Marriage Of Kara Underwood v. Robert Underwood

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 3, 2014
Docket44068-7
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage Of Kara Underwood v. Robert Underwood (Marriage Of Kara Underwood v. Robert Underwood) 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.

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Marriage Of Kara Underwood v. Robert Underwood, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Y "~ I ED RT OF APPEALS fV IOtaiTr r_

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHIl u STATE OF WASHING T O•I DIVISION II

KARA UNDERWOOD, No. 44068 -7 -II

Respondent,

v.

ROBERT UNDERWOOD, PART - PUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

MAXA, J. — Robert Underwood appeals multiple trial court orders entered in proceedings

related to the dissolution of his marriage to Kara Underwood. We hold that the trial court erred

in allowing the parties' two teenage children to determine the amount of their residential time

with Robert' without supporting that decision with appropriate findings. In the unpublished

portion of this opinion we address the remainder of Robert' s arguments. We affirm in part,

reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings. We also award Kara her attorney fees on

appeal.

FACTS

Kara and Robert Underwood married in Montana in 1991. They have two children. In

2010, Kara petitioned for dissolution of her marriage to Robert. At the time, their older child

was 14 and their younger child was 12. After a bench trial, the trial court entered a final

parenting plan that allowed the children to decide whether Robert would have residential time

with them. The trial court stated:

1 The parties' first names are used for clarity. By using first names, we mean no disrespect. No. 44068 -7 -II

T] he [ children] are mature and intelligent. Due to this, along with the age of the children, the residential time between [ them] and their father in the future shall be based on the desires of the [ children]. At present they have no desire to have contact with their father. The court will honor their wishes. They will be allowed to have contact with their father and residential time if they later cho[ o] se to.

Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 35. Robert appeals this ruling, as well as several other trial court orders

addressed in the unpublished portion of this opinion.

ANALYSIS

We review a trial court' s parenting plan for abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of

Katare, 175 Wn.2d 23, 35, 283 P. 3d 546 ( 2012), cert. denied 133 S. Ct. 889 ( 2013). A trial court

abuses its discretion if its decision is manifestly unreasonable or based on untenable grounds or

untenable reasons. Katare, 175 Wn.2d at 35.

Robert argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it allowed the children to

decide whether he would receive any residential time with them because this ruling effectively

eliminated his residential time with them. We hold that although under certain circumstances

and in its discretion the trial court may allow a child to determine the amount of residential time .

with the non- custodial parent, it may doso only based on appropriate findings Because the trial

court did not make adequate findings supporting its decision here, we must remand for

reconsideration of this issue.

The trial court did not expressly order the elimination of Robert' s residential time with

the children. However, it acknowledged that the children did not desire to have contact with

their father at that time. As a result, the trial court knew that its parenting plan likely would

result in the elimination of Robert' s residential time for the foreseeable future. The question here

is whether the trial court had the discretion to allow the children to detemiine the amount of their

2 No. 44068 -7 -II

residential time with Robert, knowing that this decision effectively would eliminate Robert' s

residential time with them.

Although the trial court did not explain the basis for its ruling on residential time, it

apparently viewed its order as a limitation on residential time justified by its findings under

RCW 26. 09. 191( 2) and ( 3). RCW 26. 09. 191( 2)( a) requires limitation of residential time if the

parent has engaged in certain conduct. The trial court determined that Robert had engaged in

two types of conduct referenced in the statute: a history of acts of domestic violence as defined

in RCW 26. 50. 010( 1) and emotional abuse of a child. But RCW 26. 09. 191( 2)( a) does not give

the trial court authority to eliminate residential time. That authority is granted by other

subsections of RCW 26. 09. 191.

RCW 26. 09. 191( 2)( m)( i), for example, provides:

If the court expressly finds based on the evidence that limitations on the residential time with the child will not adequately protect the child from the harm or abuse that could result if the child has contact with the parent requesting residential time, the court shall restrain the parent requesting residential time from all contact with the child.

Thereis no question here that express findings regarding protecting the children from harm or

abuse would have been required if the trial court had explicitly eliminated Robert' s residential

time under RCW 26. 09. 191( 2)( m)( i), and that the trial court made no such findings.

A different subsection, RCW 26. 09. 191( 3), authorizes a trial court to completely preclude

a parent' s residential time if certain factors exist. The trial court found three of these factors

present in this case: ( 1) a long -term emotional or physical impairment that interferes with the

performance of parenting functions as defined in RCW 26. 09. 004, ( 2) the absence or substantial

impairment of emotional ties between the parent and child, and ( 3) the abusive use of conflict by

3 No. 44068 -7 -I1

the parent that has damaged the children' s psychological development. Based on these findings,

the trial court had discretionary authority under RCW 26. 09. 191( 3) to enter an order that

effectively eliminated Robert' s residential time with the children.

However, the trial court' s exercise of discretion to essentially eliminate a parent' s

residential time must be exercised in the context of other important considerations. First,

the legislature has expressed a policy favoring maintaining relationships between parents

and children when setting a residential schedule in a dissolution action. RCW 26. 09.002

provides that "[ t] he state recognizes the fundamental importance of the parent -child

relationship to the welfare of the child, and that the relationship between the child and

each parent should be fostered unless inconsistent with the child' s best interests." Further,

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