Peggy Sue Smith, V. Scott William Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 7, 2022
Docket83308-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Peggy Sue Smith, V. Scott William Smith (Peggy Sue Smith, V. Scott William Smith) 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
Peggy Sue Smith, V. Scott William Smith, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Marriage of No. 83308-1-I PEGGY SUE SMITH, DIVISION ONE Respondent, UNPUBLISHED OPINION v.

SCOTT WILLIAM SMITH,

Appellant.

COBURN, J. — When Hailey Smith transferred from Grays Harbor College

(GHC) to Washington State University (WSU), her father, Scott Smith, moved to

modify an order requiring that he contribute to Hailey’s 1 postsecondary

educational needs. Scott repeated an argument from a prior hearing that Hailey

should use all her financial aid and scholarships before the court calculates what

the unmet needs are that the parents should cover. The trial court found Scott

did not show a sufficient change in circumstances to justify modifying the court’s

order. Because the record lacked a showing of an uncontemplated substantial

change in circumstances, we agree and affirm.

1 Because members of the Smith family share the same last name, we refer to family members by their first name for clarity. Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 83308-1-I/2

FACTS

Scott and Peggy Smith dissolved their marriage in Thurston County in

2013. At that time, the trial court ordered Scott to pay child support, which was

later modified by Pacific County Superior Court when Peggy relocated to Pacific

County. The order reserved the issue of postsecondary educational support.

In June 2019, Peggy filed a petition to modify the child support order to

address postsecondary educational support for their eldest child, Hailey. In

response to Peggy’s request, Scott asked the court to apply all of Hailey’s

college scholarships before determining the amount the parents should pay for

the remainder outstanding expenses. The court disagreed. In July 2019, the trial

court entered an order granting postsecondary educational support. The relevant

portions state:

a. Hailey shall be responsible for 1/3 of her expenses. She shall utilized [sic] her grant and scholarship and work income to cover her share of her college expenses.

b. The parents shall be responsible, proportionally, for the remaining 2/3 of PSES; 72% to the father and 28% to the mother.

c. If the child uses scholarship funds that exceed her 1/3 share of the expense, then all parties will gain a proportional benefit in a net reduction of their share of the PSES obligation.

d. The child is currently planning on attending GHC and will be living at home with her mother. The estimated cost for a year at GHC (upon which the division of responsibility is based) is $18,468.00; Hailey's share is $6,156.00, Mother [sic] share is $3,444.00, and Father's share is $8,868.00.

e. As long as Hailey lives in her mother's home the Father's monthly support payment shall be paid directly to Mother; paid at the same time of the remaining child support obligation, except as may be noted below.

2 No. 83308-1-I/3

f. The Father's share (72% of the parent's 2/3's responsibility) is $739.00 per month, but is reduced by $33.76 per month to $705.24 per month in recognition of his proportional share for credit as noted in paragraph c. above.

The order also provided when the parties could motion for review:

If Hailey transitions to a four year school or other qualified program upon finishing or leaving GHC, and the parties are unable to cooperate and agree upon what the future PSES shall look like, then either parent may bring this issue back before the court upon a motion, only, for review and appropriate adjustment; a new Petition is not required.

Scott did not appeal the order. 2 In August 2020, Scott filed a “Motion to

Adjust Child Support Order.” Substantively, it was a motion to modify the

postsecondary educational support order now that Hailey was transferring from

GHC to WSU and had obtained additional scholarships. The parties disputed

what the one-year cost of attending WSU would be for Hailey, who was going to

be living at home with her mother just as she had when she attended GHC.

Scott argued that regardless if the cost was about $21,000 as he proposed or

closer to $25,000 according to Peggy,

Hailey has enough in scholarships, grants and savings from un- used scholarships and grants to cover the entirety of that. We feel that the money should be used this year, while she has it. If it's exhausted this year, then we can come back next year and make whatever adjustments. I think everyone is on the same page, that both mother and father have enough earnings to help her to the extent she needs it. And so, using the funds now shouldn't be problematic. And, in fact, it probably would support any subsequent application for financial need to not have banked, un-used scholarship funds in the future.

2 Scott concedes that he, as pro se, did file a motion for reconsideration but that the court struck the hearing because he failed to properly serve the motion. 3 No. 83308-1-I/4

Peggy explained that because Hailey lived with her while attending GHC

and will be living with her while attending WSU, the only change is that expenses

increased because tuition increased from $18,000 a year at GHC. However,

Peggy explained, because Hailey used her scholarship money to cover the

tuition difference, there was no need to revisit the parent contribution.

The court noted that the court had previously considered whether Hailey

should spend all her money up front or save it for her part later on and had

already decided that issue. Scott conceded that though the cost of tuition had

increased, that increase was already covered with scholarships. That left room

and board, which the court determined Scott had not shown a change in

circumstances given Hailey was living in the same place.

The court found that there was not a sufficient change of circumstances to

warrant a modification of the prior order and denied Scott’s motion. Scott

appeals.

DISCUSSION

Scott contends that the trial court abused its discretion by denying Scott’s

motion to modify the postsecondary educational support order. We disagree.

With some statutory exceptions not argued here, 3 “the support provisions

in a dissolution decree are modifiable only on a showing of an uncontemplated,

3 RCW 26.09.170(8) provides that an order of child support may be modified one year or more after it had been entered without a showing of substantially changed circumstances (a) if the order works a severe economic hardship on either party or the child, (b) if a child is still in high school, upon a finding that there is a need to extend support beyond the eighteenth birthday to complete high school, or (c) to add an automatic adjustment of support provision consistent with RCW 26.09.100. 4 No. 83308-1-I/5

substantial change in circumstances.” In re Marriage of Shellenberger, 80 Wn.

App. 71, 79-80, 906 P.2d 968 (1995) (citing RCW 26.09.170(1)).

A reviewing court will not reverse a trial court's decision about whether a

substantial change of circumstances has occurred absent a manifest abuse of

discretion. In re Marriage of Arvey, 77 Wn. App.

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Related

Matter of Marriage of Arvey
894 P.2d 1346 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1995)
In Re the Marriage of Shellenberger
906 P.2d 968 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1995)
In Re Marriage of Littlefield
940 P.2d 1362 (Washington Supreme Court, 1997)
In re the Marriage of Littlefield
133 Wash. 2d 39 (Washington Supreme Court, 1997)

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