HomeMy WebLinkAboutJulian St. Marie Settlement - 102124 CONFIDENTIAL SETTLEMENT AND GENERAL RELEASE AGREEMENT
This Confidential Settlement and General Release Agreement("Agreement")is made and entered
by and between Julian St. Marie ("St. Marie"), Jefferson County, and the Jefferson County
Prosecuting Attorney Office including its parent,subsidiaries,successors, or assigns (collectively
"Jefferson County"). For good and valuable consideration as reflected below, St. Marie and
Jefferson County contract and agree as follows:
1. Separation of Employment. St. Marie's employment with Jefferson County
ended on May 17,2021 ("Separation Date").
2. Relevant Disputes. The parties enter this Agreement principally to resolve the
federal lawsuit captioned Julian Elizabeth St. Marie v.Jefferson County et al.,No.3:22-cv-05893
(W.D. Wash.) ("the Lawsuit"). Additionally, St. Marie currently has multiple public records
requests pending against Jefferson County ("the PRA requests) numbered CO01236, CO01667,
CO01670, CO01675,CO01676, CO01677,CO01914,and C001915
3. No Admissions. Jefferson County and St. Marie both agree that they are not
entering into this Agreement because of any wrongdoing or liability of the other party or on the
part of any other individual or company released in this Agreement, expect to the extent
adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction. Therefore, this Agreement cannot and will not
be considered as an admission of wrongdoing or liability by any of them.
4. Effective Date. The effective date of this Agreement shall be the date the parties
agreed by email to mutually forebear from further efforts to pursue claims in the Lawsuit,namely
September 13,2024.
5. Consideration. This Agreement further memorializes the agreement reached
between St. Marie and Jefferson County reached by the exchange of emails between them on
September 12-13, 2024,and the subsequent forbearance between the parties from filing an appeal
from the Lawsuit and Jefferson County foregoing any additional recovery efforts on its
counterclaim or request for sanctions in the Lawsuit. The parties agree that such forbearance
between the parties shall constitute sufficient and adequate consideration to support this
Agreement.
6. St. Marie's Release of Claims.
a.General Release.St.Marie knowingly and voluntarily releases and forever discharges
Jefferson County, its parent entities, affiliates, subsidiaries, divisions, predecessors, insurers,
successors and assigns, and their current and former employees (including but not limited to
James Kennedy, Christopher Ashcraft, Andrew Rowlson, Tuppence Macintyre, and their
spouses), attorneys, insurers, officers, directors,owners, and agents thereof,both individually
and in their business capacities, and their employee benefit plans and programs and their
administrators and fiduciaries (collectively referred to as "Releasees"), of and from any and
all claims, known and unknown, asserted or unasserted, which St. Marie has or may have
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Page 1 of 4 St.Marie Initials
against Releasees as of the date of execution of this Agreement, including, but not limited to,
any alleged violation of or claim based on the following:
• Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964;
• The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974("ERISA")(as modified below);
• The Immigration Reform and Control Act;
• The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990;
• The Fair Credit Reporting Act;
• The Family and Medical Leave Act;
• The Equal Pay Act;
• The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008;
• The Families First Coronavirus Response Act;
• The Washington Consumer Protection Act, Chapter 19.182 RCW;
• The Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act, Chapter 49.17 RCW;
• The Washington Family Care Act;
• The Washington Equal Pay Opportunity Act,Chapter 49.58 RCW;
• Any provision of Title 49 of the Revised Code of Washington;
• Any provision of Title 296 of the Washington Administrative Code;
• Any claim alleging the exception to the Industrial Insurance Act of Washington for injuries
inflicted with deliberate intention(RCW 51.24.020);
• Any other federal, state or local law, rule, regulation, ordinance, public policy,
contract, tort, or common law;
• Any basis for recovering costs, fees, or other expenses including attorneys' fees incurred
in these matters;or
• The Medicare Secondary Payor statute or regulations, including any private cause of
action under 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(3)(A).
Additionally, St.Marie shall cause the PRA Requests to be withdrawn no later than five days
from the her signing this Agreement.
b. Claims Not Released. St.Marie is not waiving any rights she may have to: (a) her own
vested accrued employee benefits under Jefferson County's health, welfare, or retirement benefit
plans as of the Separation Date; (b) benefits and/or the right to seek benefits under applicable
workers' compensation and/or unemployment compensation statutes; (c)pursue claims which by
law cannot be waived by signing this Agreement;(d)enforce this Agreement;and/or(e)challenge
the validity of this Agreement.
7. Acknowledgments and Affirmations.
a. Claims. St. Marie affirms that she has not filed, caused to be filed, or is a party to
any claim, suit, or administrative charge against Jefferson County except for her the Lawsuit. St.
Marie agrees to cooperate in executing and filing promptly any necessary pleadings to effectuate
Page 2 of 4 16 St.Marie Initials
this Agreement.
b. Compensation. St. Marie affirms that she has been paid and/or has received all
compensation, wages, bonuses, commissions, and/or benefits which are due and payable as of
the date she signs this Agreement.
C. Leave. St. Marie affirms she has been granted any leave to which she was entitled
under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act,Family and Medical Leave Act, or similar
state or local leave or disability accommodation laws.
d. Workplace Injuries. St. Marie affirms that she has no known workplace injuries or
occupational diseases.
8. Liens or Assignments. St. Marie hereby agrees, represents and warrants that St.
Marie shall have sole responsibility for the satisfaction of any and all liens or assignments in law,
equity,or otherwise,against any of the matters released herein,and that St.Marie will fully satisfy
all liens, if any by the time the parties' current lawsuit is dismissed. St. Marie further represents,
agrees and warrants that St. Marie shall defend, hold Releases harmless from, and indemnify
Releasees from,any liabilities or costs which they may incur as a result of any liens of any nature
and/or St. Marie's failure to satisfy any liens.
9. Severability.If any term or provision of this Agreement,or the application thereof
to any person or circumstances,will to any extent be held invalid or unenforceable,the remainder
of this Agreement, or the application of such terms to persons or circumstances other than those
as to which it is invalid or unenforceable, will not be affected thereby, and each term of this
Agreement will be valid and enforceable to the fullest extent permitted by law.
10. Entire Agreement. This Agreement contains the entire agreement between the
parties and takes the place of any and all other agreements, understandings, negotiations, or
communication, whether oral or written, express or implied, between Jefferson County and St.
Marie including the exchange of emails between the parties described above. Jefferson County
and St. Marie each acknowledge that no representations have been made to them which are not
contained in the Agreement, that they have not signed this Agreement in reliance on any
representation not expressly set forth in this Agreement, and that any representations of any kind
not contained in this Agreement shall not be valid or binding,unless,following thc signing of this
Agreement, the parties put such a modification in a writing signed by both an authorized
representative of Jefferson County and St. Marie.
11. Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in counterparts and each shall
have the same force and effect as an original and shall constitute an effective binding agreement
on the part of each signatory. This Agreement may also be executed by facsimile signature,
electronic signature(e.g.,DocuSign)or scanned email.pdf signature,and each such signature shall
be treated as a fully enforceable signature upon receipt by facsimile, mail, or email by the other
Party.
Page 3 of 4 'St.Marie Initials
ST. MARIE FREELY,KNOWINGLY AND VOLUNTARILY SIGNS THIS AGREEMENT AS
OF THE DATE(S)SET FORTH BELOW:
JEFFERSON COUNTY PROSECUTING JULIAN ELIZABETH ST. MARIE
ATTORNEY
''� �1 t By: r ar . _ tF.'. /" Gc r-
By: /�� / Z Juli lizabeth St. Marie
Jam/ ennedy DATE Date: #IS"•40'01 y
1111
BOARD OF COUNTY C SSIONERS
JEFFERSON COUNTY, ` i.SHINGTON
a\ \__— Approved:
By. °�z I�l Li
Kate bean,Chair DATE
G e Paul rejo r.
0 DATE /a /s 2Dz 9By: 21 Z`( Attorney for Ms.St. Marie
Gr. 1 Brotherton,Commissioner DA
ii
By: AI it .! 21 V.
Heidi Eisen ., t •', 1.' •TE
` .L
SEAL: i
'•81414.4
AE a k c<�IC ?frA. /41/2 y
CarolygGalloway,CMC J DATE
Clerk of the Board
Approved:
— -'- -- October 17, 2024
Philip C. Hunsucker DATE
Chief Civil Deputy Prosecuting Attorney
Page 4 of 4 lifDst.Marie Initials
Regular Agenda
JEFFERSON COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
AGENDA REQUEST
TO: Board of Commissioners
Mark McCauley, County Administrator
FROM: Philip C. Hunsucker, Chief Civil Deputy Prosecuting Attorney
DATE: October 21, 2024
RE: Settlement with Julian St. Marie following the Cou. w's Summary Judgment Win
by the County on All her Claims in her Federal Cour. ,awsuit in Tacoma
STATEMENT OF ISSUE:
The Lawsuit and the Claims
On October 15, 2024, the Prosecuting Attorney's Office (PAO) and the county's outside
counsel, came to written terms of settlement with Julian St. Marie, a former deputy prosecutor
who sued the county and a number of county employees in the PAO and HR after her
termination in May 2021. Ms. St. Marie's lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the
Western District of Washington on November 11, 2022. Ms. St. Marie's lawsuit included
thirteen separate claims and sought$5 million in damages.
The County's Win on Summary Judgment
After nearly two years of litigation, on August 29,2024, the federal court issued a very well-
written summary judgment decision against Ms. St. Marie dismissing every one of her claims
in the lawsuit and dismissing the entire case against the county and every county-related
defendant. The summary judgment order also dismissed the county's approximately $300,000
counter claim against Ms. St. Marie. A final judgment was entered within days, which
permitted the both the county and Ms. St. Marie to appeal.
The Settlement
On October 15, 2024, Ms. St. Marie and the County came to agreement on a written settlement
by which each party agreed not to appeal the summary judgment decision in exchange for the
other party's agreement not to appeal. In addition, the county agreed to not to ask the court to
award the costs to which it was entitled as the winner("prevailing party") of the lawsuit. Ms.
St. Marie agreed in the settlement to withdraw a number of public records request she and her
lawyer had made, which required and would continue to require significant county staff time.
1
Regular Agenda
ANALYSIS:
Under the settlement, the county and the county-related defendants will pay nothing to Ms. St.
Marie. The county's defense was funded by Washington Counties Risk Pool, including paying
all attomey's fees for the county's outside counsel and all costs incurred by the county that
could have been recovered by the county. Finally, the settlement will free up resources of the
PAO that were being expended to defend the lawsuit.
FISCAL IMPACT:
There is no negative fiscal impact to county resources. There will be a positive impact
because significant county staff will be spared additional disruption. Avoiding staff time
responding to public records requests already has been mentioned as a benefit. Another
significant saved resource is the time county representatives and would have to spend in a trial
scheduled for two weeks in the Tacoma federal court.
RECOMMENDATION:
Approve and sign the settlement agreement.
DEPARTMENT CONTACT:
Philip C. Hunsucker, Chief Civil Deputy Prosecuting Attorney at Extension 219
REVIEWED BY:
Mark McCau , County Administrator Date
2
CONTRACT REVIEW FORM Clear Form
(INSTRUCTIONS ARE ON THE NEXT PAGE)
CONTRACT WITH: Julian St.Marie Contract No: PAO 2024-005
Contract For: Settlement Term: None
COUNTY DEPARTMENT: PAo
Contact Person: Philip C.Hunsucker,Chief Civil DPA
Contact Phone: X. 219
Contact email: phunsucker@co.jefferson.wa.us
AMOUNT: $0.00 PROCESS: y_ Exempt from Bid Process
Revenue: So.00 _ Cooperative Purchase
Expenditure: tom _ Competitive Sealed Bid
Matching Funds Required: Sam _ Small Works Roster
Sources(s)of Matching Funds N/A _Vendor List Bid
Fund# N/A RFP or RFQ
Munis Org/Obj N/A _Other:
APPROVAL STEPS:
STEP 1: DEPARTMENT CERTIFIES COMPLLA/ CE WITH JCC 3.55.080 AND CHAPTER 42.23 RCW.
CERTIFIED: ❑ N/A:E1 0 C , -- October 17,2024
Signature Date
STEP 2: DEPARTMENT CERTIFIES THE PERSON PROPOSED FOR CONTRACTING WITH THE
COUNTY (CONTRACTOR) HAS NOT BEEN DEBARRED BY ANY FEDERAL, STATE, OR LOCAL
AGENCY.
CERTIFIED: ❑ N/A: Q 0 C j�-"�"` October 17,2024
Signature Date
STEP 3: RISK MANAGEMENT REVIEW(will be added electron icalic through Laserfiche):
Electronically approved by Risk Management on 10/18/2024.
STEP 4: PROSECUTING ATTORNEY REVIEW(will he added electronically through Laserfiche):
Electronically approved as to form by PAO on 10/18/2024.
PAO negotiated settlement.
STEP 5: DEPARTMENT MAKES REVISIONS & RESUBMITS TO RISK MANAGEMENT AND
PROSECUTING ATTORNEY(IF REQUIRED).
STEP 6:CONTRACTOR SIGNS 3
L
STEP 7: SUBMIT TO BOCC FOR APPROVAL
7
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Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 1 of 33
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8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON
9 AT TACOMA
10
JULIAN ELIZABETH ST MARIE, CASE NO. 3:22-cv-05893-DGE
11
Plaintiff, ORDER ON MOTION FOR
12 v. SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.
NO. 60)
13 JEFFERSON COUNTY et al,
14 Defendant.
15
16 I. INTRODUCTION
17 This matter comes before the Court on Defendants' motion for summary judgment to
18 dismiss all remaining claims in this action. (Dkt.No. 60.) Having considered Plaintiff Julian St.
19 Marie's response(Dkt No. 68), Defendants' reply(Dkt.No. 71), and the remaining record,the
20 Court GRANTS summary judgment dismissal of all of Plaintiff's claims.
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ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- I
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 2 of 33
II. BACKGROUND
2 A. Plaintiff's Work History
3 Plaintiff Julian St. Marie was hired by the Jefferson County Prosecuting Attorney's
4 Office("JCPAO")as Chief Deputy Prosecuting Attorney in 2015. (Dkt.No. 69 at 4.) In 2018,
5 Defendant James Kennedy was elected as the Jefferson County Prosecuting Attorney. (Dkt.No.
6 60 at 4.) Kennedy assumed office in January 2019. (Dkt.No. 61 at 2.) On February 4,2019,
7 Kennedy abolished the Chief Deputy Prosecuting Attorney position and replaced it with the
8 position of Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecuting Attorney. (Dkt.No. 61-1 at 2.) He reclassified
9 Plaintiff as a"Deputy Prosecuting Attorney"and approved her for a pay raise effective February
10 1, 2019. (Id. at 4.) Around this time, Kennedy appointed Defendant Christopher Ashcraft,who
11 had previously served as Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor for the JCPAO, as Chief Criminal
12 Deputy Prosecuting Attorney. (Dkt.No. 60 at 4); (Dkt.No. 62-1 at 68). In March 2021,
13 Plaintiff began covering district court dockets for a colleague on maternity leave. (Dkt. No. 69 at
14 6.)
15 On May 13, 2021, Kennedy sent Plaintiff an email with the subject line"Re: Tentative
16 Decision to Terminate Your Employment." (Dkt. No. 61-1 at 39.) In the email, Kennedy
17 explained:
18 Events over the past month and a half rapidly devolved to a point where you no
longer have a functional relationship with multiple members of this office,
19 including me. This is a result of your behavior, including haranguing your
supervisors and support staff in common areas of the office, and your failure to
20 make sure that witnesses are subpoenaed in cases assigned to you. Your behavior
towards staff, which I characterize as abusive, is intolerable. Several staff
21 members have told management that [they] are uncomfortable being in your
presence. The final straw was allowing the State v. Patrick Hundtofi case to get
22 dismissed on May 5, 2021[,] because no witnesses had been subpoenaed, even
after Chris identified at least one witness you should subpoena.
23
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ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-2
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 3 of 33
1 (Id.) The record provides an account of the events Kennedy describes, which took place in April
2 and May of 2021.
3 In early May 2021, Plaintiff delayed issuing trial subpoenas for the State v. Patrick
4 Hundtoft matter such that, by the time they were issued, certain preferred witnesses were
5 unavailable for a criminal trial in state court. (Dkt. No. 61-1 at 19.) On May 5,2021—the day
6 before the State v. Patrick Hundtoft trial was set to begin—Plaintiff asked for a
7 continuance. (Dkt.No. 62-1 at 99.) Plaintiff informed the court that, although she could proceed
8 with the remaining witnesses, she had a mandatory meeting and was therefore unavailable for
9 trial. (Id.) The state court denied Plaintiff's request and dismissed the case. (Id. at 101.) The
10 judge noted that"[t]his has been an ongoing issue . . . You had multiple opportunities to declare
11 ready or not ready . . . . I don't even have a subpoena in my file." (Id.) In a subsequent email
12 exchange, Kennedy described Plaintiffs"failing to contact her witnesses or get subpoenas out"
13 as"a major screw up in of itself."(Dkt.No. 61-1 at 33.) Plaintiff later attributed the late
14 subpoenas to practices around the Laserfiche system that she found"unworkable"and her
15 impression that she"was not getting the legal assistance [she] needed." (Dkt.No. 68-1 at 33.)
16 Prior to the May 5th trial incident, Kennedy was already in communication with JCPAO
17 staff members about Plaintiff's performance issues. On May 4, 2021, Kennedy confirmed to
18 Ashcroft that he had forwarded"concerns about [Plaintiffs] abusive behavior"to Human
19 Resources. (Dkt.No. 61-1 at 14.) Kennedy also reached out to a Human Resources staffer,
20 Defendant Andy Rowlson, on April 29, 2021, after a difficult meeting with Plaintiff about her
21 performance.' (Id. at 10.) The record shows Kennedy and Ashcroft were engaged in discussions
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23 ' The events of April 29, 2021, are disputed. In a document entitled "Memorandum on Today's
Events with Julie St. Marie,"Kennedy describes Plaintiff becoming incredibly upset—screaming
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ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-3
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 4 of 33
1 about Plaintiff's alleged mishandling of the district court docket since at least April 12, 2021.
2 (Id. at 17)("Julie needs someone with her—the fact that she is not ready for this week's trial is
3 stunning.").
4 On May 7, 2021, Plaintiff met with Rowlson. The two discussed various problems,
5 including that Plaintiff had been "haranguing" staff but"recognized [she] needed to stop,and
6 would work to do so"; that Plaintiff was not entitled to greater legal assistance than other
7 attorneys;and that Kennedy was considering firing Plaintiff. (Dkt.No. 62-1 at 108-109.) On
8 May 17,2021, Plaintiff sent Kennedy an email with the reasons she believed he should not fire
9 her. (Dkt.No. 61-1 at 41-43.) Plaintiff stated that she had been unaware of"any sort of
10 problem"with her performance prior to May 13th and emphasized that she had been working at
11 JCPAO for six years and "maintained an active and successful motions practice" during that
12 time. (Id. at 43.) Later that day, Plaintiff met with Kennedy and Rowlson. (Id. at 45.) Kennedy
13 then terminated Plaintiffs employment as a deputy prosecutor for the JCPAO. (Id.) In
14 September 2021, the JCPAO hired former Defendant Tuppence Macintyre, a woman who is
15 about two years older than Plaintiff,to replace her. (Dkt.No. 61 at 4.)
16 There is limited evidence on the record documenting Plaintiff's time at JCPAO prior to
17 March 2019. Plaintiff stated in her deposition testimony that"up until the final three weeks of
18 my employment, I thought everything was just great"(Dkt.No. 62-1 at 10)and declared"I loved
19 my job and enjoyed working with everyone in the office[.]" (Dkt.No. 69 at 22.) In his
20 deposition, Kennedy affirmed that"we got along quite well until maybe February/March of
21
22 at him at a"shouting level that was heard by most of the office." (Id. at 10.) Plaintiff disputes
that the conversation rose to the level of shouting or swearing from her side. (Dkt.No. 69 at 25.)
23 In her declaration, she notes she may have spoken loudly and sworn generally, as was normal in
the culture of the office, but that she did not swear"at" Kennedy. (Id.) Plaintiff instead declares
24 Kennedy shouted and swore at her. (Id.)
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-4
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 5 of 33
1 2021 . . . [when] Ms. St. Marie [took over the district court docket and began] having a lot of
2 problems with the digital nature of the court information, the file information,which was on a
3 system called Laserfiche, and she was also having issues with her assigned paralegal." (Dkt. 68-
4 1 at 176-177.) However, Plaintiff also declared she complained about"constant sexual
5 innuendo and crude, profane remarks" in the workplace prior to the spring of 2021. (Dkt.No. 69
6 at 22.)
7 After leaving the JCPAO, Plaintiff started her own law practice. (Dkt.No. 61 at 4.) As a
8 criminal defense lawyer, she frequently litigated opposite the JCPAO. (Id.) Plaintiff alleges that
9 during this time,the JCPAO failed to communicate with her and blocked her website from some
10 JCPAO computers. (Dkt.No. 69 at 29.) The record shows Defendants investigated the website
11 issue and determined the site was temporarily unavailable due to an issue in the website's code,
12 which caused it to be automatically flagged and blocked by the County's firewall. (Dkt.No. 68-
13 1 at 87.) The record also confirms the JCPAO instituted a policy whereby its staff would only
14 communicate with Plaintiff on the record or in writing after Plaintiff allegedly made
15 misrepresentations to the court about JCPAO staff. (Dkt.No. 68-1 at 221.) Ultimately, several
16 of Plaintiffs clients expressed concern that Plaintiff could not adequately represent them because
17 the JCPAO appeared to treat her unfairly. (Dkt.No. 63-1 at 3);(Dkt.No. 69 at 32).
18 In June 2022, Denver Shoop, an individual whom Plaintiff had prosecuted, filed a public
19 records request seeking"[c]opies of records regarding the termination of employment of Deputy
20 Prosecuting Attorney Julie St. Marie." (Dkt.No. 61-1 at 47.) After Plaintiff received third party
21 notice of Shoop's request, she filed suit to enjoin the release of the records in Jefferson County
22 Superior Court. (Id. at 48.) In the court filings, Plaintiff stated that JCPAO attorneys had made
23 "unsubstantiated and libelous statements"about her. (Dkt. No. 68-1 at 70.) On June 24, 2022, a
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ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-5
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 6 of 33
1 local reporter published an article in the Port Townsend Leader about Plaintiff's Superior Court
2 attempts to enjoin the County from releasing the records. (Id.) The article, reporting on the
3 public pleadings in the case, stated that"[i]n the county's response . . . . [t]he county [] claimed
4 St. Marie had constant trouble using the digital record system in Jefferson County District
5 Court." (Id. at 71.) Shoop subsequently withdrew the public records request. (Dkt.No. 60-1 at
6 2.) Jefferson County and Plaintiff then stipulated to dismissal of the case, which was dismissed
7 by Judge Lauren Erickson on October 20, 2022. (Id. at 6.)
8 B. Procedural History
9 On November 16, 2022, Plaintiff filed a complaint asserting the following 14 claims:
10 • Claim 1 is against all Defendants and"brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983,and the
First, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, for
11 violation of procedural and substantive due process rights[.]" (Dkt.No. 1 at 28.)
12 • Claim 2 is against all Defendants and alleges that Jefferson County"failed to provide
the Plaintiff with a procedurally constitutional Loudermill hearing[,]"thereby
13 violating Plaintiff's Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment due process rights. (Id. at 29.)
14 • Claim 3 alleges that all Defendants are liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for
"[r]etaliation [against Plaintiff] for the exercise of[Plaintiff's] First Amendment
15 rights[.]" (Id. at 33.)
16 • Claim 4 is against all Defendants except Macintyre for"supervisorial responsibility"
"brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for violation of Plaintiff's Constitutional
17 rights under the First, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments[.]" (Id. at 35.)
18 • Claim 5 is against Defendants Jefferson County, Kennedy, Ashcraft, Hunsucker, and
Rowlson for"conspiracy to violate civil rights""brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
19 § 1981, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and 42 U.S.C. § 1985 and 42 U.S.C. [§] 1986, and the
First, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments[.]" (Id. at 38.)
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• Claim 6 is against Defendants Jefferson County, Kennedy, Ashcraft, Hunsucker, and
21 Rowlson for sexual harassment in violation of the Washington Law Against
22 Discrimination("WLAD"), RCW Chapter 49.60. (Id. at 40-42.)
• Claim 7 is against Defendants Jefferson County, Kennedy, Ashcraft, Hunsucker, and
23 Rowlson and alleges a hostile work environment claim under the WLAD. (Id. at 42-
24 43.)
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-6
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 7 of 33
1
• Claim 8 is against Defendants Jefferson County, Kennedy, Ashcraft, Hunsucker, and
2 Rowlson for sex discrimination under the WLAD. (Id. at 44.)
3 • Claim 9 is against Defendants Jefferson County, Kennedy, Ashcraft, Hunsucker, and
Rowlson for age discrimination under the WLAD. (Id. at 45-46.)
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• Claim 10 is against Defendants Jefferson County, Kennedy, Ashcraft, Hunsucker,
5 Rowlson, and Macintyre for the tort of libel. (Id. at 46.)
6 • Claim 11 is against all Defendants except for Ms. Macintyre for the torts of negligent
hiring, supervision, and retention. (Id. at 48.)
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• Claim 12 is against Jefferson County, Kennedy, Ashcraft, Hunsucker, Rowlson, and
8 Macintyre for the tort of outrage. (Id. at 50.)
9 • Claim 13 is against all Defendants for tortious interference with a business
expectancy. (Id. at 52.)
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• Claim 14 is against all Defendants for negligence"in addition to or in the alternative
11 to the cause[s] of action above[.]" (Id. at 53.)
12 On August 25,2023,the Court dismissed claims One, Three, 10, 12, and 13 as to
13 Macintyre. (Dkt.No.43.) The Defendants now seek dismissal on summary judgment of all
14 remaining claims asserted in Plaintiffs complaint. (Dkt.No. 60.)
15 III. DISCUSSION
16 A. Legal Standard
17 Summary judgment is proper if the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on
18 file, and any affidavits show that there is"no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
19 moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). A material fact
20 is one that"might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law." Anderson v. Liberty
21 Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248(1986). A dispute of material fact is genuine if there is sufficient
22 evidence on the record for a reasonable trier of fact to return a verdict for the nonmovingparty.
rtY•
23 Id. The party moving for summary judgement bears the initial burden of identifying the portions
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ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-7
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 8 of 33
1 of the pleadings, discovery, and affidavits that show the absence of a genuine dispute of material
2 fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1985). If the issue is one in which the
3 opposing party bears the burden of proof at trial, the moving party must only point out to the
4 court"that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving parry's case." Id. at 325.
5 If the moving party meets this initial burden, the nonmoving party must point to specific
6 facts in the record showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 250;
7 T.W. Elec. Service Inc. v. Pacific Elec. Contractors Ass'n, 809 F.2d 626, 630(9th Cir. 1987)
8 ("[T]he nonmoving party may not rely on the mere allegations in the pleadings in order to
9 preclude summary judgement."). If the nonmoving party fails to put forth such evidence, then
10 the moving party is entitled to judgement as a matter of law. Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323. In
11 determining whether a genuine dispute of material fact exists, "[t]he deciding court must view
12 the evidence, including all reasonable inferences, in favor of the non-moving party." Reed v.
13 Lieurance, 863 F.3d 1196, 1204(9th Cir.2017).
14 B. Claims against Spouses(All Claims)
15 Defendants argue that the Court should dismiss all Claims against Defendants' individual
16 spouses. (Dkt. No. 60 at 17.) Defendants note that"Plaintiff repeatedly alleges that all
17 individual defendants were acting within the course and scope of their employment,"meaning
18 that none of their alleged conduct involved their marital communities. (Id.) Plaintiff does not
19 respond and offers no facts or legal authority in support of her federal or state law claims against
20 the individual Defendants' spouses. (See generally Dkt.No. 68.)
21 Accordingly, Plaintiffs claims against all individual Defendant's spouses are
22 DISMISSED on summary judgment.
23 C. Derivative Claims(Cause of Actions One, Four, Five)
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-8
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 9 of 33
1 Defendants asserts Claims One, Four and Five are derivative of claims Two and Three.
2 (Dkt.No. 60 at 22.) Plaintiff does not respond to Defendants' argument and otherwise makes no
3 effort to identify how claims One, Four, and Five are distinct from claims Two and Three,
4 factually or legally. (See generally Dkt. No. 68.) As is often cited, "judges are not like pigs,
5 hunting for truffles buried in briefs"or the record. United States v. Dunkel, 927 F.2d 955, 956
6 (7th Cir. 1991). Nor is it the Court's job to formulate arguments to distinguish one claim from
7 another.
8 Accordingly, Claims One, Four, and Five are DISMISSED on summary judgment.
9 D. Due Process Claim (Claim Two2) —Loudermill Hearing
10 The Fourteenth Amendment protects individuals from deprivation of property by the
11 government without due process. Portman v. Cnty. of Santa Clara, 995 F.2d 898, 904(9th Cir.
12 1993). "A government employee has a constitutionally protected property interest in continued
13 employment when the employee has a legitimate claim of entitlement to the job." Id (citing Bd.
14 of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564, 577 (1972)). To ascertain whether an employee has a
15 legitimate claim of entitlement, "a court looks to `existing rules and understandings that stem
16 from an outside source such as state law."'Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Henderson, 940 F.2d 465,
17 475 (9th Cir. 1991)(quoting Roth, 408 U.S. at 577). Under Washington law, "[c]onstitutionally
18 protected property interests may be created either through (1)contract, (2)common law, or(3)
19 statutes and regulations." Durland v. San Juan Cnty., 340 P.3d 191, 199(Wash. 2014).
20
21
22 2 To the extent Plaintiff's asserts a Fifth Amendment violation in any of her claims, there is no
23 actionable claim because the"Fifth Amendment's Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses
apply only to the federal government, not to state actors." Peoples v. Schwarzenegger, 402 Fed.
24 Appx. 204, 205 (2010).
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-9
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 10 of 33
1 Plaintiff argues the County's Personnel Administration Manual adopted on January 4,
2 2021, created an entitlement to employment by"form[ing] part of the Plaintiff's employment
3 contract with Jefferson County." (Dkt.No. 68 at 6.) Defendants argue Plaintiff was not entitled
4 to employment as a deputy prosecuting attorney because under state law Plaintiff was always an
5 at will deputy prosecutor. (Dkt.No. 60 at 18)(citing Wash. Rev.Code § 36.27.040).
6 In Washington, "[a]ny county,city,town or township may make and enforce within its
7 limits all such local police, sanitary and other regulations as are not in conflict with general
8 laws." WASH.CONST. art. XI, § 11. An ordinance,regulation, or resolution is "consistent with
9 article XI, section 11 unless it either prohibits what the state law permits,thwarts the legislative
10 purpose of the statutory scheme, or exercises power that the statutory scheme did not confer on
11 local governments." Emerald Enterprises, LLC v. Clark Cnty., 413 P.3d 92, 98 (Wash. 2018)
12 (internal quotations omitted).
13 Washington Revised Code § 36.27.040 is unambiguous: "The prosecuting attorney may
14 appoint one or more deputies who shall have the same power in all respects as their
15 principal . . . . The prosecuting attorney shall be responsible for the acts of his or her deputies
16 and may revoke appointments at will." This means:
17 Deputy prosecutors are appointed for specified terms of office because their terms
coincide with the elected prosecutor's term. Unless a deputy's appointment is
18 revoked [by the prosecutor], the term of office for a deputy prosecutor ends when
the term of the elected prosecutor ends. Once hired, deputy prosecutors are not
19 entitled to remain deputy prosecutors should a new prosecutor become elected.
20 Spokane Cnty. v. State, 966 P.2d 305, 310(Wash. 1998).3
21
22 3 In Spokane, the State Supreme Court analyzed whether a deputy prosecutor was an employee
under the State's Public Employees' Collective Bargaining Act." (Id. at 307.) In analyzing this
23 issue,the court concluded that a deputy prosecutor is not appointed for a specified term of office
and that an elected prosecutor has authority to"clean house"and appoint new staff under
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 10
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 11 of 33
1 Because Washington law creates an at will relationship between an elected prosecutor
2 and their appointed deputy prosecutors, finding Jefferson County's Personnel Administration
3 Manual created an employment entitlement would thwart the legislative purpose of the statutory
4 scheme governing elected prosecutors and their appointed deputy prosecutors. Thus,Jefferson
5 County's Personnel Administration Manual is preempted from conferring any employment
6 entitlement to Plaintiff pursuant to article XI, section 11 of Washington's Constitution regardless
7 of whether Jefferson County sought to create an employment contract through the Manual-
8 which Defendants dispute—and regardless of Plaintiff's purported reliance on it.
9 Plaintiff,therefore, lacked a property interest in her employment and otherwise cannot
10 maintain a Fourteenth Amendment due process claim based on her discharge as a deputy
11 prosecutor. Accordingly, Plaintiff's Fourteenth Amendment due process claim based on the
12 alleged failure to provide a Loudermill hearing fails as a matter of law and is DISMISSED on
13 summary judgment.
14 E. First Amendment Claim (Claim Three)
15 Plaintiff's complaint cites three incidents in which Defendants allegedly violated her First
16 Amendment rights: (1)the JCPAO policy to communicate with her only in writing or in a court
17 proceeding; (2)her alleged termination for speaking out against failing systems at the JCPAO
18 and inappropriate conduct; and(3)the disabling of"public access to Plaintiff's webpage/site."
19 (Dkt.No. 1 at 31-35.) In disorderly fashion, Plaintiff peppers her opposition with short,
20 conclusory statements lacking any citation to the record to support these allegations:
21 • Plaintiff was"subjected to wrongful termination . . . in retaliation for
making repeated First Amendment complaints to defendant Kennedy
22
23 § 36.27.040 once elected. (Id. at 311.) Based on the plain language of§ 36.27.040 and the
analysis in Spokane, a deputy prosecutor serves at the pleasure of an elected prosecutor and
24 maintains no expectation of continued employment as a deputy prosecutor.
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 11
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 12 of 33
about the constant sexual innuendo in the office environment and her lack
of administrative support, as detailed in her Declaration." (Dkt.No. 68 at
2 12.)
3 • "[D]efendants violated the Plaintiff's clearly established First Amendment
rights by refusing to receive communication from her during trial, in her
4 role as criminal defense attorney." (Id. at 18.)
5 • "The defendants retaliation against the Plaintiff for her speech is
actionable. . . . Plaintiff spoke as a private citizen, about matters of public
6 concern which did not affect her personally[.] . . . Genuine issues of
material fact exist as to whether Plaintiff would have been fired but for her
7 speech. (Id. at 19.)
8 It bears repeating that it is not the Court's task to search the record or identify arguments to
9 support conclusory statements. Dunkel, 927 F.2d at 956.
10 1. Communication Policy
11 This Court previously concluded the JCPAO's communication policy did not impose a
12 prior restraint on Plaintiff's speech and that Plaintiff failed to state a claim against Macintyre
13 based on the communication policy. (Dkt.No. 43 at 4-7.) Plaintiff offers no argument, factual
14 or legal, as to why the Court's prior analysis is not applicable to Plaintiff's claims against the
15 remaining Defendants. Likewise, the Court is unaware of a reason why a different analysis
16 should apply to Plaintiffs First Amendment claim, premised on the same communication policy,
17 against the remaining Defendants.
18 Pursuant to the Court's prior ruling on this issue, Plaintiff's First Amendment claim
19 against the Defendants premised on the JCPAO's communication policy is DISMISSED on
20 summary judgment.
21 2. Termination as retaliation for complaints about"failing systems"and inappropriate
office conduct
22
There are five sequential steps to analyzing a First Amendment retaliation claim brought
23
by government employees:
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 12
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 13 of 33
1 (1)whether the plaintiff spoke on a matter of public concern; (2)whether the
plaintiff spoke as a private citizen or public employee; (3)whether plaintiff's
2 protected speech was a substantial or motivating factor in the adverse
employment action; (4)whether the state had an adequate justification for treating
3 the employee differently from other members of the general public; and (5)
whether the state would have taken the adverse employment action even absent
4 the protected speech.
5 Hernandez v. City of Phoenix, 43 F.4th 966, 976(9th Cir. 2022)(quoting Eng v. Cooley, 552
6 F.3d 1062, 1070(9th Cir. 2009)). A government employee bears the burden of proving the first
7 three steps. Moser v. Las Vegas Metro. Police Dep't, 984 F.3d 900, 904(9th Cir. 2021). Once
8 established,the burden shifts to the government to establish the last two steps. Id. at 904-905.
9 "What constitutes speech on a `matter of public concern' remains somewhat hazy, despite
10 the decades that have passed since the concept was first employed." Hernandez,43 F.4th at 977.
11 Instead, it is useful to identify speech that is not entitled to constitutional protection—"namely,
12 speech on matters only of personal interest, such as speech addressing a personal employment
13 dispute or complaints over internal office affairs."Id. Indeed, "[m]ost speech falling outside that
14 purely private realm will warrant at least some First Amendment protection and thus will qualify
15 as speech on matter of public concern[.]" Id. (internal quotations and citations omitted). The
16 "content of the statements,the form (time, place, and manner)of the statements, and the context
17 in which the statements were made"are all considered in determining whether speech involved a
18 matter of public concern. Id.
19 As already noted, Plaintiff cites generally to her declaration (or provides no citation at
20 all)as support for her position that she voiced"repeated First Amendment complaints"and
21 "spoke as a private citizen, about matters of public concern which did not affect her personally."
22 (Dkt.No. 68 at 12, 19.)
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 13
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 14 of 33
1 Regarding issues involving her assigned office staff, Plaintiff states in her declaration, "I
2 expressed concerns about how subpoenas were is issued"and references her May 6, 2021, email
3 to Kennedy. (Dkt. No. 69 at 7.) The email identifies complaints about the lack of staff support
4 and the effect on Plaintiff's ability to perform her duties. (Dkt. No. 68-1 at 28-29.) The
5 "speech"in the May 6, 2021, email can only be classified as involving a"purely personal
6 employment dispute or complaints over internal office affairs"as Plaintiff was upset with staff
7 assigned to her. Plaintiff's complaints about office staff and the effect on Plaintiff's performance
8 is not speech on a matter of public concern.
9 Regarding Plaintiffs complaints"about the constant sexual innuendo in the office
10 environment"(Dkt.No. 68 at 12), Plaintiff does not identify the"content of the statements,the
11 form (time,place, and manner)of the statements, [or]the context in which the statements were
12 made." Hernandez,43 F.4th at 977. For example, Plaintiff declares she"expressed to Mr.
13 Kennedy numerous times my concerns that the excessively loud and excessively foul language,
14 particularly denigrating woman and victims,was inappropriate" (Dkt.No. 69 at 22)and that she
15 "repeatedly indicated [to Kennedy] that the constant sexual innuendo, crude language, rating of
16 victims as 'hot or not', and sexual gestures in my presence made me uncomfortable." (Id. at 23.)
17 Yet, Plaintiff provides no information specifying what Plaintiff specifically told Kennedy, when
18 it was told, where it was told, how it was told, or the context in which the statements were made,
19 who was present, what Kennedy's response was, etcetera. Plaintiff's declaration offers no more
20 than a general description of complaints allegedly expressed to Kennedy. Without more,the
21 Court lacks the ability to evaluate whether such complaints, assuming they occurred,concerned a
22 matter of public concern.
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 14
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 15 of 33
1 Plaintiff has not met her burden of establishing that she spoke on a matter of public
2 concern.4 Accordingly, Plaintiffs First Amendment retaliation claim based on allegedly
3 speaking out about inappropriate conduct is DISMISSED on summary judgment.
4 3. Plaintiffs Website
5 Plaintiffs complaint states, a"First Amendment retaliation violation occurred when the
6 Defendants disabled public access to Plaintiff's webpage/site." (Dkt.No. 1 at 34.) Defendants
7 point out that, in general, an employer can disable access to internet sites on work computers.
8 (Dkt.No. 60 at 20)(citing Urofsky v. Gilmore, 216 F.3d 401,409(4th Cir. 2000)). Defendant
9 also identifies the County's firewall was to blame for County employees being unable to access
10 Plaintiffs webpage. (Id. at 20-21;see also Dkt.No. 61-1 at 53-55.)
11 Plaintiff makes no effort to respond to Defendant's arguments regarding access to
12 Plaintiffs website. (See generally Dkt. No. 68.) Moreover, Plaintiff offers no facts supporting
13 her allegation that the County disabled public access to her website as opposed to access via the
14 County's internal computer servers. The Court is unaware of any authority, and Plaintiff offers
15 none, supporting a First Amendment retaliation claim based on an employer disabling internal
16 access to an external website.
17 Accordingly, Plaintiffs First Amendment retaliation claim based on disabled access to
18 Plaintiff's website is DISMISSED on summary judgment.
19 F. Sexual Harassment,Hostile Work Environment,and Sex Discrimination (Claims
Six,Seven,Eight)
20
21
22 4 Though it is unnecessary to analyze the remaining steps of a First Amendment retaliation claim,
Plaintiff also has failed to establish her alleged protected speech was a substantial or motivating
23 factor in her discharge. Without any citation to the record, Plaintiff baldly asserts, "[g]enuine
issues of material fact exist as to whether Plaintiff would have been fired but for her speech."
24 (Id. at 19.) Absent more,this is insufficient to meet her burden.
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 15
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 16 of 33
1 1. Sexual Harassment and Hostile Work Environment
2 The WLAD provides that it is an"unfair employment practice"for any employer to
3 "discriminate against any person in compensation or in other terms or conditions of employment
4 because of. . . sex." RCW 49.60.180(3). The Washington Supreme Court has"interpreted this
5 section of the statute as prohibiting sexual harassment in employment." DeWater v. State, 921
6 P.2d 1059, 1062 (Wash. 1996). "Sexual harassment claims are generally categorized as 'quid
7 pro quo harassment' or `hostile work environment claims."' Id. (citing Payne v. Children's
8 Home Soc'y, 892 P.2d 1102, 1105 n.2 (Wash. 1995)). Quid pro quo harassment describes"a
9 situation where an employer requires sexual consideration from an employee as a quid pro quo
10 for job benefits."Glasgow v. Georgia-Pacific Corp. 693 P.2d 708, 711 (Wash. 1985). In a
11 hostile work environment claim, "the employee seeks to hold the employer responsible for a
12 hostile work environment created by a supervisor or co-worker's sexual harassment of the
13 employee." Id. Although Plaintiff names sexual harassment and hostile work environment as
14 separate claims in her complaint,there are no facts on the record to support a quid pro quo type
15 claim. Likewise, Plaintiff discusses the claims together as a hostile work environment claim in
16 opposing Defendant's motion for summary judgement. (Dkt.No. 68 at 15.)
17 To establish a hostile work environment claim under the WLAD, an employee must show
18 that"(1)the harassment was unwelcome, (2)the harassment was because of sex, (3)the
19 harassment affected the terms or conditions of employment, and (4)the harassment is imputed to
20 the employer." DeWater, 921 P.2d at 1063. For harassment to affect the terms or conditions of
21 employment, it must give rise to an "abusive work environment" or be"sufficiently severe and
22 persistent to seriously affect the emotional or psychological well being of[the] employee."
23 Glasgow, 693 P.2d at 712. Whether harassment is severe or pervasive is a question of fact.
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 16
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 17 of 33
1 Harris v. Forklift Sys.Inc., 510 U.S. 17, 23 (1993). The Washington Supreme Court has
2 "frequently recognized"that federal caselaw interpreting Title VII law constitutes persuasive
3 authority in construing the WLAD. Antonius v. King Cnty., 103 P.3d 729, 735 (Wash. 2004)
4 (collecting cases).
5 Defendants contend that Plaintiff was never"the target"of any sexual comments and so
6 was not actually"subject to"harassment herself. (Dkt.No. 60 at 24-25.) Plaintiff responds,
7 citing generally to her declaration, that she had to "endure constant sexual inuendo and crude and
8 profane remarks,"and that she"repeatedly complained that the work atmosphere made her
9 uncomfortable."(Dkt.No. 68 at 15.) While Plaintiff does not dispute that she herself was not the
10 target of any comments, she asserts that"office culture" can form the basis of a hostile work
11 environment claim. (Id. at 16.)
12 Contrary to Defendant's contention, a plaintiff who is not the direct subject of derogatory
13 comments can make out a claim of hostile work environment if the workplace is utterly
14 permeated with discriminatory, gender-based commentary. See Sharp v. S&SActivewear,
15 L.L.C., 69 F.4th 974, 978(9th Cir.2023)("individual targeting is not required to establish a Title
16 VII violation"); Coles v. Kam-Way Transp., 2017 WL 3980563, at *3 (Wash. Ct. Ap. 2017) ("A
17 work environment may be considered hostile even if offensive comments are not made directly
18 to the employee."). However, "[o]bjectionable conduct is not `automatically discrimination
19 because of sex merely because the words used have sexual content or connotations'that an
20 employee finds upsetting. Sharp, 69 F.4th at 978(citing Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs.,
21 Inc., 523 U.S. 75, 80(1998)). "[Ain employee's overhearing of sporadic, offensive remarks
22 directed at others in the same protected class is not enough"to make out a hostile work
23 environment claim. Coles, 2017 WL 3980563, at *4.
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 17
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 18 of 33
1 While the Court appreciates that this workplace appeared to tolerate some commentary
2 that a reasonable person might find insulting to women, Plaintiff has not put forth specific
3 evidence on the record to show that"severe and pervasive"sex-based commentary created a
4 hostile or abusive work environment. Blackburn v. State, 375 P.3d 1076, 1081 (Wash. 2015).
5 The facts Plaintiff provides are vague: she declares that there was frequent inuendo and crude
6 remarks"denigrating women and victims of crime"and that the"volume and content of
7 offensive conversations"between Ashcraft and Lysa Phillis made her"uncomfortable."(Dkt.
8 No. 69 at 22-23.) Candace Drollinger's declaration affirms that"Ashcraft constantly flirted with
9 Ms. Phillis and the two of them regularly made gross sexual references." (Dkt. No. 68-1 at 76.)
10 Beyond these generic descriptions, Drollinger declares she"can't speak to exactly which
11 comments [Plaintiff] heard in terms of sexual innuendo,"although she states that Ashcraft
12 "would make loud comments, rating the `sexiness' of victims of crime." (Dkt.No. 68-1 at 77.
13 75.)
14 The inuendo-laden conversations between Ashcraft and Phillis would not lead a
15 reasonable person to infer that Defendants categorically"view[ed] women negatively, and in a
16 humiliating or degrading way." Reeves v. C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. 594 F.3d 798, 811
17 (11th Cir. 2010)(describing the kind of words and severity of conduct that might be found
18 "sufficiently gender-specific and either severe or pervasive [so that a plaintiff] may state a claim
19 of a hostile work environment, even if the words are not directed specifically at the plaintiff.");
20 see also Glasgow, 693 P.2d at 712. And while Plaintiff indicates that comments about crime
21 victims made her upset, the facts do not create an objective finding that a reasonable person
22 would find them "so extreme [in severity or pervasiveness] as to amount to a change in the terms
23 and conditions of employment." Adams v. Able Bldg. Supply Inc. 57 P.3d 280, 284 (Wash. Ct.
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 18
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 19 of 33
1 App. 2002). Indeed,the only change Plaintiff indicates was her choice to begin wearing noise-
2 cancelling headphones in the office. (Dkt.No. 69 at 22.) Thus, Plaintiff fails to put forth
3 evidence on the record to show a genuine dispute of material fact as to her hostile work
4 environment claim.
5 Accordingly, Plaintiff's sexual harassment and hostile work environment claifns are
6 DISMISSED on summary judgment.
7 2. Sex Discrimination
8 "Discrimination claims under [the WLAD] may be brought under one of two theories,
9 either `disparate impact' or`disparate treatment."' Oliver v. Pac. Nw. Bell Tel. Co., Inc., 724
10 P.2d 1003, 1005 (1986). Here, Plaintiff claims disparate treatment based on sex. (Dkt.No. 68 at
11 12.) Specifically, she asserts 1)wrongful demotion because of her sex in February 2019 and 2)
12 wrongful termination because of her sex in May 2021. (Id.)
I3 a)Alleged Wrongful Demotion
14 Defendants argue that because"[t]he WLAD . . . has a three-year statute of limitations,"
15 any claim related to the events of February 2019 is untimely and must be dismissed. (Dkt. No.
16 60 at 26.) Plaintiff provides no response to the timeliness argument. (See generally Dkt.No.
17 68.)
18 The Supreme Court of Washington has established that discrimination claims must be
19 brought within the general,three-year statute of limitations. Antonius, 103 P.3d at 732(citing
20 Wash. Rev. Code §4.16.080(2)). The court specified that"for discrete acts, the limitations
21 period runs from the act itself, and if the limitations period has run, a discrete act is not
22 actionable even if it relates to acts alleged in timely filed charges." Id. at 733. The court named
23 "failure to promote"as a discrete act. Id. Plaintiff filed her complaint on November 16, 2022,
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)- 19
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 20 of 33
1 more than three years after the allegedly discriminatory demotion in February 2019. On this
2 basis, the Court finds that Plaintiffs sex discrimination claim as to her alleged demotion is
3 untimely and fails as a matter of law.
4 b)Alleged Discriminatory Termination
5 Washington courts have adopted the three-part,McDonnel Douglas burden shifting
6 framework for disparate treatment cases under the WLAD. Mikkelsen v. Pub. Utility Dist. No. 1
7 of Kittitas Cnty., 404 P.3d 464, 470 (Wash.2017) (citing McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Percy
8 Green,411 U.S. 792, 802(1973)). Under McDonnell Douglas, the plaintiff must first establish a
9 prima facie case of discrimination by showing that"(1) she was within a statutorily protected
10 class, (2)she was discharged by the defendant, (3) she was doing satisfactory work, and (4)after
11 her discharge,the position remained open and the employer continued to seek applicants with
12 qualifications similar to the plaintiff." Id. If the Plaintiff establishes the prima facie case, the
13 burden then shifts to the defendant employer to "articulate a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason
14 for the adverse employment action." Id. at 471 (citing Scrivener v. Clark Coll. 334 P.3d 541,
15 546 (Wash. 2014)). If the employer successfully establishes a nondiscriminatory explanation,
16 the burden then shifts back to the plaintiff to produce admissible evidence showing that the
17 defendant's reason was pretextual or that, even if the stated reason was legitimate, discrimination
18 was a substantial factor motivating the adverse employment action. Mikkelsen, 404 P.3d at 471
19 (citing Scrivener, 334 P.3d at 546). Contrary to Defendants' contention(Dkt. No. 60 at 25),the
20 McDonnell Douglas"framework does not require a plaintiff to prove that she was replaced by a
21 person outside her protected group to establish a prima facie case of discrimination." Mikkelsen,
22 404 P.3d at 473.
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-20
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 21 of 33
1 Defendants cite to Plaintiff's alleged struggle in covering the district court docket,
2 interpersonal issues with her supervisors and other employees, and her causing a criminal case to
3 be dismissed as legitimate reasons for terminating her employment. (See Dkt.No. 60 at 5-10.)
4 These reasons may be sufficient to prevent Plaintiff from making out prong (2)of the prima facie
5 case—that she was doing satisfactory work. Assuming, however,that the prima facie case is
6 met,this rationale constitutes a legitimate, nondiscriminatory explanation for Plaintiff's
7 termination for the purposes of the burden-shifting framework. "The employer's burden at this
8 stage is not one of persuasion, but rather a burden of production"; "[t]o go forward, the employer
9 need only articulate reasons sufficient to meet the prima facie case." Grimwood v. Univ. of
10 Puget Sound, Inc. 753 P.2d 517, 521 (Wash. 1988).
11 Plaintiff argues that her termination was pretextual based on Kennedy's allegedly
12 "vague"deposition testimony about the reasons for her termination. (Dkt.No. 68 at 13.)
13 However, Plaintiff does not put forth any evidence to show that"the employer's articulated
14 reason was a pretext for a discriminatory purpose" or that"[sex-based] discrimination was a
15 substantial factor"motivating the decision to terminate her. Scrivener, 334 P.3d at 546.
16 Moreover, Kennedy's deposition testimony is in fact quite specific as to his reasons for
17 terminating Plaintiff. (Dkt.No. 68-1 at 182-183, 198, 207)("Her behavior towards [her
18 paralegal] was rude and disrespectful. I would characterize it as abusive."); ("She did not get
19 subpoenas out[.]"); ("[We were] in this sort of acute timer period where everything's going
20 down, and she's not there half the time. She's walking off the job. She's absent."). Because
21 Defendants put forth legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for terminating Plaintiff's
22 employment and Plaintiff does not put forth evidence that that they were pretextual or that sex
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-21
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 22 of 33
1 discrimination was a motivating factor in the discharge, Plaintiffs sex discrimination claim fails
2 as a matter of law.
3 Accordingly, Plaintiff's claims for sex discrimination are DISSMISSED on summary
4 judgement.
5 G. Age Discrimination Claim (Claim Nine)
6 Plaintiff alleges that she was discriminated against based on age when Kennedy demoted
7 her and hired Ashcraft, "a younger[] male," in February 2019. (Dkt.No. 68 at 17.)
8 For the same reasons cited in Section III.D.2.supra, this claim is untimely. The Court
9 accordingly DISMISSES Plaintiff's claim of age discrimination.
I 0 H. Libel Claim (Claim 10)
I I In response to Defendant's interrogatories, Plaintiff identified 89 statements that she
12 asserted were libelous. (Dkt.No. 62-1 at 114.) However, Plaintiff did not identify the speaker
13 for any of the statements or indicate where the allegedly defamatory quotes might be found.
14 Defendants searched the responses to the public records requests made by Plaintiff or her counsel
15 to identify each statement and log it in a chart by speaker, audience, and document type. (Dkt.
16 No. 63-1 at 17-40.) Plaintiff takes issue with Defendant's characterization of three statements,
17 but beyond this does not dispute the information provided in Defendant's chart. (Dkt.No. 68 at
18 23.) The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are clear that"[i]f a party fails to properly support an
19 assertion of fact or fails to properly address another party's assertion of fact"a court may
20 "consider the fact undisputed for the purposes of the motion." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e)(2).
21 Accordingly, the Court finds the identification of the statements in Defendant's chart
22 unchallenged, except as to those three statements, which the Court itself has identified and
23 categorized. In addition to the 89 statements, Plaintiff alleged in her Complaint that Defendants
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-22
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 23 of 33
I published libelous statements about her when they produced documents in response to Shoop's
2 public records request. (Dkt. No. 1 at 27.) Defendants deny that any records were ever produced
3 in that case; assert that none of the 89 statements are libelous; and argue that the court should
4 "not only dismiss Plaintiff's tenth claim but impose $300,000 in damages and reasonable
5 attorney fees as sanctions." (Dkt.No. 60 at 28.)
6 1. The 89 Statements
7 An action for defamation requires a plaintiff to "prove four essential elements: falsity, an
8 unprivileged communication, fault, and damages"Robel v. Roundup Corp., 59 P.3d 611, 621
9 (Wash. 2002)(citing Mark v. Seattle Times, 635 P.2d 1081, 1088 (Wash. 1981),cert. denied,457
10 U.S. 1124(1982)). "When a defendant in a defamation action moves for summary judgment,the
11 plaintiff has the burden of establishing a prima facie case on all four elements." Marquez v.
12 Harborview Med. Ctr., 2018 WL 741321, at *7(W.D. Wash. 2018). "The prima facie case must
13 consist of specific, material facts, rather than conclusory statements,that would allow a jury to
14 find that each element of defamation exists." Id. A plaintiff satisfies the falsity prong by
15 providing"evidence that a statement is probably false or leaves a false impression due to omitted
16 facts." Yeakey v. Hearst Commc'ns, Inc., 234 P.3d 332, 335 (Wash. Ct. App. 2010)(citing Mohr
17 v. Grant, 108 P.3d 768, 773 (Wash. 2005)). Additionally, "[b]efore the truth or falsity of an
18 allegedly defamatory statement can be assessed, a plaintiff must prove that the words constituted
19 a statement of fact, not an opinion." Robel, 59 P.3d at 621. Opinions are not actionable,as they
20 are protected under the First Amendment. Id. Truth serves as a complete defense to an action
21 for defamation. Mark, 635 P.2d at 1086.
22 Plaintiff fails to make out a prima facie case of defamation as to any of the 89 statements.
23 She offers no specific evidence of falsity, instead citing cursorily to her own declaration. (See
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-23
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 24 of 33
1 Dkt.No.68 at 23.) As the Supreme Court of Washington has emphasized, "conclusory
2 statements in a plaintiff's affidavit are insufficient; the plaintiff must demonstrate the basis for
3 his assertions"to survive a defendant's summary judgement motion in a defamation case.
4 Herron v. Tribune Publ'g Co., 736 P.2d 249, 225 (Wash. 1987). What is more, it appears that
5 most all the statements put forth as libelous are protected by either absolute or qualified
6 privilege. Thus, Plaintiff fails to make out a prima facie case on at least two elements: falsity
7 and unprivileged communication.
8 Washington courts recognize the so-called common interest privilege,which applies
9 "when the declarant and the recipient have a common interest in the subject matter of the
10 communication." Momah v. Bharti, 182 P.3d 455, 460(Wash.Ct. App. 2008). "This privilege
11 generally applies to organizations, partnerships and associations and `arises when parties need to
12 speak freely and openly about subjects of common organizational or pecuniary interest." Id.
13 (citing Moe v. Wise, 989 P.2d 1148, 1155 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999)). Washington courts have also
14 held that"intracorporate communications"are not defamatory because they are not"published."
15 Doe v. Gonzaga Univ.,24 P.3d 390, 387 (Wash. 2001), rev'd on other grounds, 536 U.S. 273
16 (2002). "For a corporation . . . acting through one of its agents or representatives,to send a
17 libelous communication to another of its agents or representatives cannot be a publication of the
18 libel on the part of the corporation." Prins v. Holland—North Am. Mortgage Co., 181 P. 680,
19 680-681 (1919). Thus, communications between members of a corporation (such as emails
20 between co-workers)that take place in the ordinary course of business are not defamatory.
21 Marquez, 2018 WL 741321 at *7.
22 As Defendants point out,the approximately 50 statements sourced from private email
23 discussions between JCPAO co-workers are intracorporate communications. (Dkt.No. 60 at 29.)
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-24
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 25 of 33
1 This includes the statements from Kennedy and Ashcraft's email correspondence (statements 1-
2 35; 43-48; 53-60; 69-75); the statement from an email between Kennedy and Hunsucker
3 (statement 87); and the statement sourced from Kennedy's tentative termination letter(statement
4 77). (Dkt.No. 63-1 at 17-40.) The statements from emails exchanged between Plaintiff and
5 Macintyre(statements 81-83)about the JCPAO's communication policy are not only covered by
6 the common interest privilege, but also were made to Plaintiff herself. (Id. at 63.) In Plaintiff's
7 reply to Defendant's motion for summary judgement, Plaintiff did not respond to any of
8 Defendant's arguments asserting these statements were privileged. (See generally Dkt.No. 68.)
9 Many of the allegedly libelous statements identified by Plaintiff originate in Defendants'
10 Answer(Dkt.No. 14)and its appendices. (See Dkt.No.63-1 at 17-40)(identifying statements
11 36-42; 49-53; 61-68; and 79 as originating in litigation documents from this case). Similarly,
12 statements 84 and 85 are from Jefferson County's response to Plaintiff's motion in Jefferson
13 County Superior Court to enjoin the release of her termination files. (Dkt.No. 62-1 at 119-120.)
14 "Allegedly libelous statements, spoken or written by a party or counsel in the course of a judicial
15 proceeding, are absolutely privileged if they are pertinent or material to the redress or relief
16 sought, whether or not the statements are legally sufficient to obtain that relief." Southcenter
17 Joint Venture v. Nat'l Democratic Pol'y Comm., 780 P.2d 1282, 1292 (1989)(quoting McNeal v.
18 Allen, 621 P.2d 1285, 1286 (1980)). These statements were made or used in litigation and are
19 therefore privileged. Statements 76, 88, and 89 are quotations from the Jefferson County
20 Superior Court filings that were published in the Port Townsend Leader. (Dkt.No. 68-1 at 70-
21 72.) Thus, statements 76, 88 and 89—made during a public judicial proceeding and reported by
22 the press—are likewise not subject to a libel claim. Finally, Plaintiff's allegation that statement
23 85—which Plaintiff herself made in an intracorporate email—was"published out of context" in
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-25
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 26 of 33
1 the Port Townsend Leader similarly fails, as the Leader was quoting the absolutely privileged
2 Superior Court documents.
3 Lastly, statements 78 through 80 are from a police report filed by Defendant Kennedy
4 regarding an alleged hit-and-run incident involving Plaintiff and a JCPAO staff member. As an
5 initial matter, statements 79 and 80 do not appear to have been made by any Defendant who was
6 served with process, and thus the Court does not have personal jurisdiction to make findings.
7 See Fed. R. Civ. P. 4. As to statement 78—"I heard a very loud `crunch,' and I knew
8 immediately what had just occurred. I didn't see the collision. I knew Ms. St. Marie had just
9 backed into a gray Subaru"(Dkt.No. 63-1 at 36)—Plaintiff fails to offer"specific, material
10 facts,rather than conclusory statements, that would allow a jury to find that each element of
11 defamation exists."Marquez, 2018 WL 741321 at *7. She provides no evidence of falsity
12 beyond the account of the incident provided in her declaration, in which she claims to have
13 "barely tapped DPA Phillips car." (Dkt.No 69 at 30.) She also puts forward no evidence of
14 special or actual damages, which"must be alleged and proved"to avoid summary judgement
15 when the allegedly defamatory words are not libelous per se. Haueter v. Cowles Pub. Co., 811
16 P.2d 231, 235 (Wash. Ct. App. 1991)(citing Purvis v. Bremer's, Inc., 344 P.2d 705, 708 (1959)).
17 Thus, Plaintiff has failed to create a genuine issue of fact as to multiple, required elements of the
18 defamation claim.5
19 2. Complaint Allegations of Libel not in the 89 Statements
20
21
22 5 This section addresses every statement except for statement 86. Statement 86 is from
Rowlson's post-termination email relating to health insurance benefits. (Dkt.No. 62-1 at 120.)
23 Rowlson indicates the final date of Plaintiff's healthcare coverage in the email. (Id.) The
statement does not appear to be about Plaintiff, but rather about her healthcare coverage. Thus,
24 this statement is not libel as a matter of law.
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-26
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 27 of 33
1 Plaintiff alleges Defendants produced her termination file"in response to [a] public
2 record request [that] contained Kennedy and Ashcraft's emails denigrating the Plaintiff's
3 intellect,abilities, and personality." (Dkt No. 1 at 27.) Defendants argue Plaintiff's claim "is
4 frivolous because Plaintiff knows nothing was disclosed to Shoop."(Dkt.No 60 at 28.) Plaintiff
5 neither responds to this argument nor identifies any facts in the record indicating a genuine
6 dispute of fact. The Superior Court's memorandum opinion affirms Defendants' assertion that
7 nothing was disclosed: "the requester chose not to intervene and withdrew his records request."
8 (Dkt. No. 60-1 at 3.) Because nothing was disclosed, there can be no finding of libel as to this
9 claim.
10 3. Defendant's Request for Sanctions and Attorney's Fees
I I Defendants move for sanctions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(b) and
12 attorney's fees and damages under Washington's Anti-SLAPP statute. First, Defendants argue
13 that Plaintiff filing"a pleading that alleges a disclosure was made to Shoop when the Court in
14 Plaintiffs own Public Records Act Lawsuit found no such disclosure took place"violated the
15 requirement under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(b)(3)that"a party that files a pleading
16 certifies that he has reasonably inquired into the truth of its factual allegations." (Dkt. No. 60 at
17 28.) Second, Defendants argue that they are entitled to recovery of attorney's fees and a damage
18 award under the Anti-SLAPP statute, Washington Revised Code § 4.24.510. (Id. at 30).
19 Specifically, Defendants assert that because 30 out of the 89 allegedly defamatory statements
20 were sourced from Defendant's answer or Defendant Kennedy's police report, they are entitled
21 to$300,000 in statutory damages. (Id.) Plaintiff responds that the Anti-SLAPP statute"has no
22 application to Plaintiffs claims here and does not provide a basis to penalize the plaintiff for her
23 claims." (Dkt.No. 68 at 24.)
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-27
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 28 of 33
1 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(c)(2)provides that"[a] motion for sanctions must be
2 made separately from any other motion and must describe the specific conduct that allegedly
3 violates Rule 11(b)." Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(c)(2). Because Defendants request sanctions as part of
4 their motion for summary judgement rather than in a separate motion, the court must deny the
5 request for sanctions.
6 Washington's Anti-SLAPP statute"immunizes a `person' who communicates a
7 complaint or information to a branch or agency of the federal, state, or local government from
8 civil liability." Segaline v. State, Dep't of Labor and Industries, 238 P.3d 1107, 1110(Wash.
9 2010)(citing Wash. Rev. Code §4.24.510.). "The purpose of[the statute] is to protect citizens
10 who come forward with information that will help make law enforcement and government more
11 efficient and more effective." K.M.P. by& through Pinho v. Big Brother Big Sisters of Puget
12 Sound, 483 P.3d 119, 124(Wash. Ct. App.2021). Although the statute may have been
13 applicable to the allegedly libelous statement in Defendant Kennedy's police report, Defendants
14 failed to raise the statute as an affirmative defense and thus waived it. "Federal Rule of Civil
15 Procedure 8(a) and(c)provide that a defendant's failure to raise an `affirmative defense' in his
16 answer effects a waiver of that defense." In re Adbox, Inc. 488 F.3d 836, 841 (9th Cir. 2007). In
17 this case, Defendants should have become aware of the potential applicability of the statute after
18 receiving discovery responses in February 2023. Yet they never moved to amend their
19 pleadings, thus waiving the defense. See, e.g., Estate of Filion ex rel. Filion v. Johnson,2014
20 WL 1910470, at *2 (Wash. Ct. App. 2014)(finding that Defendant's failure to assert
21 Washington's Anti-SLAPP statute as an affirmative defense constituted waiver, preventing
22 Defendant from raising the defense at trial). Accordingly, Defendant's request for attorney's
23 fees and damages under Washington Revised Code § 4.24.510 is DENIED.
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-28
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 29 of 33
All told, because Plaintiff failed to raise a genuine dispute of material fact as to her libel
2 claim,the Court DISMISSES the claim on summary judgement. The Court DENIES
3 Defendant's request for sanctions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(b) and DENIES
4 attorney's fees and statutory damages pursuant to Washington Revised Code § 4.24.510.
5 I. Negligence and Negligent Hiring Claims(Claims 11 and 14)
6 Defendants argue"Plaintiffs eleventh and fourteenth claims are . . . threadbare"and
7 "fail . . . because they fail the requirement of Twombly and Igbal"(Dkt.No. 60 at 34), but focus
8 their attention on Plaintiff's negligence and negligent hiring assertions. To prove negligence, a
9 Plaintiff must show: "(1)the existence of a duty owed to the complaining party; (2)a breach
10 thereof; (3)a resulting injury; and(4)a proximate cause between the claimed breach and
11 resulting injury." King v. Garfield Cnty. Pub. Hosp. Dist. No. 1, 15 F. Supp. 3d 1111, 1115
12 (E.D. Wash. 2014) (citing Pedroza v. Bryant, 677 P.2d 166, 168 (Wash. 1984)). To prove
13 negligent hiring, "a plaintiff must show that the employer had knowledge of the employee's
14 unfitness or failed to exercise reasonable care to discover unfitness before hiring or retaining the
15 employee." Anderson v. Soap Lake Sch. Dist., 423 P.3d 197, 206(Wash. 2018). To the extent
16 Plaintiff alleges her negligence claim stems from Macintyre's conduct, Plaintiff fails to put forth
17 facts indicating Macintyre breached any duty owed to Plaintiff. (See Dkt.No. 68 at 24.)
18 Likewise, Plaintiff puts forward no facts on the record indicating that Macintyre was unfit or that
19 Defendants were aware of such unfitness. (Id.)
20 As to the remainder of the claims contained in Claim 11,the Court agrees with
21 Defendants. Plaintiff has failed to put forth facts towards the negligent supervision, negligent
22 retention, and failure to train actions also found in Claim 11.
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-29
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 30 of 33
1 Accordingly,the court DISMISSES Plaintiff's claims for negligence,negligent hiring.
2 negligent supervision, negligent retention, and failure to train.
3 J. Outrage Claim (Claim 12)
4 Under Washington law, "[t]he tort of outrage requires the proof of three elements: (1)
5 extreme and outrageous conduct, (2) intentional or reckless infliction of emotional distress, and
6 (3)actual result to plaintiff of severe emotional distress." Kloepfel v. Bokor, 66 P.3d 630, 632
7 (Wash. 2003). "The first element requires proof that the conduct was 'so outrageous in
8 character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency, and to be
9 regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.' Robel, 59 P.3d at 619
10 (quoting Dicomes v. State, 782 P.2d 1002(Wash. 1989)). Accordingly,"the tort of outrage 'does
I I not extend to mere insults, indignities,threats, annoyances, petty oppressions, or other
12 trivialities'because the law expects plaintiffs to "be hardened to a certain degree of rough
13 language, unkindness and lack of consideration." Kloepfel, 66 P.3d at 632(quoting Grimsby v.
14 Samson, 530 P.2d 291,295 (Wash. 1975)). The conduct must be such that"the recitation of the
15 facts to an average member of the community would arouse his resentment against the actor and
16 lead him to exclaim `Outrageous!'Kloepfel, 66 P.3d at 632 (quoting Reid v. Pierce Cnty., 961
17 P.2d 333, 337(Wash. 1998)).
18 Plaintiff's outrage claim stems from two instances: "Macintyre's refusal to engage
19 professionally"and the events surrounding her termination. (Dkt.No. 1 at 51.) The court
20 previously dismissed the complaint as to Macintyre, finding that her communications were not
21 outrageous. (Dkt.No. 43 at 9.) Regarding the claim of outrage based on Plaintiff's termination,
22 Washington courts hold that common law tort claims—such as outrage and emotional distress-
23 cannot be based on the same facts underlaying a plaintiff's claim for unlawful discrimination
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-30
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 31 of 33
1 under the WLAD. See Arthur v. Whitman Cnty.24 F.Supp 3d 1024, 1034 (E.D. Wash.2014)
2 ("Because the factual basis for Plaintiff's outrage and NIED claims is the same as her WLAD
3 hostile work environment and retaliation claims, her avenue for recovery is limited to her WLAD
4 claims.");Id. at 1039 ("Plaintiffs' common law claims for outrage and NIED are DISMISSED as
5 being duplicative of her WLAD hostile work environment and retaliation claims");Anaya v.
6 Graham, 950 P.2d 16, 20 (Wash. Ct.App. 998)("[T]he outrage claim duplicates the
7 discrimination claim. We affirm the dismissal on that basis[.]");Francom v. Costco Wholesale
8 Corp., 991 P.2d 1182, 1192 (Wash. Ct. App. 2000). Here, Plaintiffs outrage arises directly from
9 the events that underlie her claims under the WLAD. Accordingly, it is duplicative and must
10 properly be dismissed. Moreover,nothing in the facts, even viewed in the light most favorable
11 to Plaintiff, indicates that her manner of discharge was"so outrageous in character, and so
12 extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as
13 atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community."Robel 59 P.3d at 619(quoting
14 Dicomes v. State, 782 P.2d 1002, 1012 (1989)).
15 Accordingly,the Court DISMISSES Plaintiffs outrage claim on summary judgement.
16 K. Tortious Interference with Business Expectancy Claim (Claim 13)
17 A Plaintiff claiming tortious interference with a business expectancy must prove: "(1)the
18 existence of a valid contractual relationship or business expectancy; (2)that defendants had
19 knowledge of that relationship; (3)an intentional interference inducing or causing a breach or
20 termination of the relationship or expectancy;(4)that defendants interfered for an improper
21 purpose or used improper means; and(5)resultant damage." Pac. Nw. Shooting Park Ass 144
22 P.3d 276, 280(Wash. 2006)(quoting Leingang v. Pierce Cnty. Med. Bureau, Inc., 930 P.2d 288,
23 300(Wash. 1997)). Regarding the third element, "[i]nterference with a business expectancy is
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-31
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 32 of 33
1 intentional if the actor desires to bring it about or if he knows that the interference is certain or
2 substantially certain to occur as a result of his action." Newton Ins. Agency& Brokerage, Inc. v.
3 Caledonian Ins. Grp., Inc., 52 P.3d 30, 34 (Wash. Ct. App. 2002). As to the fourth element,
4 "[i]nterference is for an improper purpose if it is wrongful by some measure beyond the
5 interference itself, such as a statute, regulation, recognized rule of common law, or an established
6 standard of trade or profession." Id.
7 Plaintiff fails to make out a prima facie case as to numerous elements of her claim.
8 Beyond stating generally that"Defendants knew of Plaintiff's business expectancy in a general
9 sense and with respect to clients who had already retained her,"Plaintiff fails to point to facts in
10 the record showing Defendants were aware of her client relationships. (Dkt.No. 68 at 21.) To
11 demonstrate the third prong, Plaintiff cites to an email from a client that states: "[b]ecause we
12 used Julie St.Marie as our lawyer, it seemed the entire county was against us." (Dkt.No. 68-1 at
13 114.) Although this suggests that she did lose clients, it does not establish that Defendants
14 "desire[d]"to bring about that outcome or knew it was"substantially certain." Newton, 52 P.3d
15 at 34. Likewise, Plaintiff does not put forward evidence that shows Defendants harbored "an
16 improper objective of harming the plaintiff"or pursued the"use of wrongful means that in fact
17 cause[d] injury to plaintiffs contractual or business relationship." Pleas v. City of Seattle, 774
18 P.2d 1158, 1163 (Wash. 1989). Plaintiff's general response that the"totality of circumstances
19 here demonstrates the defendant's improper purpose," is supported only by her own declaration
20 and account of the events. (Dkt.No. 68 at 21.) Thus, it fails to raise a genuine dispute of
21 material fact.
22 Accordingly,the Court DISMISSES Plaintiffs claim for negligent interference with a
23 business expectancy on summary judgement.
24
ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-32
Case 3:22-cv-05893-DGE Document 80 Filed 08/29/24 Page 33 of 33
1 IV. CONCLUSION
2 For the reasons stated above, the Court GRANTS Defendants' motion for summary
3 judgment in its entirety. All of Plaintiff's remaining claims are DISMISSED as a matter of law.
4 The Court DENIES Defendants' request for sanctions and attomey's fees.
5 Dated this 29th day of August 2024.
7
8 David G. Estudillo
United States District Judge
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ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT(DKT.NO.60)-33