See also http://corruptwash.com,
http://goldbarreporter.org,
http://snocoreporter.com
Judges Allowed to Self-Deal
and Lie in Washington Courts
Will Other States Follow Our Precedent?
The law requires:
Not only must Justice be
done: it must also be seen to be done.
- R
v Sussex Justices, Ex parte McCarthy (1924, Great Britain)
The case, R v Sussex Justices, provided precedent for more than a thousand judicial decisions among England's former colonies, and many
dozens in US federal and state courts.
But in the State of Washington:
- A judge is not required to disclose her conflicts of interest when judging cases.
- A judge can knowingly incorporate lies in his rulings.
- A judge can steer $842,734.67 to lawyers he knows have lied to him in court.
So much for the appearance of justice.
Our Story in a Nutshell
New to the State of Washington, in 2004 we were ripped off by a real estate agent who worked for Washington's largest
real estate company, Windermere Real Estate. (Full story at The Renovation
Trap.) Briefly, the agent brought a contractor into a home purchase and renovation package without telling us
the contractor was not licensed, bonded, insured, or qualified to do the work — and without telling us the
contractor was his business partner. The contractor ruined the value of the home, and in 2006, one of the
sub-contractors sued us, claiming he had not been paid. Following the Court Rules, we claimed against the
Windermere agent, his agency, and other parties involved.
While researching the case, we discovered that Windermere tolerated incredibly bad practices among its agents, and
State regulatory agencies had been incredibly permissive of Windermere's unethical business practices. We
undertook a campaign to alert the public to Windermere, and to force the government to do its job. Some of our
campaign can be found on Windermere Victims.[2]
We defended ourselves for 18 months, then hired a young lawyer with the Lane Powell law firm to take us through
trial. But unknown to us, our new attorney's manager's manager at Lane Powell was Grant Degginger, Mayor of
Bellevue. (Degginger's resume
here, cached.) We did not know that Degginger was presiding over the
biggest real estate/construction boom in Bellevue's history — that he had a supportive relationship with the very
forces we were opposing.
(Business Journal
interview, cached.) In fact, the Washington
Association of Realtors gave the single largest contribution to Degginger's 2007 election campaign.
(Public
Disclosure Commission documents here, cached.) Note
that the second largest contributor was the Lane Powell law firm, showing Lane Powell's institutional interest in
Degginger's political success.
While we won in court against Windermere before a jury of 12, our "victory" proved hollow: Lane Powell gave away some
of our awards to Windermere, and let other awards evaporate in subsequent unchallenged court actions. See
Synopsis of Bar Complaint. Then Lane Powell sued us, claiming we owed a
fortune in legal fees.[3]
Lane Powell (probably Degginger) hired Robert Sulkin of McNaul Ebel Nawrot & Helgren PLLC as the attorney in the
case. Sulkin is a SLAPP suit attorney, known for his attempt to squelch the Olympia Food Coop's boycott of
Israeli
products. The
Olympian
(cached).
For current status, see Center for Constitutional
Rights. In that suit, Sulkin and his clients are attempting to strip Washingtonians of their First Amendment
rights to free speech and public participation.
In our case, Sulkin and Lane Powell took advantage of the Consumer Protection Act’s fee provision to
funnel $842,734.67 from us — the intended beneficiaries of the Consumer Protect Act — into their
own pockets. We believe this result is a perversion of public interest law.
We have told the story in more detail in our Synopsis, and in full particulars
in the Bar Complaint.
V&E Medical Imaging, Inc. V. DeCoursey:
The King County Superior Court
There were 32 judges sitting on the bench in the Superior Court when Lane Powell filed suit. Defying the odds,
the case was "randomly" assigned to Superior Court Judge Richard D. Eadie, who just happened to be married to
a long-time
Windermere agent/broker (cached). Claire Eadie
has brought more than $289,000 in Windermere commissions into the Eadie household. Under the community property
laws of Washington, Mrs. Eadie's income is Judge Eadie's income, and he himself is a beneficiary of Windermere's
Retirement Plan. Court documentation
here.
A reasonable person would expect Judge Eadie to be sympathetic to the interests of his wife's employer, and
UNsympathetic to Windermere's noisy political antagonists (that is, Mark and Carol DeCoursey). Under
the Code of Judicial Conduct, Judge Eadie was
"disqualified" to preside over the case and was required to recuse.[1]
See CJC 2.11, Disqualification.
But Judge Eadie kept silent about his financial entanglements with the Windermere Family until we discovered his
secret nine months later. We told him he was disqualified to rule on the case and asked him to recuse. Lane
Powell vehemently opposed our recusal motions. Instead of recusing, Judge Eadie kept the case and steered
$842,734.67 in damages and interest to Lane Powell
(here
and here). His apparent message was clear: "Sue
Windermere? Even if you win, you'll lose." One can only conclude that Judge Eadie might indeed have had a
purpose for keeping the case under his control, rather than step aside for an impartial judge.
In the process of that case, Lane Powell and its lawyers told amazing lies, apparently without fear that Judge Eadie
would call them out. They lied about court documents that had already passed under the judge's nose, about the
sequence of months in the calendar, about things they had said earlier in the case, about attorney client privilege,
about the judge's own rulings, and an amazing assortment of other things — just brazen, shameless lies that only a
compromised judge would accept. But accept them he did, even incorporating their whoppers into his
rulings. Table of Lies here.
The King County Superior Court:
- Aug. 9, 2012: Our Motion to Recuse[1]
- Aug. 15, 2012: Lane Powell's Opposition to Our Motion to Recuse
- Aug. 16, 2012: Reply in Support of Our Motion to Recuse
- Sept. 5, 2012: Judge Eadie's Refusal to Recuse
- Nov. 16, 2012: Court Transcript of Summary Judgment hearing,
Sound recording of Summary Judgment hearing.
- Dec. 4, 2012: Our Second Motion to Recuse
- Dec. 7, 2012: Lane Powell's Opposition to Second Motion to Recuse
- Dec. 10, 2012: Reply in Support of Our Second Motion to Recuse
- Dec. 13, 2012: Judge Eadie's Second
Refusal to Recuse (written for him by Lane Powell)
The Commission on Judicial Conduct for Washington State
We filed a complaint with the Washington Commission on Judicial Conduct (CJC). However, the CJC had no interest
in the judge's entanglements. Should we presume this kind of thing goes on all the time in Washington?
The Washington State Court of Appeals
On August 7, 2013, we appealed to Division I of the Washington State Court of Appeals. We were represented by
the preeminent
attorney, James
Lobsenz of Carney Badley
Spellman. He based his argument on the legal doctrine of the "appearance of fairness," which means that
justice must not only be done according to law,
"it must also appear to be done" in
the eyes of the ordinary reasonable person.
But the Windermere family is apparently very important in Washington, as are judges and other
public officials. To the Court of Appeals, Judge Eadie's failure to disclose his familial and financial
connections to Windermere Real Estate while presiding over a trial against two Windermere whistle-blowers and
stripping them of their court awards against Windermere — well, heck, that appeared to be just fine.
Judge Becker wrote that our worries about Judge Eadie's personal finances were speculative, illogical, unreasonable.
See first paragraph of Opinion.
Rather than squarely addressing the disqualification of Judge Eadie as a violation the appearance of fairness
doctrine and the Rules and laws of Washington, the Court of Appeals misrepresented our arguments and the thrust of our
appeal (see in particular pages 7 and 8), and then decided against us on the basis of its misrepresentations.
But the Court of Appeals was apparently unwilling to stand behind its ruling by publishing its decision. When
we asked the Court to publish its Opinion, Lane Powell vigorously opposed our motion. The Court lined up with
Lane Powell and refused to publish.
The Washington State Court of Appeals:
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when
men are afraid of the light.
— Plato
The Washington State Supreme Court
On June 17, 2014, we petitioned the Washington Supreme Court to review Judge Eadie’s refusal to recuse. We
based our petition on the appearance of fairness.
We also told the Supreme Court that Judge Eadie had knowingly incorporated Lane Powell’s multiple patent lies into
his rulings — further damaging the appearance of fairness.
The appearance of fairness was also damaged by the law firm's repeated misrepresentation of material fact
and the judge's incorporation of those misrepresentations into his rulings over the DeCourseys'
objections. Petition, Pg. 4, Ftn. 3.
In addition, we informed the court that four independent observers swore under penalty of perjury that Judge Eadie
appeared appallingly prejudiced against us — and
dishonest. Petition, Pg. 4, Ftn. 3. See
excerpts right column.
Lane Powell did not dispute the appearance of fairness issue. Lane Powell did not dispute that Judge Eadie had
knowingly incorporated Lane Powell's multiple patent lies in his rulings. Nor did Lane Powell challenge the four
affidavits from independent witnesses attesting the Judge Eadie’s appearance of unfairness in his courtroom.
Nonetheless, despite these and the many anomalies in the lower courts, the State Supreme Court denied our
petition. The Supreme Court gave no reasons, of course.
It appears that judges who incorporate known lies into their rulings and appear to be unfair are usual and
customary in Washington courtrooms; that practice appears perfectly fair to the Supreme Court and needs no review.
Because our case will not receive a public hearing before the Supreme Court — and because the Court of Appeals
refused to publish its opinion — the facts concerning the operation of the courts in our case will effectively
be shielded from public view and discussion.
The Supreme Court's refusal to review our matter of the compromised judge was particularly disastrous for the people
of Washington. Ours was the second case in 2014 to petition the Supreme Court on the appearance of fairness
issue. In the earlier case, the Court of Appeals had affirmed the decision of a compromised judge in
the Kok case, ruling that because the judge had made the "right" decision (against the Koks and in favor of the
School District), she was not required to recuse[1] or disclose her personal interest in
the case. And then the Court agreed to publish the decision, giving it the force of State law.
When the Kok case was petitioned to the Supreme Court, we filed an amicus curiae brief arguing that a
review was necessary to preserve an important element of justice, but the Supreme Court declined to review it.
And now Kok is the law in Washington.
I believe that there will be ultimately be a clash between the oppressed and those who do the oppressing. I
believe that there will be a clash between those who want freedom, justice and equality for everyone and those who
want to continue the system of exploitation. I believe that there will be that kind of clash, but I don't think
it will be based on the color of the skin ... — Malcolm X
Summary of the Kok case: On January 3,
2007, Samnang Kok was shot to death inside the Foss
High School in Tacoma as he was preparing for class. The Kok family sued the Tacoma School District No. 10,
claiming that the history of his psychiatrically-challenged assailant was known to the School District, and it
should have taken steps to protect the other students. The Koks had asked for a jury and the matter of
foreseeability is usually left for jury determination. But in an unusual presumption of judicial power, Judge
Lee ruled in summary judgment that as a matter of law, no reasonable person could have foreseen the attack
and therefore the county was not liable to the Koks.
After the case was over, the Koks learned that the law firm that employed Judge Lee's husband regularly represented
the School District in a wide variety of cases, and that judge's own income (in this community property state) was
dependent on the good will of the School District toward her husband's law firm. The Koks appealed, but on
October 22, 2013, the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment:
Because a reasonably prudent and disinterested person would conclude that all parties received a fair,
impartial, and neutral hearing, we affirm the trial judge's decision that recusal was not necessary.
(Kok v. Tacoma School Dist. No. 10, 327
P.3d 55 (2014), 180 Wn.2d 1016)
But there was hardly a "hearing" of the facts of the case. The results of discovery (such as who in the
District knew what, when they knew it, whether they had acted prudently, etc.) had not been given a hearing by a trier
of fact. The Kok case was dismissed in summary judgment as a matter of law, without regard of the
facts.
Then (as mentioned above) the Court published the opinion, elevating its tolerance of compromised judges into the
law of
Washington. January 22,
2014 Order to Publish with Opinion. Kok petitioned the Supreme Court, but the petition was denied.  And
with that decision, a significant portion of the Code of
Judicial Conduct passed into Washington's history.
By denying our petition, the Supreme Court allowed the Kok decision to stand as law in Washington. Like
a campfire that has escaped to the surrounding brush, judicial corruption now threatens the whole forest. And
the Supreme Court is simply letting it happen.
The Washington State Supreme Court:
- April 17, 2014: Our Amicus Brief in favor of Koks' Petition for
review by the Supreme Court
- April 24, 2014: Tacoma County School District's Opposition to our
Amicus Brief
- June 4, 2014: The Supreme Court declined to review the Kok Case
- June 8, 2014: Our Petition to the Supreme Court
- July 17, 2014: Lane Powell's Opposition to Our Petition
- October 8, 2014: The Supreme Court's declined to review
our case
On October 7, 2014, a five judge panel composed of Chief Justice Madsen and Justices Owens, Stephens, González and Yu
considered our petition, and unanimously agreed not to review the case. The order was signed on October 8.
IT IS ORDERED:
That the Petition for Review is denied.
DATED at Olympia, Washington this 8th day of October, 2014.
Our Complaint to the Washington State Bar Association
On June 20, 2014, we filed a Complaint with the Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) against Degginger, McBride,
Sulkin, and Eaton (the lawyers involved), and Lane Powell and McNaul Ebel (the firms involved). On August 6,
WSBA sent a letter to each lawyer, noting that they had not responded by the deadline under the rules, and
threatening to subpoena them if they did not respond in ten days.
On August 15, 2014, the lawyers responded, and on September 8, we replied. In our introduction to that reply,
we pointed out that the Lane Powell/McNaul attorneys did not deny 50 of the violations of the
Rules of Professional
Conduct we had charged in our Complaint. Under the standard Rules of Procedure, failure to deny an
accusation is a tacit admission. A WSBA finding against the four lawyers on these grounds should be a slam dunk.
Justice is everyone's business, and institutional injustice eventually hurts everyone, even those who think they
might benefit. (Consider the words
of John Donne.) Please
contact Ms. Debra Slater, Disciplinary Counsel, Washington State Bar Association, 1325 Fourth Avenue, Suite 600,
Seattle, WA 98101, phone 206-239-2124 to ask when Washingtonians might expect the WSBA to announce its
findings. Until the WSBA publicly sanctions the miscreants, the misconduct of which we complain is effectively
permitted.
Our Complaint:
- June 20, 2014: Our Complaint to the Washington State Bar (Synopsis)
- August 6, 2014: The Bar's reminder to Grant Degginger that he missed the deadline for response
- August 16, 2014: Degginger, McBride, Sulkin, and Eaton's (et al.)'s Response to Our Complaint
- Sept. 8, 2014: Reply in Support of Our Complaint
The Bar's Decision:
On April 9, 2015, the Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) dismissed our
Grievances against Grant Degginger, Ryan P. McBride, Robert M. Sulkin, and Malaika M. Eaton. WSBA stated:
"Based on the information we have received, insufficient evidence exists to prove unethical
conduct by [name] by a clear preponderance of the evidence in this matter. Therefore, we are dismissing
the grievance."
Our Requests for Review:
On May 26, 2015, we requested a review of those dismissals on the grounds that, among other things:
-
WSBA disregarded and mischaracterized many of our charges and much of our documentation.
-
WSBA disregarded undisputed evidence that the four lawyers violated many provisions of the RPC.
-
WSBA failed to find “sufficient evidence” of the lawyers’ violations of the RPC, even though the four lawyers tacitly admitted many of the violations.
-
WSBA attacked our character on the basis of non-germane and misleading information.
-
WSBA refused to accept our complaint against the Lane Powell law firm, but nonetheless issued a glowing endorsement of Lane Powell’s performance.
-
WSBA acted as BOTH the defense council and the judge for the accused lawyers.
-
WSBA failed to sanction the lawyers who lied to us -- despite emails proving the lies.
-
WSBA failed to sanction the lawyers who lied in court -- despite court pleadings that proved the lies.
-
WSBA disregarded a lawyer’s failure to disclose his obvious conflict of interest when accepting our case.
-
WSBA failed to sanction lawyer fee gouging and exploitation of public interest law.
-
WSBA refused to sanction the lawyers’ extortive use of attorney/client confidences.
-
WSBA adopted the words and stances of a compromised judge as a substitute for WSBA doing its job disciplining lawyers.
-
WSBA justified Lane Powell’s “gift” to Windermere of more than $250,000 that had been awarded to us by the court
June 25, 2015: The
WSBA forwarded the collective response from the four lawyers to our request for review of the dismissals.
July 6,
2015: We replied to WSBA and the lawyers' charge that we are "name-calling."
We Are Not Alone
Many distinguished lawyers, judges, scholars, and other citizens lament the state of justice in America and have
suggested improvements. You can read about some of their suggestions in the Introduction to
our Bar Complaint.
The quality of justice in the courts is the subject of elections. In Washington, we elect by popular ballot the
judges in the Superior, Appeal, and Supreme courts. Those judges are directly responsible to the people of
Washington for fairly and properly administering justice. If they do not their job well, who will hear of
it? Who will tell?
There really can be no peace without justice. There can be no justice without truth. And there can be no truth, unless
someone rises up to tell you the truth. — Louis Farrakhan
Every person who notices injustice in the courts can and must tell neighbors, friends,
and anyone else in the electorate who will listen, because it is only by such telling that elections have meaning.
Since the membership and discipline of the Bar is directly under the control of the Supreme Court, the judges on that
court must be held responsible to the electorate for lawyer ethics in the State. If those judges permit the courts
to be used for plunder and blackmail, the electorate must discipline the judges of the Supreme Court with the ballot
box.
But since the problems we have documented cannot are not being solved by the Bar and the Judiciary, other citizen
bodies, such as City Councils, should be able to pass ordinances outlawing the bad behavior and providing sanctions.
To have an orderly and just society, we MUST have fair courts. Let's all work together: The State Legislature
should do whatever it can to achieve this goal.
What Can Be Done
In summary, the Lane Powell lawyers lied, a disqualified judge refused to recuse himself, and that judge knowingly
incorporated Lane Powell's lies in his rulings. When we appealed, the Court of Appeals misrepresented the issues
in question, refused to hear the matter we actually appealed, and ruled on an invented question. And the Supreme
Court’s refused to deal with it all ...
These abuses clearly break down the public trust.
But the Supreme Court can still fix things. The judges who ignored the rules and the basic principles of
justice ("Not only must justice be done, it must also appear to be done") can correct their mistakes. And they can
do so on their own initiative (“sua sponte”) by applying already existing court rules.
Sua sponte is Latin phrase that means “of his own will; voluntarily.” Sua sponte usually refers to a
judge taking action without a request or motion by one of the parties.
(Free Legal Dictionary)
The Washington Supreme Court doesn't have to wait for the Second Coming to correct its mistakes. On discovering
it has been defrauded, any court at any time can sua sponte correct the mistakes. For the Superior Court,
that procedure is described in CR 60(b). For the higher courts, it is RAP 12.9, quoted here in part:
RULE 12.9 RECALL OF MANDATE OR CERTIFICATE OF FINALITY
(a) To Require Compliance With Decision. The appellate court may recall a mandate issued by it to determine if the
trial court has complied with an earlier decision of the appellate court given in the same case. The question of
compliance by the trial court may be raised by motion to recall the mandate, or by initiating a separate review of the
lower court decision entered after issuance of the mandate.
(b) To Correct Mistake or Remedy Fraud. The appellate court may recall a mandate or certificate of
finality issued by it to correct an inadvertent mistake or to modify a decision obtained by the fraud of a party or
counsel in the appellate court.
A state supreme court is not bound by precedents, of course; it creates precedents. Even so, there is ample
Federal precedent for vacating judgments based on fraud. One of the best-known is Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v
Hartford-Empire Co., 322 U.S. 238 (1944). In that 1932 patent infringement case, a lawyer arranged for the
publication of a fraudulent article in a trade journal, and citing that article as an authority, won a large award for
his client. Years later, the fraud was discovered and the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the judgment. The
Supreme Court wrote:
Furthermore, tampering with the administration of justice in the manner indisputably shown here involves far
more than an injury to a single litigant. It is a wrong against the institutions set up to protect and safeguard the
public, institutions in which fraud cannot complacently be tolerated consistently with the good order of society ... The
public welfare demands that the agencies of public justice be not so impotent that they must always be mute and helpless
victims of deception and fraud. (Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v. Hartford-Empire Co., 246.)
As other judges point out, when lawyers lie in court, they commit fraud on the court:
Since attorneys are officers of the court, their conduct, if dishonest, would constitute fraud on the
court. (H.K. Porter Co., Inc. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 536 F.2d at 1115 (6th Cir. 1119.)
In 1985, Federal Rules
Decision wrote:
The lawyer's duty to place his client's interests ahead of all others presupposes that the lawyer will live
with the rules that govern the system. ... Misconduct, once tolerated, will breed more misconduct and those who might
seek relief against abuse will instead resort to it in self-defense. (Schwarzer, Sanctions Under the New
Federal Rule 11 — A Closer Look, 104 F.R.D. 181, 184 (1985), cited
in Physicians Ins. Exch. v. Fisons Corp., 122
Wn.2d 299 (1993); 858 P.2d 1054.
Thus does a camp fire become a forest fire.
This website should be regarded as an open invitation to the Washington Supreme Court to correct itself, the lower
courts, and Washington attorneys. In these post-Ferguson and Eric Garner days, the Washington Supreme Court has a
chance to lead the nation: To reassert the principle of “appearance of fairness” and regain the confidence of the
American public in our system of justice.
We encourage our readers send a courteous letter to public officials and the Supreme Court judges suggesting that the
corrections be made. They are public servants. And we are the public.
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable
network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly affects all
indirectly. — Martin Luther King, Letter from Birmingham Jail, August, 1963.
Footnote 1: Recusal —
to withdraw from a position of judging so as to avoid any semblance of partiality or bias.
Footnote 2: How much damage were we doing to Windermere with our campaign?
According to Windermere's own estimate, quite a bit. In settlement negotiations, Windermere required as an
"essential" clause of any agreement that we never mention Windermere's role in the purchase of our house to anyone,
ever. For each and every such mention, Windermere would be damaged by $25,000, which we would have to pay to
Windermere. See the Dark Clause drawn up by Windermere's
attorney. We did not sign the document.
Footnote 2: Quite aside from the monies we "owed" Lane Powell, we incurred other
expenses and suffered other financial losses directly as a result of defending ourselves against the original 2006
lawsuit and Lane Powell's 2011 lawsuit. These expenses include but are not limited to fees spend during early case
development, witness fees, and legal fees spend on appeals. That amount totals more than $250,000.
Disclaimer: We make no personal criticisms of these lawyers and judges. The
courts are part of our system of government. It is both our right and our duty as citizens to draw attention to
questionable behavior, publicly condemn it where appropriate, and call for reforms.
Each fact on this website is true at the time of writing.
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