Lawrence Edward Madsen v. Vikki Lee Vega

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 19, 2021
Docket36344-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lawrence Edward Madsen v. Vikki Lee Vega (Lawrence Edward Madsen v. Vikki Lee Vega) 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
Lawrence Edward Madsen v. Vikki Lee Vega, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED AUGUST 19, 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 Vulnerable Adult ) Protection Order for LAWRENCE ) No. 36344-9-III EDWARD MADSEN. ) ) VIKKI LEE VEGA, ) ) Appellant, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) v. ) ) TED MADSEN, ) ) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. — Having made a long trip to Spokane from California, Vikki

Vega waived certain procedural rights in this action seeking a vulnerable adult protection

order against her rather than suffer a two-week delay. Following a hearing in which Ms.

Vega represented herself, the court commissioner granted only a portion of the relief that

was requested. Ms. Vega nonetheless appeals. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In early August 2018, Adult Protective Services (APS) was investigating whether

Ed Madsen1 was being financially exploited by his wife, Vikki Vega, from whom Ed had

1 Ed’s given name is Lawrence Edward. His son Theodore, who commenced the action below, goes by Ted. Because of the shared last name we refer to them, and to No. 36344-9-III Vega v. Madsen

been legally separated since 2013. Ed was living at Franklin Hills Rehabilitation, a

Spokane nursing home, and had lived there for almost 18 months. Ms. Vega lived in

Bodfish, in Kern County, California. Notwithstanding the couple’s legal separation, Ms.

Vega held durable medical and financial powers of attorney that Ed had signed in 2016.

She was receiving most of Ed’s monthly social security benefits as spousal maintenance

and was receiving the balance of his benefits as his attorney-in-fact.

Ted Madsen, Ed’s son and Ms. Vega’s stepson, learned that Ms. Vega planned to

travel to Spokane and remove Ed from Franklin Hills, which he believed was in an effort

to thwart the APS investigation. Ted traveled to Spokane and on August 3 filed a petition

for a vulnerable adult protection order (VAPO), obtaining an order that temporarily

restrained Ms. Vega from having contact with Ed and from removing him from Franklin

Hills. The order set a hearing on the petition for August 16. The temporary order was

served on Ed on August 4. It was not served on Ms. Vega until August 11.

Ms. Vega and Ted’s lawyer appeared in court at the time set for the hearing, but it

was not clear that the hearing could proceed. Ms. Vega had not received the six court

days’ notice that is statutorily required. See RCW 74.34.120(2). She appeared with a

stack of documents that Ted’s lawyer had not had an opportunity to review. Ted’s lawyer

Steven Madsen, Ed and Ms. Vega’s son, by their first names. In Ed’s and Ted’s case, we use their preferred names, which were used in the proceedings below. No disrespect is intended.

2 No. 36344-9-III Vega v. Madsen

wished to offer as evidence a declaration of Steven Madsen, Ed’s and Ms. Vega’s son,

that Ms. Vega had not had a chance to review. Ted’s lawyer requested a two-week

continuance to cure the defect in notice and so that each side could review the other

side’s proposed evidence.

Ms. Vega opposed a continuance, telling the court and Ted’s lawyer that she had

traveled to Spokane to get Ed, concerned that he was not being given medication he

needed. She explained that she lived in a remote high-desert community,

And it’s a twelve-hundred mile trip. So I do not—I’m here. I do not want to appear by phone. And I don’t want to continue this. I mean, I’m here. Let’s do it. I mean, you brought the action. I appeared. Let’s do it.

Report of Proceedings (RP) at 5.

The court commissioner explained to Ms. Vega that it would not proceed in light

of the service defect unless Ms. Vega wished to waive it. The commissioner also

indicated that a continuance would be required if Ms. Vega wished to offer her

documents as exhibits. Ms. Vega waived untimely service of the notice of hearing,

agreed to forgo offering her own documents as evidence, and agreed to the admission of

Steven’s declaration to which she would respond with testimony. After recessing briefly

to review the court file, the commissioner proceeded with the hearing.

Ted’s witnesses were Steven, by declaration; Pamalynn Brault, an APS

investigator; and Ms. Vega. Steven’s declaration accused Ms. Vega of mistreating his

sister, who was Ed’s and Ms. Vega’s daughter; of being a spendthrift; and of

3 No. 36344-9-III Vega v. Madsen

manipulating Ed, whose mind Steven characterized as “tainted by dementia and mental

illness.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 23.

Ms. Brault testified that she had been assigned to investigate a report that Ed was a

vulnerable adult and was being financially exploited by Ms. Vega. She testified that she

had met with Ed and with his doctor and other personnel at Franklin Hills. She testified

that Ed had been diagnosed with vascular dementia, a cognitive deficit, and on the basis

of that diagnosis, his age (over 60), and the fact that he was living in a state-licensed

facility, was a vulnerable adult. Ms. Brault testified that based on her investigation, Ed

was receiving almost $3,400 a month in social security, of which Ms. Vega was receiving

$2,400 a month as spousal maintenance. She testified that from the $1,000 or so a month

that remained available for Ed, Ms. Vega was paying none to Franklin Hills, and he was

over $10,000 in arrears to the facility. She testified that Ms. Vega had paid nothing on

Ed’s behalf to the facility during the entire 18 months he had resided there, and Ed was at

risk of losing his housing.

Ms. Brault testified that she had obtained and reviewed copies of Ed’s bank

statements and determined that most of the transactions reflected on the statements

occurred in California, where Ms. Vega resides, and that no transactions were identifiable

as for Ed or to Ed. Ms. Brault testified that Ms. Vega held durable powers of attorney for

Ed, both medical and financial, and that in her opinion Ms. Vega was breaching her duty

of care by not resolving and satisfying the amounts owed for Ed’s housing.

4 No. 36344-9-III Vega v. Madsen

Under examination by Ted’s lawyer, Ms. Vega acknowledged that the handwritten

portions of the powers of attorney Ed had signed in 2016 were in her handwriting, but

testified that she prepared them at his request.

Ms. Vega cross-examined Ms. Brault and testified on her own behalf. Ms. Vega

testified that Franklin Hills was failing to bill private insurers before billing Medicaid,

and that she was only deferring payment of Ed’s participant liability until the amounts

billed to Medicaid were corrected. She mentioned a couple of times Medicaid’s

admonition that participants “[o]nly pay what you owe,” and testified that if she overpaid,

she had no confidence she would ever get the money back. She testified that while she

and Ed lived apart, Ed had always intended to provide for her financially. As for her

stepson, Ted, she testified that Ted went for years without seeing her or Ed and knew

nothing about her relationship with his father.

Ms. Vega testified that ownership of the Franklin Hills facility had changed at

least four times, it had gone through a receivership, and it had been fined millions of

dollars for Medicare and Medicaid fraud. Ms. Vega disputed the allegations in Steven’s

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