Marriage Of Lawrence L'hommedieu, V Shelane L'hommedieu

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 9, 2021
Docket53639-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage Of Lawrence L'hommedieu, V Shelane L'hommedieu (Marriage Of Lawrence L'hommedieu, V Shelane L'hommedieu) 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
Marriage Of Lawrence L'hommedieu, V Shelane L'hommedieu, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

November 9, 2021

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Marriage of

LAWRENCE L’HOMMEDIEU, No. 53639-1-II (consolidated with No. 54702-3-II) Respondent,

And

SHELANE L’HOMMEDIEU, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

CRUSER, J. – Shelane L’Hommedieu1 appeals from the trial court orders addressing the

division of property and spousal maintenance in the dissolution action brought by her former

husband Lawrence L’Hommedieu. Shelane2 also appeals from the trial court’s denial of her

various motions for reconsideration. She argues that the trial court erred when it (1) characterized

Lawrence’s Oregon PERS3 income as his separate disability income, (2) failed to address her

community interest in various assets that Lawrence took or liquidated before the current

dissolution action was filed, (3) precluded her from introducing evidence or questioning Lawrence

1 Shelane is a self-represented party. 2 Because Shelane and Lawrence share the same last name, we refer to them by their first names to avoid confusion. 3 Public Employees Retirement System. Consolidated Nos. 53639-1-II / 54702-3-II

about missing assets, (4) failed to address her community property interest in the River Glen Road

property and concluded that Lawrence had not acted in bad faith when he deeded the property to

his father, (5) failed to distribute all of the parties’ vehicles and unequally distributed the vehicles

it did address, (6) failed to find that Lawrence acted in bad faith when he removed her as the

survivor beneficiary of the Oregon PERS pension, (7) refused to rule on Lawrence’s violation of

the temporary orders regarding the family health insurance and failed to order Lawrence to pay

her additional health care costs, (8) failed to consider all relevant factors, including each parties’

resources, when awarding spousal maintenance, (9) failed to resolve unpaid child support issues,

(10) set the temporary child support lower than the amount in the economic table and child support

worksheets without explanation, (11) restricted her access to her portion of the PERS individual

account program (IAP)4 account until Lawrence turns 55 years old and limited her access to the

account records, (12) assigned various debts to her, and (13) referred to allegations of opiate abuse

in a clarification order. Shelane also request costs.

Because of the disparity in income between the parties, despite Lawrence’s ability to pay,

we hold that the trial court abused its discretion when it set Shelane’s spousal maintenance at

$1,500 a month for three years. Accordingly, we remand this matter for the trial court to determine

the spousal maintenance. We otherwise affirm. Because Shelane has not filed the required financial

affidavit, we deny Shelane’s request for costs.

4 “ ‘Individual account program’ means the defined contribution individual account program of the Oregon Public Service Retirement Plan established under ORS 238A.025.” ORS 238A.005(9) (ORS 238A.005 was amended in 2021. See 2021 Or. Laws ch. 135, § 3 [, at ___]. Because the amendment does not impact our analysis, we cite to the current version of the statute.). 2 Consolidated Nos. 53639-1-II / 54702-3-II

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Starting in 1996, Lawrence began working for the Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue in

Oregon. Shelane and Lawrence were married on April 29, 1998. The couple had two girls, who

were born in November 1998 and August 2002.

Lawrence became disabled in 2010, after 14 years of service with the fire department. In

2011, his application for a PERS “disability retirement allowance” based on “a duty-related

disability” was approved. Tr. of Excepts of Test. from Audio Files (Tr.) (May 24, 2019) at 21. At

the time of trial, Lawrence was receiving $6,269 a month from his PERS disability. He also

qualified for social security disability in the amount of $2,660 a month, and for veteran’s disability

in the amount of $3,458.07 a month.

The marital community ended on September 1, 2013. Lawrence filed for dissolution in July

2014.

In December 2015, the trial court issued temporary orders requiring Lawrence to pay

Shelane $3,000 a month in spousal maintenance and $1,500 a month in child support.5 These orders

also restrained Lawrence from “assigning, transferring, borrowing, lapsing, surrendering or

changing entitlement of any insurance policies of either or both parties whether medical, health,

life or auto insurance.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) (Oct. 1, 2019) at 3. They further required Lawrence to

pay the health insurance premiums for the children and to notify Shelane when the coverage

terminated.

5 The standard child support calculation was stated as $2,524 per month. 3 Consolidated Nos. 53639-1-II / 54702-3-II

II. TRIAL

The case went to trial in May 2019. At trial, Lawrence called his mother, himself, and

Shelane as witnesses. Shelane, acting pro se, called herself as a witness. And Lawrence called

himself as a rebuttal witness.

Shelane has not supplied this court the complete transcript from the two-day trial. Instead,

she has supplied selected portions of the record. The transcribed portions of the verbatim report of

proceedings show numerous short gaps throughout and completely omits (1) Shelane’s testimony

as Lawrence’s witness, which lasted just over an hour and (2) Lawrence’s rebuttal testimony,

which lasted approximately 36 minutes.

A. LAWRENCE’S WITNESSES

1. LAWRENCE’S MOTHER’S TESTIMONY

Lawrence’s mother testified about a property (the River Glen Road property) that

Lawrence and Shelane had purchased with Lawrence’s father during the marriage. Lawrence’s

mother testified that the property was purchased for $250,000 and that she and her husband used

$200,000 of their line of credit on their home to finance the purchase for Lawrence and Shelane.

At some point Lawrence quitclaimed the property to his father, but Lawrence continued to pay

them back to cover the interest payments on the line of credit that financed the property. She also

testified that the property was sold for $179,000 “a few months” before the trial. Tr. (May 24,

2019) at 16.

2. LAWRENCE’S TESTIMONY

Lawrence testified about his injury, his disability, his other disability benefits, and his

“PERS disability determination” as described above. Id. at 20. He testified that his PERS

4 Consolidated Nos. 53639-1-II / 54702-3-II

“application for disability retirement allowance was approved for a duty-related disability” in

2011, and that his disability status was reexamined almost yearly. Id. at 21.

Lawrence also testified that he and Shelane had initially separated in March 2012, when

Shelane left the family home with their children while he was away. He testified that after

discovering that Shelane had left, he found that she had taken all of their gold and silver with her.

Shelane filed for dissolution in April 2012, but they reconciled in June 2012. They separated again

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