In re the Marriage of Hasan Tahat & Mary Tahat

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 31, 2014
Docket31454-5
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Hasan Tahat & Mary Tahat (In re the Marriage of Hasan Tahat & Mary Tahat) 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 Hasan Tahat & Mary Tahat, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

JULY 31, 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. 31454-5-III HASAN TARAT, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) OPINION PUBLISHED IN PART ) MARY ROSE TARAT, ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. - In this marriage dissolution appeal, we resolve two related

procedural questions (1) was a letter ruling by the trial court a "decision" for purposes of

commencing the period in which a party must file a motion for reconsideration under CR

59 and (2) whether a trial court should allow the nonmoving party an opportunity to

respond before the trial court grants a motion for reconsideration. We answer the first

question in the negative and the second question in the affirmative.

FACTS

The parties, Mary Rose and Hasan Tahat, met as graduate students in the

Philippines. Mary received her doctorate in molecular and cellular protozoology. Hasan

received his masters in engineering. The couple married in 1988. During their marriage

the Tahats had two children. At the time of the marital dissolution, neither child was a No.3l454-5-III In re Marriage ofTahat

dependent.

In 1995, the Tahats moved to the United States. They decided one of them should

remain home with the children. Mary Tahat assumed this noble role, which included

cleaning house and preparing meals.

Hasan Tahat worked at the Yakima Regional Clean Air Agency (YRCAA).

As an employee at the Clean Air Agency, Hasan contributed to a defined benefits

plan and a deferred compensation plan. With the money he would have spent on

lunch at a restaurant, Hasan invested in the stock market. At the time of their

separation, the stock market account totaled $39,000. After the parties filed for

divorce, Hasan lost most of the value of the account by gambling that he attributes

to postseparation depression.

In 2007, before the couple separated, they purchased, for $200,000.00, a home on

Summitview Avenue, in Yakima. The Tahats used $29,506.17 in proceeds from the sale

of their previous home as a down payment. Because of bad credit, Mary's name was not

added to the title to the Summitview residence.

Mary returned to work outside the home, in 2008, when their eldest child entered

prestigious Whitman College. Mary worked as a science teacher at the Yakima Valley

School District.

The Tahats lived together on Summitview Avenue until August 2010, when Mary

moved from the residence. After the Tahats separated, Hasan refinanced the home. The

No. 31454-5-111 In re Marriage o/Tahat

home's value had depreciated in the interim. A broker valued the residence at $168,000,

an amount less than the debt on the home.

I

! At the time of separation, the Tahats owed $3,956.33 on a Visa credit card

and $1,700.00 to Jeffrey Talbot, their immigration attorney. Mary Rose did not 1

use the credit card after separation, but she paid $2,123.00 on the card to avoid 1

further damage to her credit. Hasan Tahat continued to use the Visa card.

PROCEDURE

In April 2011, the couple, without legal representation, jointly petitioned for

divorce. In August 2011, Mary Rose Tahat hired an attorney, Troy Lee. Hasan

continued to represent himself. On September 8, Mary, through counsel, filed a response

to the petition for dissolution, despite having earlier joined the petition. The response did

not seek spousal maintenance.

Hasan Tahat failed to disclose, in discovery, the value of his retirement and stock

accounts. ·In March 2012, the court ordered Hasan to produce his retirement and stock

account statements. For his delay, the court fined Hasan $150. Anticipating Hasan's

compliance, the court scheduled trial for June 18. In May 2012, Mary moved to continue

trial because of her lawyer's preplanned vacation. Trial was reset for August 7.

On June 1,2012, attorney Robert Velikanje appeared on behalf of Hasan

Tahat. Thereafter, Hasan alleged Mary inherited a substantial sum of money from

3 j l J f No. 31454-5-II1 In re Marriage ofTahat

I I her father, to which he claimed an entitlement. To substantiate his claim, Hasan

scheduled depositions of Mary's brothers for the day before trial.

I 1 On July 27, 2012, Mary Rose Tahat again moved for a continuance, this

time because she and her brothers planned a vacation the week of trial. Hasan

I Tahat objected, claiming Mary sought to delay and prevent him from deposing her

brothers. The court granted Mary's motion and reset trial for November 13,2012.

On November 6, 2012, Hasan Tahat's counsel conducted the deposition of

Mary Tahat. When asked, during the deposition, if she sought spousal

maintenance, Mary responded in the negative.

On November 13,2012, Mary Tahat terminated the services of attorney

Troy Lee. To accommodate Mary's new counsel, the court continued trial to

December 11,2012, "with monetary terms." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 100. On

November 28, 2012, Mary moved for another trial continuance so that her new

attorney could adequately prepare. Her motion was denied and that attorney

withdrew.

On December 6,2012, less than a week before trial, Mary Tahat retained a

third attorney, Ellen McLaughlin. On December 11,2012, the day trial began,

Mary moved to amend her pleadings to include a claim for spousal maintenance.

The court denied her request as tardy and prejudicial. The trial court denied a

renewed motion to amend the pleadings at the beginning of the second day of trial.

No. 31454-5-III In re Marriage ofTahat

At trial, the parties presented testimony relevant to the distribution of the

stock market account, the Summitview residence, and the money Hasan alleged

Mary inherited. Rather than seeking ownership of the house, Mary requested the

court apportion half the down payment to her. Hasan demurred, offering her the

house with its liabilities. Mary and her brothers testified that she, as their half-

sister, never inherited any money from their father's estate.

Trial ended on December 12,2012. At the conclusion, the trial court

declared, "1' 11 have a written decis ion to you by the end of [the] week." Report of

Proceedings (RP) at 187 (emphasis added).

On December 14, 2012, the court sent counsel a three-page letter on court

stationery. Because we must decide whether the letter constitutes a "decision"

under CR 59, we repeat the entire letter. Throughout this opinion we will refer to

the December 14 epistle as "the letter ruling," although we attach no legal

significance to the term:

December 14,2012 Re: Tahat 11-3-00430-1 Dear Counsel: This family law litigation is concerned solely with the identification of property and liabilities of the parties, its characterization and its division. The parties married in 1988 and separated on August 1, 2010. Two children were born of the marriage, both of whom have attained adulthood. Both husband and wife have doctorates. The husband is employed by the

No. 31454-5-111 In re Marriage ofTahat

Yakima Regional Clean Air Authority. The wife is employed by the West Valley School District as a science teacher. The husband focused a great deal of his energy upon the supposed existence of a large inheritance which the wife has received or will receive.

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