Dep't of Soc. & Health Servs. v. Sims
Dep't of Soc. & Health Servs. v. Sims
Opinion
*88 ¶1 This case concerns contempt sanctions imposed against the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) for failing to timely complete competency evaluations for criminal defendants. Specifically at issue is whether the State has waived its sovereign immunity under RCW 7.21.030 as regards the imposition of interest concerning imposed *264 contempt sanctions. We find no waiver under this statute's plain language or in the context presented. We also determine whether remedial sanctions run *89 from the date of the trial court's oral ruling imposing the sanctions or the filing of the written sanction order. We hold that the oral ruling determining contempt and imposing sanctions triggers the running of the contempt sanctions. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals in part and reverse in part, as explained below.
FACTS
¶2 This case is a consolidation of multiple cases brought by criminal defendants against DSHS and state hospitals for the State's failure to provide timely competency evaluations to the criminal defendants.
1
In these cases, DSHS and the hospital appealed contempt sanctions that were imposed for delays in providing the competency evaluations. The parties agree that the facts in
State v. Sims,
1 Wash. App. 2d 472,
¶3 In 2014, the State charged Anthony J. Sims with second degree burglary.
Sims,
1 Wash. App. 2d at 477,
¶4 On November 26, 2014, Sims filed a motion asking the trial court to order DSHS to show cause for its failure to schedule his evaluation in compliance with the court's November 20 order. Sims asked the court to impose remedial sanctions of $ 500 per day against DSHS for every day past December 2 until he received his competency evaluation.
¶5 A hearing on this motion began on December 11, 2014, at which time the trial court heard from Sims and five other similarly situated defendants. During this hearing, DSHS presented evidence that the state hospital was having difficulty completing competency evaluations due to insufficient funding and personnel in light of the hospital's large scope of responsibility. At the conclusion of this hearing, on December 12, the trial court orally imposed sanctions on DSHS in the amount of $ 200 per day for every day the evaluations were not completed in compliance with the prior court ordered deadlines. 3
*265 Sims's competency evaluation occurred as originally scheduled on December 15. The trial *91 court did not enter a written contempt order with findings until a month later on January 16, 2015. 4
¶6 DSHS appealed the contempt sanctions to the Court of Appeals, Division Three.
5
The Court of Appeals held: (1) where a court imposes sanctions for contempt that did not occur in its presence, statutory sanctions are limited to remedial sanctions; (2) sanctions for past violations were impermissibly punitive rather than remedial, but remedial sanctions from the date of the order were appropriate; (3) nothing in the remedial sanctions statute requires a court to enter a written order prior to sanctions becoming effective; and (4) the State has impliedly consented to interest on statutory sanctions imposed against it.
Sims
, 1 Wash. App. 2d at 476, 480-81, 484,
¶7 Relevant here, the Court of Appeals rejected DSHS's argument that as to the remedial sanctions, the State's sovereign immunity precluded the accrual of statutory interest on unpaid sanctions.
Id.
at 484,
*92
¶8 Judge Korsmo dissented in part. While the dissent agreed with the majority that an order need not be reduced to writing before it takes effect, it disagreed with the majority's conclusion that interest is available on contempt sanctions.
Id.
at 490-91,
¶9 DSHS petitioned this court for review of the published Court of Appeals' split decision on two issues only: (1) whether the State consented to be subject to interest payments on the contempt sanctions and (2) whether a trial court's oral contempt ruling should not be considered effective until it is filed as a written order. This court granted review of these two issues. 7
ANALYSIS
1. The State has not consented to liability for interest on contempt sanctions imposed under RCW 7.21.030
¶10 The doctrine of sovereign immunity requires a state to consent before a court can hold it liable for interest on its debts.
Our Lady of Lourdes Hosp. v. Franklin County,
¶11 The issue is the effect of the remedial sanctions statute, RCW 7.21.030, specifically, whether it authorizes the imposition of interest. First, as demonstrated below, the statute's plain, unambiguous language does not provide for interest. Nor does the statute provide "comprehensive relief" that would warrant finding an implied waiver.
¶12 RCW 7.21.030 provides in relevant part that a court "may initiate a proceeding to impose a remedial sanction on ... the motion of a person aggrieved by a contempt of court in the proceeding to which the contempt is related ... [and] after notice and hearing, may impose a remedial sanction" on a person in contempt. The statute lists the following available sanctions in subsection (2): (a) imprisonment, (b) "[a] forfeiture not to exceed two thousand dollars for each day the contempt of court continues," (c) an order designed to ensure compliance with a prior order of the court, (d) "[a]ny other remedial sanction ... if the court expressly finds that those [above listed] sanctions would be ineffectual to terminate a continuing contempt of court," and (e) commitment to juvenile detention. RCW 7.21.030 (emphasis added). The statute further provides, "The court may, in addition to the remedial sanctions set forth [above], order a person found in contempt of court to pay a party for any losses suffered by the party as a result of the contempt and any costs incurred in connection with the contempt proceeding, including reasonable attorney's fees ." RCW 7.21.030(3) (emphasis added). As can be seen, the plain language of the statute does not address, include, or provide for interest.
¶13 As DSHS notes, where the legislature has intended a waiver of sovereign immunity for interest, it has done so with express statutory language. See Suppl. Br. of DSHS at 9-10; see also RCW 4.56.110, .115 (expressly providing for interest on judgments founded on tortious conduct of the *94 State); RCW 51.32.080(4) (addressing "interest paid on ... permanent partial disability compensation"); RCW 82.32.060 (providing for interest on tax refunds).
¶14 Further, in
Union Elevator,
this court reiterated the rule applicable in this case, stating, "A waiver of sovereign immunity exists when the State has
expressly,
or by
reasonable construction
of a contract or statute, placed itself in a position of attendant liability."
The legislature enacted statutes expressly permitting interest on condemnation awards but did not include similar language in the Relocation Act [real property acquisition policy act (ch. 8.26 RCW) ]. Furthermore, the legislature enumerated specific categories of costs and expenses compensable under the Relocation Act but did not include interest among these recoverable expenses. We will not do so impliedly.
¶15 The primary cases on which Sims relies, Architectural Woods and Smoke, 8 concern contracts or are otherwise distinguishable. This court addressed and distinguished those cases in Union Elevator as follows. Concerning Architectural Woods this court explained:
[T]he State impliedly waived sovereign immunity when the legislature statutorily authorized state colleges to enter into construction contracts with private parties. ... Because the State was acting in a private capacity , we reasoned that the statute impliedly held the State to " the same responsibilities and liabilities as [a] private party, including liability for interest ." Architectural Woods, 92 Wn.2d at 526-27 [598 P.2d 1372 ].
Union Elevator,
In Smoke we allowed an award for postjudgment interest when the city " consent[ed] to suit for damages ," thereby "impliedly *95 waiv[ing] immunity from the liabilities attendant to such claims." Smoke, 132 Wn.2d at 228 [937 P.2d 186 ] (citing Architectural Woods, 92 Wn.2d at 526-27 [598 P.2d 1372 ] ).
Union Elevator,
¶16 Moreover, the purpose of RCW 7.21.030 is clearly to compel compliance. The remedial sanctions the statute expressly authorizes provide the parameters for such coercion. Although imposing interest would comport with the statute's coercive purpose, such action would require adding language to the statute, which this court cannot do.
See
State v. Glas,
¶17 Finally, while subsection (3) of the statute provides that in addition to the listed remedial sanctions, a court may order a person in contempt "to pay a party for any losses suffered by the party as a result of the contempt and any costs incurred in connection with the contempt proceeding, including reasonable attorney's fees," the present case does not involve damages (i.e. the present case concerns a defendant trying to compel DSHS to provide timely competency evaluations so his criminal prosecution may proceed). RCW 7.21.030. Also, the attorney fee provision here is limited to "costs incurred in connection with the contempt proceeding."
2. An oral contempt order is considered effective immediately, before it has been reduced to writing
¶18 RCW 7.21.030(1) states, "Except as provided in RCW 7.21.050, the court, after notice and hearing, may impose a remedial sanction authorized by this chapter." RCW 7.21.050(1) instructs that "[t]he order of contempt shall recite the facts, state the sanctions imposed, and be signed by the judge and entered on the record." RCW 7.21.050(1) additionally requires the judge to impose sanctions "immediately after the contempt of court or at the end of the proceeding."
¶19 DSHS contends that the statutory requirement for findings of fact and purge conditions means that a written order is needed for contempt sanctions to become effective. Suppl. Br. of DSHS at 16 (citing
State v. Mecca Twin Theater & Film Exch., Inc.,
¶20 We hold that while the governing statutes contemplate entry of a written contempt order, a trial court's oral *97 order is effective immediately. Nothing in the statute subjects contempt orders to different rules than those that apply to other court orders, and DSHS's rights to notice and to appeal are not undermined by giving effect to an oral order. Accepting DSHS's view would mean that a party could delay the effectiveness of sanctions during the formalizing of an order, contrary to the purpose of contempt proceedings to ensure the orderly, timely, and efficient administration of justice.
A. Oral orders are effective and enforceable, even if they can be modified prior to being reduced to writing
¶21 DSHS argues that a person facing a verbal ruling of contempt is placed in a state of "legal limbo" where he or she will face the difficult task of appealing verbal rulings that remain subject to revision. Suppl. Br. of DSHS at 17. Because written orders are also subject to modification, and courts use oral rulings on a daily basis to conduct litigation, these concerns by DSHS are unfounded. As the Court of Appeals correctly noted, "The inability to modify an order should not be the touchstone for determining an order's enforceability."
Sims,
1 Wash. App. 2d at 482,
¶22 First, written orders are also subject to modification. CrR 7.8(a) provides that "[c]lerical mistakes in judgments, orders or other parts of the record and errors therein arising from oversight or omission may be corrected by the court at any time of its own initiative or on the motion of any party." In a situation where a party believes that the judge misspoke or the sanction was written down incorrectly, regardless of whether the order is written or oral, the order may be modified to meet the intent of the court. Thus, even if there were errors in the written contempt order, a judge is still able to modify the order, pursuant to CrR 7.8(a), to match the original transcript of proceedings.
¶23 Second, there is no reason why contempt orders should be treated differently from other orders. Parties are generally required to follow a trial court's oral rulings. If
*98
questions arise and a required written finding or conclusion is missing, the remedy is to remand for entry of a written order, not invalidation of the original oral order.
See, e.g.,
State v. Head,
¶24 Moreover, compliance with oral rulings is critical to orderly court proceedings. For instance, when a court rules on a midtrial evidentiary objection or pretrial on the admission of a prior conviction or other evidence, the ruling is not hypothetical, or advisory; it is a final ruling that the parties must obey.
See
State
v.
Austin,
¶25 In sum, the fact that an oral order remains subject to modification by the court has no bearing on its immediate validity. Written orders may also be modified per CrR 7.8(a). In addition, the court system routinely relies on compliance with oral rulings *269 to maintain the orderly and efficient administration of justice. We decline to depart from this system with respect to contempt orders. *99 B. Oral orders provide sufficient notice and adequately preserve issues for appellate review
¶26 DSHS's concerns about notice and appellate review are adequately protected with an oral order that is later reduced to writing. As to notice, RCW 7.21.030(1) mandates that a contempt sanction may be imposed only after notice and hearing. There is no argument here that DSHS lacked notice. While the effective appeal of a contempt order necessitates a written order, it does not follow that an oral order imposing sanctions is ineffective until reduced to writing. Appellate review is sufficiently preserved by the ability to remand for entry of written findings and the rule that in the event of a conflict, a written order will control over an oral ruling.
See
Head
,
¶27 Contrary to DSHS's assertions,
Templeton v. Hurtado,
¶28 The Court of Appeals here correctly observed that
Templeton
simply reiterated the requirement that a written contempt order with adequate findings is necessary for appellate review.
Sims,
1 Wash. App. 2d at 482,
¶29 Finally, this is not a case where the terms of the court's oral order conflict with the subsequent written order. While a written order will take precedence over a prior oral order in the event of a conflict, 11 that circumstance is not present here. DSHS's attempt to delay the effective date of the sanctions imposed by the superior court fails.
CONCLUSION
¶30 We reverse in part and affirm in part the Court of Appeals' decision. Neither the plain language of RCW 7.21.030 nor the context of this case warrant a finding that the State waived its sovereign immunity, either expressly or impliedly, and consented to the imposition of interest on the sanctions imposed. This is not a damages case, and under the circumstances presented, the statute does not provide comprehensive relief such that waiver may be implied. In other words, the statutory scheme does not support finding an implied waiver of sovereign immunity that would subject the State to interest payments on remedial contempt sanctions. On this issue we reverse the Court of Appeals.
¶31 With regard to the validity of the superior court's oral contempt orders, nothing in RCW 7.21.030 supports treating contempt orders differently from other court orders. An oral order is immediately effective, and the parties' rights to notice and *270 appeal are protected by subsequent *101 entry of a written order, the terms of which will control over any conflicting oral statement. Requiring an immediate written contempt order risks allowing the party in contempt to delay the imposition of sanctions while the order is formalized and runs contrary to the central purpose of the remedial contempt statute-to compel timely compliance with court orders. On this issue we affirm the Court of Appeals. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
WE CONCUR:
Fairhurst, C.J.
Johnson, J.
Owens, J.
Stephens, J.
Wiggins, J.
González, J.
Gordon McCloud, J.
Yu, J.
In each of the following cases, which were consolidated in the Court of Appeals, DSHS and a state hospital appealed contempt sanctions that were imposed for delays in providing competency evaluations and/or restoration services to criminal defendants: No. 34120-8-III, State v. Sims; No. 34121-6-III, State v. Larson; No. 34122-4-III, State v. Owen; No. 34123-2-III, State v. Johnston; No. 34124-1-III, State v. Cooper; No. 34125-9-III, State v. Blake; No. 34126-7-III, State v. Pal; No. 34127-5-III, State v. Fairfield; No. 34128-3-III, State v. Tall; No. 34129-1-III, State v. Spain; No. 34130-5-III, State v. Lennartz; No. 34131-3-III, State v. McCarthy; No. 34132-1-III, State v. Alexander; No. 34133-0-III, State v. Fleming; No. 34134-8-III, State v. Fletcher; No. 34135-6-III, State v. Schilling; No. 34136-4-III, State v. Montoya; No. 34137-2-III, State v. Sackmann; No. 34138-1-III, State v. Rettinger; No. 34139-9-III, State v. Anderson; No. 34140-2-III, State v. Graham; No. 34141-1-III, State v. Keranen; No. 34142-9-III, State v. Fregoso; No. 34143-7-III, State v. Beggs; No. 34180-1-III, State v. Sandstrom; No. 34205-1-III, State v. Lopez. Two sanction orders were entered in the cases of defendants Fairfield and Tall. Accordingly, a total of 28 sanction orders are at issue.
In 2014, former RCW 10.77.068(l)(a)(i) (2012) provided a performance target of 7 days or less for a defendant's pretrial competency evaluation. The current statute retains the 7 day target and adds a maximum time limit of 14 days. See RCW 10.77.068(l)(a)(i).
The trial court explained that the sanctions were remedial sanctions ordered in accordance with RCW 7.21.030 rather than in accordance with its inherent authority. The court directed the funds to go to the registry of the court, pending a later final disposition; but compensation to the defendants for actual losses was not contemplated. The court later amended its contempt order, specifying the sanctions were to be paid to the clerk of the court and directed to Spokane County Detention Services for the purpose of assisting mentally ill offenders in jail.
The trial court held similar hearings in other cases where groups of defendants whose competency evaluations were not timely completed sought sanctions. At the conclusion of each hearing, the court, usually weeks later, entered a written order of contempt supported by findings.
As noted, contempt sanctions were imposed in 28 individual orders entered in the cases of the 26 defendants consolidated in the present matter. The sanctions collectively totaled $ 337,500. Each judgment also included interest at 12 percent per year.
Judge Korsmo opined that the Court of Appeals should reverse the contempt rulings in their entirety based on theories not argued by any party.
See
Sims,
1 Wash. App. 2d at 485 n.2,
The appropriateness of imposing sanctions under the circumstances of this case is not before the court.
Smoke v. City of Seattle,
Cf.
RCW 64.40.020. This statute, which was at issue in
Smoke,
provided landowners a cause of action for damages for arbitrary government agency action and attorney fees to the prevailing party, thereby providing "comprehensive relief" to aggrieved landowners.
See
Union Elevator,
DSHS relies on dicta in
State ex rel. Wallen v. Noe
,
stating that a judgment of contempt was inoperative because no written judgment of contempt was ever issued.
See
Dailey,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of Washington, Respondent, v. Anthony J. SIMS Respondent, Department of Social & Health Services, and Western State Hospital, Petitioners, and Other Similar Cases Consolidated on Appeal.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published