In the Matter of the Custody of: SA-M

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 15, 2021
Docket37108-5
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of the Custody of: SA-M (In the Matter of the Custody of: SA-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 the Matter of the Custody of: SA-M, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED JUNE 15, 2021 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Custody of ) ) No. 37108-5-III SA-M, ) ) ) PUBLISHED OPINION

STAAB, J. — In 2016, Karina Morales-Rodriguez was murdered at her work. At

the time of her death, Ms. Morales-Rodriguez was living with and engaged to the

petitioner, Gabriel Pinon. Their blended family included SA-M, Ms. Morales-Rodriguez’s

five-year-old daughter from her prior relationship with the respondent, Jose Luis Alvarez.

Shortly after Ms. Morales-Rodriguez was killed, Mr. Pinon filed a petition for custody of

SA-M. Mr. Alvarez disputed this petition and sought custody as well. In 2019, Mr. Pinon

amended his petition for custody to include a claim under the newly enacted de facto

parenting statute, RCW 26.26A.440.

This case provides an opportunity to interpret and apply RCW 26.26A.440. We

conclude that the trial court properly focused on SA-M’s relationship with Mr. Pinon in

finding that Mr. Pinon was SA-M’s de facto parent. Under the statute, the child’s best

interest in continuing the relationship is now a primary factor in determining whether a de

facto parentage exists. If custody is an issue, the court must then make a separate No. 37108-5-III In re Custody of SA-M

determination of the child’s best interest for purposes of custody and a scheduling order.

The two interests are not necessarily the same. In this case, substantial evidence supports

the trial court’s finding that it is in SA-M’s best interest for the de facto parent to retain

primary custody while limiting Mr. Alvarez’s residential time with his daughter. We

affirm.

FACTS BACKGROUND

SA-M was born in 2010 to Karina Morales-Rodriguez and Jose Luis Alvarez. Ms.

Morales and Mr. Alvarez ended their relationship at some point in early 2012, and Ms.

Morales began living with Gabriel Pinon in April 2012. At the time, SA-M was 18

months old. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Alvarez moved to Oklahoma.

For the next four years, Ms. Morales and Mr. Pinon continued to live together as a

family. Mr. Pinon was heavily involved in SA-M’s life and was the only father she knew.

He took SA-M to school nearly every day and was involved in her education. The two

had a close and bonded relationship. SA-M considered Mr. Pinon her father and always

referred to him as “dad.”

SA-M’s mother, Ms. Morales-Rodriguez, encouraged their relationship, especially

after Mr. Alvarez moved out of state. Mr. Alvarez was largely absent from SA-M’s life,

although he engaged in periodic phone calls every three to four months. From 2012 to

2016, Mr. Alvarez visited his daughter one time.

2 No. 37108-5-III In re Custody of SA-M

By 2016, Ms. Morales and Mr. Pinon were engaged to be married. These plans

were cut short when Ms. Morales was murdered at her job. At the time, there were four

children in their family, Mr. Pinon’s two children from a prior marriage, SA-M, and the

couples’ young child.

PRETRIAL EVENTS

Several weeks after Ms. Morales’ death, Mr. Pinon filed a pro se petition for third-

party custody of SA-M and made arrangements to serve Mr. Alvarez. Mr. Alvarez moved

back to Yakima and responded to Mr. Pinon’s petition by seeking custody of SA-M. Mr.

Pinon hired counsel, filed an amended petition to include a claim for common law de facto

parent, and moved to retain custody of SA-M.

At an initial hearing, the court granted Mr. Pinon’s motion to retain custody,

reserved the issue of de facto parenting for trial, and ordered visitation with Mr. Alvarez.

Mr. Alvarez took advantage of his scheduled visitation, took a parenting class, and filed a

motion to transfer custody in August 2016. The commissioner denied the motion but

appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL).

At a hearing in April 2017, the court adopted the GAL’s report. After interviewing

the parties and numerous witnesses, the GAL concluded that both men seemed capable of

fulfilling parental duties, although he expressed concern that Mr. Alvarez had been

willingly non-present for an extended period of time and was not aware of SA-M’s

3 No. 37108-5-III In re Custody of SA-M

progress in school or mental health issues. The GAL noted that if this were a case

between two legal parents, he would not recommend a change of custody from Mr. Pinon

to Mr. Alvarez. But since he did not find the extreme circumstances needed to justify a

nonparental custody order, the GAL recommended a slow transition of custody from Mr.

Pinon to Mr. Alvarez.

Trial on Mr. Pinon’s petition was continued several times as Mr. Alvarez cycled

through attorneys. Meanwhile, as SA-M transitioned to custody with Mr. Alvarez, her

grades in school fell, and her mental health deteriorated. Several reports were filed with

Child Protective Services (CPS) regarding Mr. Alvarez’s care of SA-M. In one instance,

SA-M told a school counselor that Mr. Alvarez had hit her with the metal part of a belt,

leaving a bruise on her rib cage. In another report, a hospital called CPS after SA-M was

found some distance from Mr. Alvarez’s home at 11:00 p.m. She was treated for

scratches that she said were from her father hitting her with a fishing pole. Mr. Alvarez

told the police that SA-M regularly runs away from home.

In follow-up investigations, a social worker noted that SA-M sometimes tells “tall

tales” and exaggerates about being hit and her needs being met. SA-M and Mr. Alvarez

began therapy sessions together and their relationship improved. After several follow-up

visits in which no concerns were noted, the case was marked as ready for closure.

In March 2019, CPS received two more anonymous reports of abuse by Mr.

Alvarez against SA-M. The anonymous source alleged that Mr. Alvarez regularly hit SA-

4 No. 37108-5-III In re Custody of SA-M

M with a belt, pulled her by the ear and hair, and otherwise physically abused her. It

appears these reports were made by Mr. Alvarez’s ex-girlfriend, Veronica Granillo, who is

also the mother of his second child born in 2018. At no point did any of these reports

result in SA-M being removed from Mr. Alvarez’s home.

Trial was continued for the last time from May 2019 to July to allow the GAL to

review newly available CPS reports and update the GAL report. In the meantime, Mr.

Pinon filed a petition for de facto parentage under the newly enacted de facto parenting

statute, RCW 26.26A.440.

TRIAL

At trial, several witnesses testified for both parties. Only some of the testimony is

outlined below.

Mr. Pinon testified about the strength and nature of his relationship with SA-M—

how she grew up calling him dad and how he regarded her as his daughter on the same

footing with his other children. He testified about how Ms. Morales-Rodriguez regarded

him as a good parent to SA-M. He testified about how he arranged for SA-M to see a

therapist in the wake of her mother’s death until custody switched to Mr. Alvarez. He

testified how he felt Mr.

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