Neil Grenning v. Department of Corrections

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 20, 2024
Docket39458-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Neil Grenning v. Department of Corrections (Neil Grenning v. Department of Corrections) 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
Neil Grenning v. Department of Corrections, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED NOVEMBER 20, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

NEIL GRENNING, ) ) No. 39458-1-III Petitioner, ) ) v. ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, A ) SUBDIVISION OF THE STATE OF ) WASHINGTON ) ) Respondent. )

FEARING, J. — Neil Grenning, incarcerated by the Washington Department of

Corrections (DOC), appeals an order declaring DOC to have violated the Public Records

Act (PRA), but denying Grenning bad faith penalties. We do not address the merits of

Grenning’s appeal. We dismiss the appeal as untimely.

FACTS

On October 15, 2020, Neil Grenning, then incarcerated at Airway Heights

Corrections Center, filed a grievance with DOC for confiscating a judicial opinion mailed

to him by the Washington Supreme Court. On October 30, Grenning met with DOC

Grievance Coordinator Jason Martin, who showed Grenning emails indicating the

opinion was mailed to him in error. According to Grenning, the emails contained an No. 39458-1-III Grenning v. Department of Correction

unredacted email from the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) advising DOC that, if

Grenning had received the opinion, DOC should return it to him.

On November 13, 2020, Neil Grenning filed a Public Records Act (PRA) request

with DOC for all documents concerning his grievance, including the emails shown to him

by Jason Martin. DOC provided the emails to Grenning, but DOC heavily redacted the

email sent by the AGO to DOC before forwarding it to Grenning. DOC claimed the

attorney-client and work product privileges shielded the redacted segments from

production.

PROCEDURE

On June 29, 2021, Neil Grenning filed suit against DOC for violating the PRA.

He sought disclosure of the records sought by his PRA request and bad faith penalties.

On March 30, 2022, Neil Grenning filed a motion to compel discovery and a

motion for in-camera review of the records. He argued DOC waived any privilege when

DOC Grievance Coordinator Jason Martin showed him the unredacted email.

On August 31, 2022, the superior court issued a thorough letter ruling in Neil

Grenning’s favor. The court ruled that DOC violated the PRA by redacting the one

email. According to the court, DOC waived any privilege and attorney work product

protections when Jason Martin showed the email to Grenning. Nevertheless, the superior

court denied Grenning bad faith penalties because DOC did not act maliciously when

2 No. 39458-1-III Grenning v. Department of Correction

redacting an email it reasonably believed to be protected. On September 22, 2022, the

superior court signed an order confirming its letter ruling.

On October 4, 2022, Neil Grenning filed a motion for reconsideration. According

to Grenning, he could not file his motion for reconsideration until October 4 because

Airway Heights Corrections Center policy only permitted sending legal mail on Tuesdays

and Thursdays. October 2, 2022 was a Sunday; October 4, 2022 was a Tuesday. On

October 10, 2022, the superior court denied Grenning’s motion for reconsideration as

untimely because the 10-day period had expired on October 2. According to the court’s

ruling, the motion must have been mailed on October 2, 2022 for it to be timely. On

October 6, 2022, Neil Grenning filed a motion for summary judgment on his purported

remaining arguments. In response, DOC argued that no remaining claims pended before

the superior court because the court found a violation of the PRA, ordered DOC to

produce the e-mail, and denied the request for penalties. The superior court agreed with

DOC and, on December 6, 2022, the court struck the hearing on Grenning’s summary

judgment motion.

On December 20, 2022, Neil Grenning filed this appeal. The notice of appeal

came two months after the September 22 order.

LAW AND ANALYSIS

The State asks that we dismiss this appeal on the basis that Neil Grenning

untimely filed his notice of appeal. We grant this request.

3 No. 39458-1-III Grenning v. Department of Correction

Under RAP 2.2, a party may appeal any “final judgment entered in any action or

proceeding” or any “final order made after judgment that affects a substantial right.”

RAP 2.2(a)(1), (13). CR 54 defines a judgment as “a final determination of the rights of

the parties in the action and includes any decree or order from which an appeal lies.”

CR 54(a)(1). CR 54 defines an order as “every direction of a court or judge, made or

entered in writing, not included in a judgment.” CR 54(a)(2).

Under RAP 5.2(a), a party seeking review of a trial court’s decision must file a

notice of appeal with the trial court within thirty days of the decision’s entry.

RAP 5.2(a)(1). If, however, a party files a timely motion for reconsideration under

CR 59, the thirty-day deadline to file an appeal does not begin until entry of an order

deciding the motion. See RAP 5.2(a)(2); 5.2(e)(1). Under CR 59, a motion for

reconsideration is timely if it is filed within ten days of the judgment, order, or decision

for which the party seeks reconsideration. See CR 59(b). A trial court may not extend

the deadline to file a motion for reconsideration. See CR 6(b).

Under RAP 18.8, an appellate court will only grant a party an extension of the

deadline to file a notice of appeal in “extraordinary circumstances” to “prevent a gross

miscarriage of justice.” RAP. 18.8(b). The “desirability of finality of decisions”

generally prevails over an appellant’s privilege to “obtain an extension.” See RAP

18.8(b).

4 No. 39458-1-III Grenning v. Department of Correction

The superior court entered a final order finding a violation of the PRA, but

denying bad-faith penalties, on September 22, 2022. The September 22 order triggered

the thirty-day period to appeal. See RAP 5.2(a)(1). Neil Grenning needed to file his

notice of appeal by October 22. He filed his notice on December 20, 22.

The superior court’s final September 22 order also triggered the ten-day deadline

to file a motion for reconsideration, which elapsed on October 2, 2022. See CR 59(b).

Neil Grenning filed his motion on October 4, 2022. Under GR 3.1(a), the “mailbox rule,”

if an incarcerated person deposits a filing into their institution’s internal mail system by

the deadline, the filing will be deemed “timely.” GR 3.1(a). Nevertheless, for the

mailbox rule to apply, an incarcerated person must use his institution’s system for legal

mail, assuming one exists. GR 3.1(c). If Grenning had placed his motion for

reconsideration in his institution’s internal mail system by October 2, he would have

timely filed it under the mailbox rule. See CR 59(b); GR 3.1(a).

Neil Grenning did not place his motion in the internal system until October 4.

While institution policy may not have sent his motion until Tuesday, October 4, Grenning

presents no evidence that he could not have placed the motion in the internal mail system

by October 2. Grenning cites no law suggesting the failure of DOC to mail his motion

until October 4 tolled the deadline for filing the motion. Again, GR 3.1(a) would have

deemed the filing timely if Grenning deposited the motion with the institution system on

October 2.

5 No. 39458-1-III Grenning v. Department of Correction

Because Neil Grenning’s motion for reconsideration was untimely, the motion did

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Neil Grenning v. Department of Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-grenning-v-department-of-corrections-washctapp-2024.