaction would be tantamount to destruction of a court record and, thus, improper absent an authorizing statute.

¶7 Meanwhile, Encarnación and Farias filed a motion to affirm the commissioner’s order in the superior court, apparently because the Clerk had not yet complied with the redaction order. The motion was denied. Encarnación and Farias appealed from the order denying their motion to affirm the redaction order. A commissioner of this court determined that the order was not appealable as a matter of right and, thus, granted to the superior court the full authority to hear and decide any related motions brought by Encarnación and Farias. Encarnación and Farias thereafter filed in the superior court a CR 60(b) motion for relief [504]*504from the order denying their motion to affirm the redaction order, characterizing that order as a denial of a hearing on the motion to redact.

¶8 Although the Clerk’s office was not a named party in the case, the Clerk submitted a response to the motion to vacate, asserting that the relief requested — redaction of Encarnación’s and Farias’s full names from the SCOMIS record — effectively constitutes the unlawful destruction of a court record in contravention of General Rule (GR) 15(h). The trial court determined that, although the Clerk did not have standing to oppose the motion for relief, the Clerk would have standing “at the ultimate hearing where the Court may or may not direct the clerk’s office to do something.” The trial court granted relief in the form of scheduling a hearing on the merits of the motion to redact.

¶9 At the subsequent hearing, the trial court granted Encarnación’s and Farias’s motion to redact the court record. The trial court determined that it was bound by this court’s decision in Indigo Real Estate Services v. Rousey, 151 Wn. App. 941, 215 P.3d 977 (2009), and, thus, the court rejected the Clerk’s contention that GR 15 prohibits the replacement of a party’s full name with the party’s initials in the SCOMIS index. The trial court then indicated that, in granting the motion for redaction, it had applied GR 15 and the requirements set forth in Seattle Times Co. v. Ishikawa, 97 Wn.2d 30, 640 P.2d 716 (1982).

¶10 On November 18, 2010, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of its redaction order. The court found that a prospective future landlord “could readily discover” the unlawful detainer record and that landlords “commonly deny rental housing” to applicants who have such records. Thus, the court determined, the record “present[ed] a significant risk” that Encarnación and Farias would be denied housing in the future. The trial court also found that the unlawful detainer action had been dismissed, that the court had neither entered findings against the tenants nor ordered their [505]*505eviction, and that Encarnación and Farias had “raised a meritorious defense to the ‘eviction’ action.”

¶11 Based upon its factual findings, the trial court determined that Encarnación’s and Farias’s need to obtain rental housing constituted a “compelling privacy interest,” as required by GR 15(c)(2) for redaction of a court record, because (1) they were not homeowners, (2) they then lived in a home that did not suit their needs, and (3) they had “a good faith expectation that they [would] need to change residences in the near future.” The court further determined that the SCOMIS record presented “a serious and imminent threat” to the applicants’ abilities to obtain housing because (1) they had already been denied rental housing due to this record and (2) they had “good reason to expect” that other potential landlords would similarly reject them based upon the existence of the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 P.3d 513, 169 Wash. App. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hundtofte-v-encarnacion-washctapp-2012.