In e the Marriage of: Derrick Badgley and Michelle Elise Pappas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 3, 2022
Docket37841-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In e the Marriage of: Derrick Badgley and Michelle Elise Pappas (In e the Marriage of: Derrick Badgley and Michelle Elise Pappas) 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
In e the Marriage of: Derrick Badgley and Michelle Elise Pappas, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED MAY 3, 2022 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

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

In the Matter of the Marriage of: ) ) No. 37841-1-III DERRICK BADGLEY, ) ) Appellant, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION and ) ) MICHELLE PAPPAS, ) ) Respondent. )

FEARING, J. — In this marital dissolution, husband Derrick Badgley assigns error

to the trial court’s characterization of his Spokane Valley residence and an IRA account

as community-like property. He argues that, when characterizing the two assets as

community-like property, the dissolution court mistakenly concluded that the couple

engaged in a committed, intimate relationship before marriage because Idaho law does

not recognize such a relationship. Because Badgley failed to plead Idaho law and

neglected to sufficiently brief the question before the trial court, we decline to apply

Idaho law. We affirm the dissolution court’s distribution of property.

FACTS

Derrick Badgley and Michelle Pappas formed their relationship in the neighboring

Gem State. The two began dating in August 2008, when Badgley lived in Lewiston,

Idaho and Pappas in Coeur d’Alene. They visited one another in the two cities. In No. 37841-1-III In re Marriage of: Badgley & Pappas

November 2008, Pappas briefly moved to California, though she returned to Idaho

several times to visit Badgley. Pappas returned to live in Idaho in June 2009.

Late in the summer of 2009, Michelle Pappas moved into Derrick Badgley’s

Lewiston home. Pappas enrolled at the University of Idaho. Pappas did not pay rent.

Badgley paid all of the couple’s living expenses. The couple adopted a dog together and

attended vacations and holidays with each other’s families. The pair, however,

maintained separate financial accounts and did not commingle funds.

Michelle Pappas contracted cancer. She stopped attending the University of Idaho

and thereby lost the medical insurance available because of her matriculation. Derrick

Badgley investigated adding her to his medical insurance plan. He discovered that,

without being married, he could not add Pappas to the plan. As part of his research,

Badgley learned that Idaho does not recognize common-law marriages.

While Michelle Pappas and Derrick Badgley cohabitated in Idaho, Pappas

believed the pair would eventually wed. In December 2011, Derrick Badgley and Pappas

became engaged to marry.

In August 2012, Derrick Badgley purchased a house in Spokane Valley. Michelle

Pappas participated in the home search. She described the home as a “good common

ground” between Badgley’s preference for country living and her preference for city life.

Report of Proceedings (RP) at 242. Badgley alone paid the down payment on the

purchase of the residence. The deed to the home listed only Badgley’s name. According

2 No. 37841-1-III In re Marriage of: Badgley & Pappas

to Pappas, the two agreed to add her name on the residential title on marriage. Badgley

and Pappas relocated to Spokane to live in the new house. Badgley never added Pappas’

name to the residential title.

In April 2013, the pair ended their close relationship after Michelle Pappas

revealed she wanted to move to Texas. As a result of the breakup, Derrick Badgley

sought a new romantic relationship. But in June 2013, Pappas discovered she was

pregnant with Badgley’s son, and the pair reconciled. In July 2013, Pappas returned to

the Spokane Valley home to reside with Badgley. The partners married in August 2014.

Derrick Badgley maintained an IRA account through Edward Jones. After

changing employers in 2017, he rolled a 401(k) fund from his employer, Sherwin-

Williams, into the Edward Jones account. Badgley withdrew funds from the IRA during

the marriage.

PROCEDURE

Derrick Badgley petitioned for marital dissolution in January 2019. His petition

included no request for the application of Idaho law. In a trial brief, Badgley argued

against the existence of a committed, intimate relationship, but, in forwarding this

argument, he only analyzed Washington law. He did not request that the trial court apply

Idaho law.

During opening statement at trial, Derrick Badgley’s counsel commented, in part:

3 No. 37841-1-III In re Marriage of: Badgley & Pappas

The history in this case and the facts will show that I kind of left the elephant in the room out of my opening brief. And I apologize for that. But I just—I realized as I was preparing for this that the parties lived in Idaho for the first few years, except eight months in Washington when they weren’t married. And Idaho has done away with common law marriage; therefore, they’ve done away with CIRs [committed intimate relationships] completely or meretricious relationship cases because they—the factors in a CIR and a meretricious relationship and a common law marriage are exactly the same. And from the statutory common law factors over there at ICJI [Idaho Civil Jury Instruction] 911 and the case law in 2002, I have a case for the Court that indicates that it’s no longer been the case since 1997.

RP at 8-9.

During the cross-examination of Derrick Badgley by Michelle Pappas’ counsel,

the following colloquy ensued:

Q. And do you remember how you held her out when you introduced her to your family? A. No. Q. Okay. And then— MR. STENZEL [Derrick Badgley’s attorney]: Your Honor, I’m going to entertain an objection at this time. I’m really not sure where Mr. Dudley [Michelle Pappas’ attorney] is going. I can voir dire counsel—the client and—they were living in Idaho at the time. There is no meretricious relationship or CIR in Idaho nor common law marriage. So I don’t know how this is relevant. MR. DUDLEY: Mr. Stenzel can do—could have done a summary judgment, if he wanted to, long ago. You don’t get to show up at trial and try to prevent me from putting on my case. MR. STENZEL: He can put on his case, Your Honor, but a summary judgment is optional because it is expensive, number 1; and number 2, you get issues decided sometimes that you don’t want to before trial. And I am not even sure that—I said at the beginning, I said this was the elephant in the room that I missed. So as I’m talking—I can bring up the law even if it’s the last day I find it out.

4 No. 37841-1-III In re Marriage of: Badgley & Pappas

If there was no common law marriage in Idaho and no CIR and no meretricious relationship, then how could that even be relevant to what we’re doing here under the conflict-of-law theory? MR. DUDLEY: Well, you would have to invoke a choice of law. You would have had to do that. It would be as if someone lived in a noncommunity property state and brought property here to a community property state. MR. STENZEL: Sure. MR. DUDLEY: And so I believe I get to put on my case. And it’s listed as a disputed issue. You don’t get to—so . . . MR. STENZEL: He can put that they didn’t get a treasure, but if they start talking about treasure hunting, they didn’t do any treasure hunting, treasure trove, then it’s irrelevant. You know, he can put it in there and he won’t sign it unless it’s in there. Then we deal with it and deal with it here. And that’s—we do it by objection. So my concern is where are we going with this. THE COURT: Okay. I’m going to overrule the objection.

RP at 125-26.

During the cross-examination of Michelle Pappas, her counsel commented:

THE COURT: Mr. Dudley? MR. DUDLEY: Mr. Stenzel is always fond of saying a phrase called “case law,” but he never actually gives you a case.

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