Sean Kuhlmeyer v. Isabelle Kuhlmeyer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 8, 2021
Docket81002-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sean Kuhlmeyer v. Isabelle Kuhlmeyer (Sean Kuhlmeyer v. Isabelle Kuhlmeyer) 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
Sean Kuhlmeyer v. Isabelle Kuhlmeyer, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Marriage of No. 81002-2-I ISABELLE KUHLMEYER, DIVISION ONE Respondent,

and UNPUBLISHED OPINION SEAN KUHLMEYER,

Appellant.

BOWMAN, J. — Sean Kuhlmeyer challenges several trial court orders

entered following the dissolution of his marriage with Isabelle Kuhlmeyer. The

“law of the case” doctrine precludes several assignments of error. Others are

barred as untimely, unsupported by the record, or moot. The remaining

challenges lack merit. We affirm.

FACTS

This is Sean’s second appeal concerning his marital dissolution with

Isabelle.1 See In re Marriage of Kuhlmeyer, No. 78765-9-I (Wash. Ct. App. Jan.

21, 2020) (unpublished) (Kuhlmeyer I), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/

787659.pdf. We repeat the pertinent facts set forth in our prior opinion as

contextual background for the issues we address below.

1 Though Isabelle has since changed her last name to Latour, we refer to the parties by their first names in this opinion and mean no disrespect in doing so.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 81002-2-I/2

Sean and Isabelle married in 2000, had a child together, separated in

2016, and in 2017, Isabelle petitioned for dissolution of the marriage. In January

2018, the parties agreed to arbitrate their disputes under chapter 7.04A RCW

and “authorized the arbitrator to determine a final parenting plan, each party’s

income, a child support order, the division of assets and debts, a restraining

order, and an award of attorney fees.”2 Following a two-day arbitration in May

2018, the arbitrator entered a comprehensive 153-page award that set forth

findings of fact and conclusions of law, resolving all issues. Sean did not agree

with any of the rulings, contending that the arbitration award was “ ‘a travesty of

justice’ ” and “ ‘rife with errors.’ ”3

In June 2018, Sean moved to vacate the arbitration award, filed for

bankruptcy, and demanded to relitigate all issues before the arbitrator; while

Isabelle asked the trial court to affirm the nonfinancial issues resolved in binding

arbitration. The trial court entered an order partially confirming the arbitration

award, reserving resolution of financial issues pending Sean’s bankruptcy;

findings of fact and conclusions of law; and an order restraining Sean from

contacting Isabelle for 60 months. The court also entered a final parenting plan

under RCW 26.09.191 that restricted Sean’s parenting time and his ability to

make major decisions about the child based on Sean showing “ ‘no evidence of

being able to stop his compulsively self-destructive litigation pattern, short of

vindication, which h[e] is unlikely to get,’ ” and his abusive use of conflict “ ‘that

2 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 2. 3 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 2.

2 No. 81002-2-I/3

endangers and damages the psychological development’ ” of their child.4 The

court appointed Mollie Hughes to serve as case manager and directed Hughes to

conduct a six-month review of the parenting plan. The court ordered Hughes to

summarize her review in a written report and to include her “recommendations, if

any, for elimination of or change in supervision, reduction or expansion of

residential time, and/or contact between the parties.”

In July 2018, Sean filed a motion asking the trial court to “consider new

evidence of alleged misconduct by Isabelle’s counsel in conjunction with his

motion to strike the arbitration award” and to disregard reports authorized by the

guardian ad litem (GAL) appointed for the child based on a grievance he filed

against the GAL.5 Isabelle “responded by asking the court for relief from Sean’s

incessant and frivolous motions.”6

After a hearing, the trial court found that Sean’s “repeated filings

needlessly increased Isabelle’s litigation costs” and that “his threats to continue

improper litigation were harassing and abusive.”7

Thus, in an effort to impede Sean’s “ability to abusively use court filings and legal proceedings to harass” Isabelle, the court prohibited Sean from filing any more motions unless he submitted “a one-page statement regarding its subject matter” to the court and received approval to file the motion.[8]

The trial court noted that in the eight weeks between June 2 and July 31, 2018,

Sean had e-mailed the court 31 times, often seeking “ ‘legal advice on how to file

4 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 2-3 (alteration in original). 5 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 3. 6 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 3. 7 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 3. 8 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 3.

3 No. 81002-2-I/4

more motions, or to complain of some other, unrelated, situation,’ ” and had

“ ‘engaged in repetitive litigation that is harassing and abusive.’ ”9 The trial court

awarded Isabelle attorney fees, denied Sean’s grievance against the GAL,

denied his motion to vacate the arbitrator’s award, denied his motion for new trial,

and denied Sean’s motion for sanctions against Isabelle’s counsel.

In August 2018, Sean filed a notice of appeal, challenging several orders

entered by the trial court between February and July 2018. Isabelle then filed a

motion for contempt, asserting various grounds. The trial court found Sean in

contempt of court:

Sean had “been warned in multiple court orders to follow the orders of this court” and . . . “[n]otwithstanding the warnings, [he] filed almost 500 pages of documents less than two court days before this hearing[,]” with the “vast majority of the content” of his materials asserting “frivolous claims.”[10]

The trial court also denied Sean permission to file a motion to modify the

parenting plan, a motion for contempt against Isabelle, and a “motion ‘regarding

personal property.’ ”11 The court denied Sean’s motion to reconsider the

contempt order.

In September 2018, the bankruptcy court dismissed Sean’s petition after

concluding that he filed the petition in bad faith and manipulated the bankruptcy

code to prevent resolution of the dissolution proceeding with Isabelle. The

bankruptcy court summarized Sean’s conduct as beyond egregious:

“[T]he debtor [Sean] wants to use an asset in which [Isabelle] has a substantial economic interest to satisfy [Isabelle’s] claims against

9 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 3 n.4. 10 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 4 n.6 (brackets in original). 11 Kuhlmeyer I, slip op. at 4 n.7.

4 No. 81002-2-I/5

him, arising out of the marriage dissolution. While that is egregious under almost any circumstance, it is made even worse here by the additional facts that: (1) [Isabelle] has occupied the home and paid the mortgage since 2016; (2) [Isabelle] is exposed to the risk that she would be unable to take Washington State’s $125,000 homestead exemption, to which she would be entitled but for this case; and (3) the debtor didn’t file this case until after the arbitrator involved in the dissolution case concluded the home should be awarded to [Isabelle].[12]

In October 2018, the trial court denied Sean’s numerous requests to file

motions to reconsider and for contempt orders against Isabelle as either

repetitive of motions that the court had denied before or having no merit on their

face. Sean then filed a second notice of appeal, challenging various trial court

orders entered between August and October 2018.

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Sean Kuhlmeyer v. Isabelle Kuhlmeyer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sean-kuhlmeyer-v-isabelle-kuhlmeyer-washctapp-2021.