Joshua Harrison v. Krystle L. Duvall F/k/a Furrow

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 23, 2018
Docket76046-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joshua Harrison v. Krystle L. Duvall F/k/a Furrow (Joshua Harrison v. Krystle L. Duvall F/k/a Furrow) 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
Joshua Harrison v. Krystle L. Duvall F/k/a Furrow, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

rILEO APPEALS 01V 1 COURT OF WASHINGT 011 c, STATE OF WU:28 ZOIB UR 23

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Custody of ) BNH, BIF, and BTH, ) No. 76046-7-1 (consolidated with ) 76047-5-I& 76048-3-1) Children. ) ) DIVISION ONE JOSHUA L. HARRISON, ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) KRYSTLE L. FURROW (n/k/a DUVALL),) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant, ) FILED: April 23, 2018 ) FADI FAKHOURI and ERYK HARDIN, ) ) Defendants. ) )

BECKER, J. — Appellant Krystle Furrow, now known as Krystle Duvall, is the mother of three children. Respondent Joshua Harrison is the biological father

of one of those children. Duvall seeks reversal of an order establishing that

Harrison is a de facto parent to the other two children. She also challenges a

parenting plan by which the children are scheduled to reside primarily with

Harrison. Duvall identifies no persuasive basis for overturning the trial court

orders. We affirm. No. 76046-7-1/2

FACTS

Duvall was in tenth grade when she became pregnant with her first child.

She gave birth to a girl, BNH, in June 2003. She married the girl's father, Eryk

Hardin. He and Duvall separated a few months after getting married.

In early 2004, Duvall began a relationship with Harrison. At the time,

Duvall was living in her sister's home and working at a fast food restaurant. She

and Harrison decided to live together. Duvall and the baby, then eight months

old, moved into Harrison's apartment. Duvall was still legally married to Hardin,

but he had moved to Minnesota. That marriage was later dissolved by decree

and a parenting plan was entered allowing Hardin to have supervised visits with

his daughter.

Duvall became pregnant with Harrison's child. A boy, BTH, was born in

February 2006. Harrison testified that around this time, he started spending

more one-on-one time with Duvall's daughter, BNH. He said he wanted to avoid

a situation where she felt neglected because there was a new baby in the family.

He testified that he and BNH "went on many walks. Our bond strengthened."

Duvall moved out in 2008. At trial, she and Harrison gave different

reasons for the breakdown of their relationship. Duvall said that Harrison was

verbally and emotionally abusive, while Harrison said the couple's problems

stemmed from the fact that Duvall was "partying" frequently. Duvall moved in

with a man named Fadi Fakhouri. Both children stayed with Harrison.

2 No. 76046-7-1/3

Later in 2008, Duvall and Fakhouri decided to move to England together.

Before leaving, Duvall executed a power of attorney granting Harrison authority

to make medical and educational decisions for both children. When asked during

trial why she left, Duvall responded, "I don't know. I was young. I had two kids. I

didn't know what I was doing."

The trial court found that Duvall returned to the United States from

England "one or two, or possibly three times." Her contacts with the children

during these visits are described as few and brief. "Josh put[BNH]in counseling

through the school to deal with the issue of her mother being gone." Duvall does

not assign error to the findings entered by the trial court. We accept them as

verities on appeal. In re Dependency of C.B., 79 Wn. App. 686, 691, 904 P.2d

1171 (1995), review denied, 128 Wn.2d 1023(1996).

Duvall and Fakhouri moved back to Washington in mid-2010. They lived

together in Redmond in a house rented by Fakhouri. The two children continued

to live primarily with Harrison.

Duvall became pregnant with Fakhouri's child. She gave birth to a girl,

BIF, in October 2012. By the time this child was born, Fakhouri had moved out

of the house he shared with Duvall. The trial court found that Fakhouri spent

"some time" with BIF before relocating to Europe.

Duvall and the baby remained in the house that Fakhouri had rented.

Duvall could not afford the rent. In November 2012, Harrison took over the lease

and he and the two older children moved in with Duvall and her newborn.

Harrison and Duvall soon resumed a close relationship. Harrison started

3 No. 76046-7-1/4

bonding with the new baby; he testified that he took on "a parental role" and

began "wanting the best for her." Duvall testified that during this period she was

responsible for the majority of the parenting tasks as to all three children.

Harrison had a full-time job at a paint store.

In June 2014, Harrison and Duvall decided to separate. At trial, Harrison

cited Duvall's drinking habits as a source of the couple's problems. In July 2014,

Duvall moved in with Robert Duvall, a man she later married. Harrison moved in

with his sister. Harrison and Duvall informally agreed that the children would split

time between households—one week with Duvall, the next week with Harrison,

and so on. This arrangement did not work out as planned. The three children

ended up living mainly with Harrison in his sister's home.

In August 2014, Harrison filed petitions seeking nonparental custody of the

girls, BNH and BIF, who were then 11 years old and 1 year old, respectively. To

establish adequate cause to proceed with a nonparental custody action, the

petitioner must(1)show that the child is not in the physical custody of a parent or

the parents are unsuitable custodians and (2) allege specific facts that, if proven

true, establish that the parent is unfit or the child would suffer actual detriment if

placed with the parent. RCW 26.10.032(1); In re Custody of E.A.T.W., 168

Wn.2d 335, 344-45, 227 P.3d 1284 (2010). Harrison alleged that neither of the

two girls had "resided a significant amount of time" with their biological parents

and the parents were not suitable custodians because they could not provide

safe, stable homes for the children. He asked that Duvall's visitation rights be

limited for several reasons, including willful abandonment, and that the biological

4 No. 76046-7-1/5

fathers' visitation rights be limited because each had abandoned his child and

substantially refused to perform parenting functions. Harrison asserted that

granting him nonparental custody would serve the girls' best interests, in part

because he had the ability and desire to provide a safe, stable home and the girls

were emotionally bonded with him. Harrison also filed a petition for a parenting

plan by which his then 8-year-old son, BTH, would reside mainly with him.

Duvall asked the court to dismiss the nonparental custody petitions and

reject Harrison's proposed parenting plan as to their son. A commissioner found

adequate cause to proceed with the petitions. Trial was set for January 2016.

By temporary orders, the children were scheduled to reside mainly with Harrison.

A guardian ad litem prepared a 53-page report that documented

information obtained through interviews with Duvall, Harrison, and the older two

children, as well as others involved in the children's lives. The report conveys

the impression that Harrison was a consistent caregiver to all three children

throughout their lives. The guardian ad litem observed that Harrison "could be

considered a de facto parent" to the girls:

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Joshua Harrison v. Krystle L. Duvall F/k/a Furrow, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshua-harrison-v-krystle-l-duvall-fka-furrow-washctapp-2018.