Simon J. Hall, V. Alerian A. Hall (nka Lockwood)

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 17, 2025
Docket86131-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Simon J. Hall, V. Alerian A. Hall (nka Lockwood) (Simon J. Hall, V. Alerian A. Hall (nka Lockwood)) 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
Simon J. Hall, V. Alerian A. Hall (nka Lockwood), (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

SIMON J. HALL, No. 86131-0-I Appellant, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION ALERIAN A. HALL (NKA Lockwood),

Respondent.

CHUNG, J. — Simon Hall and Alerian Hall, now Lockwood, 1 were married in July

2010. They had two children, M.H. and L.H. In February 2022, the parties separated,

and Hall subsequently filed for dissolution. After a trial, the court awarded Lockwood the

family home, 59 percent of the total property, and spousal maintenance. The trial court

also designated Lockwood as the parent with whom the children reside a majority of

their time and ordered that each parent is to pay their pro rata share of the children’s

post-secondary educational expenses. Additionally, the court credited “[a]ny funds from

[the children’s college savings accounts] . . . to the parent who contributed the funds

into the accounts (or whose family contributed the funds).” Hall challenges the trial

court’s division of assets in favor of Lockwood, the maintenance award, and its decision

regarding the children’s post-secondary education. Lockwood seeks appellate attorney

fees.

1 Because the parties had the same last name during marriage, we will refer to Alerian by her

current name, Lockwood, for clarity. No. 86131-0-I/2

We affirm with one exception. Because the parties agree that the children’s

college savings accounts belong to the children, crediting payments to the parent whose

family contributed to the respective accounts has the effect of treating them as separate

property, and the trial court erred in doing so. We reverse on this limited issue and

remand to the trial court to remove the language that credits funds from the children’s

college savings accounts to the parent who contributed, or whose family contributed,

the funds into the accounts. We otherwise affirm the trial court’s division of property and

award of spousal maintenance and we award Lockwood appellate attorney fees.

FACTS

Simon Hall and Alerian Lockwood were married in July 2010. After more than

eleven years of marriage, Hall filed for dissolution in February 2022. The parties share

two children, M.H., born in 2013, and L.H., born in 2016. Both children have special

needs. Prior to their marriage, Lockwood worked as a financial advisor. At the start of

their marriage, in 2010, Hall worked as a software engineer for Microsoft, and Lockwood

attended law school and subsequently opened her own law firm doing estate planning.

In 2018, after the births of M.H. and L.H., “[Lockwood and Hall] made a decision

mutually for [Lockwood] to leave her practice . . . so she could be home with [L.H.].”

Lockwood then “took on the home and childcare role,” which allowed Hall to “earn the

significant income that support[ed] the family.”

Additionally, Lockwood testified that she was diagnosed with “different things that

are all types of peripheral neuropathy,” which she explained “encompasses carpal

tunnel and ulnar nerve entrapment.” Specifically, Lockwood testified that she was

diagnosed with unspecified polyneuropathy, which she described as causing her “hands

2 No. 86131-0-I/3

to start seizing up and clawing up,” and a “combination of problems and numbness,

coldness, pain.” Lockwood explained that the symptoms began in her hands shortly

after she started law school and that her symptoms increased to the point that she

needed accommodations in law school and needed “someone [to] do dictation for me,”

and that she would use “dictation software that [Hall] purchased” for her. Further,

Lockwood explained that after her separation from Hall, she did not have “extra added

pain” but that her symptoms and pain remained. At the time of dissolution, Hall was

working for Google and Lockwood was unemployed but planning to go back to school

and open her own landscape design business.

On October 11, 2023, after six days of trial, the trial court entered findings of fact

and conclusions of law, a dissolution decree, a parenting plan, and a child support

order. In the parenting plan, the trial court imposed a phased residential schedule

wherein Lockwood had the majority of time with the children, but allowed Hall’s time to

increase steadily. In the dissolution decree, the trial court distributed 59 percent of the

total property to Lockwood and 41 percent to Hall, laying out its distribution in an

attached asset liability and distribution list. The parties’ net assets at the time of

dissolution amounted to $6,394,924. The court distributed to Lockwood $3,649,425 in

community property and $141,072 of separate property, totaling $3,790,497. It

distributed to Hall $1,273,713 in community property and $1,330,713 in separate

property, totaling $2,604,426.

Lockwood’s community property distribution included the family home valued at

$1,450,000, all of Fidelity account 8947, a portion of Fidelity account 7415 valued at

$800,000, and a portion of Google stock valued at $867,000. Lockwood’s separate

3 No. 86131-0-I/4

property award included a retirement account valued at $125,473, a bank account

valued at $4,592, and personal property valued at $11,008. Hall’s community property

award included a portion of Fidelity account 7415 valued at $81,739.02 and a portion of

Google stock valued at $961,113. 2 Hall’s separate property award included a

condominium valued at $450,000, a portion of Google stock valued at $441,657, a

portion of a Microsoft retirement account valued at $359,427.98, a portion of a Google

retirement account valued at $32,552.53, and a bank account valued at $38,024.32. In

its findings, the trial court explained that its division of the real property was “designed to

provide financial and location security for Ms. Lockwood and the children into the

future.” Further, the dissolution decree required Hall to pay Lockwood spousal

maintenance in the amount of $10,000 per month for two years and then in the amount

of $8,000 per month for three years thereafter.

Further, in the child support order, the trial court ordered the parents to pay for

the children’s post-secondary education proportionately “based on their incomes at that

time” and specified that “[a]ny funds from 529 or comparable accounts for the children

shall be credited to the parent who contributed the funds into the accounts (or whose

family contributed to the funds).” Lockwood and Hall have six savings accounts

intended to support the children’s educational expenses. In its corresponding asset and

liability distribution, the trial court identified four accounts, Fidelity UTMA accounts 8606

and 9302 and my529 plan accounts 4892 and 9529, as Lockwood’s separate property.

2 Hall and Lockwood’s community property distribution also included various other investments,

retirement funds, bank accounts, and personal property. The parties do not dispute the distribution of these assets.

4 No. 86131-0-I/5

The trial court also marked two Vanguard 529 plan accounts, one for M.H. and the other

for L.H., as Hall’s separate property.

On October 23, Lockwood filed a motion for reconsideration of the October 11

orders requesting the trial court to (1) correct a discrepancy in the duration of spousal

maintenance awarded, (2) correct an error denoting to which accounts Lockwood’s

family contributed, and (3) clarify how accounts should be divided to fairly distribute

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re the Marriage of Boisen
943 P.2d 682 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1997)
In Re the Marriage of Crosetto
918 P.2d 954 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1996)
In Re Marriage of Skarbek
997 P.2d 447 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2000)
In Re the Marriage of Rink
571 P.2d 210 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1977)
In Re the Marriage of Washburn
677 P.2d 152 (Washington Supreme Court, 1984)
Harmony at Madrona Park v. Madison Harmony Development Inc.
253 P.3d 101 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)
In Re Marriage of Langham
106 P.3d 212 (Washington Supreme Court, 2005)
Thompson v. Lennox
212 P.3d 597 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2009)
Stokes v. Polley
37 P.3d 1211 (Washington Supreme Court, 2001)
In Re Marriage of Zier
147 P.3d 624 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2006)
In Re Marriage of Shui and Rose
125 P.3d 180 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2005)
In Re Estate of Borghi
219 P.3d 932 (Washington Supreme Court, 2009)
Damian Schwarz v. Susan M. Schwarz
368 P.3d 173 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2016)
Umpqua Bank v. Shasta Apartments, LLC
378 P.3d 585 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2016)
In Re The Marriage Of: Joseph C. Anthony v. Penny L. Anthony
446 P.3d 635 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2019)
In re the Marriage of Chandola
180 Wash. 2d 632 (Washington Supreme Court, 2014)
In re the Marriage of Brewer
976 P.2d 102 (Washington Supreme Court, 1999)
Stokes v. Polley
145 Wash. 2d 341 (Washington Supreme Court, 2001)
In re the Marriage of Langham
153 Wash. 2d 553 (Washington Supreme Court, 2005)
Borghi v. Gilroy
167 Wash. 2d 480 (Washington Supreme Court, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Simon J. Hall, V. Alerian A. Hall (nka Lockwood), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-j-hall-v-alerian-a-hall-nka-lockwood-washctapp-2025.