In Re Marriage: Caroline Caylor, Aka Caroline Vaughan, App. v. Nathaniel Caylor, Resp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 16, 2016
Docket73404-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Marriage: Caroline Caylor, Aka Caroline Vaughan, App. v. Nathaniel Caylor, Resp. (In Re Marriage: Caroline Caylor, Aka Caroline Vaughan, App. v. Nathaniel Caylor, Resp.) 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 Re Marriage: Caroline Caylor, Aka Caroline Vaughan, App. v. Nathaniel Caylor, Resp., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE i. j

In the Matter of the Marriage of No. 73404-1-1 ^ 5 CAROLINE MARIA CAYLOR, 5 ^3 Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION S =:'> and -40

NATHANIEL THOMAS CAYLOR,

Respondent. FILED: May 16, 2016

Schindler, J. — Caroline Maria Vaughan appeals the decree of dissolution, final

parenting plan, findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the order of child support.

Vaughan contends the provision in the parenting plan and the order of child support that

prohibits her from "providing negative information about the father to day care providers,

school personnel, or other parents associated with the child or child's friends" violates

her First Amendment right to free speech. Vaughan also challenges the parenting plan

residential provisions, the decision of the court to exclude a letter as hearsay, and the

award of $30,000 in attorney fees based on intransigence. We conclude the record

supports the court's decision to impose a provision in the parenting plan and the order

of child support prohibiting Vaughan from engaging in unprotected speech but vacate

and remand to craft a provision that prohibits only unprotected speech. In all other

respects, we affirm. No. 73404-1-1/2

FACTS

In spring 2012, Caroline Maria Vaughan and Nathaniel Thomas Caylor were

living in the same apartment complex. Caylor lived with his five-year-old son. Caylor

sustained a serious facial injury in 2009 and had a metal device that was screwed into

his jaw. In 2011, Caylor sustained a back injury while working as a high-rise window

washer.

In April 2012, Vaughan and Caylor started spending time together. Vaughan

thought Caylor was "very nice" and "charming." When Caylor and Vaughan met in April

2012, Vaughan worked in sales for a wine and alcohol distributer.

Caylor told Vaughan that shortly after the mother of Caylor's son died in 2009, a

family member called the police concerned about Caylor's mental state. Police went to

the apartment to conduct a welfare check. Caylor was in the apartment with his son.

Caylor refused to allow the police to enter. Believing Caylor was armed and dangerous,

a Seattle police officer shot him, causing extensive and serious injuries to his face and

jaw. Caylor was not armed and no weapons were found at the apartment. Child Protective Services removed Caylor's son from his custody and filed a

dependency petition. Caylor entered an Alford1 plea to the felony harassment charge. After Caylor successfully completed a number of services including a psychological evaluation and therapy, the State returned Caylor's son to his care and dismissed the

dependency petition.

Caylor filed a civil lawsuit against the city of Seattle (City) based on the shooting, the multiple surgeries stemming from the shooting, and the removal of his child.

1 North Carolina v. Alford. 400 U.S. 25, 91 S. Ct. 160, 27 L Ed. 2d 162 (1970). No. 73404-1-1/3

Caylor and Vaughan married in July 2012. Vaughan was pregnant at the time. A

few weeks after the wedding, Caylor underwent major surgery to reconstruct his jaw

with a bone graft. Caylor was hospitalized for several weeks. Physicians prescribed

high-level pain medication after the procedure. While Caylor was hospitalized, Vaughan

suffered a miscarriage.

Caylor's parents arrived from Idaho to help care for Caylor and his son. When

Caylor returned home from the hospital, Vaughan was not interested in caring for Caylor

or his son but insisted Caylor's parents leave.

In November, Vaughan was pregnant.

On January 25, 2013, Caylor and Vaughan argued. Caylor took Vaughan's cell

phone because his was broken and tried to leave. Vaughan confronted him. Caylor

said Vaughan "was charging at me. She was getting in my face. She was pushing me."

As he was driving his truck away from the house, Vaughan came "screaming out of the

house at [Caylor]." Vaughan stepped on the running board and reached inside the truck

through an open window to hit him in the face. Vaughan started "punching" Caylor's

face and "clawing at" his arm. As Caylor tried to roll up the window, Vaughan grabbed

the door handle, broke it off, and fell.

She started hitting at me. Yeah. This is a very emotionally charged thing, so just give me a moment here. So she charged in and climbed on the car and started punching at me and like clawing at me. And she reached in. And Iwas trying to get her away and holding my hand up because she kept hitting me in the head. And Itried to roll the window up with my hand up. She reached in to grab the door knob. She broke the door knob off and fell off the car.

Caylor drove a short distance and called the attorney who was representing him in the

case against the City for help. No. 73404-1-1/4

The attorney found Caylor parked in the truck approximately four blocks away

from his house, very weak and "shaken." Caylor had a PICC2 line in his arm for

"intravenous antibiotics and intravenous pain medication."

Q: How did [Caylor] appear to you? A: Very shaken. I mean literally shaking. He was trembling and very sad. Q: And how did you know he was sad? A: A couple things. One would be just his facial expressions and affect. And I believe he was tearful. The other is that I actually have a background before law of working in mental health, and I would certainly have assessed him as being depressed, and acutely so. Q: And how would you describe his physical condition, his weight? A: He was very evidently weak. And as the morning got on and as he got out of the vehicle and I spoke with him and then did some additional things with him, it was very evident he was weak. I knew that he had just had a surgery recently. He was walking with a cane. And I understood that the surgery had been to take a bone graft from somewhere in his leg or hip to use in trying to reconstruct his mouth that had been damaged by the shooting.

Caylor and the attorney went back to the house to retrieve some belongings and

Caylor's medication. Vaughan was not there. They found the medication "outside in a

garbage can on the curb." The attorney took Caylor and his son to a hotel and to a

scheduled medical appointment. "[Caylor] was very distraught. . . , trying to figure out

what would be next. ... He was moving slowly, was pale, and was at times tearful, and

his general bearing was of a person who was not at all well." A few days later, the

attorney helped Caylor move out of the house.

On February 28, 2013, Vaughan filed a petition for dissolution of the marriage.

Vaughan did not allege domestic violence or seek a restraining order.

2 Peripherally inserted central catheter. No. 73404-1-1/5

Caylor went to Idaho with his son to stay with his parents. Caylor and his son

returned to Port Townsend, Washington around May 2013. In August 2013, Vaughan

gave birth to a daughter.

In January 2014, Vaughan obtained a decree of dissolution, findings of fact and

conclusions of law, an order of child support, and a parenting plan by default. Caylor

filed a motion to vacate the default orders. Vaughan filed a declaration in opposition to

the motion. Vaughan claimed Caylor assaulted her on January 25, 2013 by grabbing

her arm and causing a bruise. Vaughan alleged Caylor took her cell phone to prevent

her from calling the police and threatened to run her over. In a supplemental

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