In Re The Marriage Of: Teresa G. Harkenrider v. Christopher A. Wodja

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 26, 2014
Docket43660-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Marriage Of: Teresa G. Harkenrider v. Christopher A. Wodja (In Re The Marriage Of: Teresa G. Harkenrider v. Christopher A. Wodja) 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: Teresa G. Harkenrider v. Christopher A. Wodja, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILE COIRT r APPEALS DIVISION II 2061 rUG2G VII: 36 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHING

DIVISION II

In re the Marriage of: No. 43660 - -II 4 consolidated with

TERESA GERETTE HARKENRIDER, No. 44504 - -II 2

Respondent,

and UNPUBLISHED OPINION

CHRISTOPHER ALAN WODJA,

Appellant.

MELNICK, J. — Christopher A. Wodja appeals the entry of several orders filed in this

dissolution post - proceeding. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in entering

these post- decree orders. We affirm and grant Teresa Harkenrider' s request for attorney fees on

appeal.

FACTS

Wodja and Harkenrider were married in 2004 and had two children before they divorced

in December 2011. After a four - week trial in which more than 30 witnesses testified, the trial

court granted Harkenrider primary residential custody of the children and denied Wodja all

residential time until he completed one year of psychotherapy and an anger management course.

On December 16, 2011, the court entered findings of fact supporting the dissolution and

the parenting plan. These findings stated that it was in the children' s best interest that the court

retain exclusive continuing jurisdiction over the parties. The court then cited Wodja' s

intransigence throughout the case, including a misleading phone call to police about his family

and a frivolous contempt motion, and added that he increased the cost of litigation by lying about

Harkenrider' s alcohol consumption. This intransigence offset any award of attorney fees based 43660 -4 -II / 44504 -2 -II

on need and ability to pay. The court rejected a finding that Harkenrider was alcohol dependent

but, because she had occasionally consumed alcohol to excess, required her to undergo random

urinalysis testing once or twice monthly until the anticipated April 27, 2012 review hearing.

With regard to Wodja' s need for treatment, the court found as follows:

Dr. Whitehill, who was called as [ Wodja' s] witness, does not recommend Wodja' s] contact with the children until it can be determined that [ Wodja] can correct his parental deficiencies which are difficult Axis II disorders and traits. Entire sections of [Wodja' s] psychological testing were invalid due to [ Wodja' s] defensiveness and attempts to portray himself in a [ positive] light. Therefore, the court finds that [ Wodj a] will have no visits, residential, or contact with the children pending further order of the Court as specifically set forth in the Parenting Plan. Wodja] failed to disclose numerous criminal incidents to both Dr. Judd and Dr. Whitehill which were arguably of a sexual nature, which were not taken into in the preparation of either expert' s reports. Both experts consideration

testified to [ Wodja' s] minimalization of incidents related to allegations of

attempted rape, assault, kidnapping, and drugging of women. The Court finds Dr. Whitehill persuasive with respect to most of Wodja' s] disorders and The court also finds that it is more likely conditions.

than not that [ Wodja] has a sexual deviancy[.]

Clerk' s Papers ( CP) ( 43660 -4 -II) at 26. The court entered this finding regarding Wodja' s

credibility:

The court finds that the testimony of [Wodja] was not credible in many respects. It is a manifestation of [ Wodja' s] disorders that he cannot accept rules and requirements The way that [ Wodja' s] mind perverts reality and his of others.

pathological lying, mostly in failed attempts to place himself in the best light, was evident throughout the trial and his actions during litigation.

CP ( 43660 -4 -II) at 27.

Wodja made handwritten changes to the court' s initial findings, which resulted in the

entry of corrected findings and an award of attorney fees to Harkenrider. Wodj a did not appeal

any of the dissolution orders, including the parenting plan.

2 43660 -4 -II / 44504 -2 -II

In February 2012, the trial court entered an order setting forth the parameters for

selecting Wodja' s psychotherapist and the prerequisites for his treatment. The order also

provided that

any treatment provider for [ Wodj a] shall be provided ... expert reports, guardian

ad litem information, criminal records related to [ Wodja' s] history, Department of Health records, and declarations of individuals setting forth allegations of abuse, sexual deviance, and other evidence provided to the court as a basis for restrictions [ on Wodja' s contact with Harkenrider and the children]. This must

occur prior to commencement of any treatment for it to be acceptable to the Court.

CP ( 43660 -4 -II) at 32.

On March 16, the trial court entered an order finding that Wodja had intentionally

misrepresented material facts to the court with regard to his alleged treatment with one provider.

This misrepresentation is perjurious and warrants specific note in the file, and [ is] part of a

repeated pattern of behavior on the part of [ Wodja]." CP ( 43660 -4 -II) at 47. That order also

dismissed an anger management provider whom Wodja had consulted without providing the

required background information, appointed a .different provider, and awarded attorney fees to

Harkenrider for Wodja' s intransigence. The court denied Wodja' s motion for reconsideration

and awarded additional fees to Harkenrider.

At the April 27 review hearing, Harkenrider informed the court that Wodja had obtained

show cause orders from three court commissioners in an attempt, to bring contempt motions

against her. Consequently, the court entered an order intended to alert other judicial officers that,

pursuant to its findings of fact and conclusions of law entered on December 16, 2011, the trial

judge retained exclusive jurisdiction to hear all future matters concerning this case and family.

During the same April hearing, the trial court reviewed the issue of Harkenrider' s

ongoing requirement to submit to random urinalysis testing. The court relieved Harkenrider of

3 43660 - -II / 44504 - -1I 4 2

that obligation after finding that she did not inappropriately miss any tests and that her absences

were related to the fact that she was scheduled for urinalysis testing at another facility. The court

then ruled that Paula van Pul and Bill Kohlmeyer would be counseling Wodja. On May 11,

2012, the court entered an order clarifying that van Pul could address domestic violence issues

raised in an earlier evaluation and stating that a new anger management provider was necessary

due to Kohlmeyer' s withdrawal.

On June 8, 2012, the trial court heard Wodja' s motion for reconsideration of its April 27

order. The court refused to consider the new materials that Wodja filed the day before the

hearing. The court denied Wodja' s motion for reconsideration, found that the motion was made

in bad faith, and awarded Harkenrider $2, 500 in attorney fees.

On June 15, 2012, the trial court heard argument on Wodja' s motion for clarification of

the dissolution decree so that it would include the vehicle identification number ( VIN) of a car

that had been awarded to him. Harkenrider argued that the motion was unnecessary and part of

Wodja' s constant efforts to harass her. She stated that Wodja did not need the VIN to obtain title

but that she would have signed a proposed order disclosing the VIN. She added:

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