In Re The Parentage Of A.d.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 8, 2019
Docket51490-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Parentage Of A.d. (In Re The Parentage Of A.d.) 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 Parentage Of A.d., (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 8, 2019

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of No. 51490-7-II

ANNA MARIE MORALEZ,

Respondent,

and

MARTIN DOMINGUEZ, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

CRUSER, J. — Martin Dominguez appeals from the superior court order denying his

motion to dismiss Anna Marie Moralez’s1 petition for post-secondary educational support for their

18-year-old daughter AD and the court’s order granting the petition for post-secondary support.

Dominguez’s original support obligation was imposed by an administrative support order that

continued support as long as AD was under 19 and still a full-time student in a secondary school

program; the superior court order changed the administrative support order.

On appeal, Dominguez argues that (1) the superior court erred when it concluded that

service by mail was proper under RCW 26.09.175, (2) the superior court had no authority to

modify the administrative support order, and (3) the superior court did not have authority to impose

post-secondary educational support because the petition for post-secondary educational support

1 Moralez was formerly known as Anna Marie Dean. No. 51490-7-II

was untimely.2 Both parties also request attorney fees on appeal. We affirm the superior court’s

orders and deny the parties’ requests for attorney fees.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

A. DIVISION OF CHILD SUPPORT NOTICE OF FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY

Dominguez and Moralez have three daughters together. Their youngest daughter, AD, was

born in April 1999. Support for the two older daughters is not at issue.

In October 2006, the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) Division of Child

Support (DCS) entered a notice and finding of financial responsibility ordering Dominguez to pay

back child support and monthly support for all three daughters.3 The notice stated that this would

“become a final order” if the parents did not ask for a hearing within 20 days. Clerk’s Papers (CP)

at 27. The notice stated that once it became a final order, the child support obligation continued

until one of several events occurred, including (1) the child’s emancipation, (2) the entry of a court

order superseding the DCS order, (3) modification of the DCS order under WAC 388-14A-3925,4

or (4) the child reaching the age of 18, unless the child is under 19 and “is a full-time student in a

secondary school program.” CP at 28.

2 Dominguez raises three new arguments in his reply brief: (1) estoppel, (2) laches, and (3) failure to establish a substantial change of circumstances. We do not address these arguments because Dominguez raises them for the first time in a responsive brief. Cowiche Canyon Conservancy v. Bosley, 118 Wn.2d 801, 809, 828 P.2d 549 (1992). 3 The record does not reveal why or how the DCS became involved in the child support issue. 4 WAC 388-14A-3925 states that the DCS, the custodial parent, or the noncustodial parent can petition and request a hearing before an administrative law judge to prospectively modify an administrative child support order.

2 No. 51490-7-II

The notice also advised the parents that they could petition the superior court to set the

child support amounts “at any time.” CP at 29. It further advised the parents that they would need

to petition the superior court if they wanted to establish or modify a parenting plan because

parenting plan issues were beyond the DCS’s authority. The notice was silent as to post-secondary

educational expenses.

B. 2006 PARENTAGE ACTION AND CR 2A AGREEMENT

Two months after receiving the notice of financial responsibility, Moralez filed a parentage

action under former RCW 26.26.375 (2011)5 and petitioned the superior court for a parenting plan.

Dominguez joined in this petition. An agreed temporary parenting plan, which is not part of the

record on appeal, was entered the same day.

The “cause of action” section of the joint petition stated, “Support and health insurance

coverage for the minor children has been determined administratively by the [DCS] and the

Petitioner does not want the court to address child support.” CP at 4. But the “relief requested”

section of the petition suggested the parties were asking the court to address child support by

stating,

The court is requested to enter an order that

5 In 2018, the legislature repealed former RCW 26.26.375. LAWS OF 2018, ch. 6, § 907. Because Moralez filed her petition to modify support in 2017, we cite to the 2011 version of RCW 26.26.375, which was in effect in 2017. Pursuant to former RCW 26.26.375, once paternity has been acknowledged, the parties may commence a judicial proceeding for a parenting plan on the same basis as provided in chapter 26.09 RCW or child support proceedings as provided in chapter 26.19 RCW. This provision allows the unmarried parents of a child, who would not be covered under chapter 26.09 RCW (governing dissolution proceedings) to bring a cause of action to resolve issues relating to establishing a parenting plan, child support, and health insurance for a minor child. Although the record does not show whether Dominguez and Moralez were ever married, Dominguez does not suggest that Moralez should have brought her petition under any other statute.

3 No. 51490-7-II

[d]etermines support for the dependent children pursuant to the Washington State Support Schedule and either or both parents be ordered to maintain or provide health insurance coverage for the children and pay extraordinary uninsured costs proportionate to their income.

CP at 5.

In mid-April 2007, after no action was taken in the parentage action for four months, the

superior court set the matter for a hearing on May 25. The court advised the parties that if no one

appeared for the May 25 hearing, it could dismiss the action. When no one appeared, the court

dismissed the matter without prejudice.

Two months later, Moralez moved to vacate the dismissal order. In her motion to vacate,

Moralez asked the superior court to “re-open [her] case regarding the parenting plan that was filed

Dec. 14, 2006,” noting that she had some “outstanding medical bills in regards to [the] care of

[her] children.” CP at 178-79. On July 18, the court vacated the order of dismissal.

On October 30, 2008, the superior court issued an order to show cause as to why the matter

should not be dismissed for want of prosecution. Only Moralez appeared at the show cause

hearing. The superior court “found that a final parenting plan had not yet been entered” and set a

settlement conference for February 9, 2009. CP at 182.

At the settlement conference, the parties entered into a CR 2A agreement. In this

agreement, they “agree[d] to adopt as their final parenting plan the temporary parenting plan

attached” with specified changes. CP at 7.

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