Jeanne Harris, Appellant/cross-respondent v. Roger Kell, Respondent/cross-appellant

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 11, 2014
Docket43788-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jeanne Harris, Appellant/cross-respondent v. Roger Kell, Respondent/cross-appellant (Jeanne Harris, Appellant/cross-respondent v. Roger Kell, Respondent/cross-appellant) 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
Jeanne Harris, Appellant/cross-respondent v. Roger Kell, Respondent/cross-appellant, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTO

DIVISION II

In re the Marriage of: No. 43788 -1 - II

JEANNE MARIE HARRIS,

Appellant,

MA

ROGER DUANE KELL, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

LEE, J. — Jeanne Marie Harris and Roger Duane Kell were married for approximately

five years. After they separated, they engaged in four years of litigation over the distribution of

approximately $200, 000 of property. The trial court primarily awarded the parties their separate

property and entered a judgment distributing less than $ 50, 000 in additional assets between the

parties. Harris appeals. We affirm the trial court. In addition, due to the intransigent nature of

Harris' s appeal, we grant Kell' s request for attorney fees.

FACTS

Harris and Kell married on May 3, 2003. Kell was an electrician working out of the

union hall. He also owned several rental properties. Harris was a Vancouver city councilwoman

and she owned a consulting business. After the parties married, they lived together in Harris' s

home. No. 43788 -1 - II

During the marriage, Kell worked as an electrician for several companies including Kraft

and Boeing. Harris ran for county commissioner, but lost. Later she opened an Allstate

Insurance agency. Although both parties contributed to household expenses ( Harris paid the

mortgage and Kell paid for utilities), they primarily kept their finances separate. During this

period, Harris was incurring large amounts of credit card debt.

Harris and Kell separated on May 31, 2008. The dissolution trial was continued several

times due to a variety of reasons, including court congestion and Kell' s medical issues. The trial

court also continued the trial for a period of time after Kell was diagnosed with cancer.

Ultimately, the dissolution did not go to trial until April 2012, four years after Harris and Kell

separated.

Immediately after filing her petition for dissolution, Harris filed a motion for temporary

spousal maintenance of $3, 000 a month. The trial court ordered Kell to pay Harris $ 1, 500 per

month. Over the course of the dissolution, maintenance was modified several times and reduced

from $ 1, 500 to $ 1, 000, from $ 1, 000 to $ 775, from $ 775 to $ 500, and from $ 500 to $ 250.

Although the amounts varied, Kell paid Harris maintenance for 39 months, until April of 2012.

Over the 39 months that Harris received maintenance, she ran her own insurance agency until

she was forced to close the business. After Harris closed the business, she continued her position

as a Vancouver city councilwoman, but decided to return to school and pursue another graduate

degree rather than find additional employment or take additional jobs through her consulting

business.

2 No. 43788 -1 - II

While the dissolution was pending, Harris declared bankruptcy. In the bankruptcy,

Harris discharged the majority of her credit card debt ( approximately $ 260, 000), but still had

three mortgages on her home and a car loan. Kell entered the marriage with a small amount of

manageable debt. However, after the parties separated, he began incurring debt due to attorney

fees and maintenance payments.

During the marriage, Harris operated the Allstate Insurance agency. When she began

operating the agency, Harris routinely comingled her business and personal finances by making

business purchases from her personal account and using business funds to pay for personal

expenses. In March 2009, Harris decided to execute two promissory notes in order to align her

business and personal finances. She executed one promissory note from the business to herself

for approximately $41, 000 to be paid in installments of $1, 000 a month. She executed ,a second

promissory note from herself to the business for approximately $ 42, 000 to be paid in

installments of $50 a month. The promissory note from herself to the business was discharged in

her bankruptcy. However, Harris transferred approximately $ 23, 000 from the business to her

personal account as payment on the first promissory note.

Allstate redeemed Harris' s insurance agency in the fall of 2011, and executed a payout

agreement which provided Harris with $ 5, 562 a month for 12 months as compensation for the

economic interest she had in her insurance policies. After Allstate redeemed Harris' s insurance

agency, the trial court ordered Harris to produce discovery regarding the basis for payments and

how Allstate calculated the amount of the payments. The trial court also ordered Harris to

C No. 43788 -1 - II

transfer the Allstate payments to Kell' s attorney to be held in Kell' s attorney' s trust account

pending the outcome of the dissolution and property distribution. Harris failed to comply with

the court' s order to produce discovery. Ultimately, the trial court found Harris in contempt and

ordered Harris to provide the discovery by February 24, 2012. Harris also failed to comply with

the trial court' s contempt order.

Harris' s attorney withdrew. After her attorney withdrew, Harris began representing

herself pro se and began filing numerous motions with the trial court. The trial court found that

most, if not all, of Harris' s motions were not grounded in law and, on at least two occasions,

ordered Harris to pay Kell' s attorney fees for responding to her motions.

A month prior to the scheduled trial date, Harris filed a motion with the court asking to

use $ 2, 500 of the Allstate payments held in Kell' s attorney' s trust account to hire an attorney to

represent her at trial. Harris stated that she had already made arrangements with an attorney to

represent her at trial. The trial court granted Harris' s motion and ordered Kell' s attorney to pay

2, 500 to Harris' s new attorney. The trial court also allowed Kell' s attorney to withdraw an

additional $2, 500 to be paid toward Kell' s attorney fees.

A few days before the scheduled April trial date, Harris' s new attorney filed a motion to

continue the trial, alleging that he would need an extra four weeks to arrange for additional

discovery and subpoenas and prepare for trial. The trial court denied the motion based on

Harris' s prior representation to the court when she requested monies for attorney fees that if the

trial court gave her funds for an attorney, she would be ready for the scheduled trial date.

0 No. 43788 -1 - II

On the day of trial, Harris' s new attorney moved to present Harris' s 1099g income tax

statement as evidence of the character of the Allstate payments as severance pay. Kell' s attorney

moved to exclude the evidence because she had not seen the document, and Harris had not

complied with the trial court' s earlier contempt order requiring her to provide any evidence

regarding the Allstate payments by February 24, 2012. The trial court granted Kell' s motion to

exclude because of Harris' s failure to comply with its contempt order.

The trial court held a two - day dissolution trial in which no other witnesses besides Harris

and Kell testified. On April 27, 2012, the trial court issued a written memorandum decision to

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