Le & Associates, P.s. v. Robert Diaz-luong And Lan Thi Nguyen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 26, 2016
Docket73944-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Le & Associates, P.s. v. Robert Diaz-luong And Lan Thi Nguyen (Le & Associates, P.s. v. Robert Diaz-luong And Lan Thi Nguyen) 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
Le & Associates, P.s. v. Robert Diaz-luong And Lan Thi Nguyen, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

LE & ASSOCIATES, P.S., a professional service corporation, No. 73944-1-1

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

ROBERTO DIAZ-LUONG and UNPUBLISHED OPINION LAN THI NGUYEN, husband and wife, and the marital community comprised thereof,

Appellants,

and r f-

o-* T> —t <•/-> ALLSTATE PROPERTY AND rn 1 -1 ~~u CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, rvs c^ a foreign corporation, and FARMERS T'-

INSURANCE COMPANY, a foreign x--

corporation, and GEICO INDEMNITY -)C"

COMPANY, a foreign corporation, CO

Defendants,

v.

EDWARD K. LE and VIENNA T. LE, Individually and as spouses/partners, FILED: September 26, 2016

Respondents.

TRICKEY, A.C.J. — In this third appeal from litigation spanning nearly a

decade, appellants Roberto Diaz-Luong and Lan Thi Nguyen challenge the dismissal of their counterclaims and third party claims for willful noncompliance

with court orders. We affirm. No. 73944-1-1/2

FACTS

Most of the pertinent facts and procedural history are set forth in our

previous decisions in this case1 and will be repeated here only when necessary

to explain our decision.

Appellants are attorneys formerly employed by the law firm Le &

Associates, P.S. (the firm). In 2007, the firm sued them for quantum meruit,

tortious interference with business expectancy, replevin, and other causes of

action. The firm alleged that when appellants separated from the firm, they

downloaded client files, printed hard copies, and used the information to solicit

business in violation of a separation agreement with the firm.

Appellants pleaded counterclaims and third party claims, including claims

for unpaid wages, quantum meruit, tortious interference, injunctive relief,

replevin, conversion, and embezzlement.

In 2008, the firm obtained a preliminary injunction which, among other

things, prohibited appellants from using, copying, modifying, or deleting

information in the files or database of the firm. The injunction also required them

to identify all computers containing the misappropriated client list, pay for a

professional to examine all computers and hard drives, and return all hard copies

of any client files to the firm.

1 Le & Assocs., P.S. v. Diaz-Luonq. noted at 157 Wn. App. 1040 (2010); Le & Assocs. P.S. v. Diaz-Luonq. noted at 169 Wn. App. 1010 (2012). No. 73944-1-1/3

In 2008 and 2009, the court found appellants in contempt for violating the

terms of the injunction and the court's prior orders.

In 2010, we affirmed the contempt orders. We concluded that the court's

findings were supported by substantial evidence and that the contempt orders

were within the court's discretion. We held that monetary sanctions imposed by

the trial court were civil remedial sanctions, not punitive sanctions, and awarded

fees on appeal under RCW 7.21.030(3).

Meanwhile, the firm obtained yet another contempt order for appellants'

continued noncompliance with prior orders. The noncompliance included

appellants' failure to timely identify flash drives; lying about their existence; using

data-destroying software to destroy data on the flash drives; violating an order to

refrain from copying, destroying, deleting, or modifying any computer, storage

device, electronic data; failing to identify the computer used to falsify a second

USB (universal serial bus) drive; failing to disclose a computer containing client

data; continuing to possess electronic client files; continuing to possess hard

copies of client files; and failing to pay costs caused by their contempt.

In 2012, we upheld the contempt order and rejected appellants'

challenges to the court's findings and sanctions. We also awarded fees and

costs on appeal under RCW 7.21.030(3).

In February and April of 2014, the superior court clerk filed motions to

dismiss for want of prosecution. Shortly thereafter, appellants requested, and the

court set, a trial date. The court issued an amended case schedule and ordered No. 73944-1-1/4

the parties to engage in alternative dispute resolution (ADR) by March 16, 2015,

or face sanctions.

In March 2015, the firm and third party defendants moved to dismiss

appellants' counterclaims and third party claims, arguing that appellants had not

engaged in ADR and were still not complying with the court's orders. The court

granted the motion, stating in pertinent part that appellants'

willful noncompliance with court Orders continues.

. . . The [firm has] proven . . . that in the four years and six months since the entry of the . . . 2010 Order, and for over two years and eight months since the Court of Appeals affirmed the Order, defendants have taken no actions to comply with the requirements of that Order or the Preliminary Injunction, Contempt Order, and Sanctions Order. . ..

. . . Defendant's noncompliance with the courts' Orders was found to be willful and intentional, and their continued noncompliance is also willful and intentional.

. . . The court in its Orders . . . imposed a variety of sanctions ... to induce them to comply with the court's Orders. . . . None of these sanctions have resulted in defendants' compliance. Defendants have not only willfully refused to comply for more than six years, but in the interim have engaged in additional violations . .

. . . The court cannot allow this matter to languish indefinitely with no disposition, waiting for defendants to comply. . . . The administration of the court system requires that this case be closed. Without closure, [the firm] and third-party defendants will be greatly prejudiced. They have incurred hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorney fees which have not been paid by defendants . . . . Defendants' noncompliance with the court's Orders is prejudicial to the interests of the [firm] and its clients. Noncompliance is prejudicial to [the firm's] ability to defend against defendants' claims. Requiring [the firm] to indefinitely be subject to this lawsuit pending defendants' compliance with court orders is prejudicial, expensive and unjust. It would be prejudicial to require [the firm] No. 73944-1-1/5

and third-party defendants to proceed to trial without defendants' compliance. . . . No lesser sanction than a dismissal of defendants' claims will be effective to close this matter. Lesser sanctions have been tried for years with no effect.^

Citing both its inherent authority to enforce its orders and CR 41, the court

dismissed appellants' counterclaims and third party claims with prejudice and

awarded the firm $129,132.35 in attorney fees.

The court subsequently granted the firm's motion to dismiss its

undetermined claims against appellants and entered a final judgment. This

appeal followed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Courts have discretion to dismiss a lawsuit for noncompliance with a court

order under CR 41(b),3 and for reasons falling within the court's inherent power

to manage its own affairs,4 including dilatoriness other than that described in CR

2 Clerk's Papers (CP) at 292-93. 3 CR 41(b) authorizes dismissal of a claim for failure "to comply with court rules or any order of the court." Will v. Frontier Contrs.. Inc.. 121 Wn. App.

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