Mustafa Idris v. Girma Ayele And Jane Doe Ayele

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 5, 2019
Docket78145-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mustafa Idris v. Girma Ayele And Jane Doe Ayele (Mustafa Idris v. Girma Ayele And Jane Doe Ayele) 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
Mustafa Idris v. Girma Ayele And Jane Doe Ayele, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MUSTAFA IDRIS, No. 78145-6

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

V.

GENESIS CHIROPRACTIC GROUP L.L.C., a Washington State Corporation, and MASUD HASAN and JANE DOE UNPUBLISHED OPINION HASAN,

Defendants,

GIRMA AYELE and JANE DOE AYELE,

Appellants. FILED: August 5, 2019

ANDRUS, J. — Girma Ayele appeals a default judgment entered against him.

He contends the trial court failed to properly apply CR 60 when it denied his motion

to vacate an order of default. Although Ayele, who is representing himself in this

appeal, has cited the incorrect court rule governing the basis for reversal, we

nevertheless conclude we cannot overlook the key procedural error in this case—

the trial court erroneously entered an order of default against Ayele without notice

to him. We therefore reverse the order of default and default judgment against

Ayele and remand.

FACTS

Ayele and Masud Hasan managed a chiropractic business, Genesis No. 78145-6-112

Chiropractic L.L.C.1 Ayele and Hasan agreed to pay Mustafa Idris $3,000 a month,

in two equal payments, to treat chiropractic patients at Genesis. Ayele and Hasan

also agreed to pay Idris an additional 50 percent of all payments Genesis received

for patients that Idris brought to Genesis.

Idris treated patients at Genesis between November 10, 2014 and March

27, 2015. In those four months, he received four checks—one was returned for

insufficient funds and another was for less than half of the agreed biweekly

amount. Genesis never paid him for his January work. Idris complained about not

being paid on time and could not get a straight answer from Ayele or Hasan on

who was in charge of issuing his checks. He finally learned there were insufficient

funds to pay him. He stopped treating patients at Genesis on March 27, 2015.

Idris sued Ayele, Hasan, and Genesis for breach of contract, unjust

enrichment, promissory estoppel, negligent misrepresentation, and Consumer

Protection Act2 violations in November 2015. He alleged he was owed $13,274.29

in damages for unpaid services rendered while Idris treated patients at Genesis’

facilities. He sought the entry of a judgment for this sum certain, plus costs, and

attorney fees.

ldris served Hasan and Genesis on November 7, 2015. Idris served Ayele,

who was in Africa at the time Idris filed his complaint, on December 9, 2015. Hasan

filed a pro se notice of appearance on December 2, 2015, and Ayele filed a pro se

notice of appearance on December 29, 2015.

Neither Hasan nor Genesis are parties to this appeal and are mentioned only in so far as their involvement in the underlying matter is necessary to explain Ayele’s appeal. 2 Chapter 19.86 RCW.

-2- No. 78145-6-1/3

On December 17, 2015, Idris filed a motion for orders of default against

Hasan and Genesis with the assigned judge, who elected to refer the matter to

King County Superior Court’s Ex Parte Department.3 On January 6, 2016, a court

commissioner in the Ex Parte Department denied the motion because it was

unclear whether Hasan’s notice of appearance was on his own behalf or on behalf

of Genesis, an LLC. Because Hasan was not a member of the Washington State

Bar, the commissioner concluded Hasan could not represent Genesis and

instructed Idris’s counsel to note the motion for a hearing.

As instructed, Idris refiled his motion for orders of default against all

defendants on January 7, 2016,~ and noted the motion for a hearing before the Ex

Parte Department for January 20, 2016. He served all three defendants with the

notice of court date, the motion, and all the supporting documentation. In this

motion, Idris acknowledged that Hasan and Ayele had filed notices of appearance

but stated correctly that they had failed to answer the complaint.

For reasons that are unclear from the record, a commissioner entered Idris’s

orders of default against Ayele and Genesis the very next day, on January 8, 2016.

The commissioner denied Idris’s motion against Hasan because of Hasan’s notice

of appearance. Again, the commissioner informed Idris’s counsel he needed to

~ The assigned judge may refer a motion for default to the Ex Parte Department, even if a party has appeared. The parties will advise the commissioner that the assigned judge referred the motion to the Ex Parte Department. ~ KING COUNTY, WASH., DEPT OF JUDICIAL ADMIN., Ex PARTE MOTIONS & HEARINGS MANUAL § lIe. (rev. Dec. 24, 2015), available at https:Ilwww. kingcounty. ~ov/—/media/courts/Clerk/docs/misc/ExParteMotjonsHearingsManual.ash x?la~en. ~ Ayele points out that he was not included in the first motion for an order of default that Idris filed. This fact is of no consequence here. Hasan and Genesis were served before Ayele. Thus, when Idris had to refile the motion, he properly included Ayele in that motion because, at that point, 20 days had elapsed since he served Ayele.

-3- No. 78145-6-1/4

note the motion for a hearing and provide notice to Hasan. Given that Ayele had

also filed a notice of appearance by this time, it is unclear from the record why the

commissioner did not treat Idris’s motion against Ayele in the same manner. While

Ayele had notice of the January 20, 2016 hearing date, he was unaware that a

commissioner intended to rule ex parte on Idris’s motion for an order of default

before that date.

When counsel for Idris learned that his motion for an order of default had

been granted as against Ayele but not as against Hasan, he did not bring this error

to the court’s attention. Instead, he moved for entry of a default judgment against

Genesis on January 13, 2016, which a commissioner granted and entered on

January 14, 2016. He also filed and served a motion for default judgment against

Ayele on January 19, 2016. A commissioner denied this motion on January 20,

2016, because it was supported only by Idris’s counsel’s declaration, not by the

declaration or affidavit of a person with actual knowledge.

Ayele, assuming a hearing on Idris’s motion would occur on January 20,

2016, filed a response to the motion on January 19, 2016. In this declaration, he

testified that Idris’s counsel had misrepresented, in his motion, that none of the

defendants had communicated with him after serving the complaint. Ayele

represented that he had been communicating with Idris’s counsel since December

24, 2015, in an attempt to resolve the claims through mediation, or absent that, to

request time to retain counsel for Genesis. He challenged the authenticity of the

checks Idris had attached to the complaint, asserting that they did not match any

-4- No. 78145-6-1/5

checks that Genesis had written to Idris. Ayele asked the court to deny the motion

for an order of default and allow him time to answer the complaint.

Counsel for Idris, knowing the court had already entered default orders on

January 8, 2016, assumed the January 20, 2016 hearing had been stricken by the

Ex Parte Department. But the hearing on Idris’s motion for orders of default

apparently remained on the court’s calendar. Ayele appeared in person for the

hearing; a commissioner attempted to reach Idris’s counsel by phone, and when

the commissioner received no answer to his call, he struck the hearing. The

commissioner did not tell Ayele that an order of default had already been entered.

Ayele filed an answer on April 12, 2016.

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