In Re The Parenting & Support Of E.l.c., James Childs v. Olivia Walton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 20, 2018
Docket49112-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Parenting & Support Of E.l.c., James Childs v. Olivia Walton (In Re The Parenting & Support Of E.l.c., James Childs v. Olivia Walton) 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 Parenting & Support Of E.l.c., James Childs v. Olivia Walton, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

March 20, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Parenting and Support of: No. 49112-5-II

E.L.C.,

Child.

JAMES M. CHILDS,

Petitioner, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

and

OLIVIA N. WALTON,

Respondent.

JOHANSON, J. — James Childs appeals the trial court’s final parenting plan regarding his

and Olivia Walton’s child, ELC. Childs argues that a factual finding was not supported by

substantial evidence, that the trial court abused its discretion, and that the final parenting plan

violated his constitutional rights. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

ELC was born to Walton and Childs in June 2014. Shortly after ELC’s birth, Walton

moved out from the home where she lived with Childs, taking ELC, and discontinued contact with

Childs. In October, Childs filed a petition to establish a parenting plan. No. 49112-5-II

In February and July 2015, the trial court entered temporary orders that designated Walton

as ELC’s “custodian” for “all other state and federal statutes” and provided that ELC would reside

with Walton for the majority of the time. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 10, 35. The February temporary

parenting plan provided for ELC to reside with Walton except for two weekly four- or six-hour

periods when ELC was with Childs. The July temporary parenting plan increased Childs’s

residential time to 4 hours during the week and a 32-hour, overnight visit on the weekend. Both

temporary orders prohibited Childs from being under the influence of drugs or alcohol during the

visits and required him to provide Walton with urinalysis results and treatment attendance records,

establishing that he was in treatment.

II. FINAL PARENTING PLAN PROCEEDINGS

A. BENCH TRIAL

The matter proceeded to a bench trial, at which Walton requested sole decision-making

authority and to maintain the existing residential schedule and Childs requested equal decision-

making authority and an equal residential schedule. In support of his request, Childs relied upon

RCW 26.16.125 and arguments that failure to adopt his proposed parenting plan would violate his

constitutional rights.

1. CHILDS’S TESTIMONY

Childs testified that Walton excluded him from decision making about ELC and tried to

control his access to ELC. During his testimony, Childs discussed his criminal history: in 2001,

he pleaded guilty to the felony of conspiracy to commit robbery. In 2014, he pleaded guilty to

first degree negligent driving, which was reduced from a driving under the influence (DUI) charge.

Within one year, he received a deferred prosecution for another DUI charge. To obtain the deferred

2 No. 49112-5-II

prosecution, Childs had admitted to his “alcoholism” having caused the wrongful conduct;

however, Childs testified that he had lied about being an alcoholic and that he did not in fact suffer

from alcoholism.

2. WALTON’S TESTIMONY

Walton testified that she moved out from Childs’s home because she felt uncomfortable

and stressed living with Childs. She felt threatened and bullied by “[a]ll of the litigation” Childs

had since initiated regarding ELC.1 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 181.

Walton disputed that she and Childs could make decisions together or agree about

“anything.” VRP at 197-98. For instance, they could not agree on health-care decisions regarding

ELC because Childs disagreed with placing ELC on state insurance or vaccinating her. Walton

also testified that if the trial court ordered joint decision making, that would result in a decision-

making impasse between her and Childs. She explained that when she had sole decision-making

authority, Childs was unable to force her to give in, argue with her, and bully her.

Walton did acknowledge that she and Childs had mutually decided for ELC to participate

in soccer. She, Childs, and ELC had also gone out together at least twice.

Walton claimed that although the temporary parenting plans required Childs to provide her

with random urinalysis results and treatment records, Childs had ceased doing so. However,

Walton admitted that she had never “seen one that wasn’t clean.” VRP at 191.

1 During his testimony, Childs acknowledged that he had filed over 100 pleadings in the case.

3 No. 49112-5-II

3. FINAL PARENTING PLAN RULING

Following the parties’ testimony, the trial court orally ruled2 that it would adopt Walton’s

proposed parenting plan. The trial court expressed two primary areas of concern that impacted its

determination of the appropriate parenting plan but that did not rise to the level of former RCW

26.09.191 (2011) limitations.

First, the trial court found that Childs had two alcohol-related offenses within 12 months

of each other. It expressed “great concern that [Childs] ha[d] these back-to-back alcohol-related

offenses” in addition to his guilty plea related to conspiracy to commit robbery. VRP at 228. And

the trial court found a lack of information about “what progress [Childs had] made in treatment”

due to the dearth of records. VRP at 229. Because of this lack of information, the trial court could

not discern whether Childs “acknowledged this problem and dealt with it.” VRP at 229.

Second, the trial court found “abundant” evidence “that there’s just no ability [of the

parents] really to agree.” VRP at 229. It referenced Childs’s bullying Walton, which the trial

court perceived as an effort to make Walton “give in.” VRP at 229. Later, when the trial court

orally ruled that it would allocate sole educational and nonemergency health care decision-making

authority to Walton, it also noted the evidence about “the history of these parties, the attempts to

control, [and] the history of litigation in this matter.” VRP at 231.

The trial court entered a final parenting plan in which ELC spent the majority of the time

with Walton. Like the July temporary parenting plan, the final parenting plan provided for ELC

2 The trial court entered written findings adopting the final parenting plan and stating that no former RCW 26.09.191 limitations applied. However, the trial court did not include written findings for the RCW 26.09.187 parenting plan criteria.

4 No. 49112-5-II

to spend a 4-hour period during the week and a 32-hour, overnight period during the weekend with

Childs. Walton was also designated ELC’s custodian “for purposes of all other state and federal

statutes which require a designation or determination of custody.” CP at 107. Regarding decision-

making authority, the trial court allocated decision-making authority about religious upbringing to

both parents. However, the trial court allocated educational and nonemergency health care

decision-making authority to Walton.

Childs had to abstain from alcohol or illegal drugs before and during visits, comply with

“all provisions of his Deferred Prosecution treatment and probation,” and release urinalysis results

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In Re The Parenting & Support Of E.l.c., James Childs v. Olivia Walton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-parenting-support-of-elc-james-childs-v-olivia-walton-washctapp-2018.