Jprd Investments v. Dawit Tefferi And Jane Doe Tefferi ( 2021 )


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  • IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    JPRD INVESTMENTS, LLC, a
    Washington limited liability company,           No. 80407-3-I
    Respondent,                 DIVISION ONE
    v.                                 UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    DAWIT TEFFERI, individually and the
    marital community comprised of
    DAWIT TEFFERI and JANE DOE
    TEFFERI, husband and wife,
    Appellant.
    APPELWICK, J. — Tefferi argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to
    vacate a default judgment obtained against him by a debt collection agency. He
    argues the judgment is void for lack of personal jurisdiction due to insufficient
    service. Further, he argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to return
    funds garnished by JPRD because the underlying judgment was void. Both parties
    request attorney fees on appeal. We affirm.
    FACTS
    This case arises from a default judgment on a credit card debt that JPRD
    Investments LLC (JPRD) obtained against Dawit Tefferi.
    On March 4, 2008, JPRD purchased the right to collect on Tefferi’s credit
    card balance. That month, JPRD sent two letters addressed to Tefferi at a house
    No. 80407-3-I/2
    he owned in Seattle.1 Neither letter was returned as undeliverable nor did the
    United States Postal Service provide JPRD with a forwarding address. Tefferi did
    not respond to the letters.
    On May 28, 2008, JPRD served a summons and complaint for the credit
    card balance on Tefferi at the Seattle house.        The process server left the
    documents with an “Alex Doe,” whom he identified as a “co[-]resident who refused
    to give his last name.”
    Tefferi disputes that he resided at the house at the time and claims he
    rented it to tenants. Tefferi did not produce any documentation evidencing a rental
    agreement or identifying any claimed tenants. Tefferi asserts that he lived in
    Washington, D.C., from 2006 until 2013. He supported this assertion with letters
    from his former property manager and employer in the D.C. area confirming his
    employment and tenancy at the time of service.
    On July 30, 2008, JPRD obtained a default judgment against Tefferi. On or
    about April 3, 2009, JPRD scheduled supplemental proceedings with Tefferi and
    posted them at the Seattle house. Three days later, Tefferi telephoned JPRD to
    discuss the proceedings. JPRD then garnished Tefferi.
    Shortly after the garnishment, Tefferi hired an attorney to discuss a
    settlement. JPRD argued because the attorney did not controvert the garnishment
    or move to vacate the judgment, Tefferi had waived his ability to seek return of the
    funds.
    1
    JPRD asserted at oral argument that it complied with postal regulations.
    We note that their compliance is uncontested, but we are unable to locate further
    documentation of that compliance in the record.
    2
    No. 80407-3-I/3
    In 2012, JPRD again garnished Tefferi. Tefferi signed and submitted an
    exemption claim. He listed his address as the Seattle house on the form and
    envelope.
    In 2019, Tefferi filed a motion to vacate judgment and return the garnished
    funds. Tefferi stated he had returned to Seattle and had only recently learned the
    funds taken from his account were a garnishment.
    At the hearing on Tefferi’s motion, the court noted the unappealed notice of
    service from 2008. It declined to order an evidentiary hearing, as the process
    server would likely have no memory of serving Tefferi 10 years later. It concluded
    there was enough evidence to find Tefferi had been properly served.
    The trial court entered an order denying Tefferi’s motion to vacate judgment
    and return funds garnished by JPRD.
    Tefferi appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    First, Tefferi argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to vacate the
    default judgment because it was void for lack of personal jurisdiction due to
    improper service. Second, he argues the writ of garnishment should be quashed
    and his funds returned with interest. Finally, both parties argue they are entitled
    to attorney fees and costs on appeal should they prevail.
    I. Motion to Vacate
    A default judgment entered without proper jurisdiction is void. Ahten v.
    Barnes, 
    158 Wn. App. 343
    , 349-50, 
    242 P.3d 35
     (2010). Courts have a mandatory,
    nondiscretionary duty to vacate void judgments. Id. at 350. So, a trial court's
    3
    No. 80407-3-I/4
    decision to grant or deny a CR 60(b) motion to vacate a default judgment for want
    of jurisdiction is reviewed de novo. Id. There is no time limit to bring a motion to
    vacate a void default judgment. Id.
    Personal service of the summons and complaint is required to establish the
    court’s personal jurisdiction over the defendant. CR 4(d)(2); Sutey v. T26 Corp.,
    13 Wn. App. 2d 737, 748-49, 
    466 P.3d 1096
    , review denied, 
    196 Wn.2d 1026
    (2020). When a defendant challenges service of process, the plaintiff has the initial
    burden of proof to establish a prima facie case of proper service. Northwick v.
    Long, 
    192 Wn. App. 256
    , 261, 
    364 P.3d 1067
     (2015). A plaintiff can establish a
    prima facie case by providing a declaration of a process server, regular in form
    and substance. 
    Id.
     Then the challenging party must show by clear and convincing
    evidence that service was improper. 
    Id.
     A facially correct return of service is
    presumed valid. Woodruff v. Spence, 
    88 Wn. App. 565
    , 571, 
    945 P.2d 745
     (1997).
    Proper service requires the plaintiff to serve the defendant personally or by
    leaving a copy of the summons at the defendant’s “house of his or her usual abode
    with some person of suitable age and discretion then resident therein.” RCW
    4.28.080(16).
    Here, JPRD provided the declaration of a process server stating that an
    “Alex Doe” was served with a copy of the summons and complaint. He was listed
    by the process server as Tefferi’s “co[-]resident.”
    Tefferi acknowledges that where a facially valid declaration of service has
    been made, the burden of proof normally shifts to the party challenging service.
    But, quoting Farmer v. Davis, he argues this rule is meant to prevent “judgments
    4
    No. 80407-3-I/5
    from contrived attack at a time when the attack may be hard to contradict if the
    memory of the plaintiff’s witness to the service has faded.” 
    161 Wn. App. 420
    , 429,
    
    250 P.3d 138
     (2011). He argues none of the facts observed by JPRD’s process
    server are in question and the declaration does not allege the service was given
    to Tefferi.
    However, the declaration does list an “Alex Doe” as his “co[-]resident,” a
    fact Tefferi disputes. And, as the trial court noted, it would be unlikely that the
    process server would be able to recall over a decade later what “Alex Doe” had
    said to indicate that he and Tefferi both resided at the Seattle house at that time.
    This foreclosed the usefulness of other potential actions the court might take, such
    as holding an evidentiary hearing. The policy considerations at the heart of the
    burden shifting rule still apply to the facts at issue here.
    We conclude that by providing a declaration of its process server, JPRD
    established a prima facie case that service was proper. So, in order to prevail,
    Tefferi must demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that “Alex Doe” was
    not served as co-resident at Tefferi’s usual place of abode.
    The term “usual place of abode” is to be liberally construed to effectuate
    service and uphold jurisdiction. Sheldon v. Fettig, 
    129 Wn.2d 601
    , 609, 
    919 P.2d 1209
     (1996). It means such center of one’s domestic activity that service left with
    a family member is reasonably calculated to come to one’s attention within the
    statutory period for the defendant to appear. Id. at 610.
    5
    No. 80407-3-I/6
    Tefferi argues despite owning the Seattle house, it was not his center of
    domestic activity when JPRD purported to serve him in May 2008. Tefferi points
    to “ample direct evidence” of his new center of domestic activity in Washington,
    D.C., including a utility bill, a lease agreement, and a letter confirming his
    employment.
    It is possible for a defendant to have more than one house of abode under
    RCW 4.28.080(16). In Sheldon, our Supreme Court held that while “most people
    generally maintain only one house of usual abode for service of process purposes,
    we recognize under certain circumstances a defendant can maintain more than
    one house of usual abode.” 
    129 Wn. 2d at 611
    .
    Tefferi argues Sheldon is distinguishable. Defendant Fettig was a flight
    attendant who maintained a home in Chicago. Sheldon, 
    129 Wn. 2d at 612
    . She
    also received mail and calls at her parents’ Spokane home, where she resided
    almost one week out of each month. 
    Id. at 605-06
    . The court held these facts,
    along with her “highly mobile” profession, resulted in her maintaining more than
    one house of usual abode. 
    Id. at 612
    .
    Tefferi argues his circumstances are nothing like Fettig’s. Unlike an adult
    child who sometimes resides in his or her parents’ home, the Seattle house was a
    “rental house” he did not share with his “tenant.” He argues there is no evidence
    of his co-residency with “Alex Doe.”
    Still, the declaration of the process server, which is valid on its face,
    declared “Alex Doe” to be a co-resident of Tefferi’s at the time of service. Tefferi
    offered no proof that he in fact rented the house to anyone at the time of service.
    6
    No. 80407-3-I/7
    Nor did he provide any evidence indicating who “Alex Doe” was in order to dispute
    that Alex could be properly served or Alex’s status as his “co-resident.”
    The 2008 letters JPRD sent to the Seattle house were not returned and no
    forwarding address was provided. And, Tefferi does not dispute that three days
    after supplemental proceedings were posted at the Seattle house in 2009, he
    contacted JPRD.      This occurred while Tefferi asserts he was still living in
    Washington, D.C., under similar circumstances to 2008. It would appear that he
    was aware of correspondence addressed to him by JPRD at the Seattle house.
    Tefferi has not foreclosed the possibility of a co-residency with “Alex Doe”
    or circumstances under which he could be found to have more than one house of
    usual abode. Although there is evidence that Tefferi resided in Washington, D.C.,
    Tefferi has not proven defective service by the heightened burden of clear and
    convincing evidence.
    We affirm the order denying Tefferi’s motion to vacate the default judgment
    and decline to order JPRD to return Tefferi’s garnished funds with interest.
    II. Attorney Fees
    Both parties requested reasonable attorney fees should they prevail on
    appeal. Since Tefferi does not prevail, we deny his claim. JPRD claims fees under
    the original cardholder agreement.
    Attorney fees on appeal can be awarded if law, contract, or equity permits
    an award of fees. Hwang v. McMahill, 
    103 Wn. App. 945
    , 954, 
    15 P.3d 172
     (2000);
    RAP 18.1(a). Where a contract specifically provides that attorney fees and costs,
    incurred to enforce the provisions of the contract, shall be awarded to one of the
    7
    No. 80407-3-I/8
    parties, the prevailing party is entitled to reasonable attorney fees, regardless of
    whether the prevailing party is specified in the contract. RCW 4.84.330. “A party
    may be awarded attorney fees based on a contractual fee provision at the trial and
    appellate level.” Renfro v. Kaur, 
    156 Wn. App. 655
    , 666-67, 
    235 P.3d 800
     (2010).
    The original default judgment concerns credit card debt JPRD obtained
    against Tefferi. That debt arises from and is subject to the underlying cardholder
    agreement, the substance of which has not been challenged.2 The order of default
    judgment provided that judgment was to bear interest at 23.99 percent, as called
    for in the cardholder agreement. The same agreement provided, “If we refer
    collection of your account to a lawyer who is not our salaried employee, you will
    have to pay our attorney[] fees plus court costs or any other fees, to the extent
    permitted by law.”
    JPRD asserts that an award of JPRD’s costs and attorney fees is warranted
    under the cardholder agreement despite default judgment being entered in 2008
    “because provisions in a contract or a note providing for attorney fees do apply
    until the judgment is final.” Such provisions are construed as entitling a prevailing
    party to reasonable attorney fees for all services required to prosecute the action
    to its “ultimate conclusion.” Puget Sound Mut. Sav. Bank v. Lillions, 
    50 Wn.2d 799
    ,
    807, 
    314 P.2d 935
     (1957).
    2 At oral argument, counsel mentioned a case, EGP Investments, LLC v. Frear,
    No. 35734-1-III, slip op. at 6 (Wash. Ct. App. April 2, 2019) (unpublished),
    https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/357341_unp.pdf, where this court in the
    absence of a signed agreement declined to grant fees provided for in a cardholder
    agreement to a debt collection agency.
    8
    No. 80407-3-I/9
    We award JPRD its reasonable fees and costs on appeal subject to its
    compliance with RAP 18.1(d).
    We affirm.
    WE CONCUR:
    9