In the Matter of the Marriage of: Nancy Ann Bevilacqua-Madrigal & Eduardo Guadalupe Madrigal

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 30, 2021
Docket37830-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Marriage of: Nancy Ann Bevilacqua-Madrigal & Eduardo Guadalupe Madrigal (In the Matter of the Marriage of: Nancy Ann Bevilacqua-Madrigal & Eduardo Guadalupe Madrigal) 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: Nancy Ann Bevilacqua-Madrigal & Eduardo Guadalupe Madrigal, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED NOVEMBER 30, 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In the Matter of the Marriage of: ) No. 37830-6-III ) NANCY ANN BEVILACQUA- ) MADRIGAL, ) ) Respondent, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) and ) ) EDUARDO GUADALUPE MADRIGAL, ) ) Appellant. )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. — Eduardo Madrigal appeals after the trial court denied

his CR 60(b)(11) motion to vacate a default dissolution decree and associated final

orders. Because Mr. Madrigal failed to show that the property award and the parenting

plan were based on incomplete, incorrect, or conclusory information, we affirm.

FACTS

Nancy Bevilacqua-Madrigal and Eduardo Madrigal were married in 2007. In

April 2019, Ms. Madrigal filed an amended petition for dissolution of marriage. In her

amended petition, she requested the court enter a parenting plan giving her primary No. 37830-6-III Marriage of Madrigal

residential placement of the parties’ seven-year-old son, J.M, and limiting Mr. Madrigal’s

visitation and decision-making. Her request was supported by a declaration accusing Mr.

Madrigal of using and selling illegal drugs, and of assaulting and threatening her and their

son. She noted she had a permanent protection order and asked the court to enter a

protection order for her son. Her accusations were confirmed by sworn statements from

her father and adult children and, more notably, by a detailed handwritten sworn

statement from a woman who had known the couple for seven years. In that statement,

the woman confirmed that Ms. Madrigal and J.M. often stayed with her for their own

safety, and that J.M. was terrified of his father, had nightmares, and believed his father

would kill him and his mother. The woman’s statement concluded by saying she would

be at the hearing if the court wanted to ask her questions.

Mr. Madrigal responded by requesting standard visitation and joint decision-

making. In a declaration, he portrayed himself as the responsible parent, accused Ms.

Madrigal of being unfaithful, and accused her adult children of repeatedly using illegal

drugs in the family home.

The trial court heard argument on April 8, 2019. Although it did not enter a

temporary parenting plan, it did enter an order restraining Mr. Madrigal from harassing or

having any contact with Ms. Madrigal until 2099 and J.M. for one year.

2 No. 37830-6-III Marriage of Madrigal

In late February 2020, Ms. Madrigal requested renewal of the one-year restraining

order that protected J.M. In her supporting declaration, she noted that Mr. Madrigal had

failed to obtain a court-ordered hair follicle test and court-ordered counseling. She also

informed the court that Mr. Madrigal had three warrants out for his arrest and had

repeatedly violated the restraining order, resulting in over 10 police reports. Mr.

Madrigal did not appear for the March 9, 2020 hearing, but his attorney did. After

argument, the trial court extended the restraining order to protect J.M. for an additional

year.

Mr. Madrigal never filed an answer to Ms. Madrigal’s dissolution petition.

In late July 2020, Ms. Madrigal moved for an order of default and noted her motion for

August 17. Counsel for Mr. Madrigal filed a notice of intent to withdraw, with a

withdrawal date of August 27. At the August 17 default hearing, counsel for Mr.

Madrigal explained he had attempted to reach his client but was not successful. The trial

court entered the default order. The order included the following warning: “The court

may sign orders and hold hearings in this case without notice to the defaulted party.”

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 31. There was no objection to this language.

3 No. 37830-6-III Marriage of Madrigal

On August 18, the court administrator provided Ms. Madrigal’s counsel a date of

September 9, 2020, to present evidence for the final orders. Counsel filed notice of the

September 9 hearing with the court.

Also on August 18, Mr. Madrigal called his attorney and told him that he had

returned to Washington. He had been in Mexico for several months, and once he returned

to Ellensburg in late June 2020, he was arrested for failing to comply with court orders

and was incarcerated for 20 to 30 days.1 Once Mr. Madrigal called his attorney on

August 18, the latter filed a notice of appearance and provided a copy of that notice to

opposing counsel.

Ms. Madrigal testified at the evidentiary hearing, and the court admitted a letter

from J.M. In conjunction with the final dissolution decree, the court entered findings of

fact and conclusions of law about the marriage, including a finding “that there has been

significant domestic violence in this household.” CP at 42.

The property award gave Ms. Madrigal the family home—a duplex co-owned with

Ms. Madrigal’s father. Ms. Madrigal testified that the marital equity in the duplex was

1 In his motion to set aside the dissolution decree and final orders, Mr. Madrigal failed to explain why he could not have kept in contact with his attorney while he was in Mexico, or upon his arrest and incarceration in Ellensburg, or even after his release. Instead, he simply says he did not own a phone and it took him weeks after being released to get one. A person does not need to own a telephone to make a telephone call.

4 No. 37830-6-III Marriage of Madrigal

$15,000. The award offset this equity by assigning to Ms. Madrigal just over $15,000 of

credit card debt. In addition, the award assigned to Ms. Madrigal the debt for each asset

awarded to her.

The parenting plan prohibited Mr. Madrigal from having contact with J.M. The

reasons for this were Mr. Madrigal’s physical and repeated emotional abuse of J.M.,

domestic violence and assault in the home, Mr. Madrigal’s long-term emotional problems

and substance abuse that interfered with his ability to parent, few or no emotional ties

with J.M, and his use of conflict in a way that endangered or damaged J.M.’s

psychological development. The court entered a third restraining order, restraining Mr.

Madrigal from any contact with J.M. for one year.

On September 14, Mr. Madrigal called his attorney because he learned that final

papers had been entered. On September 22, Mr. Madrigal, citing CR 60(b)(11), moved to

vacate the dissolution decree and the associated final orders. He argued that it would be

inequitable not to vacate the decree and associated final orders because (1) he had

$60,000 of equity in the duplex but was assigned the duplex debt, and (2) the parenting

plan deprived him of all contact with J.M.

The superior court received briefing from the parties and held a hearing. It later

issued a letter ruling denying Mr. Madrigal’s motion. In relevant part, the ruling stated:

5 No. 37830-6-III Marriage of Madrigal

“Through his own inexcusable neglect [Mr. Madrigal] failed to keep in contact with his

attorney and the case moved along without his participation.” CP at 105. The trial court

entered its order denying Mr. Madrigal’s motion to vacate, and Mr. Madrigal timely

appealed.

ANALYSIS

A. FILING A NEW NOTICE OF APPEARANCE DID NOT ABROGATE THE COURT’S PRIOR DEFAULT ORDER

Mr. Madrigal contends his attorney’s new notice of appearance should have alerted

the trial court that he wanted to participate in the default evidentiary hearing. But even if

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In the Matter of the Marriage of: Nancy Ann Bevilacqua-Madrigal & Eduardo Guadalupe Madrigal, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-marriage-of-nancy-ann-bevilacqua-madrigal-eduardo-washctapp-2021.