Michaela Osborne Nka Fellows v. Charles Fellows

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 28, 2016
Docket74643-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Michaela Osborne Nka Fellows v. Charles Fellows (Michaela Osborne Nka Fellows v. Charles Fellows) 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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Michaela Osborne Nka Fellows v. Charles Fellows, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Marriage of No. 74643-0-1

MICHAELA FELLOWS, DIVISION ONE

Appellant,

and UNPUBLISHED OPINION CHARLES FELLOWS,

Respondent. FILED: November 28, 2016

Mann, J. — Michaela Osborne1 appeals the trial court's ruling that she was in

contempt of court for violating the dissolution decree relating to her marriage with former

husband Charles Fellows. The trial court found Osborne in contempt after she

intentionally violated the court's order by damaging the couple's former home before

vacating it. Because substantial evidence supports the trial court's finding of contempt

and proper imposition of a remedial, not punitive sanction, we affirm.

1 Appellant's last name is now Osborne. No. 74643-0-1/2

FACTS

This case arises out of dissolution proceedings involving Michaela Osborne and

Charles Fellows. The trial court distributed the parties' assets and granted the decree

of dissolution on June 30, 2015. The decree of dissolution awarded the family home,

located at 10021 SE 192nd Place, Renton, Washington, to Fellows but permitted

Osborne to remain living there for an additional 60 days. Osborne had until August 30,

2015, to remove her belongings from the property and quitclaim her interest in it to

Fellows. The decree ordered Fellows to pay $54,000 to Osborne for her equity interest

in the home.

At the conclusion of trial, counsel for Fellows asked the court to "issue an oral

ruling to not do something to the house or destroy it."2 The court ruled that

The house needs to be maintained in the condition it is. I'm—I don't want to see—there's no need for the parties to be back here again. This is going to be the cleanest way for these parties to just—there's nothing that should be holding you together, including this house, so the house needs to be in a livable condition.[3]

The court also granted Osborne a permanent protection order against Fellows.

On July 8, 2015, the trial court presented its written ruling and further

commented:

The home should be in—if there's any sabotage or anything done to the home, I will allow—consider a contempt motion here and will address any potential reduction of damages. I think the easiest way to—I think [Osborne] is aware that she needs to leave the home intact. Do not damage it in any way, shape, or form. If that's a concern, the parties may come back for a contempt consideration and address any damages that may have occurred.[4]

2 Report of Proceedings (RP) (June 30, 2015) at 240. 3 RP (June 30, 2015) at 240. 4 RP (July 8, 2015) at 251.

-2- No. 74643-0-1/3

Osborne vacated the home within the designated time period. On August 31,

2015, Fellows came by the house and saw a hole in the front door and paint splashed

on the exterior and the deck. He called the police and reported the damage. The police

contacted Osborne, who told them that she had possession of the house until

September 8, 2015, and "anything that she does to her house until then is okay."5

According to the police, Osborne "would not admit to actually being the one that

damaged the residence," but claimed that her children did it, and that it was a

"temporary lapse in judgment."6

The parties do not dispute the extent of the damage done to the house. Paint

was splattered and streaked across the interior and exterior of the house. There were

holes in the walls, doors, cabinets, floors, and ceilings. The baseboards, doorframes,

and windowsills were damaged. There were cracks and chips in the tile, the

countertops, the bathroom sinks, and one of the mirrors. There were numerous

handwritten messages on the walls addressed to "Chuck" and "Chucky."7 There was a

small round hole and writing scratched into the front door. The estimate cost to repair

the damage and replace the fixtures totaled $144,937.49.

Fellows moved for an order of contempt on October 2, 2015. On October 26,

2015, he filed a declaration of a private investigator he had hired, which contained a

report of a conversation with one of the couple's neighbors. The report included

statements from the neighbor about seeing "a hole in the front door and paint on the

side of the house."8 According to the investigator, Osborne had told her neighbor that

5 Clerk's Papers (CP) at 577. 6 CP at 578. 7 CP at 148, 158, 164-170, 180. 8 CP at 424.

-3- No. 74643-0-1/4

she "did it," in reference to the damage to the house, and that she "couldn't wait until

Charles saw the house."9 Osborne filed a declaration on November 3, 2015, which

included police reports of Fellows' prior harassment and violation of the protective order.

She also included declarations from witnesses stating that the house was in livable

condition before Osborne moved out.

In her declaration, Osborne admitted to removing the refrigerator, the stove, the

dishwasher, and speakers from the walls of the house. She stated that she "only took

what wasn't in the house when we purchased it."10 She also admitted to the "minimal

writing on the walls, and the carving on the front door," but argued that Fellows had

"[seen] the writing before he moved out of the house."11 She declared that when she

left on August 28, 2015, "it was in a livable condition, with no damages to the cabinetry,

no paint on the walls, no holes in the walls, or any of the other damages."12 According

to Osborne, her children and her niece tracked paint inside and made handprints on the

walls when she went to the house with the Renton Police.

Osborne also stated in her declaration that she believed Fellows damaged the

house himself and blamed her. Fellows submitted a declaration in reply contesting all of

Osborne's assertions and included the police investigation report from the night he

discovered the house had been damaged.

At the hearing on November 9, 2015, the trial court found Osborne to be in

contempt of court for "intentionally fail[ing] to comply with the oral ruling of Judge

9 CP at 424. 10 CP at 431. 11 CP at 428. 12 CP at 428. No. 74643-0-1/5

Galvan and lawful orders of the court dated on 7/8/2015."13 The trial court found that

Osborne violated the order by "willfully and purposefully destroying] the family home."14

The trial court found that Osborne had the past and present ability to comply with the

order but did not have the present willingness to comply with the order. As a result, the

trial court ruled that Osborne was in contempt of court and that she may purge the

contempt by "[p]ay[ing] the monies awarded to Charles Fellows per the Judgment

Summary contained herein."15

ANALYSIS

We review a trial court's decision in a contempt proceeding for an abuse of

discretion. In re Marriage of James, 79 Wn. App. 436, 439-40, 903 P.2d 470 (1995).

An abuse of discretion is present only if there is a clear showing that the exercise of

discretion was manifestly unreasonable, based on untenable grounds, or based on

untenable reasons. State ex rel. Carroll v. Junker, 79 Wn.2d 12, 26, 482 P.2d 775

(1971).

Any "intentional. . . [disobedience of any lawful judgment, decree, order or

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