In Re The Parentage Of C.j.m.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 21, 2018
Docket49626-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Parentage Of C.j.m. (In Re The Parentage Of C.j.m.) 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 C.j.m., (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 21, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of Parenting and Support of No. 49626-7-II

CJM,

Child.

SHAKIRA McLEROY,

Appellant,

and

JULIAN HARRIS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent.

JOHANSON, J. — Shakira McLeroy appeals the superior court’s modification order that

granted primary residential placement of CJM to Julian Harris and the amended parenting plan.

McLeroy argues that the trial court erred when it (1) admitted and considered hearsay from Child

Protective Services (CPS) reports, (2) based its modification decision on past rather than present

circumstances, (3) concluded that CJM’s current living situation was harmful to his health and that

CJM would benefit from changing primary residential placement, (4) failed to make a finding that

Harris has a history of acts of domestic violence, (5) concluded that McLeroy engaged in abusive

use of conflict, and (6) ordered McLeroy to pay child support. We affirm. No. 49626-7-II

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

In 2010, CJM was born to McLeroy and Harris. In 2012, the trial court entered a permanent

parenting plan granting McLeroy primary residential placement.

In April 2015, Harris suspected CJM was being abused, and on behalf of CJM, Harris

obtained a domestic violence protection order (DVPO) against McLeroy. McLeroy filed a motion

for contempt against Harris for violating the parenting plan, alleging he failed to return CJM to

her. But the trial court denied her contempt motion because the protection order allowed CJM to

remain with Harris.

In August, Harris filed a modification petition, and the trial court ordered temporary

custody of CJM to Harris pending the modification trial. Harris asserted that McLeroy’s home

environment was detrimental to CJM’s mental, physical, or emotional health because there was

domestic violence in the home. In November, the trial court entered an order finding adequate

cause to support the modification petition. Trial occurred on September 27 and 30, 2016.

II. TRIAL

A. OPENING STATEMENTS

Harris was pro se at trial. Harris said that he would call witnesses who would testify about

how McLeroy’s behavior impacted CJM.

McLeroy’s counsel stated that the previous year, McLeroy had been married to an abusive

woman named Kanitra Lockett. Lockett was abusive to McLeroy and “those around her.” Report

of Proceedings (RP) (Sept. 27, 2016) at 13. McLeroy filed for divorce from Lockett and has had

no contact with her. Counsel argued that all abuse allegations “originated from Kanitra Lockett

2 No. 49626-7-II

and that relationship” and that because Lockett was no longer involved in McLeroy’s life, any

issue that had existed was remedied. RP (Sept. 27, 2016) at 13. McLeroy’s counsel also asserted

that Harris had a domestic violence conviction from 2013 for choking his girlfriend, which could

result in RCW 26.09.191 restrictions on his residential time.

B. MCLEROY’S TESTIMONY

McLeroy met Lockett at the “end of 2013” and had a three-year relationship with her. RP

(Sept. 27, 2016) at 22. Lockett was “very abusive” and “controlling” and stalked McLeroy at one

point. RP (Sept. 27, 2016) at 22. McLeroy sought counseling to address issues related to the

relationship. She also utilized the services of a domestic violence advocate in 2014 and again at

the end of 2015. In 2015, with the support of the domestic violence advocate, McLeroy filed for

a protection order against Lockett, but she dropped the action when Lockett left McLeroy alone.

Lockett stalked McLeroy in April 2016, and McLeroy tried to obtain a housing unit unknown to

Lockett.

McLeroy filed for divorce from Lockett, and the divorce was final days before the

parenting plan modification trial. McLeroy learned lessons from her relationship with Lockett,

including that she would never put herself in that situation again.

There has never been a finding by CPS that McLeroy abused CJM.

During cross-examination, McLeroy stated that she had once obtained a no-contact order

against Lockett, but that it was lifted upon McLeroy’s consent. Subsequently, when Lockett was

stalking McLeroy in 2016, McLeroy chose not to pursue a no-contact order against Lockett and

instead trusted Lockett’s promises not to engage in further contact.

3 No. 49626-7-II

Harris asked McLeroy whether she has stopped making poor choices such as the choice to

be in a relationship with Lockett. McLeroy responded that “I feel as though it wasn’t about me

making poor choices. It was about me settling for the wrong people in my life, and she’s no longer

in my life.” RP (Sept. 27, 2016) at 39. McLeroy stated that she was the “victim in the domestic

violence for three years,” but did not acknowledge her poor decision making or the impact this had

on CJM. RP (Sept. 27, 2016) at 40.

C. HARRIS’S TESTIMONY AND MCLEROY’S HEARSAY OBJECTION

Harris testified that sometime after the permanent parenting plan was entered in 2012, he

started receiving calls from CPS. After receiving these calls, he met with CJM’s daycare provider

regarding the CPS calls. Harris noticed CJM had bruises and other signs of physical harm, but

McLeroy refused to speak to him about it. CJM sometimes screamed and woke up in the middle

of the night, and CJM was “terrified of having to go back” to McLeroy or the grandparents’ house.

2 RP at 80. Before living with Harris full-time, CJM was often anxious and acted out in school.

CJM once took off his belt and threatened to hit another child with it at school.

Harris obtained a DVPO in Thurston County.1 After living with Harris and Harris’s

girlfriend of over four years, Martha Haslem, full-time for over a year, CJM is now more secure

and comfortable and is not acting out with violent behavior. CJM expressed fear that he would

have to go back to live with McLeroy and asked for reassurance that he would be able to stay with

Harris.

1 Testimony refers to the DVPO as a “no-contact order,” but the accurate term in this case is DVPO.

4 No. 49626-7-II

After a 2013 domestic violence conviction for choking a girlfriend, Harris had been

through extensive counseling and parenting classes and learned to provide a stable home. Harris

provided CJM with a “structured environment and a loving environment.” 2 RP at 84.

Harris sought to introduce CPS records into evidence. McLeroy’s counsel said it objected

to the “multiple hearsay” in the documents, but that “[t]he CPS records in and of themselves are

unremarkable.” RP (Sept. 27, 2016) at 41. The trial court admitted the records and said it would

disregard the hearsay within them. Harris had received calls regarding welfare checks for CJM as

recently as the summer.

On cross-examination, Harris testified that he was convicted of a domestic violence assault

against an ex-girlfriend. The victim filed a one-year DVPO against him, which had expired. The

ex-girlfriend, who was the mother of one of Harris’s children, did not allow Harris to see the child.

McLeroy’s counsel questioned Harris about the contents of the CPS records, which had

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