In re the Marriage of Daneille Dickson & Craig Dickson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 1, 2014
Docket30459-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Daneille Dickson & Craig Dickson (In re the Marriage of Daneille Dickson & Craig Dickson) 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 Daneille Dickson & Craig Dickson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

MAY 1,2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

In re the Marriage of: ) ) No. 30459-1-III DANEILLE DICKSON, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) CRAIG DICKSON, ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. - In this marriage dissolution proceeding, the trial court ordered

Craig Dickson to pay maintenance to Daneille Dickson, child support and private school

tuition for the couple's minor child, all postsecondary expenses for the couple's college

age child, a property equalization payment, and a portion of Ms. Dickson's attorney fees.

Mr. Dickson assigns six errors to the rulings of the trial court. He contends the trial court

(1) failed to properly consider the statutory factors in calculating maintenance, (2)

wrongly set child and postsecondary support amounts, (3) neglected to consider his

separate property contribution to the family home, (4) failed to apply credit for

retroactive payments, (5) failed to take into account the business assets seized by the

federal government in dividing the parties' property, and (6) wrongly ordered him to pay No.30459-1-III In re Marriage ofDickson

a portion of Ms. Dickson's attorney fees. After a two-week trial but before the trial

court's ruling, the Federal Bureau ofInvestigation (FBI) seized a~sets of the couple as the

result of Mr. Dickson's criminal "structuring" activity. The seizure complicated the

issues to be resolved, and the trial court thereafter convened an additional week of trial.

FACTS

The Dicksons married on July 6, 1991. They have two children: Jordan (age 21)

and Regan (age 18). Ms. Dickson has only a high school education and stayed at home to

care for the children during much of the marriage. Mr. Dickson holds a college degree.

Ms. Dickson petitioned for dissolution on August 10,2009.

Mr. Dickson received an inheritance from his mother's estate in 2002. Mr.

Dickson claims that the parties used $200,000 of the inheritance for a down payment on a

family home. Ms. Dickson testified she was unaware the down payment came from an

inheritance.

Most of the parties' assets were acquired by income generated by their successful

business, Dickson Iron & Metals, Inc. (DI&M), which resells scrap metal. Mr. Dickson,

however, failed to produce in discovery or at trial income tax returns for the two years

preceding trial. In November 2008, Ms. Dickson opened Rogue, a coffee shop, but it

failed and closed less than a year later.

At the time of dissolution, Jordan was a sophomore attending Whitman College.

His annual tuition is $50,000 per year. Regan was ajunior at a private high school in

No.30459-1-III In re Marriage ofDickson

Colorado, where her mother relocated. Her annual costs for tuition and fees approximate

$15,000.

Trial proceeded in mid-July 2010. During trial, expert appraisers testified as to the

value ofDI&M. Ms. Dickson's expert, Douglas Brajcich, employed a capitalized excess

earnings method of valuation and valued DI&M at $3 million. Mr. Dickson's expert,

Dan Harper, testified that a straight capitalization accounting methodology was a more

appropriate method to value the scrap metal business. Mr. Harper appraised DI&M as

being worth between $1,494,153 and $1,642,675.

On August 31, 2010, after trial but before the trial court entered final orders on the

petition for dissolution, the FBI raided DI&M, Mr. Dickson's residence, and the family

residence occupied by Ms. Dickson. The FBI seized cash, the account balances in DI&M

bank accounts, business records of the company, and personal vehicles. On August 31,

the FBI also seized, from Mr. Dickson, checks made payable to DI&M, totaling

$448,470. Dickson carried the checks in a duffie bag on his way to work. The checks

were dated from the middle of July 2010 through the fourth week of August 2010.

Eventually the federal government charged Mr. Dickson with structuring financial

transactions to avoid reporting requirements and conspiracy to commit structuring based

on DI&M business practices from January 1,2005 through April 30, 2008. The

government alleged that Mr. Dickson laundered stolen scrap metal for thieves and tried to

keep the transactions hidden. In March 2011, Mr. Dickson pled guilty to seven counts of

structuring financial transactions and one count of conspiracy to commit the same

offense. Mr. Dickson and the government entered into a plea agreement whereby Mr.

Dickson forfeited real property, vehicles, and retirement accounts. He also agreed to pay

a money judgment.

During the forfeiture proceedings, Ms. Dickson asserted she was an innocent

owner and had a superior interest to some of the seized assets. On July 6, 2011, Ms.

Dickson entered into a stipulation with the federal government, under which the

government paid her $15,000 and returned to her a Lexus and a BMW. In exchange, Ms.

Dickson released all other claims to the forfeited assets.

At the request of Mr. Dickson, the trial court reopened the trial for presentation of

additional evidence resulting from the FBI seizures. The dissolution trial resumed on

July 13,2011, and continued until July 20,2011. During the reconvened trial, Mr.

Dickson testified that he had not deposited the $448,470 in checks seized by the

government because he had a "pile of paperwork coming out of trial." Report of

Proceedings (RP) at 1909.

After completion of trial, the trial court dissolved the parties' marriage and

ordered Mr. Dickson to pay $6,500.00 per month in maintenance from September 1,

2011, to August 31,2013. The court ordered Mr. Dickson to pay $1,257.60 per month in

child support for Regan, all of Jordan's educational expenses for the next three years, and

Regan's private school expenses up to $15,000.00 per school year for two years. On the

No. 30459-1-111 In re Marriage ofDickson

child support worksheet, the court calculated Mr. Dickson's net monthly income at

$12,303.00 and Ms. Dickson's net monthly income at $5,725.62, based upon the

maintenance award. Also on the child support worksheet, the court used the figure for a

one-child household, even though Mr. Dickson was ordered to pay postsecondary support

for Jordan. In dividing the couple's property, the trial court awarded the $317,121.27

proceeds from the sale of the family home to Ms. Dickson, finding the $200,000.00 down

payment from Mr. Dickson's inheritance was commingled and, thus, community

property. The trial court estimated the value of the seized property, cash, and vehicles to

be $1,358,763.00. The court counted the assets seized by the government as assets

awarded to Mr. Dickson. In other words, only Mr. Dickson was burdened, in the trial

court ruling, by the seizure.

The court valued DI&M at $2,500,000.00 and awarded the business to Mr.

Dickson. The court ordered him to pay Ms. Dickson an equalization payment of

$2,012,059.50. The distribution and equalization payment resulted in each party

receiving distribution of $2,888,774.50. The court ordered Mr. Dickson to pay

$59,047.00 in Ms. Dickson's attorney fees and costs. The court allowed these fees to be

deducted from the equalization payment, reducing the equalization payment to

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