In Re The Marriage Of: Gabriel Y. Lee v. Carol Ann Kennard

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 16, 2013
Docket68266-1
StatusPublished

This text of In Re The Marriage Of: Gabriel Y. Lee v. Carol Ann Kennard (In Re The Marriage Of: Gabriel Y. Lee v. Carol Ann Kennard) 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: Gabriel Y. Lee v. Carol Ann Kennard, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

In the Matter of the Marriage of No. 68266-1-1 GABRIEL Y. LEE, ORDER DENYING MOTION Respondent, TO RECALL MANDATE AND DENYING THE v. MOTION TO STRIKE RESPONDENT'S ANSWER CAROL ANN KENNARD, TO THE MOTION TO RECALL MANDATE Appellant.

The appellant, Carol Kennard, has filed a motion to recall the mandate

issued by this court on October 18, 2013. Respondent, Gabriel Lee, has filed a

response. Kennard filed a motion to strike Lee's response and a reply. Lee filed a

response to the motion to strike, and Kennard filed a reply. Both Kennard and Lee

request fees.

The motion to recall the mandate suggests that the opinion in Lee, by virtue

of the phrase "unless the separation agreement is set aside," impliedly overturns In

re Marriage of Hulscher. 143 Wn. App. 708, 108 P.3d 199 (2008), and it should be

clarified to guide the trial court on remand. In re Marriage of Lee, 176 Wn. App.

678, 693, 310 P.3d 845 (2013). The phrase is merely a reference to the discussion

in section II of the opinion, which relied on Hulscher. It was not intended to imply

any disagreement with Hulscher. Under a timely motion for reconsideration, the

panel would have removed this language as unnecessary. However, the case was

mandated and the trial court has already acted on remand. Appeal is a more

appropriate procedure than recall of the mandate under the facts here. No. 68266-1-1/2

We have considered the motions and have determined that both motions

should be denied. Now, therefore, it is hereby

ORDERED that the motion to recall the mandate is denied; it is further

ORDERED that the motion to strike the answer to the motion to recall the

mandate is denied; it is further

ORDERED that Kennard's request for attorney fees is denied; it is further

ORDERED that Lee's request for attorney fees is denied.

Done this 20^ day of \NfY\(rV>v 2014.

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f\3 U3 32 =c< IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Marriage of CO

No. 68266-1-1 C/">

GABRIEL Y. LEE, DIVISION ONE en Respondent, PUBLISHED OPINION v. 9?

en 7:: •< CAROL ANN KENNARD, ]

Appellant. ) FILED: September 16, 2013

Appelwick, J. — Lee and Kennard separated in 1999 and entered an agreed

decree of dissolution in 2000. In 2011, Kennard sought entry of a QDRO with a present

day effective date. Kennard also sued to collect spousal maintenance and child support

arrears, based on Lee's failure to pay the automatic cost of living increases required by

escalation clauses in the separation agreement and child support order. The trial court

held that both escalation clauses were unenforceable and void. The trial court modified

the effective date of the QDRO to the date of separation and sanctioned Kennard's

attorney under CR 11 on that issue. We affirm as to striking the child support escalator,

entering the QDRO effective as of the parties' date of separation, and imposition of CR

11 sanctions. We reverse as to the agreed maintenance escalator and remand for

enforcement of that provision and for award of attorney fees on that issue. No. 68266-1-1/2

FACTS

Carol Ann Kennard and Gabriel Lee separated on February 15, 1999. Lee's

attorney withdrew from representation in January 2000. In February 2000, Kennard and

Lee, now pro se, signed a separation contract and property settlement agreement, as

well as an agreed child support order. Kennard's attorney, H. Michael Finesilver,

drafted both the property settlement agreement and the child support order. The

agreement was incorporated into a decree of dissolution. The decree and child support

order were entered ex parte.

The decree awarded Kennard "[o]ne-half of the husband's Group Health

retirement benefits, subject to the terms and conditions as outlined in the Qualified

Domestic Relations Order [QDRO] which accompanies this agreement, except for the

401 (k)." A QDRO was never attached to the final agreement.

The decree also awarded Kennard spousal maintenance of $9000 per month.

The maintenance award contained an automatic escalation clause requiring the award

to "be adjusted every three years based upon the cost of living index, all urban

consumers for the greater Seattle and Everett area." Kennard and Lee agreed that

"[mjaintenance is otherwise nonmodifiable by either party, unless agreed to in writing by

the parties."

The child support order required Lee to pay $875 per month for each of their two

children. Like the maintenance escalator, the child support order contained an

automatic escalation clause: "The amount of child support will be increased every three No. 68266-1-1/3

(3) years based on the cost of living index, but in no event shall the amount be in

excess of $1,500 per month, per child, nor any less than $875 per month, per child."

The parties do not dispute that Lee regularly paid $9000 per month in

maintenance and the child support amount originally ordered. But, Lee never paid the

automatic cost of living increases for spousal maintenance or child support.

Eleven years later, in 2011, Kennard's attorney drafted a proposed QDRO and

sent it to the pension plan administrator for approval. The QDRO stated that Kennard,

as alternate payee:

[l]s entitled to a portion of the amounts credited to Participant's accounts in the Plan as part of a just and right division of the estate of the parties. Such portion is hereafter defined as "Alternate Payee's Share of Plan Benefits." "Alternate Payee's Share of Plan Benefits" shall be an amount equal to a portion of the total amount held in Participant's account under the Plan, as of the date of this Order. The portion assigned for the Alternate Payee's Share of Plan Benefits shall be a percentage equivalent to fifty percent (50%) of the total vested amount held in Participant's accounts under the Plan.

(Emphasis added.) The QDRO also noted "[tjhat the amounts credited to Participant's accounts under the Plan from July 22, 1979 to February 11, 2000 are the community

property of both Participant and Alternate Payee." After the plan administrator approved

the proposed QDRO, it was presented to Lee who refused to sign and approve it for

entry by the court. Kennard subsequently moved for adoption of the proposed QDRO,

for past due spousal maintenance and child support, as well as attorney fees.

Lee requested that the trial court declare both escalation clauses void and

unenforceable, because they were tied solely to the consumer price index (CPI). Lee

also argued that the proposed QDRO was defective, because it entitled Kennard to half

of Lee's pension, even benefits accruing after their separation and dissolution. No. 68266-1-1/4

Essentially, Lee explained, Kennard would receive 18 years of plan contributions,

instead of six years (the amount of time between initiation of the plan and their date of

separation). Lee argued that this did not comport with the parties' intention. Lastly, Lee

requested that the trial court sanction Kennard's attorney under CR 11 for submitting

the QDRO.

The court held that the child support and maintenance escalation clauses were

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