      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
BELLEVUE FARM OWNERS
ASSOCIATION, a Non-profit Corporation;             No. 79430-2-I
LAUREN BARRETT and WILLIAM                         (Consolidated with No. 794329)
BARRETT, husband and wife respectively,
trustees of the Laurie Barrett Residential
Trust and of the Bill Barrett Residential Trust;   DIVISION ONE
WEBSTER AUGUSTINE Ill, an individual;
HOOPOE LLC, a Washington Limited
Liability Company; GIGI BIRCHFIELD and
MARK BAUTE, husband and wife; TIMOTHY              UNPUBLISHED OPINION
DOHERTY and CHRISTINE DOHERTY,
husband and wife; GLEN CORSON and KIM
KYLLO-CORSON, husband and wife;
JANTANA KUPPERMANN and BARUCH
KUPPERMANN, husband and wife;
RODNEY SMITH and MARY MARGARET
SMITH, husband and wife; MATTHEW
STRAIGHT and VERONICA STRAIGHT,
husband and wife; TOM TUCCI and DIANE
TUCCI, husband and wife; and DANA
PIGOTT, an individual,

              Appellants/Cross-Respondents,

              V.


CHAD STEVENS and JANE DOE
STEVENS, husband and wife; and PETE
FINDLEY and JANE DOE FINDLEY,
husband and wife,

              Respondents/Cross-Appellants,

CASCADE MOUNTAIN RENTALS LLC, a
Washington Limited Liability Company;
ROBERT STEVENS, an individual, and
DOES Ito 10, Inclusive,

                                   Defendants.     FILED: February 10, 2020
No. 79430-2-112


       CHUN, J.   —   After the trial court entered final judgment, Bellevue Farm

Owners Association (BFOA) filed a motion for discovery sanctions against Chad

Stevens, who opposed it as untimely. The trial court determined that excusable

neglect warranted reopening the final judgment under both CR 59(h) and

CR 60(b) in order to address the motion. The Discovery Master heard BFOA’s

motion and imposed sanctions on Stevens’s lawyer. Stevens asked the trial

court to review the Discovery Master’s ruling. The trial court reviewed the ruling

for an abuse of discretion and vacated two of the seven sanctions.

       BFOA appeals the trial court’s decision to vacate the two sanctions.

Stevens cross-appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by reopening the final

judgment and that it applied the wrong standard when reviewing the Discovery

Master’s order.

       We determine that Stevens cannot appeal the order reopening the final

judgment or awarding sanctions because he is not an aggrieved party. As such,

only the two sanctions appealed by BFOA are properly before us. With regard to

those sanctions, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by

vacating them. We affirm.

                                  I. BACKGROUND

       In 1991, the original owners of the Friday Harbor Bellevue Farm property,

who owned the waterfront portion of the property as tenants in common,

recorded a “Grant Deed of Conservation Easement.” Bellevue Farm Owners




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No. 79430-2-1/3


Ass’n v. Stevens, 198 Wn. App. 464, 467, 394 P.3d 1018 (2017) (BFOA              l).1   The

owners recorded a short plat to create four lots and a common waterfront in

1994. BFOA I, 198 Wn. App. at 467. In 1997, BFOA recorded a declaration of

protective covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs). BFOA I, 198 Wn.

App. at 467. In 2005, Stevens purchased 10 acres of waterfront property in the

Bellevue Farm plat. BFOA I, 198 Wn. App. at 467.

        In September 2012, BFOA filed a lawsuit against Stevens, alleging that he

had violated its CC&Rs. BFOA I, 198 Wn. App. at 467. Stevens, in turn,

asserted claims against BFOA, BFOA board members, and other property

owners (collectively, BFOA)—totaling 19 parties. BFOA I, 198 Wn. App. at 467-

68.

       On December 20, 2013, the trial court appointed a Discovery Master

pursuant to CR 53.3. In October 2017, the Discovery Master advised the parties

to file any motions for sanctions after trial.

       Stevens e-mailed BFOA on October 13, 2017, while the parties were

preparing for trial. In the e-mail, Stevens stated, “It would seem to make more

sense to address [issues regarding sanctions] shortly after the trial when the

parties will have a complete record for [the Discovery Master’s] consideration.”

       The jury trial concluded on December 14, 2017. The court entered final

judgment on March 2, 2018. Stevens filed his notice of appeal on March 29,

2018. BFOA filed its notice of appeal on April 25, 2018.

          In BFOA I, this court affirmed an order requiring Stevens to produce attorney
billing records to establish that he actually suffered damages for purposes of his abuse
of process claim. 198 Wn. App. at 467.

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No. 79430-2-1/4


       BFOA filed its motion for discovery sanctions on April 25, 2018. Stevens

moved to strike the motion, arguing that BFOA was required to file any motion for

sanctions before the court entered final judgment, and that RAP 7.2 barred the

court from hearing the motion because the Court of Appeals had accepted

review. The Discovery Master denied Stevens’s motion to strike and the trial

court granted the Discovery Master’s motion to file its order. The trial court’s

order stated that BFOA “may file with this Court a motion under CR 59 or CR 60,

asking this matter to be re-opened for the purpose of allowing [BFOA’s] April 25,

2018 Motion for Discovery Sanctions to be heard by the Discovery Master.”

       On July 9, 2018, BFOA moved under CR 59 and CR 60 to reopen the final

judgment for excusable neglect. Stevens opposed the motion. The trial court

granted BFOA’s motion under both CR 60(b) and CR 59(h). In its order, the

court directed the Discovery Master to hear and decide BFOA’s discovery

sanctions motion.

       BFOA’s motion sought sanctions under CR 37(a)(4), which requires the

party whose conduct necessitated a motion to compel discovery to pay for the

prevailing party’s reasonable expenses if their position was not substantially

justified. BFOA asked the court for an award of $1 05,383 in sanctions and fees.

       On September 21, 2018, the Discovery Master granted in part and denied

in part BFOA’s motion. She awarded BFOA $42,157 in sanctions and fees.

Stevens’s attorney, Jason Amala, asked the Discovery Master to make him

solely liable for the award, which she did.




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No. 79430-2-1/5


           Stevens then filed a motion with the trial court asking it to review and

vacate the Discovery Master’s order awarding sanctions. The trial court

reviewed the order for an abuse of discretion and denied Stevens’s motion

except with respect to the awards under section E for $8,948 and section F for

$7,500, which awarded fees for Stevens’s “fees as damages” claims and written

discovery, respectively.2

           On appeal, Stevens argues the trial court erred by reopening the final

judgment and by applying an abuse of discretion, rather than de novo, standard

of review. BFOA appeals the trial court ruling vacating the discovery sanctions

awarded under sections E and F.

                                       II. ANALYSIS

   A. Reopening the Final Judgment

       Stevens argues that we should vacate the Discovery Master’s order

awarding sanctions in its entirety because the trial court erred by reopening the

final judgment. BFOA claims that Stevens lacks standing to appeal the trial

court’s order reopening the judgment because the Discovery Master ultimately

imposed sanctions against only his attorney. We agree with BFOA.

       Under RAP 3.1, only aggrieved parties may seek appellate review. A

decision aggrieves a party if it adversely affects that party’s property, pecuniary,

or personal rights or imposes a burden or obligation. Randy Reynolds & Assocs.

v. Harmon, 193 Wn.2d 143, 150, 437 P.3d 677 (2019). Additionally, “[am


       2 The Analysis section below discusses additional facts related to these
sanctions.

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 No. 79430-2-1/6


 aggrieved party must have a present substantial interest in the subject matter of

the appeal and must be aggrieved in a legal sense.” State v. Rice, 159 Wn. App.

 545, 559 n.8, 246 P.3d 234 (2011) (internal quotation marks and citations

omitted).

        Stevens does not have a substantial interest in this appeal because the

Discovery Master ultimately imposed the sanctions against only his attorney.

See Enqstrom v. Goodman, 166 Wn. App. 905, 917, 271 P.3d 959 (2012) (“An

attorney sanctioned by a court may appeal the sanctions on his own behalf, but

his client is not aggrieved by the sanctions and may not appeal them.”). Because

the outcome of this appeal will not affect Stevens’s property, pecuniary, or

personal rights and will not impose a burden or obligation on him, he is not an

aggrieved party.3 Accordingly, he may not seek review of the trial court’s order

reopening the final judgment.

    B. Discovery Sanctions

        BFOA argues the trial court erred by vacating two discovery sanctions that

the Discovery Master awarded. Stevens says that the trial court properly vacated




         ~ Stevens claims that he is an aggrieved party because the reopening of the final
judgment delayed us from hearing these linked appeals by seven months. Wash. Court
of Appeals oral argument, Bellevue Farms Owners Assoc. v. Stevens, No. 79430-2-I
(Jan. 10, 2020), at 15 mm., 23 sec. through 17 mm. (on file with court). Stevens claims
that this, in turn, delayed him in enforcing an injunction ordered in one of the linked
cases. But “[a]n aggrieved party is one who has a present, substantial interest, as
distinguished from a mere expectancy or. contingent interest in the subject matter.”
                                           .   .


Tinker v. Kent Gypsum Supply, Inc., 95 Wn. App. 761, 764, 977 P.2d 627 (1999)
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The harm of the seven-month delay in
enforcing the injunction in this case does not rise to the level of a substantial interest
supporting appellate standing.

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 No. 79430-2-I/7


the two sanctions. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion by

vacating the sanctions.

        BFOA contends that a trial court reviews a Discovery Master’s award on

sanctions for an abuse of discretion. Stevens asserts that the trial court needed

to review the award de novo. Because we determine the trial court did not abuse

its discretion by vacating the sanctions regardless of whether it should have used

a de novo or an abuse of discretion standard, we decline to reach the issue.4

Additionally, because Stevens lacked standing to appeal the court’s order on

discovery sanctions, the fees awarded under only sections E and F are properly

before us. See Engstrom, 166 Wn. App. at 917; State v. Sims, 171 Wn.2d 436,

441-42, 256 P.3d 285 (2011) (holding the State could not challenge the criminal

defendant’s sentence as a whole when it did not cross-appeal and the defendant

appealed only a single sentencing condition). Accordingly, we review only

whether the trial court abused its discretion in vacating the fees awarded under

sections E and F.

       We review a trial court’s ruling on discovery sanctions for abuse of

discretion. Maqana v. Hyundai Motor Am., 167 Wn.2d 570, 582, 220 P.3d 191

(2009). A trial court abuses its discretion if it bases its order on untenable


        ~ Here, the trial court reviewed the Discovery Master’s award for an abuse of
discretion, which was more deferential than de novo review. See Bunch v. Kinp County
Dept of Youth Servs., 155 Wn.2d 165, 176, 116 P.3d 381 (2005). Because the trial
court vacated the sanctions under the more deferential standard, we assume it also
would have vacated them had it exercised de novo review. See Bellamy v. Montciomery,
2012-Ohio-4304 at ¶ 15 (Ct. App.) (“Before determining whether to remand this matter
again, we will consider whether the trial court’s findings would support an award of
sanctions under the proper standard. If so, under our deferential standard of review, we
may affirm the trial court’s judgment despite the court’s use of an improper standard.”).

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 No. 79430-2-1/8


grounds or is manifestly unreasonable. Maqana, 167 Wn.2d at 582-83. A trial

court bases its decision on untenable grounds if it “relies on unsupported facts or

applies the wrong legal standard.” Maqana, 167 Wn.2d at 583.

        1. Section E

        In June 2014, Stevens filed his fourth amended counterclaims, which

included counterclaims 12 (breach of fiduciary duty) and 13 (abuse of process).

For counterclaim 12, Stevens alleged that he had “incurred general and special

damages, including but not limited to substantial attorneys’ fees and costs.” For

counterclaim 13, Stevens alleged that abuse of process by Mark Baute (who had

represented BFOA) had needlessly increased his litigation costs.

       BFOA propounded interrogatories and requests for production of

documents on June 13, 2014, to determine the bases of Stevens’s “fees as

damages” claims. In the requests for production of documents, BFOA sought

law firm invoices.

       On June 18, 2014, Stevens signed a declaration stating, “The only

damages I am seeking are my attorney’s fees and costs.”

       In a letter dated June 19, 2014, the Discovery Master directed the parties

to confer in accordance with CR 26(i). The Discovery Master noted that when

attorney fees and costs are asserted as damages, parties must take special care

to preserve attorney-client privilege and work product.

       On August 20, 2014, BFOA moved to compel Stevens to respond to its

June 2014 second set of interrogatories and requests for production. BFOA

stated that, at that time, it was willing to forego requiring Stevens to provide time


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No. 79430-2-119


sheets or task descriptions. On August 30, 2014, the Discovery Master granted

BFOA’s motion but did not require Stevens to produce privileged time sheets.

Stevens submitted supplemental responses on February 23, 2015.

       BFOA then filed a CR 37 motion for sanctions. On March 31 2015, the

Discovery Master denied BFOA’s motion. In the order, she stated that, while

BFOA needed to test the validity of the claimed fees, producing the billings would

disclose attorney work product and attorney-client communications. She

additionally noted that it would be overly burdensome for Stevens to redact the

billings and that the redactions would give an inaccurate picture of what the fees

were. The Discovery Master proposed that the parties stipulate to the fact of

damage.

       BFOA refused to so stipulate and moved for reconsideration of the

March 31 ruling before the Discovery Master. On April 7, 2015, the Discovery

Master presented to the trial court a report that recommended requiring Stevens

to disclose unredacted attorney billings related to counterclaims 12 and 13. The

Discovery Master determined that Stevens had waived his attorney-client

privilege and work product protections by placing the fees at issue. On August 5,

2015, the trial court adopted the Discovery Master’s recommendation and

ordered Stevens to produce unredacted billing information.

      Stevens appealed and this court granted interlocutory review. BFOA I,

198 Wn. App. at 476. Because a commissioner of this court ruled that, pending

the appeal, BFOA could seek discovery that did not invade the attorney-client

privilege or work product protection, the Discovery Master ordered Stevens to


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 No. 79430-2-1/10


disclose non-protected billing information. She then reviewed the billing records

and ordered Stevens to produce redacted records. The records produced

clarified that Stevens’s attorney had not invoiced him or required him to pay

attorney fees for counterclaims 12 and 13.

        On April 3, 2017, this court affirmed the trial court’s order to compel

production of Stevens’s “‘Attorney’s Fees for Abuse of Process” spreadsheet,

which contained the attorney fees and costs related to counterclaim I 3.~

BFOA I, 198 Wn. App. at 467, 480.

        In 2018, the Discovery Master considered BFOA’s motion for discovery

sanctions. Under section E, the Discovery Master awarded BFOA fees for its

motion to compel and its motion for reconsideration, determining that Stevens’s

oppositions to these motions was not substantially justified.

        On November 5, 2018, Stevens moved for the trial court to review the

Discovery Master’s sanctions award. On December 10, 2018, the court vacated

the fees awarded under section E. With regard to these fees, the court stated

that the issue of whether Stevens had to produce billing records “was a very

close call” and that “there wasn’t a lot of law out there to make it clear.” The

court additionally stated that it believed Stevens’s choice to “fight tooth and nail”

over producing the billing records “was a very legitimate effort.”




         ~ After this court accepted review, BFOA filed, and the court granted, a motion to
strike the jury demand for counterclaim 12. BFOA I, 198 Wn. App. at 476. Accordingly,
this court did not address the issue related to counterclaim 12. BFOA I, 198 Wn. App.
at 476.

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No. 79430-2-I/Il


       When making its oral ruling, the trial court agreed that the issue of whether

Stevens needed to produce his attorney billing records “was a very close call,”

“hotly contested,” and “very confusing.” It went further by saying that “there

wasn’t a lot of law out there to make [the issue] clear,” and that the Court of

Appeals’ opinion in BFOA I could be seen as addressing a matter of first

impression. Indeed, the Discovery Master had previously declined to order

production and ordered Stevens to produce the records only on reconsideration.

The trial court supported its decision to vacate the sanction with facts from the

record. We conclude that it did not abuse its discretion with respect to section E.

       2. Section F

       In September 2014, Stevens propounded 2,200 requests for admission,

500 interrogatories, and 700 requests for production. At this point in the

litigation, Stevens had already deposed each individual plaintiff and had served

other interrogatories and document requests. BFOA had produced more than

15,000 pages of documents.

       BFOA believed the discovery was excessive and abusive and moved to

quash it. The Discovery Master quashed all the requests for admission and

quashed or limited 380 of the interrogatories and 560 of the document requests.

The Discovery Master awarded fees for the portion of Stevens’s propounded

discovery that it quashed.

      The trial court vacated the fees that the Discovery Master awarded for

excessive discovery, It determined that when considering that there were 19

parties from whom Stevens sought information and materials, the voluminous


                                         11
No. 79430-2-1/12


amount of discovery was not excessive. As such, it looked at the substance of

the propounded discovery and stated that “the request [sic] for admission, in

particular.   .   .   were totally appropriate and right on point.” The court additionally

noted that the requests for admissions “were extremely relevant,” and that the

Discovery Master “just didn’t understand how relevant they turned out to be in

trial because she wasn’t there.” Furthermore, the court noted that Stevens made

the additional discovery requests because, in prior responses, “every single

plaintiff cut and pasted in a boilerplate somewhat vague and rambling response

    and left the defendant in a position to not really know which plaintiff was

saying what.”

       While the record contains Stevens’s requests for admissions, it does not

include the interrogatories or requests for production of documents. “The party

presenting an issue for review has the burden of providing an adequate record to

establish such error.” State v. Sisouvanh, 175 Wn.2d 607, 619, 290 P.3d 942

(2012). As BFOA is the party asserting that the trial court erred by vacating the

fees awarded under section F, it had the burden to include the allegedly

excessive and abusive interrogatories and requests for production of documents

in the record. Its failure to do so precludes us from fully reviewing this issue.

Accordingly, we address the vacated fees only for excessive and abusive

requests for admissions.

       Again, the trial court supported its decision to vacate the fees with facts

from the record. It determined that while Stevens propounded a large number of

requests for admissions, the requests were relevant and not excessive when


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No. 79430-2-1/13


considering that the case involved 19 plaintiffs. Indeed, each request concerned

a plaintiff in the case or the property at issue. As the trial court presided over the

two trials that occurred, it was in the best position to determine whether the

discovery requests were excessive and abusive. Washington State Physicians

Ins. Exchange & Ass’n v. Fisons Corp., 122 Wn.2d 299, 339, 858 P.2d (1993)

(“The abuse of discretion standard again recognizes that deference is owed to

the judicial actor who is better positioned than another to decide the issue in

question.”). It concluded that the requests were not excessive or abusive and

vacated the fees awarded under section F. We determine the trial court did not

abuse its discretion in doing so.

      Affirmed.




WE CONCUR:




______                                               ~


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