Larry D. Christensen v. Jennifer Roach

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 11, 2015
Docket44340-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Larry D. Christensen v. Jennifer Roach (Larry D. Christensen v. Jennifer Roach) 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
Larry D. Christensen v. Jennifer Roach, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION Ii

2015 AUG l I AM 9: 08 STATE OF WASHINGTON aY E I} T` t

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

LARRY DALE CHRISTENSEN, No. 44340 -6 -II

Respondent, UNPUBLISHED OPINION V.

JENNIFER ROACH,

BJORGEN, J. — Jennifer Roach appeals a vulnerable adult protection order restraining her

from contacting Larry Christensen.. Roach contends that ( 1) venue was improper because the

petition for the order of protection was not filed in the county she and Christensen both lived in,

2) she was deprived of her jury trial right because the trial court adjudicated the petition without

a jury, (3) she was deprived of due process of law because the trial court did not allow her to testify

or cross- examine the witnesses against her, ( 4) the person filing the petition, Richard Sutherland,

was disqualified from acting as Christensen' s attorney- in-fact based on a conflict of interest, ( 5)

the trial court failed to enter findings of fact and conclusions of law, and ( 6) the trial court made

factual findings unsupported by substantial evidence. No. 44340 -6 -II

We hold that Roach ( 1) waived her venue claim by failing to object or move to transfer

venue, ( 2) was not entitled to a jury trial because the hearing on the petition was an equitable

proceeding, ( 3) was not denied due process because the trial court never prevented her from

testifying or cross- examining witnesses against her, and ( 4) waived her claim that Sutherland was

tainted by a conflict of interest by failing to raise it in the trial court or adequately brief the issue

before us. We also hold that (5) the trial court made the necessary findings of fact and conclusions

of law and ( 6) that these findings are supported by substantial evidence. We affirm.

FACTS

In 1996, Christensen executed a durable power of attorney naming Sutherland " as his

attorney- in- fact" should he later become " disabled or incompetent." Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 7. In

April 2012, Christensen executed a living trust, naming himself the trust' s original trustee and

Sutherland as his successor trustee in the event of his incapacity or death. The trust granted three

people, Loretta Sutherland, Jessica Sutherland, and Roach, the power to determine whether

Christensen had become incapacitated. Under the trust, " all rights to ... income, profits, and

control of the trust property" remained with Christensen until his death, CP at 27, at which time

all interest in the trust' s property passed, in succession, to Sutherland and then to members of his

family.

By 2009, Christensen was showing signs of Parkinson' s disease. Roach began working

for Christensen near the end of that year, " cleaning and organizing his house" for $ 100 a day.

CP at 213. Over the next few months, Roach became something of a personal assistant to

Christensen before eventually moving into his house to become his " full time companion." CP

at 213

2 No. 44340 -6 -II

Roach and Christensen discovered research indicating that exercise benefitted those

suffering from Parkinson' s disease. Roach considered getting Christensen to exercise as one of

her duties, and some of Christensen' s friends and neighbors opined that he benefitted from

Roach' s physical therapy regime. In the summer of 2012, Christensen remained well enough

that he took a two week vacation through Scandinavia with Roach and one of her friends.

By late September 2012, Roach and Christensen had returned to the United States. On

September 24, 2012, Christensen tripped over a box lying on one of the steps in his house and

fell, suffering injuries that required hospitalization. During this hospitalization, Roach used

Christensen' s automated teller machine ( ATM) card to withdraw, over several days, nearly

2, 500 from his accounts.

Christensen was discharged from the hospital on October 3, 2012. Shortly thereafter,

Christensen and Roach left Christensen' s house in King County and temporarily moved into

Sutherland' s Kitsap County house. Two weeks after moving in with Sutherland, Christensen

again required hospitalization. Doctors later said that the need for hospitalization may have

resulted from lack of sleep and exhaustion from over -exercise.

On the whole, Christensen and Roach' s stay with the Sutherlands was marked by tension

and strife. Despite Roach' s repeated statements of affection for Christensen, at least three people

heard Roach yelling at Christensen during the stay. One of these witnesses testified that she

heard Roach yelling at Christensen on no less than four.occasions and believed that on one of

those occasions she heard a slap.

When Sutherland and his wife, Christensen' s nephew and his wife, and Roach began to

plan for how to care for Christensen after his second hospitalization, a serious conflict erupted

between Roach and the others. They confronted Roach over the large ATM withdrawals she had No. 44340 -6 -II

made from Christensen' s accounts during his hospitalization. Roach began crying and yelling at

the others, telling Christensen that " she was being attacked," which upset him. CP at 82. When

talk turned to the costs of Roach and Christensen' s trip to Scandinavia, Christensen " spoke up

and said [ he] agreed to pay half of all expense[ s]." CP at 82. Roach responded by repeatedly

telling Christensen " you said you would pay for all expenses on the trip[,] remember?" CP at 82.

The meeting ended, for the night, with Roach " screaming at [ Christensen,] saying she love[ d]

him and that [ the others were] attacking her and making her leave." CP at 83. When the

meeting resumed the next morning, Sutherland decided that the situation was untenable and told

Roach that she needed to leave his home by the end of the day. Roach responded by

immediately ... crying and screaming repeatedly" at Christensen that she loved him and that

the others were forcing her to leave him. CP at 83. She also told Christensen that " this has

happened before and that the girlfriend gets nothing." CP at 83. When Christensen tried to

comfort her, Roach " shuffled him into the bedroom." CP at 83. He returned, immediately

asking questions about his [ w] ill and who was in charge." CP at 83. The others took this

incident as evidence of Roach' s manipulation of Christensen.

Sutherland and Christensen' s nephew then left to go to Christensen' s house in King

County, where they retrieved belongings that he needed during his stay with the Sutherlands.

While there, the two men noticed the house' s unsanitary conditions, including leaking and

molding skylights, filthy and malodorous conditions in the master bathroom, clutter throughout

the house, and rodent feces and garbage in the kitchen.

On November 2, 2012, Sutherland filed a petition for a vulnerable adult protection order

in Kitsap County seeking to restrain Roach from interacting with Christensen. Sutherland filed

the petition, in part, as Christensen' s attorney- in-fact and as the trustee of Christensen' s living

M No. 44340 -6 -II

trust, making him Christensen' s fiduciary.' In the petition, Sutherland, under oath, listed a

number of Roach' s acts that he contended showed abuse, neglect, and financial exploitation.

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