Brent Randall Phillips v. Hon. o'neil/state Bar ( 2017 )


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  •                                   IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
    BRENT RANDALL PHILLIPS,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    THE HONORABLE WILLIAM O’NEIL, PRESIDING DISCIPLINARY JUDGE,
    Respondent Judge,
    STATE BAR OF ARIZONA,
    Real Party in Interest.
    No. CV-17-0122-SA
    Filed December 20, 2017
    Special Action from the Office of the Presiding Disciplinary Judge
    No. PDJ2016-9128
    JURISDICTION ACCEPTED; RELIEF GRANTED
    COUNSEL:
    Ralph Adams (argued), Karen Clark (argued), Adams & Clark, PC,
    Phoenix, Attorneys for Brent Randall Phillips
    James D. Lee (argued), Senior Bar Counsel, Attorney for State Bar of
    Arizona
    Mark Brnovich, Arizona Attorney General, Dominic E. Draye, Solicitor
    General, Jennifer M. Perkins (argued), Assistant Solicitor General, Phoenix,
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae State of Arizona
    JUSTICE LOPEZ authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF
    JUSTICE BALES, VICE CHIEF JUSTICE PELANDER, and JUSTICES
    BRUTINEL, TIMMER, and GOULD joined. JUSTICE BOLICK dissented.
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, opinion of the Court:
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶1            This case concerns the application of Arizona Rules of
    Evidence 408 and 613 when the State Bar of Arizona seeks to use a consent
    judgment entered in another matter in attorney disciplinary proceedings.
    We hold that Rule 408 precludes use of a consent judgment to prove
    substantive facts to establish liability for a subsequent claim, and a consent
    judgment likewise cannot be used for impeachment purposes under Rule
    613.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2             Disciplinary proceedings are currently pending against
    attorney Brent Phillips before the Presiding Disciplinary Judge (“PDJ”).
    Prior to these proceedings, the Arizona Attorney General sued Phillips for
    violations of the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act (“CFA”), A.R.S. §§ 44-1521
    to -1534. The state alleged that he mailed deceptive advertisements to
    Arizona consumers. Among other violations, the advertisements led
    consumers to mistakenly believe they were eligible for mortgage payment
    or interest rate deductions and were worded in a way that made some
    consumers think the mortgage lenders sent the advertisements. The
    advertisements also made the program look selective when it was not, and
    Phillips’ fee agreements required consumers to pay attorney fees up front,
    even if the lender ultimately denied the application to modify the
    consumers’ mortgage loan terms. The disciplinary proceedings also relate
    to this conduct.
    ¶3            To resolve the Attorney General’s CFA action, Phillips agreed
    to a consent judgment (“Judgment”). The Judgment waived Phillips’ right
    to a trial, admitted that his actions violated the CFA and a federal
    regulation, and required him to pay restitution, attorney fees, and civil
    penalties. The Judgment also precluded its use in most other proceedings:
    With the exceptions of paragraphs 12 and 13 above and the
    State’s enforcement of this Consent Judgment, this Consent
    Judgment is not and shall not in any event be used as an
    admission or evidence of any alleged wrongdoing or liability
    by defendant Brent Randall Phillips, defendant Phillips Law
    Center, and defendant Farmer’s Law Group in any other civil,
    criminal, or administrative court, administrative agency or
    other tribunal anywhere in the United States of America.
    2
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶4            Paragraphs 12 and 13 concern the state’s rights to enforce the
    Judgment during a bankruptcy proceeding or subsequent civil litigation.
    The parties stipulated that the Judgment was the result of a compromise
    and settlement agreement and that only the parties could seek its
    enforcement.
    ¶5           During attorney disciplinary proceedings before the PDJ,
    Phillips’ counsel moved in limine to preclude the State Bar from
    introducing the Judgment into evidence for any purpose. The State Bar
    opposed the motion, arguing it should be allowed to use the Judgment to
    impeach Phillips’ testimony if it differed from the facts contained in the
    Judgment. The PDJ ruled in favor of the State Bar, allowing it to introduce
    the Judgment’s stipulated facts (but not the sanctions) for impeachment
    purposes.
    ¶6             In his order, the PDJ recognized that the Judgment’s terms
    precluded its use “as an admission or evidence of any alleged wrongdoing
    or liability” by Phillips. The PDJ concluded, however, that Rule 408 does
    not render the stipulated facts inadmissible because the Judgment is being
    used for a different purpose than in the Attorney General’s original “claim.”
    Finally, the PDJ quoted Rule 613(b), emphasizing that extrinsic evidence of
    a witness’s prior inconsistent statement is admissible “if justice so
    requires.”
    ¶7            We accepted special action jurisdiction because this case
    presents a legal issue of statewide importance that is likely to recur. We
    have jurisdiction pursuant to article 6, section 5(3) of the Arizona
    Constitution.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶8            Attorney disciplinary proceedings “are neither civil nor
    criminal, but are sui generis,” and the rules of evidence apply in such
    proceedings “as far as practicable.” Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. 48(a), (c). We review
    de novo the interpretation of court rules. State v. Fitzgerald, 
    232 Ariz. 208
    ,
    210 ¶ 10 (2013). “We interpret court rules according to the principles of
    statutory construction.” State v. Aguilar, 
    209 Ariz. 40
    , 47 ¶ 23 (2004). Under
    those principles, when a rule is unambiguous, “we apply it without further
    analysis.” Wade v. Ariz. State Ret. Sys., 
    241 Ariz. 559
    , 561 ¶ 10 (2017) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). If a rule is ambiguous the Court may consider
    3
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    its “subject matter, legislative history, and purpose, as well as the effect of
    different interpretations, to derive its meaning.” Fleming v. State Dep’t of
    Pub. Safety, 
    237 Ariz. 414
    , 417 ¶ 12 (2015) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    I.      Arizona Rule of Evidence 408
    ¶9              Rule 408(a) provides:
    Prohibited Uses. Evidence of the following is not admissible—on
    behalf of any party—either to prove or disprove the validity or
    amount of a disputed claim or to impeach by a prior inconsistent
    statement or a contradiction:
    (1) furnishing, promising, or offering—or accepting, promising to
    accept, or offering to accept—a valuable consideration in
    compromising or attempting to compromise the claim; and
    (2) conduct or a statement made during compromise negotiations
    about the claim.
    ¶10           By its terms, Rule 408(a)(1) indicates that consent judgments
    cannot be introduced to prove substantive facts to establish liability for a
    disputed claim. See Michael H. Graham, 3 Handbook of Federal Evidence
    § 408:1 (8th ed. 2017) (“Pursuant to Rule 408(a)(1) neither the furnishing,
    promising, or offering, or accepting, promising to accept a valuable
    consideration in compromising or attempting to compromise the claim, nor
    the completed compromise itself is admissible to prove or disprove the
    validity or amount of a disputed claim.”). Subsection (a)(1) renders
    inadmissible “[e]vidence of . . . accepting . . . a valuable consideration in
    compromising . . . the claim.” Ariz. R. Evid. 408(a)(1). The Judgment
    reflects evidence of an exchange of “valuable consideration” between the
    state and Phillips. Phillips waived his right to a trial, admitted violating the
    CFA and a federal regulation, and agreed to pay restitution, fees, and
    penalties in exchange for mitigating liability and settling the state’s action.
    ¶11           The dissent contends that if the drafters of Rule 408 intended
    the rule to cover consent judgments and settlement agreements in addition
    to their preceding offers and negotiations, they would have said so
    explicitly. ¶ 31, infra. But this view ignores the “general terms” canon of
    statutory construction. That canon “is based on the reality that it is possible
    and useful to formulate categories (e.g., ‘dangerous weapons’) without
    knowing all the items that may fit—or may later, once invented, come to
    4
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    fit—within those categories.” Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading
    Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 101 (2012). The purpose of using
    general terms “is to produce general coverage—not to leave room for courts
    to recognize ad hoc exceptions.” 
    Id. Here, the
    drafters of Rule 408 used
    general terms—“evidence” and “valuable consideration”—to encompass
    the wide range of provisions that parties may offer and accept to reach
    settlements. By excluding consent judgments and settlement agreements
    from the general language of Rule 408, the dissent would find an ad hoc
    exception to the rule in violation of the general terms canon. And to what
    end? The practice of finding such exceptions in the context of Rule 408
    would produce great uncertainty in the rule’s application and undermine
    its policy of promoting settlement and compromise.
    ¶12             The dissent also claims that the rule’s heading, “Compromise
    Offers and Negotiations,” limits its application to evidence of offers and
    negotiations. ¶ 31, infra. Yet titles and headings “are but tools available for
    the resolution of a doubt. But they cannot undo or limit that which the text
    makes plain.” Bhd. of R.R. Trainmen v. Balt. & O.R. Co., 
    331 U.S. 519
    , 528–29
    (1947); see also State ex rel. Romley v. Hauser, 
    209 Ariz. 539
    , 542–43 ¶ 16 (2005)
    (declining to find a statute’s title persuasive when it was inconsistent with
    the text of the statute); Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The
    Interpretation of Legal Texts 221–22 (2012) (stating that although titles and
    headings “are useful navigational aids,” “a title or heading should never be
    allowed to override the plain words of a text”). As discussed above, Rule
    408(a)(1) expressly renders inadmissible evidence of “accepting” an offer to
    compromise a claim. The rule would not distinguish between evidence of
    “compromising” and “attempting to compromise” a claim unless it was
    intended to apply to completed settlements like the Judgment.
    ¶13            Even if Rule 408 were ambiguous, which it is not, secondary
    methods of interpretation and caselaw interpreting Federal Rule 408 further
    support our interpretation of the Arizona rule. When we interpret an
    evidentiary rule that largely mirrors a Federal Rule of Evidence, we look to
    the federal rule and its interpretation by federal courts for guidance. State
    v. Salazar-Mercado, 
    234 Ariz. 590
    , 592–93 ¶ 7 (2014); State v. Green, 
    200 Ariz. 496
    , 498 ¶ 10 (2001). We also “subscribe to the principle that uniformity in
    interpretation of our rules and the federal rules is highly desirable.” Orme
    Sch. v. Reeves, 
    166 Ariz. 301
    , 304 (1990).
    5
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶14            Arizona modeled Rule 408 after its federal counterpart. See
    Ariz. R. Evid. 408 cmt. to 2012 amendment (“[T]he language of Rule 408 has
    been amended to conform to the federal restyling of the Evidence Rules to
    make them more easily understood and to make style and terminology
    consistent throughout the rules.”). The only difference between the state
    and federal versions of Rule 408 is that Arizona’s rule does not include the
    “criminal use exception” set forth in Federal Rule 408(a)(2). 
    Id. We therefore
    look to Federal Rule 408 and its interpretation by federal courts to
    aid our interpretation of the Arizona rule.
    ¶15           According to the federal Advisory Committee on Rules of
    Evidence, the purpose of Rule 408 is to encourage “the compromise and
    settlement of disputes.” Fed. R. Evid. 408 advisory committee’s note to 1972
    proposed rules; see also Miller v. Kelly, 
    212 Ariz. 283
    , 287 ¶ 12 (App. 2006)
    (citing Fed. R. Evid. 408 advisory committee note). The policy underlying
    the rule operates to render evidence of a completed compromise
    inadmissible against all parties to that compromise. Fed. R. Evid. 408
    advisory committee’s note to 1972 proposed rules (“While the rule is
    ordinarily phrased in terms of offers of compromise, it is apparent that a
    similar attitude must be taken with respect to completed compromises
    when offered against a party thereto.”); see also 
    Miller, 212 Ariz. at 287
    ¶ 12
    (same); John C. Lincoln Hosp. & Health Corp. v. Maricopa Cty., 
    208 Ariz. 532
    ,
    536 ¶ 13 n.3 (App. 2004) (“[E]vidence of a settlement agreement otherwise
    precluded by Rule 408 may be offered for a purpose other than to prove or
    disprove liability or the validity of a claim . . . .”). With the policy of Rule
    408 in mind, we turn to the admissibility of consent judgments under the
    rule.
    ¶16            Since the rule’s adoption in 1975, federal courts consistently
    have held that Rule 408 bars the admission of consent judgments to prove
    substantive facts to establish liability for a claim. See, e.g., United States v.
    Gilbert, 
    668 F.2d 94
    , 97 (2d Cir. 1981); Buescher v. Baldwin Wallace Univ., 86 F.
    Supp. 3d 789, 796 (E.D. Ohio 2015); N.J. Tpk. Auth. v. PPG Indus., Inc., 16 F.
    Supp. 2d 460, 473 (D. N.J. 1998). This is not to say that the rule bars
    admission of consent judgments for all purposes. For example, in Johnson
    v. Hugo’s Skateway, 
    974 F.2d 1408
    (4th Cir. 1992), the Fourth Circuit held that
    a consent judgment was admissible to prove motive or intent under Federal
    Rule of Evidence 404(b). 
    Id. at 1413.
    Importantly, the court noted that
    admission of the consent judgment did not violate Rule 408 because it “was
    6
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    not admitted to prove the truth of the matters on which compromise had
    been reached.” 
    Id. ¶17 Likewise,
    in United States v. Austin, 
    54 F.3d 394
    (7th Cir. 1995),
    the Seventh Circuit held that the district court did not err in admitting a
    consent decree to prove the defendant was on notice that his conduct was
    wrongful because, although Rule 408 “prohibits the admission of
    statements made in the course of settlement to prove liability,” it allows the
    admission of a consent decree “when offered for another purpose.” 
    Id. at 400.
    According to the court, the consent decree “constituted a direct judicial
    admission to the accusation of fraud in the conduct underlying the
    indictment.” 
    Id. Courts interpreting
    Austin have focused on the fact that
    the consent decree in that case was not offered to prove liability, see, e.g.,
    N.J. Tpk. 
    Auth., 16 F. Supp. 2d at 473
    , and it likely would have been admitted
    under the since-enacted “criminal use exception” to Federal Rule of
    Evidence 408 (which Arizona has not adopted) because it was “offered in a
    criminal case,” and it was the product of settlement negotiations with the
    FTC, see Fed. R. Evid. 408(a)(2). Cf. 
    Gilbert, 668 F.2d at 97
    (holding that a
    consent decree is admissible under Rule 404(b) to prove knowledge of
    “reporting requirements involved in the decree,” but it may not be used “to
    prove liability for the claim”).
    ¶18           We agree with the foregoing cases interpreting Rule 408 as
    applying to consent judgments and hold that the rule precludes the use of
    a consent judgment’s substantive facts to establish liability for a subsequent
    claim. Our holding not only comports with the plain text of Rule 408(a)(1),
    but also promotes uniformity in the interpretation of the Federal and
    Arizona Rules of Evidence, see 
    Reeves, 166 Ariz. at 304
    , and advances the
    public policy underlying Rule 408. The State Bar’s position that consent
    judgments are admissible to prove substantive facts would undermine Rule
    408’s purpose by discouraging compromise and settlement.                   The
    knowledge that a consent judgment with a governmental agency could be
    used to prove wrongdoing in a subsequent administrative or disciplinary
    proceeding would almost certainly dissuade defendants from settling
    disputes. Rather than agree to a set of stipulated facts in a consent judgment
    and risk certain prejudice in later proceedings when those facts are used as
    an admission of liability, many defendants would opt to contest their cases
    instead of settling. By discouraging compromise and settlement, the State
    Bar’s interpretation of Rule 408 contravenes the rule’s purpose.
    7
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶19           Here, the State Bar seeks to use the Judgment’s stipulated
    facts to impeach Phillips’ testimony in disciplinary proceedings. Rule 408
    forbids this practice. Rule 408(a) expressly prohibits the use of such
    evidence “to impeach by a prior inconsistent statement or a contradiction.”
    As the Advisory Committee explained in the context of the federal rule,
    “broad impeachment would tend to swallow the exclusionary rule and
    would impair the public policy of promoting settlements.” Fed. R. Evid.
    408 advisory committee’s note to 2006 amendment. In fact, the State Bar
    acknowledged as much when it filed a petition with this Court in 2008 to
    amend Rule 408. It argued then that allowing the introduction of
    settlement-related communications into evidence for impeachment
    purposes “dilutes Rule 408’s substantive protections” and “diminishes Rule
    408’s value in encouraging settlement discussions.”
    ¶20            Moreover, the State Bar does not contend that it seeks to admit
    the stipulated facts of the Judgment for a purpose other than proving
    liability. Indeed, it seeks to use the stipulated facts to establish that Phillips’
    advertisements violated the Arizona Rules of Professional Conduct. This is
    the type of use that every federal court addressing the issue has, to our
    knowledge, deemed violative of Rule 408. The PDJ erred in finding the
    stipulated facts of the Judgment admissible to impeach Phillips’ testimony.
    ¶21            Citing Uforma/Shelby Business Forms, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    111 F.3d 1284
    (6th Cir. 1997), the State Bar argues that Rule 408 should not apply here
    because Phillips engaged in “inappropriate conduct” during settlement
    negotiations with the state by making false statements in the consent
    judgment. This argument is unpersuasive. Uforma held that Rule 408 does
    not apply “when the claim is based upon some wrong that was committed
    in the course of the settlement discussions; e.g., libel, assault, breach of
    contract, unfair labor practice, and the like.” 
    Id. at 1293
    (citations omitted).
    Here, the State Bar’s claim is not based on Phillips’ conduct during
    settlement negotiations with the Arizona Attorney General, but rather on
    the advertisements he sent to consumers in violation of Arizona law.
    Uforma is inapposite.
    ¶22           The State Bar also contends that Rule 408 does not apply here
    because its disciplinary proceedings do not involve the “same claim” as the
    Attorney General’s lawsuit, citing Broadcort Capital Corp. v. Summa Medical
    Corp., 
    972 F.2d 1183
    (10th Cir. 1992). We disagree. Broadcort held that
    Federal Rule of Evidence 408 did not bar the introduction of evidence
    8
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    related to settlement discussions involving “a different claim than the one
    at issue in the current trial.” 
    Id. at 1194.
    There, the evidence at issue was
    testimony regarding settlement negotiations of a different claim associated
    with a prior loan transaction. 
    Id. ¶23 Although
    Broadcort did not define “same claim,” the phrase
    has been defined in the claim preclusion context. We have previously
    observed that most federal courts, including the United States Supreme
    Court, have applied the transactional analysis of the Restatement (Second)
    of Judgments when the definition of a “claim” is legally significant. In re
    the Gen. Adjudication of All Rights to Use Water in the Gila River Sys. & Source,
    
    212 Ariz. 64
    , 71 ¶¶ 20–21 (2006); see also Armstrong v. HRB Royalty, Inc., 
    392 F. Supp. 2d 1302
    , 1306–07 (S.D. Ala. 2005) (discussing how the “same
    transaction” test is consistent with the “same claim” requirement of Rule
    408). Under the transactional analysis, the focus is on whether multiple
    claims arise out of a “common nucleus of operative facts.” Gila 
    River, 212 Ariz. at 71
    ¶¶ 20–21 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶24           In this case, applying the transactional analysis leads us to
    conclude that the two proceedings at issue involve the same claim. Unlike
    the evidence in Broadcort, which concerned an entirely different loan
    transaction, the State Bar’s claims here arose from the same set of operative
    facts underlying the CFA litigation. Specifically, both the Attorney
    General’s lawsuit and the State Bar’s disciplinary proceedings were
    brought to sanction Phillips for the advertisements he distributed.
    Although the sanctions Phillips may face from the State Bar differ from
    those in the civil proceeding the Attorney General brought, a difference in
    sanctions alone does not render a claim “different” for purposes of the
    transactional analysis. See 
    id. ¶¶ 19–21.
    We therefore find that none of the
    exceptions to Rule 408 allow the State Bar to admit the Judgment or its
    contents into evidence.
    ¶25           The State Bar also urges the Court to hold, for public policy
    reasons, that Rule 408 is inapplicable pursuant to Arizona Supreme Court
    Rule 48(c), which provides that the rules of evidence are applicable in
    attorney disciplinary proceedings “as far as practicable.” Phillips, the State
    Bar argues, should not be allowed to use Rule 408 as a “safe haven” to give
    conflicting or contradictory statements regarding his advertisements. We
    decline the State Bar’s request because it misapprehends the scope and
    purpose of Rule 48(c). The rule is merely a procedural streamlining
    9
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    provision that does not curtail the substantive application of the rules of
    evidence. Cf. In re Wilson, 
    76 Ariz. 49
    , 53 (1953) (construing Section 20, Rule
    1(C) of the Rules of the Supreme Court, the precursor to Rule 48(c), to
    provide “for a hearing that comports with the concept of due process yet
    leaving those charged with conducting the investigation free of the rigid
    rules governing proceedings in court. This is the meaning of the limitation
    on the use of the rules of evidence ‘as far as practicable’”). Accordingly, we
    decline to apply Rule 48(c) to allow admission of the Judgment in Phillips’
    disciplinary proceedings in a manner inconsistent with Rule 408.
    II.    Arizona Rule of Evidence 613
    ¶26           The State Bar next contends that the Judgment is admissible
    under Rule 613(b). It is not. Rule 613(b) provides, in relevant part,
    “[e]xtrinsic evidence of a witness’s prior inconsistent statement is
    admissible only if the witness is given an opportunity to explain or deny
    the statement and an adverse party is given an opportunity to examine the
    witness about it, or if justice so requires.”
    ¶27           In State v. Acree, 
    121 Ariz. 94
    (1978), we held that prior
    inconsistent statements, “unless inadmissible under some other rule, become
    substantive evidence usable for all purposes.” 
    Id. at 97
    (emphasis added).
    Here, as discussed above, the Judgment is inadmissible under Rule 408.
    Consequently, it is not admissible as substantive evidence under Rule
    613(b). The State Bar’s arguments under Rule 613 are unavailing.
    ¶28          The PDJ’s order implied that the stipulated facts from the
    Judgment are nevertheless admissible under Rule 613(b) because “justice so
    requires.” We disagree. There is nothing unjust about requiring the State
    Bar to prove its case—as it generally must do in attorney disciplinary
    proceedings—against Phillips without the stipulated facts from the
    Judgment. To the extent the PDJ’s order invokes Rule 613(b)’s “justice so
    requires” language to prevent Phillips from admitting facts in a civil
    proceeding to mitigate liability and then denying them in a subsequent
    disciplinary proceeding, Rule 408 does not permit it. Rule 408’s text
    expressly precludes the use of the Judgment to impeach Phillips and the
    policy underlying the rule balances the risk of such an outcome in favor of
    encouraging the compromise and settlement of disputes.
    10
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    Opinion of the Court
    CONCLUSION
    ¶29          We accept jurisdiction of this special action and grant relief by
    vacating the PDJ’s order denying Phillips’ motion in limine. The PDJ is
    instructed to not permit use of the Judgment in the disciplinary
    proceedings.
    11
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    JUSTICE BOLICK, Dissenting
    BOLICK, J., dissenting.
    ¶30          When the Court finds it necessary to resort to federal cases,
    advisory comments to a federal rule, and multiple restatements to figure
    out what a rule of our own making means, something is seriously wrong.
    ¶31             I cannot join my colleagues in finding that Rule 408
    encompasses consent decrees and settlement agreements. The rule is titled
    “Compromise Offers and Negotiations,” and the provisions that follow
    encompass that limited subject matter and no other. A rule intended to
    apply to consent decrees would use that or a similar term, not the
    cumbersome verbiage cited by the majority. Supra ¶ 9–10 (finding “consent
    decree” in the language of Rule 408(a)(1) (“furnishing, promising, or
    offering—or accepting, promising to accept, or offering to accept—a
    valuable consideration in compromising or attempting to compromise the
    claim”)). Moreover, the rule’s prohibitions are limited to “the claim,” and
    do not by their terms extend to its “nucleus” or to other lawsuits. See supra
    ¶ 23. “When the language is plain, we have no right to insert words and
    phrases, so as to incorporate in the statute a new and distinct provision.”
    United States v. Temple, 
    105 U.S. 97
    , 99 (1881); see also Sw. Iron & Steel Indus.,
    Inc. v. State, 
    123 Ariz. 78
    , 79–80 (1979) (“[T]he expression of one or more
    items of a class and the exclusion of other items of the same class implies
    the legislative intent to exclude those items not so included.”); Antonin
    Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 93
    (2012) (“The principle that a matter not covered is not covered is so obvious
    that it seems absurd to recite it.”).
    ¶32           I acknowledge, as my colleagues ably demonstrate, that for
    purposes of policy or expediency, multiple authorities have interpreted the
    federal counterpart to Rule 408 to encompass consent decrees even though
    no such language appears in the federal rule either. See, e.g., supra ¶ 15
    (“While the rule is ordinarily phrased in terms of offers of compromise, it
    is apparent that a similar attitude must be taken with respect to completed
    compromises when offered against a party thereto.” (quoting Fed. R. Evid.
    408 advisory committee’s note to 1972 proposed rules)). That a path is well-
    trod does not mean it should be followed. The categorical rule adopted by
    the Court today—that Rule 408 “precludes the use of a consent judgment
    to prove substantive facts” in any legal setting involving a claim with a
    “common nucleus” (supra ¶¶ 18, 23)—is momentous and raises significant
    policy questions that we cannot adequately consider in fact-bound
    12
    PHILLIPS V. HON. O’NEIL/STATE BAR
    JUSTICE BOLICK, Dissenting
    litigation. The outcome here may very well be correct, given that this case
    involves one state actor using another’s consent decree to prove facts in a
    separate legal action when the decree contains language prohibiting such
    use. But the consequences of rewriting Rule 408 will extend far beyond the
    facts and parties before us.
    ¶33           There is a far better approach.          Unlike statutes and
    constitutional provisions, whose policies we are oath-bound to enforce, the
    Court is authorized by Arizona Constitution article 6, section 5(5) to make
    procedural rules. Toward that end, this Court established a Standing
    Committee on the Rules of Evidence, charged with “consider[ing] future
    amendment of the rules based on changes to the Federal Rules of Evidence
    or evolving case law.” In re Establishment of the Advisory Comm. on Rules of
    Evidence, Admin. Order No. 2012-43 (2012). Case law has evolved the
    meaning of Rule 408 but the rule’s language remains unchanged. In our
    rulemaking proceedings we consider a wide array of perspectives that
    allow us to carefully weigh the full ramifications of our policy choices. It is
    a very simple yet deliberative process and far preferable to case-by-case rule
    revisions. Best of all, it can produce rules whose meaning is readily
    apparent on their face.
    ¶34             Access to justice requires clarity in our procedural rules. We
    should unfailingly hold ourselves to the standard of rules that say what
    they mean and mean what they say. Construing Rule 408 to encompass
    consent decrees flunks that standard. Not only does the rule’s language fail
    to provide notice of the new and expanded scope given to it by the Court
    today, an attorney or layperson consulting the index to the Rules of
    Evidence for provisions pertaining to consent decrees or settlement
    agreements would (unsurprisingly) find no reference to Rule 408. When
    one cannot rely on a rule’s words to determine their meaning, but instead
    must read our decisions to figure out how we have changed the meaning
    without having changed the rules themselves, we have failed a core part of
    our mission. See Allen v. Sanders, 
    240 Ariz. 569
    , 573–75 ¶¶ 22–30 (2016)
    (Bolick, J., concurring).
    ¶35           For the foregoing reasons, and with great respect to my
    colleagues, I dissent.
    13