Daniel R. Audette v. Elaina D. Audette

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 16, 2020
Docket80931-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Daniel R. Audette v. Elaina D. Audette (Daniel R. Audette v. Elaina D. Audette) 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
Daniel R. Audette v. Elaina D. Audette, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

In the Matter of the Marriage of ) No. 80931-8-I ELAINA D. AUDETTE, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) DANIEL R. AUDETTE, ) ) Appellant. )

BOWMAN, J. — Daniel Audette appeals the modified parenting plan

entered by the trial court as inconsistent with the parties’ CR 2A agreement. He

also contends the trial court abused its discretion by failing to clarify the terms of

the residential schedule and amend it to add subsequent agreed terms. Finally,

he argues that the trial court erred in imposing attorney fees based on his

intransigence. We conclude that the trial court properly incorporated the terms of

the parties’ CR 2A agreement in their modified parenting plan and that it acted

within its discretion to reject additional terms to the residential schedule and

award attorney fees based on intransigence. We affirm.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 80931-8-I/2

FACTS

Elaina Audette and Daniel1 have a young son. They dissolved their

marriage and entered a parenting plan in 2013 when their son was two years old.

The parties agreed to “revisit” the parenting plan two years later when the child

reached school age.

The parties engaged in mediation on June 1, 2018, seeking to modify the

parenting plan. After mediation, Elaina and Daniel signed a “CR 2A Stipulation of

Settlement and Agreement to Enforce,” outlining the terms of their revised

parenting plan and child support schedule.2 The CR 2A agreement incorporated

the original parenting plan and amended the school and holiday residential

schedule with handwritten changes.

The modified parenting plan listed 10 holidays. The parties placed

asterisks next to the Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Memorial Day, and Labor Day

holidays. Near the bottom of the page is an asterisk followed by the sentence, “If

Holiday would result[ ] in 3 w[ee]kend[s], in a row, other parent to receive

weekend following holiday and then their regular weekend.” Another asterisk is

below that statement at the very bottom of the page with the following statement,

“[B]egin release from school Friday to return to school Tuesday or 9:00 am if no

school.” The CR 2A agreement tasked Elaina’s attorney with incorporating its

language in a modified parenting plan and Daniel’s attorney with filing the

document with the court.

1 We refer to Elaina and Daniel Audette by their first names for purposes of clarity and mean no disrespect by doing so. 2 The child support schedule is not at issue in this appeal.

2 No. 80931-8-I/3

Elaina’s attorney drafted the modified parenting plan and sent the

document to Daniel’s attorney on July 11, 2018. Elaina’s attorney noted that

mediation failed to address the Thanksgiving holiday and proposed Elaina have

the child for Thanksgiving in even years and spring break in odd years. Daniel

then proposed several more changes, including make-up days when summer

vacation “impinges on other parents[’] time,” adding Halloween as a designated

holiday, and imposing consistent exchange times at 8:30 a.m. Elaina agreed to

add Halloween and to 8:30 a.m. transfer times but the parties could not agree on

the parenting plan as a whole.

In October 2018, the parties submitted their issues to arbitration. At

arbitration, Elaina proposed a modified parenting plan that included the following

language like that in the CR 2A agreement establishing a three-weekend rule:

If a holiday would result in a parent having three full weekends in a row, the other parent shall have the child the weekend following the holiday and shall subsequently enjoy his/her regular weekend under the residential schedule.

But her proposed plan did not designate which holidays were subject to the rule.

Elaina’s proposed parenting plan also set 9:00 a.m. as the transfer time after

holidays. Elaina again agreed to add Halloween as a holiday and to all weekday

exchanges at 8:30 a.m., but otherwise requested enforcement of the terms in the

CR 2A agreement. Elaina also asked for an award of attorney fees due to

Daniel’s intransigence in failing to sign the parenting plan after the parties had

reached a CR 2A agreement.

The arbitrator determined that Elaina’s proposed parenting plan accurately

reflected the three-weekend rule as it appeared in the CR 2A agreement and

3 No. 80931-8-I/4

acknowledged that the parties “agreed to include Halloween as a holiday and

treat it as an overnight.” The arbitrator declined to award attorney fees to Elaina

because “the issues requiring resolution were made in good faith and

appropriately resolved through this process.”

After arbitration, Elaina’s attorney drafted and e-mailed Daniel’s attorney

another modified parenting plan “consistent with” the CR 2A agreement and

subsequent arbitration decision. She told Daniel’s attorney that if Daniel refused

to sign the parenting plan, Elaina would move to enforce the CR 2A agreement

and request attorney fees. Daniel did not sign the parenting plan. Instead, he

fired his attorney and began representing himself.

Daniel continued to propose changes to the parenting plan. He proposed

the three-weekend rule apply to the weekend before the holiday and

[i]f that change creates another three weekend conflict, then the impacted parent shall instead have the weekend following the holiday. If a change to either prior or following creates another three weekend conflict, then the impacted parent shall receive no relief for the three weekend conflict.

Elaina refused to make any changes beyond those to which the parties agreed to

in the CR 2A agreement and consistent with the arbitration award. In January

2019, Elaina’s attorney sent Daniel a revised version of the parenting plan to

sign, correcting only a scrivener’s error. She told Daniel that the plan was

“consistent with the June 1, 2018 CR 2A and the Arbitration Award.” She also

told him, “If we do not receive the signed orders by [January 29, 2019], we will

proceed with a motion to enforce and seek attorney fees.”

4 No. 80931-8-I/5

Daniel did not sign the orders. Instead, he retained new counsel and

continued to push for revisions to the parenting plan. The parties accused each

other of CR 2A agreement violations, and communications became increasingly

hostile. Daniel’s new attorney argued that Elaina’s parenting plan differed from

the CR 2A agreement and insisted the parties return to arbitration. Elaina’s

attorney asserted that the parenting plan was not inconsistent with the CR 2A

agreement and that she would pursue a motion to enforce it and seek attorney

fees for intransigence if Daniel refused to sign the parenting plan.

Daniel still did not sign the parenting plan. Instead, his attorney sent three

drafts of proposed parenting plans to Elaina with different versions of the three-

weekend rule. He stated that Daniel was “willing to sign any of” them and

“immediately” file it with the court.

Elaina moved to enforce the CR 2A agreement and arbitration award,

requesting the trial court enter her proposed parenting plan. The proposed

parenting plan included the three-weekend rule language from the CR 2A

agreement but did not include Halloween as an overnight holiday and maintained

the 9:00 a.m. exchange time. Elaina asked the court to award her attorney fees

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In Re the Marriage of Crosetto
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In Re the Marriage of Mattson
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In Re the Marriage of Ferree & Ferree
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In the Matter of Marriage of Greenlee
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In Re the Marriage of Kovacs
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In Re The Adoption Of A.W.A.
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In re the Marriage of Katare
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Bluebook (online)
Daniel R. Audette v. Elaina D. Audette, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-r-audette-v-elaina-d-audette-washctapp-2020.