In re the Marriage of: Michelle L. Cummings and David A. Cummings

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 23, 2017
Docket33355-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of: Michelle L. Cummings and David A. Cummings (In re the Marriage of: Michelle L. Cummings and David A. Cummings) 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: Michelle L. Cummings and David A. Cummings, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FILED FEBRUARY 23, 2017 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Marriage of ) ) No. 33355-8-111 MICHELLE L. CUMMINGS, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) DAVID A. CUMMINGS, ) ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. - David Cummings appeals the trial court's distribution of

property in the dissolution of his and Michelle Cummings's marriage. He also challenges

a sanction imposed on him for intransigence, in favor of his trial lawyer. We affirm the

decree of dissolution and refuse to review the sanction because it is challenged on appeal

against the wrong party.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Michelle and David Cummings had been married for 34 years at the time they

separated in May 2013. Ms. Cummings moved out of the family home and into an

apartment. Several months later, she filed a petition for dissolution.

At the time of trial both parties were 58 years old. Testimony at trial established

that both had college degrees and were fully employed: Ms. Cummings worked as a

director of an assisted living facility, and Mr. Cummings was licensed and worked as a No. 33355-8-111 In re Marriage of Cummings

real estate broker and appraiser. They earned similar incomes. Both claimed to be

experiencing health issues that had affected or would affect their ability to make a living

in the future. They have two adult children and six grandchildren.

Ms. Cummings had changed jobs frequently and never worked long enough for

one employer to establish retirement savings. Mr. Cummings had several retirement

accounts, some of which were community property. The value of Ms. Cummings's

separate property was minimal, but Mr. Cummings had $75,000 worth of separate

property, much of it liquid.

During the marriage, Mr. Cummings had used his broker's license to purchase

rental properties for the couple for investment purposes. They owned five pieces of real

property at the time of trial: their home in Cheney, and four rental properties in Spokane,

one of them a commercial rental. The properties had the following agreed appraised

values:

Cheney home $215,000

North Avenue rental $115,000

Wabash rental $113,000

Garland rental $109,000

Dean rental (commercial) $140,000

2 No. 33355-8-111 In re Marriage of Cummings

The appraised values reflected the fact that the North Avenue rental was in average

condition overall but needed some maintenance and repair, and that the Wabash and

Garland properties were both in poor repair.

Both parties asked the court to award them the family home. One reason Ms.

Cummings sought to be awarded the family home was its proximity to the couples'

grandchildren, who Ms. Cummings babysat full time for two or three years before the

trial and continued to have over to her apartment every weekend. She testified that it was

difficult to have her grandchildren and other family visit in her small apartment "plus the

noise level for my neighbors is not very nice." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 163.

Another reason she asked to be awarded the family home was because she wanted Mr.

Cummings to continue to own the rental properties. She testified that owning rentals had

been his dream, not hers, and unlike her, he could own and operate them profitably. She

said she knew nothing about the rentals, and because she did not know how to manage,

maintain, or repair them, she would have to hire a property manager or fix them up to sell

them if they were awarded to her.

Mr. Cummings explained that he sought an award of the family home because he

had conducted his appraisal business out of the home for the prior eight years and was

dependent on its Cheney location for appraisal referrals. He testified he had recently lost

a longtime appraisal customer and the only appraisal business he was receiving at the

time of trial was from banks, who choose an appraiser based on his or her physical

3 No. 33355-8-III In re Marriage of Cummings

location. He testified he could "[a]bsolutely not" work in other markets the way he did in

the Cheney market. RP at 190. Another reason he sought an award of the family home

was that he, too, helped out with and wanted to be close to his grandchildren. The

evidence supported this reason, although his involvement with the grandchildren had

been less extensive than Ms. Cummings's.

Following a several day trial, the court announced its property division. Along

with other assets not in contention, it awarded the family home and the Dean property to

Ms. Cummings and awarded the other three rental properties, Mr. Cummings's retirement

accounts, and his separate property to Mr. Cummings. The value of the community

assets it awarded to Ms. Cummings was $378,131 and the value of community assets it

awarded to Mr. Cummings was $280,048. It chose not to order an equalization payment

in light of Mr. Cummings's significant separate property.

The court ruled that each party would bear its own attorney fees. But as a sanction

for what it characterized as Mr. Cummings's intransigence in belatedly disclosing certain

assets, it ordered him to pay $1,000 of Ms. Cummings's attorney fees and also ordered

him to "pay $1,000 to his own counsel," something the court said, "I have never done ...

before, but it's clear that there was additional work that had to be done over and above

preparing for trial just to make sense of a confusing picture." RP at 366.

Mr. Cummings appeals. He has named only Ms. Cummings as a respondent.

4 No. 33355-8-111 In re Marriage of Cummings

ANALYSIS

The issues on appeal are narrow. Mr. Cummings contends the trial court erred by

failing to consider the dissolution distribution factors provided by RCW 26.09.080 in

awarding the family home and the Dean property to Ms. Cummings. He argues that the

court relied instead on an improper factor: which of the two had a stronger relationship

with their grandchildren. He also assigns error to the $1,000 sanction in favor of his trial

lawyer.

Sanction

The sanction can be summarily addressed. While the court's oral imposition of

the sanction in favor of Mr. Cummings's own lawyer was ambiguous, the written

findings and conclusions entered by the court state that "[t]he parties shall be responsible

for the payment of the attorney fees and costs each of them incurred in this dissolution

action that are in excess of the $1,000 Mr. Cummings is required to pay to each

attorney." CP at 59 (emphasis added). 1 It appears from this that Mr. Cummings was not

ordered to pay his trial lawyer anything more than he owed the lawyer under their fee

agreement. If Mr. Cummings nonetheless claims to be aggrieved, his dispute is with his

trial lawyer, not with Ms. Cummings.

1 We note that Mr. Cummings's appellate lawyer is not the lawyer who tried the case and in whose favor the sanction was entered.

5 No. 33355-8-111 In re Marriage of Cummings

Property distribution

In a marriage dissolution proceeding, all of the parties' property is before the court

for distribution and the court's objective is to divide and distribute it "as shall appear just

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