Cedar Court Apartments, Llc v. Gustavo And Maria Colorado ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                                              Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    January 18, 2017
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    CEDAR COURT APARTMENTS, LLS, a                                    No. 47778-5-II
    Washington Limited Liability Company,
    Respondent,
    v.
    GUSTAVO and MARIA COLORADO,                                UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    husband and wife, and the marital community
    composed thereof,
    Appellants.
    SUTTON, J. — Gustavo and Maria Colorado appeal the trial court’s judgment as a matter of
    law that set aside the jury’s verdict against Cedar Court Apartments, LLC (Cedar Court) for the
    Colorados’s failure to prove Cedar Court caused a fire in the Colorados’s apartment. Viewing the
    evidence in a light most favorable to the Colorados, we hold that there is neither substantial
    evidence nor a reasonable inference to support the jury’s verdict, and we affirm the trial court’s
    order setting aside the jury’s verdict.
    FACTS
    I. BACKGROUND AND TRIAL
    On February 21, 2013, around 4:30 p.m., a fire ignited and destroyed the apartment the
    Colorados leased from Cedar Court. Cedar Court sued the Colorados for negligence. The
    No. 47778-5-II
    Colorados counter sued for negligence. The parties stipulated that the sole question for the jury
    was which party negligently caused the fire.1 The jury heard the following testimony and evidence.
    On the morning of the fire, the Colorados prepared for a scheduled carpet cleaning and
    moved all of their belongings into the kitchen and bathroom. Gustavo testified that he placed items
    in boxes, but was careful to place the boxes “on the floor away from the stove.” III Verbatim
    Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 219. After moving their belongings, Gustavo said that he
    “couldn’t reach the stove” because the “stove was blocked with some mattress (sic), some
    furniture.” III VRP at 211-12. He denied placing anything on the stove when they left the
    apartment for the day. On cross-examination, counsel asked Gustavo if he placed anything on top
    of the stove to prepare for the carpet cleaners and he answered, “I don’t remember to do something
    like that.” II VRP at 212. The jury later submitted questions asking whether Gustavo had placed
    a mattress against the stove or placed anything on top of the stove. Gustavo replied, “No, I didn’t,”
    and “No, nothing,” respectively. III VRP at 219.
    Gustavo also testified that, on the morning of the fire, he went to Cedar Court’s
    management office around 10:00 to 10:30 a.m. to request a maintenance work order to have the
    stove repaired because the large burners were not working. Maria testified that she noticed a
    problem with the stove about two weeks before Gustavo requested the repair and that she had
    reminded Gustavo of the problem the day before the fire and again the morning of the fire. The
    Colorados did not use the stove at all on the day of the fire “because it was not working.” III VRP
    1
    Neither party requested a jury instruction on comparative negligence.
    2
    No. 47778-5-II
    at 184, 212. The Colorados left the apartment at around 10:30 to 11:00 a.m. to allow the carpet to
    be cleaned.
    More than a year before, the Colorados first reported to Cedar Court that the stove was
    malfunctioning and that the large burners were “shorting.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 94, 457. After
    receiving that stove repair request, Cedar Court repaired the stove that same day.
    Tammy Wheat, Cedar Court’s property manager, testified. Wheat said that on the day of
    the fire, she filled out the stove repair work order. Wheat wrote in “11 AM” as the time the work
    order was requested, and under “Permission to Enter Unit” she placed an “X” next to “Anytime,”
    and Gustavo signed the work order. CP at 92. Wheat said that her assistant wrote down in a
    resident communication log that “Gustavo Colorado filed a work order for two large burners on
    stove not working” “around 11:00 a.m.” on the day of the fire. IV VRP at 374.
    Wheat met with the property’s maintenance technician, Alex, at 9:00 a.m. on the day of
    the fire to discuss his work assignments for that day. Wheat stated that because the Colorados had
    not made their stove repair request until around 11:00 a.m., Alex was not assigned the stove repair.
    Wheat also contradicted her prior testimony and testified that although Gustavo had requested the
    work order around 11:00 a.m. the morning of the fire, he did not come into the maintenance office
    to sign the work order until 4:00 p.m. She later said that she did not recall when Gustavo came
    into the maintenance office. Gustavo confirmed that he signed the work order that morning.
    Wheat explained that a Cedar Court employee is not allowed to enter an apartment until
    the tenant has provided a signed written permission. Wheat testified that Alex did not have
    permission to enter the Colorados’s apartment until after 4:00 p.m. when Gustavo gave her written
    permission, that Alex was never given the key to the Colorados’s apartment, and, that to her
    3
    No. 47778-5-II
    knowledge, Alex never accessed the apartment that day.2 She also said that she gave Alex the
    stove repair work order for the Colorados’s apartment prior to the start of the fire because “he had
    time that day to look at the stove.” IV VRP at 391.
    Wheat testified that the carpet cleaning company (Cleaners) arrived at Cedar Court
    between 2:15 and 2:30 p.m. and met her at the management office. Three units were scheduled
    for carpet cleaning that day; two vacant units were scheduled to be cleaned before the Colorados’s
    unit. Wheat said that the Cleaners were given master keys to all three units to be cleaned, including
    the Colorados. Based on Cedar Court’s policies, Wheat testified that she would send the Cleaners
    into an apartment even if she did not have signed permission from the tenant, and here, the
    Colorados had specifically requested that their carpet be cleaned that day.
    The Colorados returned to their apartment at 4:00 p.m. to check if the carpet had been
    cleaned. Gustavo testified that while his wife and daughter waited in the car, he opened the door
    of the apartment, looked inside for a couple of seconds until he realized the carpet had not been
    cleaned, and then he returned to the car. He stated that he did not smell smoke and that he did not
    touch anything but the apartment door. As Gustavo returned to his car, he saw a man he believed
    was a Cleaners employee in the parking lot near the company van. Gustavo “asked him if he can
    hurry to clean up our carpet so we can get in our apartment.” III VRP at 203, 213. Gustavo
    testified that the man had something in his hands and responded that he had another apartment to
    clean first. The Colorados then left the apartment complex and went to the library.
    2
    Wheat testified that there is only one front door key (master key) for each apartment.
    4
    No. 47778-5-II
    A tenant reported the fire to the Cedar Court management office at 4:30 p.m. Wheat
    testified that when a firefighter requested the key to the apartment, she ran to the unit where the
    Cleaners were working and retrieved the master key for the Colorados’s apartment; by the time
    she returned, the firefighters had kicked in the door. After the fire was extinguished, firefighter
    Lieutenant Kenneth Hansen, the arson investigator, was called to the scene. Lt. Hansen’s initial
    site investigation revealed that the firefighters had extinguished and removed all objects that were
    on fire in the kitchen. The firefighters had also broken through the ceiling above the stove, leaving
    drywall pieces covering the top of the stove. Lt. Hansen testified that his initial inspection did not
    reveal a fire source. After his initial site investigation, Lt. Hansen interviewed Wheat and she told
    him that the Colorados had requested a work order to repair the stove because it was
    malfunctioning. The Colorados returned to the apartment around 6:30 p.m.
    Lt. Hansen concluded that the most likely cause of the fire was that something was left on
    top of the stove between 4:00 and 4:30 p.m., the stove was accidently turned on, and a fire started.3
    Hansen determined that the heat of the fire was produced in a short amount of time, guessing that
    the fuel source was a paper product, like “a binder or a cardboard box with some items inside.”
    II VRP at 149. He was unable to determine whether the stove was a glass-top or coil-top burner
    stove or whether the stove’s knobs were turned on because the fire had melted the knobs and their
    3
    Wheat testified that on the night of the fire, during a meeting with Lt. Hansen and the Colorados,
    she heard Maria state to Gustavo, in English, “I put something down” in response to Lt. Hansen’s
    conclusion as to the cause of the fire. IV VRP at 333. Maria testified in Spanish at trial through
    an interpreter, and stated that she does not speak in English because she needs to wait for the
    translation to understand what has been said. Gustavo testified that his wife only speaks Spanish
    to family members. At trial, Maria denied that she placed anything on the stove that day.
    5
    No. 47778-5-II
    posts. He did not believe the mattress was the fire’s ignition source, and there were no tripped
    breakers that would indicate a short or arcing in any wiring.
    Lt. Hansen did not analyze or assess the wiring of the stove because that was outside his
    area of expertise. Cedar Court disposed of the stove the day after the fire. During his investigation,
    Lt. Hansen said that Wheat told him that the Cleaners had been given a master key to the
    Colorados’s apartment that day, but only the Colorados had entered the apartment that day. Lt.
    Hansen did not interview the Cleaners or Alex.
    Deanna Hanshew, an off-site asset manager for Cedar Court, testified that she had no
    personal knowledge as to who entered the Colorados’s unit that day. Hanshew also testified that
    Wheat did not tell her about the Colorados’s stove repair request until weeks after the fire.
    Hanshew explained that standard maintenance procedure requires that whenever a maintenance
    person enters an apartment to make a repair, the maintenance person must sign or initial the work
    order and note “work done” and “materials used” and record the date that the work was completed.
    III VRP at 276. She reviewed the work orders for the day of the fire. Nothing on the work orders
    for either the stove repair or the carpet cleaning for the Colorados’s apartment indicated that either
    work order had been completed and given to the maintenance office. For the Cleaners to be paid,
    a carbon copy of the work order was required to be affixed to the Cleaners’s invoice, and Hanshew
    discovered that the work order still contained all carbon copies at the time of the fire. Thus,
    Hanshew testified that she had concluded that the stove had not been repaired nor had the
    Colorados’s carpet been cleaned that day, and she stated that when she testified to the contrary at
    her earlier deposition, she had simply been mistaken.
    6
    No. 47778-5-II
    At the close of the testimony, Cedar Court moved for a directed verdict and argued that (1)
    the Cleaners acted as an independent contractor, not as an agent of Cedar Court and (2) Cedar
    Court was not negligent. The trial court denied the motion. The trial court then instructed the jury
    on the ordinary standard of care for negligence,4 instructed the jury to decide whether the Cleaners
    were an agent of Cedar Court or whether the Cleaners were an independent contractor, and
    instructed the jury that equal weight is to be given to direct and circumstantial evidence.
    II. VERDICT AND TRIAL COURT’S RULING
    The jury returned a verdict in favor of the Colorados and a verdict against Cedar Court.
    The verdict stated that the jury answered “No” to the question: “Was there negligence by the
    [Colorados] that was a proximate cause of the fire at” the apartment, and “Yes” to the question:
    “Was there negligence by [Cedar Court] that was a proximate cause of the fire at” the apartment.
    CP at 705-06.
    After the jury’s verdict, Cedar Court filed a CR 50 motion for a judgment as a matter of
    law requesting that the trial court set aside the jury’s verdict and enter a judgment in its favor. The
    Colorados argued that they had circumstantial evidence of Cedar Court’s negligence. The trial
    court stated,
    4
    Jury Instruction No. 9:
    Negligence is the failure to exercise ordinary care. It is the doing of some
    act that a reasonably careful person would not do under the same or similar
    circumstances or the failure to do some act that a reasonably careful person would
    have done under the same or similar circumstances.
    CP at 694. Jury Instruction No. 10: “Ordinary care means the care a reasonably careful person
    would exercise under the same or similar circumstances.” CP at 695.
    7
    No. 47778-5-II
    All you are really arguing is that there is some possibility that somebody else did
    it. . . . I don’t see how you can prove that by a preponderance of the evidence that
    they did anything because you can’t even show that they were there.
    IV VRP at 431. The trial court also stated,
    You have a mere possibility. It is not impossible that they did it. That’s all you’ve
    got. . . . [T]here is no way in the world that [Cedar Court] had anything to do with
    the fire, and certainly not the carpet cleaners.
    The problem with [Alex] is that there is no evidence that [Alex] ever had a
    key.
    IV VRP at 433-34.
    The trial court ruled that, as a matter of law, neither party had provided sufficient evidence
    that the other party was negligent. The trial court granted Cedar Court’s motion for judgment as
    a matter of law, set aside the jury’s verdict, denied Cedar Court’s motion to enter judgment in its
    favor, and denied both parties’ request for an award of attorney fees stating that neither party was
    a prevailing party. The Colorados appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    The Colorados argue that the trial court erred in entering a judgment as a matter of law
    because there is substantial circumstantial evidence or a reasonable inference to sustain the jury’s
    verdict that Cedar Court’s negligence proximately caused the fire. The Colorados assert that the
    trial was a “credibility contest” between Cedar Court and the Colorados, and that the jury found
    the Colorados’s testimony more credible. Br. of Appellant at 2. Cedar Court argues that the
    Colorados have failed to provide any evidence to support the jury’s verdict. We agree with the
    trial court that the verdict finding Cedar Court negligent cannot be sustained.
    8
    No. 47778-5-II
    I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When reviewing a judgment as a matter of law under CR 50, we apply the same standard
    as the trial court and review the motion de novo. Grove v. PeaceHealth St. Joseph Hosp., 
    182 Wash. 2d 136
    , 143, 
    341 P.3d 261
    (2014). A CR 50(b) motion is properly granted only when, after
    viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, it can be held as a matter
    of law that there is not substantial evidence or reasonable inference from the evidence to sustain
    the verdict. 
    Grove, 182 Wash. 2d at 143
    . “Substantial evidence is evidence sufficient to persuade a
    fair-minded, rational person that the premise is true.” Jenkins v. Weyerhaeuser Co., 
    143 Wash. App. 246
    , 254, 
    177 P.3d 180
    (2008). Circumstantial evidence and direct evidence carry equal weight.
    See Smith v. Dep’t of Corr., 
    189 Wash. App. 839
    , 847, 
    359 P.3d 867
    (2015), review denied, 
    185 Wash. 2d 1004
    (2016).
    We defer to the fact-finder on issues of conflicting testimony, witness credibility, and the
    persuasiveness of the evidence. Faust v. Albertson, 
    167 Wash. 2d 531
    , 543, 
    222 P.3d 1208
    (2009).
    The jury decides the inferences to be drawn from the evidence. 
    Grove, 182 Wash. 2d at 143
    n.8.
    Inferences drawn from evidence must be reasonable and not be based on speculation. Ayers v.
    Johnson & Johnson Baby Prod. Co., 
    117 Wash. 2d 747
    , 753, 
    818 P.2d 1337
    (1991). A verdict cannot
    be founded on mere theory or speculation. Marshall v. Bally’s Pacwest, Inc., 
    94 Wash. App. 372
    ,
    379, 
    972 P.2d 475
    (1999). If there is nothing more tangible than two or more conjectural theories,
    each asserting opposite ends of liability, a jury will not be permitted to conjecture how the event
    occurred. 
    Marshall, 94 Wash. App. at 379
    .
    The non-moving party must be given the benefit of every favorable inference which
    reasonably may be drawn from the evidence. See 
    Grove, 182 Wash. 2d at 143
    . “‘[T]he reviewing
    9
    No. 47778-5-II
    court will not substitute its judgment for that of the jury, so long as there was evidence which, if
    believed, would support the verdict rendered.’” 
    Grove, 182 Wash. 2d at 143
    n.8 (emphasis omitted)
    (quoting Burnside v. Simpson Paper Co., 
    123 Wash. 2d 93
    , 107-08, 
    864 P.2d 937
    (1994)).
    Negligence is the failure to exercise ordinary care. Mathis v. Ammons, 
    84 Wash. App. 411
    ,
    416, 
    928 P.2d 431
    (1996). It is the doing of some act that a reasonably prudent person would not
    do, or the failure to do some act that a reasonably prudent person would do, under the same or
    similar circumstances. 
    Mathis, 84 Wash. App. at 416
    .
    II. ANALYSIS
    The sole question considered by the jury was whether the Colorados’s or Cedar Court’s
    negligence proximately caused the fire. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    Colorados, the evidence shows that the Colorados were out of the apartment at the time of the fire,
    and that the fire was likely caused by a type of paper product that was placed on top of the stove
    and produced a fire in a short amount of time after Gustavo last checked the apartment at 4:00 p.m.
    However, the jury did not hear any other evidence that someone else entered the
    Colorados’s unit that day. The testimony confirmed only that Cedar Court had scheduled the
    Colorados’s carpet to be cleaned at their request. As of 4:00 p.m. when Gustavo last checked his
    apartment, the carpet had not been cleaned because Gustavo went to find the Cleaners employee
    to ask him to clean the carpet in his apartment, and the employee responded that he had another
    apartment to clean first. The fire was reported thirty minutes later, after the Colorados left to go
    to the library. Wheat verified that when the fire broke out, the Cleaners had the master key to the
    Colorados’s front door and the Cleaners were at another apartment when Wheat retrieved the key
    at the firefighters’ request.
    10
    No. 47778-5-II
    As to the stove repair request, although Wheat testified inconsistently that Alex was and
    was not assigned to repair the stove that day, she also testified that it was not possible for Alex to
    enter the Colorados’s apartment because he did not have the master key at the time the fire started.
    There is no evidence to the contrary.
    Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the Colorados, as the nonmoving party
    on Cedar Court’s CR 50 motion, there was no proof as to what was on or near the stove to start the
    fire, or how long the stove was on before the fire started. Neither party proved how the stove
    turned on, which was material because the Colorados’s prior complaints related to the stove not
    turning on at all. The circumstantial evidence argued by the Colorados that someone else, either
    Alex or the Cleaners, entered the apartment and started the fire, was speculative. And a jury’s
    verdict cannot be based on speculation. 
    Ayers, 117 Wash. 2d at 753
    . We agree with the trial court
    that there is neither substantial evidence nor a reasonable inference from the evidence to sustain
    the jury verdict that Cedar Court’s negligence caused the fire. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s
    order setting aside the jury’s verdict.
    ATTORNEY FEES
    Both parties request attorney fees and costs as the prevailing party on appeal under
    paragraph eight of the lease and under RCW 4.84.330. Because we affirm the trial court’s order,
    we deny both parties’ request for an award of attorney fees on appeal.
    The lease states as follows,
    11
    No. 47778-5-II
    8. DEFAULT/ATTORNEY FEES: In the event Resident fails to comply with any
    of the terms of this Rental Contract, the Resident shall be in default. If Resident is in
    default, this Rental Contract shall terminate and upon such termination Resident shall quit
    and surrender the premises, but shall remain liable for the performance of all obligations
    and conditions contained in this Rental Contract. Resident agrees to pay all expenses and
    attorney’s fees expended or incurred by the property owner and/or his/her agent by any
    reason of any default or breach by Resident(s) of any terms of this Rental Contract. The
    venue for any suit pertaining to any claims arising out this Rental Contract, including any
    suit pertaining to the collection of any sums owed pursuant to this Agreement, shall be
    Pierce County Washington.
    CP at 103.
    RCW 4.84.330 provides that
    [i]n any action on a contract or lease entered into after September 21, 1977, where
    such contract or lease specifically provides that attorneys’ fees and costs, which are
    incurred to enforce the provisions of such contract or lease, shall be awarded to one
    of the parties, the prevailing party, whether he or she is the party specified in the
    contract or lease or not, shall be entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees in addition to
    costs and necessary disbursements.
    Attorneys’ fees provided for by this section shall not be subject to waiver
    by the parties to any contract or lease which is entered into after September 21,
    1977. Any provision in any such contract or lease which provides for a waiver of
    attorneys’ fees is void.
    As used in this section “prevailing party” means the party in whose favor
    final judgment is rendered.
    RCW 4.84.330.
    Cedar Court is not entitled to attorney fees under the lease because the evidence did not prove
    that the Colorados were in default, and the issue tried to the jury was based on a negligence claim, not
    based on the Colorados’s default on the lease. The Colorados are not entitled to attorney fees under
    12
    No. 47778-5-II
    the lease as they are not the prevailing party on appeal.5 For similar reasons, neither party is entitled
    to attorney fees under RCW 4.84.330.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2.06.040,
    it is so ordered.
    SUTTON, J.
    We concur:
    WORSWICK, P.J.
    LEE, J.
    5
    Cedar Court asserts that if this court affirms the trial court, then Cedar Court should be awarded
    attorney fees as the prevailing party on appeal. We agree with the trial court that neither party is
    the prevailing party. See RCW 4.84.330; see also RAP 14.2.
    13