In Re The Parentage Of Nld., Ryan Adam Dixon, V. Matthew Goguen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 7, 2022
Docket82528-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Parentage Of Nld., Ryan Adam Dixon, V. Matthew Goguen (In Re The Parentage Of Nld., Ryan Adam Dixon, V. Matthew Goguen) 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 Nld., Ryan Adam Dixon, V. Matthew Goguen, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Adoption of N.L.D., No. 82528-3-I

RYAN A. DIXON, DIVISION ONE

Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

MATTHEW GOGUEN,

Respondent.

ANDRUS, A.C.J. — Ryan Dixon appeals the trial court’s order terminating his

parental rights over his biological son, N.L.D. He raises several arguments

concerning jurisdiction, standing, service, and the sufficiency of the trial court’s

findings supporting its termination order. We reject each argument and affirm.

FACTS

This appeal concerns the termination of the parental rights of Ryan Dixon

in relation to his biological son, N.L.D., born in September 2014. The petitioner is

Matthew Goguen, N.L.D.’s stepfather, who sought to adopt the child.

Goguen’s wife, Jie Liang (now Goguen) is N.L.D.’s biological mother and

was married to Dixon from approximately 2004 to 2015. Dixon and Liang

separated in 2012 when Dixon moved to Florida, but they continued to see one

another intermittently until they divorced. In December 2013, Dixon visited Liang

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 82528-3-I/2

in Washington and the couple had unprotected sexual intercourse, resulting in

N.L.D.’s conception. 1

Dixon expressed displeasure towards Liang’s pregnancy, stating in a

January 2014 email to Liang “if this baby becomes something I have to live with, I

put this on you.” Dixon was in Washington for two weeks after N.L.D.’s birth, but

has not seen the child since October 2014. In December 2014, Dixon sent Liang

an email stating that he did not wish to be a part of Liang’s or N.L.D.’s life and

wrote he “won’t be a dad to [N.L.D.] or in his life at all.” Around the same time, he

sent Liang many texts threatening Liang with violence and insulting her with racist

and sexist slurs.

Liang filed for a dissolution in Pierce County Superior Court in June 2015

and the court entered a final parenting plan in which Dixon agreed to no joint

decision making and no visitation with N.L.D. The court also entered a child

support order requiring Dixon to pay the mandatory minimum of $50 per month. In

December 2015, Dixon sent a text to Liang stating that he wanted nothing to do

with her or N.L.D.

Liang became romantically involved with Goguen in 2017 and, in March

2018, Dixon sent an email to Jie offering to permit Goguen to adopt N.L.D. Liang

and Goguen married in February 2019, and soon after, the couple contacted Dixon

to request he relinquish his parental rights. Dixon refused.

1Because N.L.D. was born while Dixon and Liang were still married, Dixon is also presumed to be N.L.D.’s father under RCW 26.26A.115(1)(a)(i).

-2- No. 82528-3-I/3

Dixon has never provided any financial support for N.L.D. He has had no

direct contact with the child except for five facetime calls in the child’s first two

years.

Goguen filed this petition to terminate Dixon’s parental rights in King County

Superior Court in January 2020. Dixon, who appeared for but did not testify or

present evidence at the trial, challenged the court’s jurisdiction and Goguen’s

standing to bring the termination action. The court rejected these arguments and

entered an order terminating the parent-child relationship in March 2021. Dixon

appeals.

ANALYSIS

Dixon raises five issues on appeal. He argues (1) the trial court lacked both

subject matter and personal jurisdiction to hear the petition, (2) Goguen lacked

standing to bring the petition, (3) service of the petition was inadequate, (4) the

trial court did not adequately address his pleadings and motions at trial, and (5)

the court lacked a basis to terminate his parental rights. We reject each argument.

A. The trial court had jurisdiction

Dixon challenges both the subject matter and personal jurisdiction of the

trial court. Neither argument is supported in Washington law.

Whether a court has jurisdiction is a question of law we review de novo.

Lakeside Indus., Inc. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 19 Wn. App. 2d 225, 229-230, 495 P.3d

257 (2021).

First, Dixon appears to conflate the issues of subject matter jurisdiction,

standing, and the merits of Goguen’s petition by arguing that the trial court lacked

-3- No. 82528-3-I/4

subject matter jurisdiction due to “lack of standing by the moving party and lack of

injury in-fact by any party involved in the lower court’s petition,” and “based on the

prerequisite by the Supreme Court that an alleged parent must be found ‘unfit’ prior

to termination of parental rights.”

A court’s subject matter jurisdiction is not implicated by considerations of

standing or the merits of a petitioner’s claim. 2 See In re Marriage of Buecking, 179

Wn.2d 438, 447-48, 316 P.3d 999 (2013) (“Subject matter jurisdiction refers to a

court’s ability to entertain a type of case, not to its authority to enter an order in a

particular case. . . . [I]f a court can hear a particular class of case, then it has

subject matter jurisdiction.”)

The Washington Constitution provides: “The superior court shall also have

original jurisdiction in all cases and of all proceedings in which jurisdiction shall not

have been by law vested exclusively in some other court.” CONST. art. IV, § 6. A

petition for the termination of parental rights “may be filed in the superior court of

the county in which the petitioner is a resident or of the county in which the adoptee

is domiciled.” RCW 26.33.030. It is undisputed that Goguen and N.L.D. lived in

King County at the time this petition was filed. The King County Superior Court

thus had subject matter jurisdiction to hear the petition.

To the extent that Dixon challenges the trial court’s personal jurisdiction, we

reject that argument as well. The trial court had personal jurisdiction over Dixon

via the state’s long-arm statute, subjecting a person to the jurisdiction of this state’s

courts for any cause of action arising from, “[t]he act of sexual intercourse within

2 We address Dixon’s arguments concerning standing and the trial court’s unfitness finding in sections B and E of this opinion, respectively.

-4- No. 82528-3-I/5

this state with respect to which a child may have been conceived.” RCW

4.28.185(1)(e). The trial court found, and Dixon does not dispute, that N.L.D. was

conceived after Dixon and Liang engaged in sexual intercourse in Washington.

The trial court thus had personal jurisdiction over Dixon.

B. Goguen had standing to seek a judicial termination of Dixon’s parental rights

Dixon argues that Goguen lacked standing to bring his petition because

“[t]here is no injury-in-fact on the record by the moving party in the lower court

case,” citing Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 112 S. Ct. 2130, 119 L.

Ed. 2d 351 (1992). But Dixon’s reliance on Lujan is misplaced because that case

applies the requirements for standing in federal court under article III of the U.S.

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In Re The Parentage Of Nld., Ryan Adam Dixon, V. Matthew Goguen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-parentage-of-nld-ryan-adam-dixon-v-matthew-goguen-washctapp-2022.