Lisa Marie Herrmann v. Paul Alan Herrmann, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 10, 2018
Docket35090-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lisa Marie Herrmann v. Paul Alan Herrmann, Jr. (Lisa Marie Herrmann v. Paul Alan Herrmann, Jr.) 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
Lisa Marie Herrmann v. Paul Alan Herrmann, Jr., (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED JULY 10, 2018 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In the Matter of the Marriage of ) ) No. 35090-8-III LISA MARIE HERRMANN, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) PAUL ALAN HERRMANN, JR., ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. — Former husband Paul Herrmann appeals the trial court’s order

vacating an earlier order that modified his obligation to pay child support and erased a

debt for past due support. Because the trial court did not abuse its discretion, we affirm

the vacation of the earlier order.

FACTS

Lisa Herrmann, now known as Lisa Morgan (Morgan), filed for divorce from Paul

Herrmann (Herrmann) in 2004. A parenting plan, entered two years later, granted

Morgan primary custody of the parties’ two children, age four and two at the time. A No. 35090-8-III In re Marriage of Herrmann

child support order, also entered in 2006, required Herrmann to pay a total of $1,000 per

month. In 2011, the trial court modified the child support order due to a decrease in

Herrmann’s income. The new order required Herrmann to pay $765 per month, which

amount would increase to $850 per month starting December 1, 2012.

In October 2012, Lisa Morgan filed a petition to modify the parenting plan by

adding an antiharassment protection order suspending all contact between Paul Herrmann

and the two children. Morgan did not seek modification of the child support order.

Herrmann did not file an answer to the petition for a restraining order, nor did he file a

petition to modify child support.

Both parties’ attorneys appeared in court on August 27, 2014, without their

respective clients present. Lisa Morgan had not seen a final agreement before the hearing

so, in advance of the hearing, she authorized her attorney to present her positions to Paul

Herrmann’s counsel and to gain clarification of Herrmann’s positions. Morgan expressly

instructed her attorney not to sign any final documents until he relayed to Morgan the

clarification she requested.

The trial court entered a new parenting plan on August 27, 2014, which plan

reduced Paul Herrmann’s visitation with the children to one supervised visit per year,

lasting not longer than six hours. On August 27, the trial court also entered an order

modifying child support despite no pending motion or petition requesting modification.

Herrmann’s and Morgan’s attorneys completed a child support worksheet that imputed

2 No. 35090-8-III In re Marriage of Herrmann

$2,000 as monthly net income for Morgan and $3,000 as a monthly net income for

Herrmann. The attorneys, however, provided no evidence, such as tax returns or

paystubs, to the court to verify income. The standard calculation for child support for

Herrmann was then $850. Nevertheless, the order entered waived his monthly transfer

payment in its entirety. The only justification identified in the order for waiver of child

support declared that Herrmann, who lived in Texas, needed to pay all transportation

expenses, including lodging, rental fees, and meals, to exercise visitation in Washington

State.

In addition to granting Paul Herrmann a downward deviation in child support, the

August 2014 modified support order required Lisa Morgan to pay all health insurance for

the children and awarded a dependency tax exemption to Herrmann. The order also

relieved Herrmann of $2,465 in back support owed by erroneously stating that “[n]o back

child support is owed at this time.” Clerk’s Papers at 346.

PROCEDURE

On September 18, 2015, Lisa Morgan moved the court to vacate the August 2014

order and reinstate the 2011 child support order. Morgan sought relief pursuant to

CR 60(b)(5) and (b)(11) because neither she nor Paul Herrmann had petitioned the court

to modify child support and Morgan never authorized her attorney to sign an order on her

behalf that would relieve Herrmann of his duty to pay child support. Morgan also argued

the order was void as against public policy because the order eliminated Herrmann’s duty

3 No. 35090-8-III In re Marriage of Herrmann

to pay child support. Finally, Morgan contended that the order was void for

noncompliance with Washington statutes regarding healthcare costs and the verification

of income required to deviate from a standard child support calculation. Among other

responses to the motion to vacate, Herrmann argued the order did not violate public

policy because it did not foreclose Morgan from modifying the order in the future.

At a June 17, 2016 hearing on Lisa Morgan’s motion to vacate, the trial court

agreed many irregularities led to the entry of the August 2014 order. The court observed

that Morgan never asked for any changes to the preexisting child support order and that

the court never determined adequate cause before modifying the support order. Instead,

the 2014 trial court signed an order of adequate cause when it signed the modification

order. When addressing Herrmann’s response to Morgan’s public policy argument, the

trial court iterated that Morgan lacked the ability to indiscriminately modify the 2014

order at some indefinite time in the future. Instead, Morgan needed to show a change in

circumstances to modify the order.

During the June 17, 2016 hearing, the trial court noted other irregularities in the

August 2014 modification of child support order. Paul Herrmann’s child support

obligation changed from $761 per month to nothing despite the order listing both parties

as garnering suitable incomes. The court observed the lack of a record to justify a zero

transfer payment. The 2014 order also extinguished back support owed without any

justification. The trial court concluded that unusual circumstances surrounded entry of

4 No. 35090-8-III In re Marriage of Herrmann

the August 2014 order and further concluded that the basis for vacating the order did not

neatly fit within any provision of CR 60(b)(1) through (10). Nevertheless, the trial court

vacated the order pursuant to CR 60(b)(1).

On October 10, 2016, both parties sought reconsideration of the trial court’s June

2016 ruling on the basis that the court lacked authority to vacate the 2014 order under

CR 60(b)(1) when Lisa Morgan had filed her motion more than one year after entry of the

order. Both parties also noted that Morgan never sought relief pursuant to CR 60(b)(1).

As she had in her original motion to vacate, Morgan again sought relief under

CR 60(b)(5) or CR 60(b)(11). The trial court issued another ruling on November 9, 2016.

The court conceded error because it lacked discretion to extend the time in which to bring

a motion to vacate under CR 60(b)(1). The court granted Morgan’s motion for

reconsideration and vacated the August 2014 order as void under both CR 60(b)(5) and

(b)(11). The trial court reinstated the 2011 child support order and entered judgment for

$22,015 in back child support: $19,550 from August 2014 through July 2016 in addition

to the $2,465 originally owed.

LAW AND ANALYSIS

2016 Order Vacating 2014 Child Support Modification Order

On appeal, Paul Herrmann contends the trial court erred when it granted Lisa

Morgan’s 2016 motion to vacate portions of the August 27, 2014 order modifying child

support. He asks that the 2014 order be affirmed such that he is relieved of both past and

5 No.

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