Patricia Comer v. Wayne Colistro, et ux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 27, 2014
Docket31058-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Patricia Comer v. Wayne Colistro, et ux (Patricia Comer v. Wayne Colistro, et ux) 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
Patricia Comer v. Wayne Colistro, et ux, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

March 27,2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

PATRICIA COMER, a married woman, ) ) No. 31058-2-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) WAYNE COLISTRO and SHARON ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION COLISTRO, individually and as husband ) and wife; and, JOHN DOES I through V, ) JANE DOES I through V; and DOE ) ENTITIES I through V, ) ) Appellants. )

FEARING, J. On December 24,2008, Patricia Comer slipped and fell outside a

residence Sharon Colistro owned in Spokane, Washington. After a bench trial, the trial

court found Colistro negligently failed to maintain the rain gutters at the residence.

Colistro's failure, the court concluded, caused ice to form on the landing, which caused

Comer to fall. The trial court entered judgment in favor of Comer.

Colistro appeals, assigning 23 errors, raising 11 issues, and requesting a new trial

based on new evidence. Many of the assignments involve the trial court's decision to

exclude evidence Colistro sought admitted in violation of discovery rules and the court's

scheduling order. She also challenges findings of fact and conclusions oflaw. Finally, I

I No. 31058-2-111 .t Comer v. Colistro

Colistro argues service of process was insufficient. We affinn all rulings of the trial

court.

FACTS

Johnny Patton and Kristina Birdsell leased a duplex at 2928 E. Grace, in Spokane,

Washington (Grace Residence). On December 24,2008, they invited Jerry and Patricia

Comer to their home for Christmas Eve dinner. Spokane experienced extraordinary

snowy weather that day. After dinner, Patton and the Comers exited the residence.

Despite the weather, Patricia Comer wore no boots. As she exited, she fell outside the

front door, displacing her left tibia and fracturing her fibula. The court found Comer

"slipped on ice and/or snow." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 821.

On July 31, 2009, Patricia Comer filed suit against the owners of the Grace

Residence, Wayne (now deceased) and Sharon Colistro. In addition to the complaint,

Comer filed Returns of Service, indicating Sharon and Wayne Colistro were served with

the complaint on July 16. On October 9, after the Colistros failed to respond, a court

signed an order of default against them.

Sharon Colistro claimed she was not served with process and did not know, until

July 7, 2011, that Patricia Comer filed suit against her. She further claimed her husband

died in 2000, such that service of process on him in 2009 was not possible. When she

learned ofthe suit, she recorded an interview with Comer. Colistro then moved to set

aside the order of default.

No. 31058-2-III Comer v. Calistro

On September 1,2011, the court granted Sharon Colistro's motion to vacate the

order of default "based on irregularities" in the .service of the complaint. CP at 190. The

court did not identify the irregularities of service. The court scheduled the trial date for

March 19,2012. Comer's counsel personally served Colistro on September 1,2011, with

another copy of the summons and complaint.

On October 7,2011, Patricia Comer, through counsel, sent Sharon Colistro

interrogatories requesting Colistro disclose the names, qualifications, and opinions of any

experts she planned to call to testify. Colistro responded that she did not have that

information at the time, but would forward it when she did.

On January 12,2012, Sharon Colistro moved for a six-month extension of the trial

date to secure assistance of counsel and continue discovery. On January 20, the trial

court denied Sharon's motion for lack of "good cause." CP at 199.

On February 9, Mary S. Murphy appeared on behalf of Sharon Colistro. On

February 10, the court amended the civil case scheduling order to permit Murphy

additional time to prepare. The scheduling order set April 23 as the deadline for

discovery. The court established a deadline for hearing dispositive pretrial motions and

for exchanging witness lists, exhibit lists, and documentary exhibits as May 25. The

scheduling order set trial for June 25.

On March 5 and April 3, Sharon Colistro disclosed testifying witnesses, which

included lay witnesses Kristina Birdsell and Johnny Patton, and expert witnesses Richard

No. 3 I058-2-III Comer v. Colistro

Fassett, Ph.D. Pharmacologist; Joellen Gill, M.A. Applied Cognitive Sciences; and S.C.

Maloney, Engineer. Because Patricia Comer had yet to receive any information about the

opinions or qualifications of expert witnesses, as she had requested in earlier

interrogatories, her counsel sent opposing counsel a letter requesting this information for

the second time.

On May 24, more than a month after the discovery cutoff, Sharon Colistro sent

Patricia Comer affidavits from Johnny Patton and Kristina Birdsell. On May 29, and

after the cutoff prescribed by the scheduling order, Colistro sent Comer the reports and

affidavits from experts Richard Fassett, Joellen Gill, and S.C. Maloney. Colistro

possessed and could have submitted the affidavits, interrogatories, and expert reports,

other than Gill's report, before the scheduling order deadline.

On June 5, and after the cutoff prescribed by the scheduling order, Sharon Colistro

moved for summary judgment. On June 11, Patricia Comer moved "to Strike

Defendant's Answer to [her] Complaint and Re-Enter Default or for other sanctions,"

because of Colistro's repeated violations of the scheduling order and rules of discovery.

CP at 237.

On June 19, Sharon Colistro submitted a 500-page "AFFIDAVIT &

SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATON FOR MOTION OF DISMISSAL OR, IN THE

ALTERNATIVE, Sl[MMARY JUDGMENT," which included both information she

previously submitted to the court and information she never disclosed, the latter including

i

I No. 31058-2-II1

I i Comer v. Calistro

I a transcript of the 2011 recorded interview of Patricia Comer. CP at 298. The court

I j denied both the motion for summary judgment and dismissal as untimely.

On June 25, 2012, at the beginning of trial, the court entertained a motion in 1 I ~ limine brought by Patricia Comer. Because Sharon Colistro violated the scheduling order

and discovery rules, the court excluded:

} • The "interrogatories" and affidavits of Johnny Patton and Kristina Birdsell; • The conversation Colistro recorded with Comer; 1 • All material included in Sharon's 500-page affidavit; and

• Testimony of all but one of Sharon's expert witnesses.

Upon trial, the trial court found poor conditions and poor maintenance of rain I I gutters at the Grace Residence caused Patricia Comer to fall. Both Comer's and Sharon

Colistro's experts "established that the rain gutters were displaced, leaky[,] and

corroded." CP at 822. Comer's expert "further testified that the moss buildup in the rain-

gutters over the garage would cause a blockage, preventing water from reaching the

downspout, which would cause the gutters to backup and overflow. This in turn would

allow leaking water to fall onto the front walkway where it would fall and freeze." CP at

822. Both Comer's and Colistro's experts testified that the corrosion and moss in the

gutters were present for a significant amount of time prior to Comer's fall.

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