Amy S Devargas, V Joshua D Kleymeyer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 17, 2015
Docket45769-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Amy S Devargas, V Joshua D Kleymeyer (Amy S Devargas, V Joshua D Kleymeyer) 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.

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Amy S Devargas, V Joshua D Kleymeyer, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

November 17, 2015

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In re the Marriage of: No. 45769-5-II

AMY S. DeVARGAS, Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

JOSHUA KLEYMEYER,

Respondent.

BJORGEN, J. — Amy S. deVargas appeals the trial court’s orders of child support for

deVargas’s and Joshua D. Kleymeyer’s minor children and an order finding her in contempt

entered by a superior court commissioner earlier in the proceedings. DeVargas assigns error to

several of the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of its orders,

contending that the trial court made various errors in calculating the parties’ obligations.

DeVargas also contends that the trial court erred in holding her in contempt. Finding errors in

the child support orders and in the contempt order, we reverse and remand for further

proceedings. No. 45769-5-II

FACTS

I. INITIAL PROCEEDING IN THE OREGON COURTS AND THE KLEYMEYER TRUST

DeVargas and Kleymeyer have two children together, BK and SK. On January 5, 2001,

the Multnomah County Circuit Court in Oregon entered a judgment awarding custody of both

children to deVargas and ordering Kleymeyer to pay child support. The court also ordered

Kleymeyer “to seek further funds for the purpose of paying [his] basic needs and responsibilities

from the Irrevocable Trust Created By Clifford Kleymeyer for the Benefit of Joshua David

Kleymeyer” (Trust) in the amount of $700 per month “to defray the children’s child care costs.”

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 435. The Trust apparently held substantial assets,1 distributions, and

income, which constituted Kleymeyer’s primary or sole source of support at the time.

II. DEVARGAS’S MOVE TO THE UNITED KINGDOM AND KLEYMEYER’S MOVE TO LOS ANGELES

On October 23, 2001, the Oregon court entered a judgment modifying the January 2001

judgment, allowing deVargas to relocate the boys to the United Kingdom. The modified

judgment required Kleymeyer to pay for the children’s health insurance and $638 per month in

child support “until each child attains the age of 18, or 21 if attending school pursuant to Oregon

Law.” CP at 430. It made deVargas “responsible for the children’s uninsured health costs until

such time that more information is available regarding the children’s health care cost in the

United Kingdom.” CP at 430. The modified judgment also provided for the children to visit

Kleymeyer in the United States for one month each summer, and allowed Kleymeyer to schedule

1 The record does not establish the exact value of the Trust assets, which passed to Kleymeyer directly when he turned 30 on August 13, 2004.

2 No. 45769-5-II

additional visits in the United Kingdom. It made deVargas responsible for one half of the travel

expenses for the summer visits and Kleymeyer solely responsible for the remainder of the

children’s travel expenses, as well as his own.

DeVargas married a United Kingdom citizen, Brendon Keenan, and had two more

children. She separated from Keenan in April 2009, returned with all four children to the United

States, and settled in Thurston County. According to a declaration submitted to the trial court,

deVargas received about $57,000 in the property division resulting from her separation from

Keenan, which money she used to relocate, purchase a car, and pay living expenses for the

following year.2

While deVargas, BK, and SK lived in the United Kingdom, Kleymeyer earned a graduate

degree from American University in Washington, D.C., and worked at various professional jobs

in the United States, Europe, and New Zealand. He eventually moved to Los Angeles,

California, got married, and found employment with The RAND Corporation.

III. BK’S LEGAL TROUBLES

In early 2011, the State charged BK with several crimes related to a hit and run accident

in Thurston County Juvenile Court. The incident giving rise to the charges occurred in January

2010 and involved a van that went missing from deVargas’s driveway. DeVargas hired a private

attorney to defend BK, at a total cost of over $14,000. The record indicates that BK received a

deferred disposition in December 2011, pursuant to a negotiated plea.

2 In a 2010 pleading, deVargas asserted that she received between $960 and $1,100 monthly from Keenan in “voluntary child support.” CP at 362.

3 No. 45769-5-II

IV. 2010 MODIFICATION OF THE OREGON JUDGMENT

Meanwhile, on March 10, 2010, Kleymeyer moved in the Oregon court to modify the

2001 custody and support orders. Kleymeyer specifically raised deVargas’s alleged failure to

fulfill her obligation under the 2001 judgments to pay a share of BK and SK’s travel and

uninsured medical expenses.

In an affidavit, Kleymeyer listed his employment as an administrative assistant at The

RAND Corporation and his total monthly gross income as $4,687.61. Kleymeyer claimed

$2,914.54 in “optional deductions” from his monthly income, including contributions of $417.00

per month to his Roth retirement account savings plan and $2,333.37 to an “Education Fund.”

CP at 384. Kleymeyer also disclosed that his wife, Kathryn Wood, had $5,406.25 in monthly

income. DeVargas asserted that her income, including food stamp benefits and “voluntary child

support” from Keenan, totaled between $2,211.00 and $2,351.00 monthly. CP at 362.

On September 7, 2010, the Oregon court entered a supplemental judgment modifying the

parenting schedule and child support by stipulation. The court determined Kleymeyer’s monthly

income to be $5,268 and deVargas’s to be $1,455. The judgment specified that Kleymeyer “will

continue to pay all of the children’s transportation expenses for his parenting time” and will pay

“$82 in excess of 4% of his gross monthly income for the children’s health insurance.” CP at

349. The Oregon court adjusted the monthly child support obligation “downward by a total of

$130 per month” for these expenses. CP at 349. The court thus ordered Kleymeyer to pay $910

per month in child support as well as BK and SK’s health insurance costs. It made deVargas

responsible for the first $250 of uninsured or unreimbursed medical expenses per year.

4 No. 45769-5-II

The judgment also awarded the dependent tax exemptions to Kleymeyer and required

him to maintain and make minimum contributions of $1,000 per year to educational savings

accounts he had set up for BK and SK. The record shows that in 2010, the accounts specified in

the order consisted of two education savings accounts with balances of nearly $20,000 each, as

well as two other accounts Kleymeyer held on behalf of BK and SK with balances of around

$70,000 each.

The judgment included a parenting plan and addressed responsibility for related

transportation as follows:

Father shall be solely responsible for booking and paying for the children’s transportation for his parenting time, and shall provide [deVargas] a copy of all transportation confirmations and itineraries as soon as he receives them. [DeVargas] shall be responsible for getting the children to and from the transportation provider at her end.

CP at 351. The judgment did not, however, award Kleymeyer any amount or offset for his

support obligation based on deVargas’s alleged failure to pay her share of the unreimbursed

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