Alice H. Argosino v. Mark W. Bryan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 20, 2020
Docket80608-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alice H. Argosino v. Mark W. Bryan (Alice H. Argosino v. Mark W. Bryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alice H. Argosino v. Mark W. Bryan, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MARK W. BRYAN, ) No. 80608-4-I ) Appellant, ) ) DIVISION ONE v. ) ) ALICE H. ARGOSINO, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION Respondent. ) )

MANN, C.J. — Mark Bryan appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion to revise

the court commissioner’s order confirming in part and denying in part the arbitration

decision clarifying the parenting plan. Bryan contends that the court’s denial was an

abuse of discretion because the commissioner was bound by deadlines in RCW 7.04A

to accept the arbitrator’s decision in its entirety without any modification. We disagree

and affirm.

I.

Bryan and Alice Argosino met in November 2007 and began residing together in

May or June 2008. As a couple, the two lived together for about seven years.

Together, they had two daughters, one born in August 2008 and the second in

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 80608-4-I/2

December 2009. Argosino was previously married and has two daughters from her

prior marriage. Bryan was previously married and has no other children.

Bryan and Argosino separated in July 2011 after Argosino filed a domestic

violence protection order (DVPO). Argosino dropped the order and separated from

Bryan for the final time in January 2014. Argosino filed another DVPO on January 2,

2014 and Bryan filed a petition to establish a residential schedule with his children on

January 21, 2014. The matter was referred to Family Court Services (FCS) and Bryan

was granted a temporary residential schedule at a hearing on February 14, 2014.

On April 19, 2014, FCS issued a risk assessment report that recommended

Bryan enroll in and complete a domestic violence offender treatment program and have

supervised visits with his children pending completion of the program. On May 12,

2014, the court granted Argosino a DVPO. Further, Argosino is enrolled in the address

confidentiality program, which keeps victims of domestic violence addresses

confidential.

On December 2, 2014, the parties participated in a settlement conference and

reached an agreement on all issues, including the final parenting plan. On January 30,

2015, the court entered a second agreed and amended order modifying the order for

protection, which allowed incidental contact between the parties during exchanges of

the children, for Bryan to pick up the children from school or daycare, and that Bryan’s

residential time would be governed by the parenting plan.

Bryan sought clarification of the parenting plan through dispute resolution. On

July 31, 2018, the trial court ordered Argosino to participate in an arbitration. In the

order, seven issues were identified that needed clarification: educational decisions,

-2- No. 80608-4-I/3

direct communication with the children, communication between Argosino and Bryan,

counseling for the children, exchanges of the children, and vacation and holiday

schedules.

The following is a summary of the arbitrator’s decision relating to each category

requiring modification. First, on the issue of education, the arbitrator found that the

children were not benefitting from remaining at a lower performing school in the Seattle

School District, should transfer to the Shoreline School District, and that the transition

would occur in September 2019.

Second, on Bryan’s direct communication with the children, the arbitrator found

that the children were sufficiently mature to have telephone contact with Bryan and

since the children were removed from the DVPO and his residential time was

unrestricted, such contact would be consistent with the parenting plan. Further, Bryan

would supply a phone for the children to use and the phone would have child controls.

Third, on clarification regarding communication between the parties, the arbitrator

found that the parenting plan requires contact between the parties for notification of

vacation dates and making joint parenting decisions. Previously, communication went

through Bryan’s attorney. The arbitrator found there was no basis to compel Bryan to

continue to engage his attorney for the benefit of Argosino. The arbitrator found that the

parties should use Our Family Wizard, a communication service that would be an

efficient and verifiable method for communication.

Fourth, on the children’s continued counseling, the arbitrator found that neither

child had been assigned to a specific therapist after four years of therapy, that the

-3- No. 80608-4-I/4

decision to place the children in therapy was a joint decision, and that there was no

compelling basis on which to keep the children in therapy at Sound Mental Health.

Fifth, on exchanges of the children between the parents, the arbitrator found that

Argosino could not assign responsibility to exchange the children to her minor 16-year-

old daughter and that non-school exchanges should continue at the North Seattle

grocery store where exchanges had previously occurred.

Sixth, on clarifying vacations, the arbitrator found that there was ambiguity in the

vacation schedule and clarified that Bryan’s weekend residential periods in the summer

start on Wednesday at 3:00 p.m. and end Monday at 9:00 a.m. The arbitrator clarified

that the summer residential schedule starts when school recesses for the summer, not

June 1st. Additionally, the arbitrator clarified that the provision about scheduling two-

week vacations could be either two one-week periods or one two-week periods and the

days are counted by overnights not by hours.

Finally, on clarifying the holiday schedule, the arbitrator found there was an

inconsistency between the settlement agreement and the parenting plan and that the

settlement agreement should supersede the parenting plan to reflect that “the children

will be exchanged on December 25th at 3:00 pm” because the children split their time

with each parent during their winter holiday break.

On March 28, 2019, Bryan submitted the arbitrator’s decision to the court for

confirmation and with a proposed final order that revised the parenting plan to include

the arbitrator’s clarifications. Argosino opposed incorporating portions of the arbitration

award. Argosino filed a motion to add the children back onto the DVPO.

-4- No. 80608-4-I/5

The court commissioner heard arguments addressing both the request to confirm

the arbitrator’s decision and to add the children to the DVPO on June 10, 2019. The

commissioner confirmed in part and denied in part the arbitration award. The

commissioner entered the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

1) School enrollment; the children are residents of the Seattle School District for the foreseeable future. Only evidence was that Shoreline would not have room.

2) The father shall provide a “simple* phone” which the mother shall preapprove for purposes of direct [communication] with the children, the parties may call the child 1x/day at reasonable times. The children are allowed to make as many calls as they wish. [*Simple meaning no component ability to track, email or other media.]

3) The father shall prepay for Our Family Wizard for one year worth of service – the parties shall limit themselves to 1 message/week. The message shall be limited to 200 words or less.

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