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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
JENNIFER RALSTON, CALEB No. 84142-4-I MCNAMARA AND THE ESTATE OF MCNAMARA; BRAEDEN SIMON, ABIE DIVISION ONE EKENEZER, JESSE HUGHEY, TIM KAUCHUK, JORDAN PICKETT, DANIEL PIERCE, SEAN SWANSON, PUBLISHED OPINION JOEY WIESER, QUINN ZOSCHKE, JEFF CUSHMAN,
Appellants, v.
STATE OF WASHINGTON, a governmental entity,
Respondent.
SMITH, A.C.J. — Several plaintiffs bring this putative class action lawsuit
against the State. They claim that it has underfunded the Washington courts in
violation of its constitutional duties, that the ensuing court congestion has
delayed their civil cases and thereby caused them harm, and that they represent
a class of plaintiffs similarly harmed. The trial court dismissed the case for failure
to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
We affirm, concluding that only the judiciary may use its inherent power to
compel the legislature to better fund the courts and that no other power allows
the plaintiffs their requested remedy. For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. No. 84142-4-I/2
FACTS
This case is a putative class action brought by a number of plaintiffs.
Each is also plaintiff in a separate civil action. They claim that those underlying
civil lawsuits have seen their trials delayed because of systemic court
underfunding. They bring this action against the State in an attempt to compel
greater funding for the judiciary.
The underlying actions are varied and their trial dates have been
postponed for a number of reasons. Jennifer Ralston and Caleb McNamara filed
their case in 2015. That case still awaited trial as of the filing of the complaint in
this putative class action because the court granted a defense motion to continue
brought on account of claimed complications in discovery. The order allowed the
parties to file a motion for expedited trial, though it is unclear from the record
whether they did.
Braeden Simon commenced his case in September, 2020. After a judicial
reassignment, trial was rescheduled by the court from September 7, 2021 to
February 16, 2022, the next available jury trial date, because of a “scheduling
conflict.”
Abie Ekenezer, Jessey Hughey, Tim Kauchak, Jordan Pickett, Daniel
Pierce, Sean Swanson, Joey Wieser, and Quinn Zoschke, along with around 45
other individuals, are plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed in September, 2020 and amended
in April, 2021. Trial was moved forward a year and a half, from September 27,
2021 to February 21, 2023, after the defendants asked for a three-year
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continuance because of the complexity of the case, which involves voluminous
discovery and more than 500 disclosed witnesses.
Jeff Cushman initiated his underlying lawsuit in October, 2020. The
matter was consolidated with other similar cases and a third amended complaint
was filed in August, 2021. The court moved the trial date to March, 2022.
Together, these plaintiffs sue the State on behalf of a larger putative class
of plaintiffs suffering the impact of delays in their civil trials. They do so because
the State plays a role in funding the courts1 and, they allege, it is failing to fulfil
that role. They contend that their trials’ continuances harmed them and were
ultimately caused by the State’s failure to adequately fund the courts. They seek
a declaration of their rights and injunctive relief under the Uniform Declaratory
Judgments Act (UDJA), ch. 7.24 RCW, requesting that the judiciary compel
greater court funding from the legislature.
1 It is a limited role. Our state constitution provides: The salaries of the judges of the supreme court shall be paid by the state. One-half of the salary of each of the superior court judges shall be paid by the state, and the other one-half by the county or counties for which he is elected. In cases where a judge is provided for more than one county, that portion of his salary which is to be paid by the counties shall be apportioned between or among them according to the assessed value of their taxable property, to be determined by the assessment next preceding the time for which such salary is to be paid. WASH. CONST. art. IV, § 13. What the State does not pay, the counties do: “The county in which the court is held shall furnish the courthouse, a jail or suitable place for confining prisoners, books for record, stationery, lights, wood, attendance, and other incidental expenses of the courthouse and court which are not paid by the United States.” RCW 2.28.139.
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The trial court granted the State’s motion to dismiss the action with
prejudice. The plaintiffs sought direct review from the Washington Supreme
Court, which declined review by a June 8, 2022 order. ANALYSIS Standard of Review
A trial court’s decision to dismiss a case under CR 12(b)(6) is reviewed de
novo. Kinney v. Cook, 159 Wn.2d 837, 842, 154 P.3d 206 (2007). “Dismissal is
warranted only if the court concludes, beyond a reasonable doubt, the plaintiff
cannot prove ‘any set of facts which would justify recovery.’ ” Kinney, 159 Wn.2d
837 at 842 (quoting Tenore v. AT&T Wireless Servs., 136 Wn.2d 322, 329-30,
962 P.2d 104 (1998)). “The court presumes all facts alleged in the plaintiff's
complaint are true and may consider hypothetical facts supporting the plaintiff's
claims.” Kinney, 159 Wn.2d at 842.
Collateral Attack
As a threshold procedural matter, the State contends that this action
constitutes a collateral attack by the plaintiffs on their underlying cases and
therefore improperly asks one court to interfere in proceedings not before it. We
disagree.
The common law priority of action rule “provides that the first court to
obtain jurisdiction over a case possesses exclusive jurisdiction to the exclusion of
other coordinate courts.” Atl. Cas. Ins. Co. v. Oregon Mut. Ins. Co., 137 Wn.
App. 296, 302, 153 P.3d 211 (2007). “[I]ts authority continues subject only to the
appellate authority until the matter is finally and completely disposed of.” State
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ex rel. Greenberger v. Superior Court for King County, 134 Wash. 400, 401, 235
P. 957 (1925). But the rule applies only where there is “identity of subject matter,
relief, and parties between the actions.” Am. Mobile Homes of Wash., Inc. v.
Seattle-First Nat’l Bank, 115 Wn.2d 307, 317, 796 P.2d 1276 (1990).
Here, there is no identity of subject matter, requested relief, or parties
between the actions. The plaintiffs do not ask the court to decide the issues of
fact or law that are the subject of their underlying cases or directly interfere in
those proceedings in any way. What relief the plaintiffs do request is systemic in
nature, rather than targeted at their preexisting cases. Furthermore, the parties
among the cases are also not identical; the State is the only named defendant
here. The priority of action rule therefore does not bar this lawsuit.
Power to Compel Legislative Funding
We are asked whether private litigants who assert that their trials have
been delayed because of an underfinanced court system’s lack of capacity may
sue the State in order to compel the judiciary’s more ample funding by the
legislature. We conclude that they may not. The judiciary possesses the
inherent power to compel the legislature to better fund the courts. But exercise
of this power is necessarily limited by the careful balance of powers between the
branches. These limitations express themselves in part by allowing only one
entity to bring this sort of lawsuit: the judiciary. More generally, no other right or
power permits the plaintiffs’ requested remedy. A lawsuit brought by members of
the public to compel specific legislative exercise of its power over funding may
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only be sustained under our state constitution’s public education mandate, not
under the provisions relied on by the plaintiffs in this case.
1. Structural Constitutional Principles
The doctrines of separation of powers, checks and balances, and inherent
judicial powers are “three interrelated . . . constituents of our governmental
framework” that inform determinations of when one branch may interfere with the
actions of another. In re Salary of Juvenile Director, 87 Wn.2d 232, 237-38, 552
P.2d 163 (1976). The judiciary is empowered by these doctrines to compel the
legislature to provide greater funding for the courts when they are
unconstitutionally under resourced. Id. at 245. The plaintiffs contend that they
fall within a “zone of interest” arising from this power that supports their lawsuit
because court underfunding “impairs [the judiciary’s] existence as a co-equal
branch, in violation of the constitutional guarantee of separation of powers.” The
State, on the other hand, contends that these doctrines entirely prohibit the
plaintiffs’ lawsuit because any exercise of this power constitutes a disfavored
judicial interference in legislative functions. We hold that only the judiciary may
wield its inherent power to compel the legislature to better fund the courts.
The three doctrines are as much philosophical and political constructs as
they are legal ones. Juvenile Director, the seminal Washington case addressing
them, conducts an examination of their history and purpose and is the basis for
much of the following analysis. Id. at 236-51. That being so, a brief summary of
the case’s facts is appropriate. It concerned the appeal from a superior court
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order enjoining the board of county commissioners of Lincoln County to pay a
court-appointed employee, the director of juvenile services, a higher wage. Id.
at 234-35. The case was brought by the superior court of Lincoln County but
heard by a superior court judge from another county. Id. at 233. The
Washington Supreme Court, in an opinion written by Justice Utter, reversed the
superior court’s order because the judicial plaintiffs had not met the high burden
needed for the judiciary to compel another branch to fund the courts. Id. at 251.
To start, “[a]ny inquiry into the propriety of court action to compel funding
of its own functions must begin with an examination of the theoretical
underpinnings of the doctrines of separation of powers, checks and balances,
and inherent judicial power.” Id. at 237. The separation of powers doctrine was
first expressed in its modern form by eighteenth century English and French
scholars including John Locke and Baron de Montesquieu. Id. at 238. At its core
is the notion that exercise of three fundamental governmental powers—writing
laws, executing laws, and judging laws’ application—should be divided among
three separate institutions of government (respectively, the legislative, executive,
and judicial branches). See id. at 238-39.2 This division came to be embodied in
the provisions of the state and federal constitutions of the United States. Id.
at 239-40. Though it is not a “definitive guide to intergovernmental relations,” the
separation of powers doctrine is still “ ‘the dominant principle of the American
2 Though, with that said, “[i]t is an oversimplification to view the doctrine as
establishing analytically distinct categories of government functions,” some overlap between and among the functions has always existed. Id. at 242.
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political system,’ ” invoked by the courts as a heuristic to help decide matters
throughout the history of American jurisprudence. Id. at 240 (collecting federal
and Washington cases) (quoting GORDON S. WOOD, THE CREATION OF THE
AMERICAN REPUBLIC 1776-1787, at 449 (1969)).
The related doctrine of checks and balances suggests that a total
separation of powers among the three branches is too broad a division of
authority. It proposes that good government is better assured by allowing the
branches to check each other’s exercise of powers in certain circumstances in
order to stop a single branch from overreaching. Id. at 240-42. Thus, among
other checks and balances, the executive possesses a veto power over
legislation, the legislature possesses the power of the purse, and the court may
interpret the constitution and laws. Id. at 241-42.
Checks relevant in this case are both judicial and legislative. On the one
hand, “[i]t is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say
what the law is” and thereby declare legislative or executive actions
unconstitutional. Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177, 2 L. Ed. 60
(1803). That this function be fulfilled is crucial, since “[w]ithout this, all the
reservations of particular rights or privileges would amount to nothing.” THE
FEDERALIST No. 78 (Alexander Hamilton). On the other hand, the Washington
legislature controls appropriations, including appropriations funding the other
branches. WASH. CONST. art. VIII, § 4.3
3 Governing appropriations in Washington:
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The judiciary’s crucial functions are therefore inextricably interdependent
with the functions of the legislature’s appropriations power. The exercise of
checks is, as a result, delicate and circumstance specific: The actual art of governing under our Constitution does not and cannot conform to judicial definitions of the power of any of its branches based on isolated clauses or even single Articles torn from context. While the Constitution diffuses power the better to secure liberty, it also contemplates that practice will integrate the dispersed powers into a workable government. It enjoins upon its branches separateness but interdependence, autonomy but reciprocity.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 635, 72 S. Ct. 863, 870,
96 L. Ed. 1153 (1952) (Jackson, J. concurring).
Not having either the power of appropriations or veto, the judiciary is “the
only branch excluded from participation in the formation and adoption of the
government budget. Such exclusion makes the courts vulnerable to improper
checks in the form of reward or retaliation.” Juvenile Director, 87 Wn.2d at 244
(providing a historical parallel, “the use of the King’s purse to obtain the loyalty of
Parliament”).
But the independence of the courts to perform their structural function
depends on funding, and so, “separation of powers also dictates that the judiciary
No moneys shall ever be paid out of the treasury of this state, or any of its funds, or any of the funds under its management, except in pursuance of an appropriation by law; nor unless such payment be made within one calendar month after the end of the next ensuing fiscal biennium, and every such law making a new appropriation, or continuing or reviving an appropriation, shall distinctly specify the sum appropriated, and the object to which it is to be applied, and it shall not be sufficient for such law to refer to any other law to fix such sum.
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be able to ensure its own survival when insufficient funds are provided by the
other branches.” Id. at 244-45. The courts therefore must—as a function not of
any positive constitutional grant of power, but instead because of the underlying
structure of the constitution—possess an inherent power to compel funding from
the other branches. Id. at 245. This power “may be exercised by the branch to
protect itself in the performance of its constitutional duties.” Id. at 245
(emphases added).
The fragility of the courts’ inherent power to compel funding is readily
apparent. Inter-branch conflict arising out of the power’s use may have “an
adverse effect on working relations between” the judiciary and the other
branches of government. Id. at 247-48. This may take the form of more funding
battles, court-packing, jurisdiction stripping, altered methods of judicial selection,
and retaliation against the judge(s) who permitted the forced funding. See id. at
248. Backlash could affect the judiciary’s ability to fulfil its constitutional duties
more dramatically than underfunding ever did. Additionally, an exercise of the
power to compel funding may cause the judiciary to lose its credibility in the eyes
of the public, id. at 248, a particular concern at this point in our history. This
dictates caution in any conflict between the judiciary and other branches.
Further recommending a restrained application of this power is recognition
of the inherently political, and inherently difficult, nature of “allocation of
available[, finite] monetary resources by representatives of the people elected in
a carefully monitored process.” Id. at 248. The judiciary, a non-political branch
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comprising officials not always selected in a proportionally representative
manner, is less sensitive to the will of the people. Id. at 249. Its single-minded
focus on its own funding may as a result risk depriving other crucial services of
funds, a distribution already carefully considered by a more representative
branch. Id. at 248-49.
This may be the case even in those instances where the judiciary is truly
unable to fulfil its constitutional duties. Real harm can be caused by court
underfunding, just as it can be caused by the underfunding of many other
important governmental services. Litigation, though, is an inferior mechanism to
remedy this harm. It focuses only on the parties involved, ignoring any broader
context. Cases such as this one, for example, cannot take into account the
difficulties faced by the legislature when deciding how to apportion resources.
And so they ignore the chance that even if the plaintiffs prevail, restoring court
funding, they may do so at the cost of harms caused by the resulting more
severe underfunding of other services. A central problem with permitting citizen
suits against the legislature to fund the courts becomes one of imbalance: the
courts could receive financing at the cost of other agencies that themselves have
no inherent power to compel their own funding.4
4 As counsel for the State noted at argument: “[T]he heart of the problem
. . . is that private litigants don’t represent the interests of the public as a whole, they represent their own interests.” Wash. Court of Appeals oral argument, Ralston v. State, No. 84142-4-I (Sept. 27, 2022), at 16 min., 23 sec., audio recording by TVW, Washington State’s Public Affairs Network, https://tvw.org/video/division-1-court-of-appeals- 2022091074/?eventID=2022091074.
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Juvenile Director therefore concluded that a high standard is demanded
where the courts’ inherent power to compel their own funding from the legislature
is invoked. Id. at 249-50. The power “is to be exercised only when established
methods fail or when an emergency arises.” Id. at 250. Juvenile Director
reversed because there was no proof that underfunding “was so inadequate that
the court could not fulfill its duties,” nor that “an increase [in funding] was
reasonably necessary for the efficient administration of justice.” Id. at 252.
The fundamental structural concerns of Juvenile Director control resolution
of this case. The courts’ inherent power to compel their own funding is
appropriately exercised rarely and only by the courts themselves. See Zylstra v.
Piva, 85 Wn.2d 743, 748, 539 P.2d 823 (1975) (“The court cannot . . . relinquish
either its power or its obligation to keep its own house in order.”). Pragmatic
worries about destabilization of the delicately balanced co-equal branches
abound. These worries are not disposed of simply because the lawsuit giving
rise to an exercise of this power is brought by private litigants rather than the
courts. Any exercise of the power would still be a judicial function, and any
protestation otherwise would appear to reasonable observers to be a Trojan
horse. Litigants may not wield the judiciary’s power in its stead, and the judiciary
may not, for its part, delegate its power in an attempt to disguise its use.
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We therefore conclude that the courts’ inherent power to use litigation to
compel more robust court funding from the legislature inheres only in the
judiciary and cannot be invoked by private litigants.5
2. General Limitations on Parties’ Power to Compel Legislative Funding
Nor can the plaintiffs rely on any other authority to sustain their lawsuit.
The limits imposed on exercise of the courts’ inherent powers are consistent with
our more general refusal to compel funding from the legislature regarding any
right or policy. See Ellensburg v. State, 118 Wn.2d 709, 718, 826 P.2d 1081
(1992) (“The power of appropriation is vested in the Legislature. It is the rare
case where the judiciary interferes with that power.”); Rocha v. King County, 195
Wn.2d 412, 431, 460 P.3d 624 (2020) (declining to compel greater compensation
for jurors); Aji P. by & through Piper v. State, 16 Wn. App. 2d 177, 193-94, 480
P.3d 438 (2021) (declining to compel the State to engage in, and therefore fund,
certain environmental policies). This refusal is, like the limitations on the courts’
inherent powers, consistent with our general approach to the separation of
powers, which disfavors “the activity of one branch invad[ing] the prerogatives of
another.” Putman v. Wenatchee Valley Med. Ctr., P.S., 166 Wn.2d 974, 985,
216 P.3d 374 (2009).
5 At argument, the plaintiffs argued that “this is . . . not an action against
the legislature. . . . It is actually against the State, because the State has responsibility for making sure that the judiciary is adequately funded.” Wash. Court of Appeals oral argument, supra, at 20 min., 22 sec. Because this action asks for exercise of the appropriations power reserved for the legislature, this is a distinction without a difference.
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The one narrow, guarded exception to this rule exists under Washington
Constitution article IX, section 1, which creates an individual positive right to
education funding enforceable through citizens’ lawsuits. Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1
v. State, 90 Wn.2d 476, 510, 585 P.2d 71 (1978) (not ordering any particular
action from the legislature, simply concluding that the State was in breach of its
duty and the legislature should act); see also McCleary v. State, 173 Wn.2d 477,
518, 269 P.3d 227 (2012) (framing right to education as a “positive right”).
That right is not at issue here, but Seattle School District No. 1 is
nonetheless instructive. Article IX, section 1 states in relevant part: “It is the
paramount duty of the state to make ample provision for the education of all
children residing within its borders.” W ASH. CONST. art. IX, § 1. Seattle School
District No. 1, relying on this language, held that the provision, because of that
duty, “creates a correlative right on behalf of all resident children.” 90 Wn.2d at
510. The court came to this conclusion via a careful textual analysis, giving
serious consideration to the words “paramount,” “duty,” and “ample provision.”
Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 90 Wn.2d at 516.
Importantly for our purposes in this case, the court in Seattle School
District No. 1 emphasized that article IX, section 1 is “unique.” 90 Wn.2d at 510.
No similar duty and correlative rights arise under other provisions not
“constitutionally paramount.” Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 90 Wn.2d at 523. And
there can be no other “paramount” right because, first, none other is described in
our constitution and, second, “[w]hen a thing is said to be paramount, it can only
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mean that it is more important than all other things concerned.” Seattle Sch.
Dist. No. 1, 90 Wn.2d at 510-11 (emphasis added) (quoting BERGEN EVANS &
CORNELIA EVANS, A DICTIONARY OF CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN USAGE 350 (1957)).
The plaintiffs invoke Washington Constitution article I, section 106 and
Washington Constitution article I, section 21,7 arguing that each of these
constitutional provisions creates a similar duty that permits this lawsuit and the
remedy of compelled funding. But those invocations are unavailing as a result of
the exclusive language in Seattle School District No. 1. Neither provision can
permit private litigants to compel funding; only article IX, section 1 authorizes that
sort of action. The plaintiffs bring their action under the UDJA, arguing that the
State’s failure to fund the courts violates article I, section 10 and article I,
section 21. But to have recourse to the UDJA, the interests litigants seek to
protect must be within that zone of interests protected or regulated by a relevant
statute or constitutional guarantee. Grant County Fire Prot. Dist. No. 5 v. Moses
Lake, 150 Wn.2d 791, 802, 83 P.3d 419 (2004). The constitutional provisions on
which plaintiffs rely, however, do not impose on the legislature a duty to act
enforceable by private litigants.
6 “Justice in all cases shall be administered openly, and without
unnecessary delay.” 7 “The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, but the legislature may
provide for a jury of any number less than twelve in courts not of record, and for a verdict by nine or more jurors in civil cases in any court of record, and for waiving of the jury in civil cases where the consent of the parties interested is given thereto.”
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Finally, plaintiffs argue that they have standing under the UDJA not
because they stand within a protected zone of interests, but because the issue of
court funding is one of great public interest. Where the question is one of great public interest . . . and where it appears that an opinion of the court will be beneficial to the public and to other branches of the government, the court may exercise its discretion and render a declaratory judgment to resolve a question of constitutional interpretation.
Seattle Sch. Dist. 1, 90 Wn.2d at 490. But public interest standing is extended to
ensure that issues do not escape review. Grant County, 150 Wn.2d at 803.
Thus, in Yakima County (West Valley) Fire Protection District No. 12 v. Yakima,
the court did not extend standing to a fire protection district where its arguments
could be made as well or better by others who had entered into the same utility
agreement with the city of Yakima. 122 Wn.2d 371, 380-81, 858 P.2d 245
(1993). Here, where the courts themselves are more knowledgeable and better
positioned than members of the public to address the systemic underfunding
alleged by the plaintiffs, we do not extend public interest standing to them.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs’ counsel stated at the beginning of oral argument that individuals
are “at the mercy of the legislature” if an underfunded judiciary proves unable to
resolve disputes. While this may be true, it is hardly a state of affairs unique to
court funding; the legislature is given the power to tax and spend, and with it the
responsibility to deliberate carefully and apportion funds appropriately. It, not the
courts, is the proper forum for debates about the expenditure of limited public
resources. Where it errs, voters are not left without recourse, but instead have
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the power to correct it through the democratic political process. Where it errs by
underfunding the courts, the judiciary is empowered to defend its institutional
purpose. But that the judiciary exists to serve public interests does not mean that
the public may compel it to use its inherent power to order the legislature to act.
We affirm.
WE CONCUR: