In Re the Marriage of Steele

957 P.2d 247, 90 Wash. App. 992, 1998 Wash. App. LEXIS 718
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 15, 1998
Docket20666-8-II, 21156-4-II
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 957 P.2d 247 (In Re the Marriage of Steele) 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 Steele, 957 P.2d 247, 90 Wash. App. 992, 1998 Wash. App. LEXIS 718 (Wash. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Morgan, J.

In this action to modify child support, Larry Mikulecky moved (1) to dismiss Vicki Steele’s petition to modify child support, (2) to vacate the child support provisions of the parties’ 1985 divorce decree, and (3) for reasonable attorney fees. The trial court denied his motions, and we affirm.

The parties were married in Washington in 1974. They lived in Oregon, where he had been born and raised, from 1976 to 1985. While living in Oregon, they had two children, one in 1979 and one in 1981.

In 1985, the parties separated and Steele returned to Washington with the children. She filed for divorce in Lewis County and served Mikulecky in Oregon. It is disputed whether the service was adequate, but it is undisputed that he failed to appear before a decree was entered.

In November 1985, the trial court entered a default decree setting maintenance at $250 a month and child support at $350 a month. The court also awarded the parties’ property, with Mikulecky receiving a travel trailer, a Dodge van, a Baja Volkswagen, the seller’s interest in a mobile home contract, a 14-foot bass boat, stock in Georgia Pacific Corporation, and his taxidermy business.

In January 1986, Mikulecky and Steele stipulated that the decree’s maintenance provisions should be stricken. They stated, “Petitioner and Respondent request that the court enter the subjoined Order Modifying the Decree of *995 Dissolution of Marriage.” 1 2They then proposed, and the court entered, the following order:

THIS MATTER having come on before this Court pursuant to the foregoing Stipulation and request of the parties herein, and the Court having reviewed the files and records of this cause and being in all things fully advised, NOW THEREFORE, it is hereby
ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that the Decree of Dissolution entered herein on November 15, 1985, be and the same hereby is modified in that Paragraph 4 on page 1 of said Decree of Dissolution is hereby stricken. Respondent shall no longer be required to make payment to Petitioner of any sum as and for the maintenance of Petitioner.[ 2 ]

Also in January 1986, Oregon entered a child support order under the Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act. According to that order, Oregon would collect $278 per month in current child support, beginning January 25, 1985. It would also collect $2,829 in back child support, based on noncompliance with the November 1985 decree. Mikulecky paid as ordered until 1995.

On October 1, 1995, Steele petitioned Grays Harbor County Superior Court to modify the Washington child support order. Mikulecky responded in three ways.

First, he moved to dismiss the modification petition, arguing that Washington lacked personal jurisdiction. He claimed he had not been properly served in Oregon because Steele had failed to file a long-arm affidavit stating she could not serve him in Washington. He also claimed that he did not have the necessary minimum contacts for Washington to exercise long-arm jurisdiction over him, and that the doctrine of continuing jurisdiction was inapplicable because the 1985 divorce decree was void.

Second, he moved, for the first time, to vacate the original decree’s child support provisions on the ground that *996 the trial court had lacked personal jurisdiction in 1985. Relying on CR 60(b)(5), he essentially argued that the original decree was subject to the same jurisdictional defects as the modification petition.

Third, he sought reasonable attorney fees. Citing RCW 4.28.185(5), he claimed that he had, or would, prevail due to lack of long-arm jurisdiction.

The trial court denied all three motions. It held that Mikulecky had voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the Washington courts when he stipulated to an order striking maintenance, when he accepted the property awarded him by the decree, and when he waited 10 years to challenge jurisdiction. Finding that modification was warranted, it increased current child support to $868.50 a month and entered judgment for back child support for the period October 1, 1995 (the date of the modification petition) to July 1, 1996 (the date of trial).

On appeal, Mikulecky disputes all three of the trial court’s bases for refusing to vacate the original child support order. He argues that the stipulation was not a request for affirmative relief; that he did not accept the decree’s benefits in a legally significant way, although he may have passively complied with some of its provisions; and that a void decree does not become valid due to delay in attacking it. He also argues that even if the 1985 action is not void, the trial court still had no personal jurisdiction over him in the 1995 modification proceeding, because Steele failed to file the long-arm affidavit required by RCW 4.28.185(4). 3 Finally, he claims that the trial court erred in denying him attorney fees, and that he is entitled to fees on appeal.

A trial court that has properly entered an initial child support order has continuing jurisdiction to modify that order so long as at least one parent continues to reside in the state and the child continues to have some connec *997 tion with the state. 4 Assuming a trial court has continuing jurisdiction, it need not consider long-arm jurisdiction, for it need not obtain personal jurisdiction twice. Accordingly, the dispositive issue here is whether the 1985 decree’s child support provisions are void or valid; if valid, the trial court had continuing jurisdiction over Mikulecky, and Steele was not required to file a long-arm affidavit.

In general, a party must assert lack of personal jurisdiction in his or her next responsive pleading, or by motion “made before pleading if a further pleading is permitted.” 5 A party is permitted but not required to obtain a jurisdictional ruling before trial. 6

A party waives a claim of lack of personal jurisdiction, and thus submits himself or herself to the jurisdiction of the court, if he or she omits to make such claim (a) in a motion “made before pleading if a further pleading is permitted,” or (b) “in a responsive pleading or an amendment thereof permitted by CR 15(a) to be made as a matter of course.” 7 A party also waives any claim of lack of personal jurisdiction if, before the court rules, he or she asks the court to grant affirmative relief, or otherwise consents, expressly or impliedly, to the court’s exercising *998 jurisdiction. 8

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
957 P.2d 247, 90 Wash. App. 992, 1998 Wash. App. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-steele-washctapp-1998.