Tomorrow's opinions, October 7, 2010
The Supreme Court will issue opinions in several cases tomorrow.
Forbes v. American Building Maintenance Company West, No. 82950-1. Whether the plaintiff has to pay prejudgment interest on attorney fees to her attorney, and whether a settlement was properly modified. Attorney Mary Schultz represented Cheryl Forbes in an employment discrimination suit against American Building Maintenance. Schultz won the trial and the first appeal. Schultz and Forbes had a falling out, and while the case was on appeal to the Supreme Court Forbes fired Schultz and accepted a settlement offer by ABM. ABM deposited the settlement money in the court registry until the court could decide how much Schultz was entitled to. The trial court awarded prejudgment interest on the attorney's fees, and Forbes challenges this award. (briefs, argument)
O'Neill v. City of Shoreline, No. 82397-9. This case revolves around whether email "metadata" is subject to disclosure under the Public Records Act. During a public meeting, the mayor of Shoreline referred to an email alleging misconduct by council members, and claimed erroneously that the email was sent by Beth O'Neill. O'Neill requested a copy of the email. The mayor provided O'Neill with a copy of the email without its header information (to, from, etc.), and the original email was apparently deleted. (briefs, argument)
State v. Garcia-Salgado, No. 83156-4. Did the State violate the U.S. or Washington Constitutions when it procured Garcia-Salgado’s DNA pursuant to a court order? (briefs, argument)
State v. Ish, No. 83308-7. Whether a prosecutor informing the jury that a witness agreed to a plea bargain requiring truthful testimony constitutes vouching for his credibility. Nathaniel Ish murdered his girlfriend and was arrested and imprisoned prior to trial. While in prison he talked to David Otterson, his cell mate, about the murder. The state made a plea agreement with Otterson which, in part, required him to testify truthfully at Ish's trial. While examining Otterson at trial, the prosecutor brought out the information that the plea agreement required Otterson to testify truthfully and that it could be revoked if Otterson breached it. Ish claims this was improperly vouching for the witness. (briefs, argument)
State v. Moeurn, No. 82995-1. Lauren Moeurn appeals his conviction and sentence for second degree assault with a deadly weapon enhancement. He argued that (1) the evidence was insufficient to prove he was the person who hit the victim; (2) prosecutorial misconduct in closing arguments deprived him of his right to a fair trial; and (3) the trial court miscalculated his offender score. The Supreme Court accepted the petition for review only on the offender score issue.
State v. Stubbs, No. 81650-6. This case concerns whether a stabbing that results in partial paralysis satisfies the requirement for an exceptional sentence for first degree assault, and whether the requirement itself is unconstitutionally vague. Troy Stubbs stabbed Ryan Goodwin in the neck, severing his spinal cord and paralyzing him from the waist down. Stubbs was convicted of first degree assault and given an exceptional sentence due to his victim's injuries. The court held that the jury could find that Goodwin's injuries substantially exceeded the great bodily harm element. (briefs, argument)
