Peter Clark v. Jesse Hoyos Diaz, et ux ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                     FILED
    NOVEMBER 12, 2020
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    PETER CLARK, an individual,                 )
    )        No. 37041-1-III
    Appellant,             )
    )
    v.                                    )
    )
    JESSE HOYOS DIAZ and JANE DOE               )        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    HOYOS DIAZ, husband and wife and            )
    their marital community composed            )
    thereof,                                    )
    )
    Respondents.           )
    SIDDOWAY, J. — Peter Clark appeals the trial court’s dismissal of his personal
    injury action against Jesse Hoyos Diaz. Mr. Hoyos Diaz presented evidence that Mr.
    Clark’s attempted service of process was ineffective and his claim had become time-
    barred. We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Jesse Hoyos Diaz and Peter Clark were involved in an automobile accident on
    June 2, 2016. According to the police report, Mr. Hoyos Diaz was 18½ years old at the
    time of the accident and lived at an apartment on Umatilla Avenue in Umatilla, Oregon.
    Over two years later, on March 22, 2019, Mr. Clark filed a personal injury action
    against Mr. Hoyos Diaz in Franklin County Superior Court. On March 26, a process
    No. 37041-1-III
    Clark v. Hoyos Diaz
    server delivered two copies of the summons and complaint to the Umatilla address set
    forth in the accident report. A declaration of service was completed by the process server
    that day and was later filed with the court; it was largely preprinted, including only a few
    handwritten entries:
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 25-26.
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    No. 37041-1-III
    Clark v. Hoyos Diaz
    About a week later, on April 1, Mr. Hoyos Diaz appeared in the action through
    counsel. The notice of appearance did not waive defects as to jurisdiction and requested
    that the lawyers be served with further pleadings or notices, except process.
    On June 27, 2019, Mr. Hoyos Diaz filed a CR 12(b)(2) motion to dismiss Mr.
    Clark’s complaint based on a lack of personal jurisdiction. Mr. Hoyos Diaz supported his
    motion to dismiss with his own declaration as well as the declaration of his landlord. The
    landlord’s declaration stated in relevant part that “Jesse Hoyos Diaz has resided at
    apartment A1 within the apartments located at 625 NW Spruce St., Hermiston, Oregon
    97838 since March 20, 2018 and has made payment for rent for said apartment every
    month from March 20, 2018 up to the present.” CP at 31. Mr. Hoyos Diaz’s declaration
    stated, in part:
    6.      . . . I did not reside at 402 Umatilla Ave., in any apartment in
    Umatilla, Oregon at that time of service and had not resided there for
    some time.
    7.      Instead, I resided at 625 SW Spruce St, Apt A-1, Hermiston, OR at
    the time service was attempted and have resided there since March
    20, 2018.
    8.      Additionally, my mother, Maria Diaz, is not a party hereto, and does
    not speak English and would not have been able to communicate
    what was alleged to have been communicated to the process server.
    CP at 48.
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    No. 37041-1-III
    Clark v. Hoyos Diaz
    In resisting Mr. Hoyos Diaz’s motion to dismiss, the only evidence presented by
    Mr. Clark was his process server’s original declaration of service and the police report
    from the 2016 accident.
    Both parties argued that Mr. Clark had the initial burden of making a prima facie
    showing of proper service that could be made by producing an affidavit of service
    indicating that service was properly carried out, after which the burden would shift to Mr.
    Hoyos Diaz, who must present clear and convincing evidence of insufficient service.
    Following a hearing, the trial court granted Mr. Hoyos Diaz’s motion. Since the
    statute of limitations had run, the court dismissed the complaint with prejudice. Mr.
    Clark appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Clark argues on appeal that the police report and the process server’s affidavit
    of service satisfied his burden of presenting prima facie evidence of proper service and
    Mr. Hoyos Diaz failed to present clear and convincing evidence of improper service in
    response. He characterizes the landlord’s declaration as “merely say[ing] that [Mr.
    Hoyos Diaz] pays rent” at a Hermiston address. Opening Br. of Appellant at 3. He
    argues that Mr. Hoyos Diaz presented no evidence as to where he spends most of his
    time, whether he pays rent elsewhere, or where he receives mail.
    Proper service of the summons and complaint is a prerequisite to a court obtaining
    jurisdiction over a party. Woodruff v. Spence, 
    76 Wash. App. 207
    , 209, 
    883 P.2d 936
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    No. 37041-1-III
    Clark v. Hoyos Diaz
    (1994). RCW 4.28.080(16) authorizes serving the summons on the defendant personally
    or by substitute service. “Substitute service of process is effective when (1) a copy of the
    summons is left at defendant’s house of usual abode, (2) with some person of suitable age
    and discretion, (3) then resident therein.” Sheldon v. Fettig, 
    129 Wash. 2d 601
    , 607, 
    919 P.2d 1209
    (1996) (Sheldon II). Mr. Hoyos Diaz does not dispute that Mr. Clark’s process
    server left copies of the summons and complaint with his mother, a person of suitable age
    and discretion, at the home at which she then resided. At issue is whether his mother’s
    home was Mr. Hoyos Diaz’s “house of usual abode” for purposes of effective substitute
    service. The term “house of usual abode” 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.’” Sheldon 
    II, 129 Wash. 2d at 610
    (quoting Sheldon v. Fettig, 
    77 Wash. App. 775
    , 781, 
    893 P.2d 1136
    (1995) (Sheldon I)).
    Whether service of process is effective is reviewed de novo. Scanlan v.
    Townsend, 
    181 Wash. 2d 838
    , 847, 
    336 P.3d 1155
    (2014). We analyze the issue as briefed
    by the parties: as turning on whether Mr. Hoyos Diaz’s evidence challenging the
    effectiveness of the service was clear and convincing. See RAP 12.1(a) (the appellate
    court generally will decide a case only on the basis of issues set forth by the parties in
    their briefs).1
    1
    In the trial court and on appeal, the parties analyzed this issue contrary to Farmer
    v. Davis, 
    161 Wash. App. 420
    , 
    250 P.3d 138
    (2011), in which this court held a presumption
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    No. 37041-1-III
    Clark v. Hoyos Diaz
    Clear and convincing evidence requires more than a preponderance of the
    evidence. In re Welfare of Sego, 
    82 Wash. 2d 736
    , 739, 
    513 P.2d 831
    (1973). Clear and
    convincing evidence exists when the ultimate facts are shown to be “highly probable.”
    In re Parental Rights to K.M.M., 
    186 Wash. 2d 466
    , 478, 
    379 P.3d 75
    (2016) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    In analyzing whether a defendant’s evidence is clear and convincing, reported
    decisions have considered not only the probativeness of the defendant’s evidence but also
    whether the plaintiff responds with evidence beyond its prima facie showing that calls the
    defendant’s evidence into doubt. Thus, in Northwick v. Long, 
    192 Wash. App. 256
    , 259-60,
    
    364 P.3d 1067
    (2015), not only was the defendant’s evidence weak (he relied on only his
    father’s declaration, without a sworn declaration of his own), but the plaintiff rebutted the
    defense evidence with the process server’s deposition testimony. The process server
    testified to what he was told by the defendant’s father and his standard practice to obtain
    multiple confirmations of a defendant’s residence from the coresident with whom the
    summons and complaint are left. He also testified that he checked the defendant’s
    that must be overcome by clear and convincing evidence does not apply to prejudgment
    attacks on the sufficiency of service of process. And Mr. Clark never requested an
    opportunity for jurisdictional discovery or an evidentiary hearing before the court. Cf.
    Harvey v. Obermeit, 
    163 Wash. App. 311
    , 327, 
    261 P.3d 671
    (2011) (citing Gross v.
    Sunding, 
    139 Wash. App. 54
    , 67, 
    161 P.3d 380
    (2007)) (when affidavits present an issue of
    fact, evidentiary hearing before judge may be required); cf. State v. LG Elecs., Inc., 
    186 Wash. 2d 169
    , 184, 
    375 P.3d 1035
    (2016) (jurisdictional discovery may be warranted where
    pertinent facts bearing on jurisdiction are controverted).
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    Clark v. Hoyos Diaz
    residence using the Department of Licensing database, a TransUnion “Locate report,”
    and a U.S. Postal Service Trace.
    Id. All databases confirmed
    the defendant resided at his
    father’s address.
    Id. The Northwick court
    pointed out that reported decisions have found a defendant’s
    evidence to fall short of clear and convincing when it fails to demonstrate a different
    place of usual abode.
    Id. at 262
    (citing State ex rel. Coughlin v. Jenkins, 
    102 Wash. App. 60
    , 64-65, 
    7 P.3d 818
    (2000)). By contrast, a defendant’s evidence that she has notified
    third parties (the post office, the Department of Motor Vehicles, creditors) of a new
    address has been found to be clear and convincing.
    Id. at 263
    (citing Gross v. Evert-
    Rosenberg, 
    85 Wash. App. 539
    , 541, 
    933 P.2d 439
    (1997)).
    Mr. Clark cites Sheldon II for its holding that the statutory provisions permitting
    substitute service must “be liberally construed to effectuate service and uphold
    jurisdiction of the 
    court.” 129 Wash. 2d at 609
    . “Liberal construction does not mean
    abandoning the statutory language entirely.” Gerean v. Martin-Joven, 
    108 Wash. App. 963
    , 972, 
    33 P.3d 427
    (2001). In Sheldon II, the defendant had moved to Chicago, but
    the plaintiff presented evidence that she continued to use her parents’ address as her
    residence for the purpose of her voter registration, car registration, on her car’s bill of
    sale, with her car insurer, when cited for speeding, and that she returned to their home
    often—collectively it caused the court to conclude that the defendant had two “usual
    place[s] of abode.” See Sheldon 
    II, 129 Wash. 2d at 610
    -11. Mr. Clark presented no
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    No. 37041-1-III
    Clark v. Hoyos Diaz
    evidence that Mr. Hoyos Diaz had these or similar continuing connections with his
    mother’s home.
    Mr. Hoyos Diaz’s evidence, compared to Mr. Clark’s, was clear and convincing.
    The order dismissing the action is affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    _____________________________
    Siddoway, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _____________________________
    Pennell, C.J.
    _____________________________
    Lawrence-Berrey, J.
    8