In re the Marriage of Chandola

180 Wash. 2d 632, 2014 WL 2770482
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 2014
DocketNo. 89093-5
StatusPublished
Cited by144 cases

This text of 180 Wash. 2d 632 (In re the Marriage of Chandola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of Chandola, 180 Wash. 2d 632, 2014 WL 2770482 (Wash. 2014).

Opinions

Gordon McCloud, J.

¶1 This case concerns three provisions of a parenting plan that limits contact between the petitioner, Manjul Varn Chandola, and his young daughter. The trial court imposed those restrictions under RCW 26.09.191(3)(g), which authorizes a court to “preclude or limit any provisions of the parenting plan” if necessary to protect against “adverse effect to the child’s best interests.” This case presents the question of what type of “adverse effect to the child’s best interests” a trial court must find before imposing parenting plan restrictions under the catchall provision, RCW 26.09.191(3)(g). We hold that restrictions imposed under that statute must be reasonably calculated to prevent relatively severe physical, mental, or emotional harm to a child. Applying that standard, we affirm the trial court’s decision to impose two of the challenged restrictions but reverse its decision to impose the third.

[637]*637FACTS

¶2 Manjul Varn Chandola (Chandola) and Neha Vyas Chandola (Vyas) were married in 1998; Vyas gave birth to the couple’s daughter, P.R.C., in 2008. Both Chandola and Vyas are attorneys, but Chandola was consistently unemployed or underemployed during their marriage. Accordingly, he was home with P.R.C. more often than Vyas was during the first two years of P.R.C.’s life. At different intervals, both Vyas’s mother and Chandola’s parents also lived in the home. The grandparents provided a great deal of child care, and while Vyas and Chandola were married, P.R.C. always slept in the same room as either her parents or one of her grandmothers.

¶3 Chandola’s and Vyas’s most serious conflicts arose after P.R.C. was born. Vyas accused Chandola of engaging in abusive behavior toward her — yelling at her, calling her names, and telling her that she was a bad mother. She felt that Chandola and his parents were trying to marginalize her, encouraging P.R.C. to bond with Chandola and minimizing Vyas’s role. Vyas also objected to Chandola’s parenting style. Particular sources of conflict were Chandola’s inability to maintain a consistent meal and sleep schedule for P.R.C. and his obsessive concern that something bad would happen to her. According to Vyas, this concern manifested in Chandola’s holding P.R.C. excessively, discouraging her from playing with other children, and insisting that she be supervised by a family member at all times — even while she slept.

¶4 In February 2011, Vyas filed for dissolution. She told Chandola that she was concerned about the possibility of sexual abuse because P.R.C. had complained of vaginal pain. When the couple separated in late February 2011, Chandola agreed to supervised visitation with P.R.C. at the advice of his attorney at the time. The supervised visitation was lifted in December 2011.

[638]*638¶5 The court-appointed parenting expert, Dr. Jennifer Wheeler, concluded that P.R.C.’s statements were not evidence of sexual abuse. In its findings of fact, the trial court also dismissed the allegations, concluding instead that “(Vyas] may have needed to precipitate a crisis in order to escape the marriage and extended family dynamic.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 94. In short, the sexual abuse allegations were unsubstantiated.

¶6 In the divorce proceedings, Chandola sought a 50-50 residential split. Vyas requested that Chandola’s residential time with P.R.C. be limited under RCW 26.09.191(3)(b) and (e), which allow a trial court to “preclude or limit any provisions of the parenting plan” upon certain findings. Subsection (3)(b) allows restrictions on the basis of a parent’s “long-term emotional. . . impairment which interferes with ... parenting functions.” Subsection (3)(e) allows restrictions on the basis of a parent’s “abusive use of conflict . . . which creates the danger of serious damage to the child’s psychological development.”1

¶7 Dr. Wheeler’s written pretrial parenting evaluation stated that there was no basis on which to impose RCW 26.09.191 restrictions. It acknowledged that Chandola appeared to have some problematic personality traits but [639]*639concluded that they did not manifest frequently enough to “meet criteria for a major mental health or personality disorder that would support restrictions to the residential schedule consistent with RCW 26.09.19l(3)(b).” 2 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Jan. 31, 2012) at 297.

¶8 Nevertheless, Dr. Wheeler recommended a residential schedule that limited Chandola to roughly the same total amount of contact he had had with P.R.C. during the period of supervised visitation (before the judge rejected the abuse allegations). The schedule she recommended amounted to about 20 hours per week (two seven-hour visits per week and one overnight stay every other Saturday). She also recommended a residential schedule in “phase [s],” whereby Chandola would progress to greater residential time with P.R.C. every few years if he successfully complied with certain recommendations. Id. at 235-45. These recommendations were fairly limited: Dr. Wheeler recommended that Chandola continue to see his therapist and participate in individual parent training but did not recommend any restrictions on Chandola’s conduct or his parents’ contact with P.R.C.

¶9 At trial, Dr. Wheeler agreed that her recommendations gave Chandola time with P.R.C. that was “significantly more limited than what would generally be the norm.” Id. at 305. When pressed to explain these recommendations on the witness stand, Dr. Wheeler disavowed her written evaluation to some extent:

I also don’t think I gave due consideration in my formulation of the [RCW 26.09], 191 restrictions to what my concerns were and how they might play out in terms of abusive use of conflict. I was very focused as I read it here on domestic violence, sexual abuse allegations and the emotional impairment.
My authority for my opinion is that the personality traits that I’ve been describing all morning in my opinion, the risk to [P.R.C.] of those traits is ongoing conflict that is essentially emotionally abusive to her. And I do think that until those traits are better regulated and [Chandola is] able to interact [640]*640with [P.R.C.] in a way that does not perpetuate this conflict and parent in a way that does not continue to inflame this conflict, I do think that [the] father is vulnerable to engaging in abusive use of conflict. That supports generally why I am limiting his residential schedule relative to what you just referred to as the normal, typical kind of recommendation.

Id. at 305-06.

¶10 After six days of testimony, the trial court found that “the father’s parenting history has had an adverse effect on the child’s best interests pursuant to RCW 26.09.191

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 Wash. 2d 632, 2014 WL 2770482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-chandola-wash-2014.