In Re The Marriage Of: Crystal H. Tablazon, V Anthony J.M. Tablazon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 31, 2018
Docket50025-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Marriage Of: Crystal H. Tablazon, V Anthony J.M. Tablazon (In Re The Marriage Of: Crystal H. Tablazon, V Anthony J.M. Tablazon) 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 The Marriage Of: Crystal H. Tablazon, V Anthony J.M. Tablazon, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

July 31, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In re the Marriage of: No. 50025-6-II

CRYSTAL H. TABLAZON,

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

ANTHONY J.M. TABLAZON,

Appellant.

MELNICK, J. — Anthony J.M. Tablazon appeals from the trial court’s order dissolving his

marriage with Crystal H. Pak.1 He contends that the trial court erred by awarding Pak the family

home, ordering him to pay her ten years of spousal maintenance, setting aside community assets

to pay debts to Pak’s family, and by awarding Pak attorney fees. 2 Because the trial court abused

its discretion by failing to value the community assets and awarding Pak one hundred percent

interest in the family home, we reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS

I. MARRIAGE AND COMMUNITY PROPERTY

Pak and Tablazon married in 1989 and separated in September 2015. At the time of their

dissolution trial, they had two adult children. Tablazon served in the Army until 2006. He then

worked as a private contractor for the United States State Department from 2006 until 2014. Pak

1 In the final divorce order, the trial court changed Crystal Tablazon’s name to Crystal Pak. 2 We also address Pak’s request for attorney fees for this appeal. 50025-6-II

worked as a hairdresser and homemaker. She started working when the kids began school and

stopped in November 2013.

At the time of trial, both parties had Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Tablazon

was one hundred percent disabled but employable. Pak was not employable, but was being treated

for her various mental disorders and could be employable in the future. Tablazon was unemployed

at the time of trial, but testified that he had been seeking jobs. He received monthly combat-related

specialty compensation (CRSC) payments from the military totaling approximately $5,800.

During their marriage, the parties resided in a house in Gig Harbor near Pak’s family. After

the separation, Pak resided in the house by herself. She continued the monthly mortgage payments

of $1,800. The value of the home at the time of trial was either $380,000 or $385,000, and the

Tablazons owed $105,000 on it.

During the marriage, Pak’s sister, Kailani Kim, lent the parties money but did not keep a

record of how much. At the time of trial, Pak and Tablazon owed her approximately $100,000.

Pak transferred $30,000 to Kim several months before the parties separated. She transferred Kim

another $20,000 several days after the separation. Pak’s parents lent Pak and Tablazon

approximately $70,000 during the marriage to purchase a home. Pak testified that she and

Tablazon owed Kim at least $13,000 and owed her parents $70,000.3

During the marriage, the parties acquired another house from Tablazon’s parents. Pak and

Tablazon rented it out for a number of years until January 2015 when they sold it. Pak placed the

$130,000 from the sale into an account to which only she had access.

3 Pak listed the $70,000 from her parents as “inheritance” in a discovery response. 1 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 112. She testified that she answered this way because she “didn’t know which way to explain it.” 1 RP at 112.

2 50025-6-II

Pak testified that Tablazon was physically and emotionally abusive to her throughout their

marriage. This abuse caused her a rotator cuff injury, terminal ringing in her eardrums, PTSD,

and other psychological disorders which prevented her from working.

II. LITIGATION

Pak filed a petition for dissolution of marriage in December 2015.

A. TABLAZON’S LITIGATION CONDUCT

In March 2016, as part of the dissolution proceedings, the court granted an ex parte

restraining order preventing Tablazon from having contact with Pak for 14 days. In April, it

extended the restraining order, ordered Tablazon to pay Pak monthly maintenance by direct

deposit, and required Tablazon to pay taxes on the family home.

The following October, Pak did not receive her monthly payment and instead received an

e-mail from “Popmoney”4 asking her to set up an account to get her money. To create the account

and receive her payment, she would have had to enter personal information, including her bank

account.

In a November declaration, Tablazon stated:

I have been making the required spousal maintenance payments . . . as directed by this Court. I am still not clear why the bank chose to use a “Pop Money” account for purposes of depositing money into [Pak’s] account, but once I learned that this had occurred, I went into the bank and made sure that the direct deposit that had previously been set up was continued.

Ex. 43.

At trial, Tablazon testified that he had placed a time limit on the direct deposit to Pak’s

account and, when it expired, a bank representative told him Popmoney would be the quickest way

4 Popmoney is a service that allows users to send, request, and receive money through a cell phone app. www.popmoney.com/index.html. It allows for direct transfers between users’ bank accounts and charges a flat fee per transaction. www.popmoney.com/index.html.

3 50025-6-II

to get Pak the money without contacting her. When asked on cross-examination about his

statement that he was “still not clear why the bank chose to use Popmoney,” he stated, “[i]t was

not a true statement” and attributed this misrepresentation to his depression and counseling at the

time. 2 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 238.

Tablazon’s trial testimony also contradicted numerous other declarations he had executed.

In a declaration from April 2016, he stated he had been medically discharged from the army in

2006, but at trial he stated he had retired and that his declaration statement had been incorrect.

Tablazon stated in the same declaration that he had left his civil contractor job because it “became

too much for [him] physically and mentally; and [he] was unable to continue working in that

position.” Ex. 41, at 2. He also said he had taken a job as an operator at Bangor but “this became

too much for [him] and [he] ha[d] not sought employment since.” Ex. 41, at 2. He said that “[a]t

this point, employment is just not possible.” Ex. 41, at 2. At trial, Tablazon acknowledged that

these statements were not true. He said he had left the first job because “of what [was] happening

with [his] family back home” and that it was not true that the second job had been too much for

him. 2 RP at 224. He also stated that he had been seeking employment for more than six months

at the time of trial.

Tablazon also failed to respond to discovery requests sent in May 2016 until the following

November. He stated this delay occurred because he was involved in PTSD counseling and was

“in the very low end of [his] life ever.” 1 RP at 190. At the time of trial, January 10, 2017, he had

not paid the $1,000 attorney fee judgment against him that was due December 13, 2016. He

claimed he did not know he had to pay it and did not remember being ordered to do so.

During the litigation, Tablazon removed Pak as the beneficiary of his military Survivor

Benefit Plan and replaced her with his daughter. He made this change despite a court order

4 50025-6-II

enjoining him from “assigning, transferring, borrowing, lapsing, surrendering or changing

entitlement of any insurance policies.” Ex. 23, at 3.

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