Mark A. Cantrell, V. Casie Jo Ray

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
Docket54056-8
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Mark A. Cantrell, V. Casie Jo Ray, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 19, 2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Parentage of C.C. No. 54056-8-II

MARK ANTHONY CANTRELL,

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION CASIE JO RAY,

Appellant.

GLASGOW, A.C.J.—CC was born in 2017 to Casie Jo Ray and Mark Anthony Cantrell, who

began living apart in 2019. At the time of trial, Cantrell lived in Montesano and Ray lived Spokane.

After a bench trial to resolve the parenting plan and child support for CC, the trial court orally

ruled that the parties would share equal residential time with CC in alternating three-week intervals

to minimize trips across the state for the two year old.

The trial court described the basic parameters of its decision in its oral ruling and required

the parties to present a final parenting plan and child support order. The trial court approved a

telephonic appearance for Ray’s counsel for the hearing to present the written orders. Ray

contested some aspects of the proposed final orders, but when counsel tried to appear by telephone,

the trial court declined to allow the telephonic appearance and did not continue the presentment

hearing so Ray’s attorney could appear in person.

On appeal, Ray contests certain aspects of the orders and argues that the trial court erred

by not allowing her attorney to appear by telephone at the presentment hearing. Ray also asserts No. 54056-8-II

that the trial court erred by granting Cantrell’s posttrial motion to amend his petition for a parenting

plan to add the couple’s second child, who was born soon after the trial. Cantrell requests appellate

attorney fees as a sanction for what he claims is a frivolous appeal.

We hold that the trial court abused its discretion by preventing Ray’s counsel from

appearing by telephone, even though the trial court had previously approved a telephonic

appearance, and by not continuing the presentment hearing so that counsel could participate. We

reverse both the parenting plan and the child support order, but we affirm the order allowing the

petition to be amended. We remand for the trial court to vacate the parenting plan and child support

orders and to conduct a new presentment hearing with both counsel present. The trial court may

enter temporary orders as necessary while proceedings on remand are pending. We deny Cantrell’s

request for attorney fees and sanctions.

FACTS

A. Background

CC was born in July 2017 in Idaho to Ray and Cantrell, who lived together but never

married. When CC was five months old, Cantrell got a job in Tumwater, so the family moved to

Olympia, where they lived with Cantrell’s family. Cantrell then purchased a home for the family

in Montesano.

Early in 2019, Ray and Cantrell began living apart. Cantrell continued living in Montesano,

while Ray relocated to Rochester. In March 2019, the Grays Harbor County Superior Court entered

a temporary order requiring that CC spend equal time with both parents, alternating every four

days.

2 No. 54056-8-II

Ray then filed a motion for a new temporary plan, asking the trial court to order alternating

residential time on a weekly basis so she could more easily move home to Spokane. Ray’s family

and support network were in Spokane and she had virtually no support in Montesano. Ray

suggested that each parent have CC for seven days at a time instead of four, reducing travel for

CC to one day per week. Ray contended it would be in CC’s best interest to “be surrounded by

maternal family . . . during my residential time.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 106. After the trial court

granted Ray’s motion, Ray returned to Spokane. Ray and Cantrell began meeting around the

summit of Snoqualmie Pass to hand off CC every Sunday, which meant CC spent nearly a full day

in the car every week.

In summer 2019, the parties prepared for a trial to determine a final parenting plan and

child support. During a deposition prior to trial, Ray disclosed that she was pregnant with a second

child and that Cantrell was the father.

B. Trial

At trial, each party testified about their hourly pay rates and typical work schedules. None

of the testimony regarding income was contested at trial.

Ray and Cantrell each testified about their relationship with CC and their reasons for living

in Spokane and Montesano. The parties disputed how much time CC should spend with each parent

and whether one parent should move so that CC would not have to spend so much time traveling

across the state. Neither parent argued the other was unfit. Both parties proposed parenting plans

that listed Ray as the custodial parent.

Cantrell argued that he should continue to have CC half of the time and that Ray should

return to the west side of the state because she worked remotely and could relocate more easily.

3 No. 54056-8-II

Ray asserted that she spent more time with CC than Cantrell did before the separation and

contended that she should be the primary parent. She also argued that it would be very difficult for

her to relocate to the west side of the state because she had no family or support system there,

whereas her family in Spokane provided her and CC with a place to live and childcare while she

worked full time. Ray proposed that before reaching school age, CC should live primarily with her

in Spokane and visit Cantrell once a month for four days. She proposed Cantrell could visit CC

one additional weekend per month if he came to Spokane.

At the end of trial, the trial court orally ruled that it would not direct Ray or Cantrell to

move before CC reached school age because both had compelling reasons for living on opposite

sides of the state. But the trial court determined that traveling back and forth from Spokane to

Montesano every week was not in CC’s best interest, so the trial court ordered Ray and Cantrell

to alternate time with CC every three weeks instead of every week. The trial court stated that there

would need to be a new hearing to establish the residential schedule when CC started school. And

the trial court invited Ray’s counsel, who lived in Spokane, to appear telephonically at that future

hearing. The trial court did not mention child support in its oral ruling.

The trial court also told Ray’s counsel that he could appear telephonically for the

presentation of final orders for the parenting plan and child support. The judge stated, “[I]f you are

close but need some decisions from me on minor details, let’s set up a hearing that [Ray’s counsel]

can participate in by telephone . . . if he wishes. Otherwise, if you reach an agreed parenting plan,

you can submit it ex parte.” Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Aug. 21, 2019) at 170.

4 No. 54056-8-II

C. Motion to File Supplemental Pleading

Ray and Cantrell’s second child, JC, was born in Spokane in September 2019, after the

trial but before final orders were entered. Cantrell signed a paternity acknowledgment for JC that

was filed with the state on September 11, 2019.

Cantrell then moved to amend the petition for a parenting plan to include JC. The basis for

his motion was CR 15(d), which permits a party to serve a supplemental pleading regarding an

event that happened after the original pleading.

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