In the Matter of the Marriage of: Cynthia Cervantes & Jose Gonzales Cervantes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 31, 2021
Docket37474-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Marriage of: Cynthia Cervantes & Jose Gonzales Cervantes (In the Matter of the Marriage of: Cynthia Cervantes & Jose Gonzales Cervantes) 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 Marriage of: Cynthia Cervantes & Jose Gonzales Cervantes, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED AUGUST 31, 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In the Matter of the Marriage of ) ) No. 37474-2-III CYNTHIA CERVANTES, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) JOSE GONZALES CERVANTES, ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. — Jose Cervantes appeals an interlocutory order for incarceration

because of his contempt in failure to pay child support and spousal maintenance.

Because Jose, in his brief, only complains about and analyzes another order not appealed

and because Jose breaches critical Rules on Appellate Procedure, we dismiss his appeal

without reaching the merits.

FACTS

Jose Cervantes and Cynthia Cervantes married on December 10, 1986, in Prosser.

At the time of dissolution, the parties had one fifteen-year-old son. We sometimes refer

to the parties with their first names because of the same surname.

The principal dispute during this proceeding entails the amount of income

garnered by Jose Cervantes in his nursery business. That income influences the amount

of child support and spousal maintenance to be paid by Jose. No. 37474-2-III In re Marriage of Cervantes

In response to a request by Jose to lower his child support and spousal

maintenance payments, Cynthia filed a pleading entitled “Analysis of Jose Cervantes

Bank Accounts Received via Subpoena.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 291-97. We do not

know the author of the analysis, but the author may have been a forensic accountant. The

document analyzed Jose’s accounts and concluded that, between July 2017 and January

2018, Jose had an income of $1,648,344.34 or $235,477.76 per month over seven

months. In turn, Cynthia provided a financial declaration, indicating that her net monthly

income was $1,570.68.

In support of his motion to reduce support and maintenance, Jose Cervantes filed a

declaration by accountant, Nathan Bridges, CPA. Bridges declared that, in 2018, Jose

collected $375,800 from farmers for baby trees he would deliver to them in 2019.

Bridges did not categorize this money as income. According to Bridges:

This is not income to Mr. Cervantes until he actually delivers the trees. These are actually pre-payments and are a liability to Mr. Cervantes until he delivers.

CP at 304. Bridges explained that Jose used $350,000 of the $375,800 in prepayments to

retire his house mortgage:

So in essence, Mr. Cervantes traded one debt for another. It is incorrect to categorize the $350,000 paid on the home as income.

CP at 304.

2 No. 37474-2-III In re Marriage of Cervantes

According to CPA Nathan Bridges, Jose Cervantes handled $732,116 in cash

during 2018, including the $375,800 in prepayments and another $86,500 in loans.

Bridges averred that Jose earned $244,028 from the sale of his nursery tree stock,

$10,000 from selling a truck, and $15,789 in wages from employment at Egley’s. After

expenses, Jose netted $46,171.

PROCEDURE

On September 26, 2017, Cynthia Cervantes filed for dissolution of marriage.

Cynthia thereafter sought an award of temporary spousal maintenance and child support.

On August 23, 2018, the superior court commissioner entered a temporary family law

order. The order required Jose Cervantes to pay $10,000 per month in family support to

Cynthia. According to the order, family support constituted a combination of spousal

maintenance and child support. The court commissioner also ordered Jose to pay, to

Cynthia, $10,000 for attorney fees and $20,000 for an accountant to review the couple’s

financial records.

On December 18, 2018, Jose Cervantes filed a motion to eliminate or reduce his

support and maintenance obligation. To support his motion, Jose filed an accompanying

declaration, averring that he could not pay $10,000 a month in family support particularly

when he needed to pay, on behalf of his wife, $10,000 in attorney fees and $20,000 in

expert fees.

3 No. 37474-2-III In re Marriage of Cervantes

On February 14, 2019, the court commissioner denied Jose Cervantes’ motion to

eliminate or reduce family support. The commissioner found that Jose’s business is cash-

based and should be considered on a cash basis. Therefore, the commissioner counted

Jose’s advance for the 2019 trees in 2018 as income. The commissioner calculated Jose’s

net annual income at $645,616 and his net monthly income at $29,535, although $29,535

multiplied by 12 equals $354,420. The court commissioner found Jose Cervantes to be in

contempt of the previous order awarding to Cynthia child support and maintenance. The

commissioner entered the following written findings, some of which are conclusions of

law or orders:

1) The court finds Mr. Cervantes [sic] income at $29,535.00 per month, based on his expert analysis 2) Mr. Cervantes was able to pay family support & refusal to pay was made in bad faith 3) Mr. Cervantes dodged his obligation 4) Mr. Cervantes [sic] request to reduce family support is denied 5) Mr. Cervantes shall pay wifes [sic] expert $20,000.00 within 60 days per the courts [sic] August 23, 2018 order 6) Mr. Cervantes shall pay $10,000 as ordered each month plus an additional $5,000.00 per month toward the back $38,800.00 7) Mr. Cervantes shall pay the $11,500.00 in attorneys fees within 60 days. 1/2 due in 30 days 1/2 due in 60 days 8) Contempt can be purged by paying $5,000.00 per month toward back support per paragraph 6.

CP at 317-18.

On February 19, 2019, Jose Cervantes filed a motion requesting the superior court

to revise the court commissioner’s order regarding contempt and requesting the

4 No. 37474-2-III In re Marriage of Cervantes

eliminating or reducing of family support. Jose challenged the commissioner’s

classification of the $375,800 advance as income. On March 19, 2019, Jose submitted

another declaration, averring that he used $350,000 of the $375,800 advance to retire the

debt on his house, which was then in foreclosure.

On March 21, 2019, the superior court denied Jose Cervantes’ motion for revision.

The court adopted verbatim the court commissioner’s findings of fact and conclusions of

law.

On September 19, 2019, the court commissioner entered an order finding Jose

Cervantes in contempt because he acted in bad faith when failing to comply with the

court’s order on payment of family support and his wife’s attorney fees. The

commissioner entered another contempt order on December 9, 2019. The new order

required Jose to pay $40,000 in arrears at $700 per week in addition to paying his

monthly obligations.

On January 30, 2020, the court commissioner, pursuant to Jose Cervantes’ failure

to comply with the two contempt orders on September 19 and December 9, 2019, ordered

Jose to jail. The incarceration order required Jose to present himself to the Yakima

County Jail immediately after the January 30 hearing to be taken into custody for not

more than five consecutive days. He could purge the contempt and procure his release by

paying the arrearages.

5 No. 37474-2-III In re Marriage of Cervantes

On March 2, 2020, Jose Cervantes filed a notice of appeal of the January 30, 2020

interlocutory order for incarceration. Instead of preparing a concise notice of appeal as

contemplated by RAP 5.3, Jose included argument in support of the merits of his appeal.

Jose argued that his attorneys never obtained his consent for a court commissioner to

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Related

In Re Marriage of Drlik
87 P.3d 1192 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2004)
In re the Marriage of Drlik
121 Wash. App. 269 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2004)
State v. Pegg
536 P.2d 171 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1975)

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In the Matter of the Marriage of: Cynthia Cervantes & Jose Gonzales Cervantes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-marriage-of-cynthia-cervantes-jose-gonzales-washctapp-2021.