Rick Sucee v. Todd Newlun

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 23, 2016
Docket72642-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rick Sucee v. Todd Newlun (Rick Sucee v. Todd Newlun) 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
Rick Sucee v. Todd Newlun, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

TODD NEWLUN, and all other persons No. 72642-1-1 similarly situated Consolidated with No. 72841-5-1

Respondent/Cross-Appellant, DIVISION ONE en

v.

RICK SUCEE, Commander of The CO

Northwest Regional Drug Task Force, CRAIG JOHNSON, Police Officer for the City of Bellingham, RICHARD FRAKES, Deputy Sheriff for Whatcom County, and UNPUBLISHED OPINION B. L. HANGER, Trooper, Washington State Sub-Division of the City of Bellingham, Whatcom County Sheriff's Office, a Subdivision of the County of Whatcom and the Washington State Patrol, a subdivision of the State of Washington,

Appellants/Cross-Respondents. FILED: May 23, 2016

Spearman, J. — In 2011 respondent and cross-appellant Todd Newlun was

charged with delivery of marijuana, a felony. During the delivery, an undercover police

officer wore a body wire that transmitted the voices of Newlun and others to another

nearby officer. Newlun successfully moved to suppress evidence obtained by use of the

body wire, because written authorization for its use was not obtained as required by

RCW 9.73.210 and .230. The charge was reduced to a misdemeanor to which Newlun

pleaded guilty. Newlun then sued the members of the Northwest Regional Drug Task

Force (collectively, Task Force) for violation of the Privacy Act, seeking exemplary and No. 72642-1-1 Consolid. w/No. 72841-5-1/2

actual damages. The Task Force moved for summary judgment on grounds that the

transmitted conversations were not private and that Newlun's claims were barred by

statute. It also moved for dismissal of Newlun's claim for exemplary damages. The trial

court dismissed the claim for exemplary damages but denied the other motions. Both

parties appeal. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

FACTS

Bellingham Police Detective Craig Johnson used a confidential informant to

arrange a marijuana purchase from Todd Newlun. The informant made a call to

Newlun's Oregon residence and spoke with his wife. Newlun agreed to meet the

informant in the parking lot of the Valley Village Shopping Mall in Bellingham,

Washington on March 16, 2011. The informant had been given Newlun's name by

another dealer and had no prior relationship with him.

Washington State Patrol Detective B.L. Hanger, working undercover, drove the

informant to meet Newlun. Hanger wore a body wire that broadcasted his voice and

other sounds to Johnson, who was monitoring from a nearby location. Hanger and the

informant parked in the mall parking lot and called Newlun. Newlun drove to the mall

and parked next to Hanger's minivan. The parties were near enough to talk through the

open windows of their vehicles. Newlun asked Hanger to follow him to his residence

and he agreed to do so.1

1 Detective Hanger testified that Newlun "talked loudly" and that other vehicles and pedestrians were passing by during the conversation. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 866. But he does not state whether any other person overheard or were in a position to overhear the conversation. No. 72642-1-1 Consolid. w/No. 72841-5-1/3

At Newlun's residence, Hanger parked the minivan on the street next to Newlun's

vehicle. Newlun got out of his vehicle and went into his house. He returned a few

minutes later and got in Hanger's minivan. Newlun talked with Hanger and the informant

about his marijuana business, and told them he had four kids to support. He said that he

owned his home but that he rented out a portion of it. He also told them that he owned

an additional five acres. The men exchanged money and two one-half pound bags of

marijuana, completing the transaction. Then Newlun talked in detail about his particular

method of processing hashish and offered to sell some to Hanger and the informant,

which they agreed to buy. They then discussed the possibility of future deals and

Newlun told them that he comes to Bellingham every two weeks to make deliveries. He

also explained how he cultivates certain products and sets prices for sales. He told

Hanger that he had another customer coming right after them.

Hanger and the informant then left to meet Johnson. About twenty-five minutes

later another customer arrived at Newlun's home. Newlun was arrested and charged

with delivery of marijuana, a felony. The Whatcom County Superior Court granted

Newlun's motion to suppress the evidence obtained by use of the body wire because

the officers failed to obtain written authorization as required by RCW 9.73.210.2 As a

result, the prosecutor reduced the charge to possessing forty grams or less of

marijuana, a misdemeanor, to which Newlun pleaded guilty.

2 The court specifically found that the violation arose under RCW 9.73.210 and not RCW 9.73.230. According to the court "the fact that [the transmission] wasn't recorded . . . would indicate to me that that's more in line with an officer safety wire rather than something intended under .230 which was to obtain information which could be used at trial." CP at 172. No. 72642-1-1 Consolid. w/No. 72841-5-1/4

Newlun subsequently filed this action under chapter 9.73 RCW, claiming that his

privacy rights were violated by the electronic transmission of his voice during the drug

sale. He named Commander Rick Sucee of the Northwest Regional Drug Task Force,

Officer Craig Johnson, Whatcom County Sheriff's Deputy Richard Frakes, Detective

Hanger, the Washington State Patrol, the Whatcom County Sheriff's Office, and the

Bellingham Police Department (collectively, Task Force). Newlun sought general

damages under RCW 9.73.060 and exemplary damages of $25,000 under RCW

9.73.230(11).

The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on the issue of damages. The

trial court dismissed Newlun's claim for exemplary damages under RCW 9.73.230 but

ruled that he could proceed on a claim for actual or liquidated damages under RCW

9.73.060.3 Next, the Task Force moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the

transmitted conversation was not private under state law. The trial court denied this

motion on April 4, 2014. The Task Force then moved for summary judgment on the

grounds that Newlun's claims were barred under RCW 4.24.420. The trial court denied

this motion on September 25, 2014. The court granted the parties' joint motion for a stay

of proceedings and a CR 54(b) order permitting the parties to seek appellate review of

each of the orders.

3The Task Force later moved for summary judgment on the basis that Newlun had not proved any actual damages and was only entitled to liquidated damages.

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Rick Sucee v. Todd Newlun, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rick-sucee-v-todd-newlun-washctapp-2016.