In Re The Marriage Of: Paul R. Adgar, V. Pamla J. Adgar

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 24, 2022
Docket83283-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Marriage Of: Paul R. Adgar, V. Pamla J. Adgar (In Re The Marriage Of: Paul R. Adgar, V. Pamla J. Adgar) 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: Paul R. Adgar, V. Pamla J. Adgar, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON In re the marriage of: No. 83283-2-I

PAUL RYAN ADGAR, DIVISION ONE

Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

and

PAMLA JO ADGAR,

Respondent.

ANDRUS, A.C.J. — Paul Adgar challenges the trial court’s decision to enter a

five-year restraining order protecting Paul’s former spouse, Pamla.1 Paul also

contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion to reconsider the restraining

order and the decision not to continue the parties’ dissolution trial. Paul fails to

establish that the trial court abused its discretion by imposing the restraining order or

denying his motion for reconsideration. Therefore, we affirm.

FACTS

Paul and Pamla were married in 2013; they separated in 2017. They own no

real property and share no children.

In October 2018, Paul petitioned for dissolution. He alleged that the parties

1 Because the parties share a last name, we refer to them by their first names for clarity. No. 83283-2-I/2

had already divided their personal property and asked the court to “order that each

spouse will keep any personal property that s/he now has or controls” and be

responsible for the debts in his or her name. He asked specifically that the court

allocate a Lexus vehicle and all associated debt to Pamla.

Pamla opposed Paul’s request, stating, “[Paul] is requesting I keep my Lexus

and walk away from the marriage. I am not agreeing to this.” Pamla alleged that

Paul had stolen a number of items from her and had used marital property to acquire

personal property, including a number of vehicles. She requested, among other

things, an award of “½ equity” in those vehicles.

In her response, Pamla checked the box for “No” in response to the question,

“Do you want the court to issue an Order for Protection as part of the final orders in

this case?” However, she asserted that “Paul . . . has been harassing me and I have

a restraining order in place,” and she attached to her response a written statement

detailing Paul’s alleged physical and mental abuse. She alleged that Paul tried to

choke her “too many times to keep track of,” threw her down the stairs on one

occasion, and, on another occasion, grabbed her by the face and broke her nose.

She also alleged that Paul threw a rock at her through the back window of his truck,

and that he “ripped the key from my Lexus . . . while it was running and put the

transmission in reverse while we were going 50 miles an hour to wreck my only car.”

She attested that she left him after that incident. She also described additional

incidents where Paul allegedly tried to harm her after the two separated.

A dissolution trial took place the afternoon of February 25, 2020. At the outset,

the trial court asked the parties whether they were ready to proceed, and Paul

-2- No. 83283-2-I/3

responded no. When the court asked why, Paul responded that his witnesses either

refused to show up or were present earlier but had to leave. In the colloquy that

followed, the trial court indicated that (1) it would not grant a continuance; (2) the only

issues before it, based on Paul’s petition and Pamla’s response, were how to divide

the assets and liabilities and whether “to continue Restraining Orders,” and (3) it

would entertain an offer of proof “on the evidence that you think you might have.”

The court proceeded to take testimony, starting with Paul, regarding the

parties’ assets and debts. At the end of Paul’s testimony, the court asked Paul about

the witnesses he would have called, and Paul indicated that he would have called

three: his mother, his brother, and his brother-in-law.

When Pamla testified, she described an incident in which Paul was “really

upset with [her] one day and he came in and he hit [her]” and “grabbed [her] from

behind” and broke her nose. Pamla attested that Paul choked her “probably 30 to

40 times during [the] marriage.” She also described an incident in which Paul gave

her permission to retrieve some of her furniture while he was at work. Pamla testified

that as she was leaving, Paul “was coming 50 miles an hour . . . in oncoming traffic

and he hit a teenager head-on and totaled that vehicle.” She testified that Paul then

“got out of that vehicle and came up to [her] car . . . and he said, ‘I was going to kill

you, was trying to kill you.’ ” Pamla testified that on another occasion, Paul “hid

outside of the house [she was] in now with [her] boyfriend and tried to kill [her].” She

claimed that Paul “pled guilty to” that incident but was unable to present evidence of

Paul’s plea.

In rebuttal, Paul testified that he did not plead guilty to any allegations of

-3- No. 83283-2-I/4

domestic violence, but did plead guilty to “Violating a Protection Order and Malicious

Mischief.” He also testified that the judge “g[a]ve [him] a two-year Restraining Order

rather than the standard one year on that.” At the time of trial, approximately 11

months remained on the term of that restraining order (criminal restraining order).

At the close of the testimony, the trial court made an oral ruling. After dividing

the parties’ assets and liabilities, the court found:

The evidence here is persuasive to this Court that there was violence on that day and you did perpetrate violence. It’s on a more likely than not here basis. It’s not a criminal case. I’m not held to the obligation of finding you guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. That’s not the question here, at all. It’s just a question of whether or not -- before the Court, who’s more believable. And, frankly, I find [Pamla] far more credible than you on that issue.

The trial court entered findings and conclusions and a dissolution decree in open

court. The court concluded that a restraining order should be entered “[t]o be

effective for 5 y[ea]rs from date of entry of final decree.”

A presentation hearing for the restraining order took place on March 5, 2020.

Pamla did not have an order to present; she brought only a copy of the criminal

restraining order. The court directed Pamla to “go downstairs and get a copy of [the]

proper order,” and it explained, “[T]his is a 26.09.050 order.” After a recess, Pamla

returned with a proposed order on a pre-printed form. The court invited comments

from Paul’s counsel,2 who stated, “So my first concern is that . . . the date should be

February 25th, 2025, as the expiration date because that was the day trial was

concluded.” The court responded, “I’ll make it five years from today’s date, March

2 Paul appeared pro se for trial, but he retained counsel for the presentation hearing.

-4- No. 83283-2-I/5

5th, 2025,” and it later signed the order.

The next day, Paul moved for reconsideration of the trial court’s decision not

to continue the trial and its decision to issue a restraining order. The trial court denied

reconsideration, observing that it had granted three of Paul’s continuance requests

and, a few weeks before trial, had denied a fourth request “so that a dissolution of

marriage case that had been pending for more than sixteen months would finally go

to trial[, t]hereby allowing the parties to move on with their lives.” The trial court also

explained, “The credible evidence presented at trial established that [Paul] poses an

ongoing threat to the safety and wellbeing of [Pamla] that is likely to continue for the

foreseeable future.” Paul appeals.

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