State of Washington v. Casey A. Evenson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 18, 2021
Docket37921-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Casey A. Evenson (State of Washington v. Casey A. Evenson) 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
State of Washington v. Casey A. Evenson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED NOVEMBER 18, 2021 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 37921-3-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) CASEY A. EVENSON, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. — Casey Evenson appeals her conviction for first degree custodial

interference and challenges the criminal filing fee imposed as a cost. We reject her

arguments that the State’s evidence was insufficient and that her trial lawyer provided

ineffective counsel when he failed to move for dismissal at the close of the State’s case.

She does not demonstrate that it was error to impose a criminal filing fee as a term of her

sentence, but since the State joins in her request that it be struck, we grant that request for

relief. We affirm the conviction and remand with directions to strike the criminal filing

fee.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Casey Evenson and Timothy Evenson are divorced parents of two young children.

The final parenting plan entered in January 2020 in connection with their divorce

provides that the children are scheduled to live with Ms. Evenson except when they are No. 37921-3-III State v. Evenson

scheduled to live with Timothy.1 When the plan was proposed and ordered, Ms. Evenson

and the children lived with Ms. Evenson’s grandmother in Reardan.

The plan, a form document with boxes to be checked and blanks to be filled in by

the parties, specifies that the children are scheduled to live with Timothy on

“WEEKENDS . . .  every other week . . . from (day) Thursday at 0:300 p.m. to

(day) Sunday at 0:700 p.m.” Ex. 1, at 6. After entry of the plan, the parents were able

to follow it without dispute for several months. On the alternating weeks when the

children were scheduled to live with Timothy, he would typically pick them up on

Thursday in Reardan and return them on Sunday.

The first diversion from the parenting plan occurred on the weekend of April 9-12,

2020, which the parties agree was Timothy’s weekend. He was moving that weekend,

however, and asked Ms. Evenson to keep the children. She agreed. His understanding of

the parenting plan was that he “forfeited” that weekend and was not entitled to “make [it]

up” the following weekend (April 16-19), which he viewed as Ms. Evenson’s weekend.

Report of Proceedings (RP) at 78-79.

A day or two before his Thursday pickup for the weekend of April 23-26, Timothy

contacted Ms. Evenson and told her he had reserved a room at a motel in North Spokane

for the visit. This was to prevent exposing his immunocompromised father to the

1 Given the common last names, this opinion refers to Timothy Evenson by his first name for clarity. No disrespect is intended.

2 No. 37921-3-III State v. Evenson

COVID-19 virus. Ms. Evenson objected to the plan, telling Timothy that she believed

the motel where he planned to stay was unsafe. Notwithstanding her objection, Timothy

drove to Reardan on April 23 to pick up the children, only to find they were not there.

He filed a complaint with law enforcement that day, and was contacted by Reardan

Police Chief Andrew Manke about being denied visitation. When Chief Manke

contacted Ms. Evenson on April 24 to get her response to the complaint, she told him that

Timothy was not entitled to visitation that weekend under the parties’ parenting plan.

The parties’ dispute over visitation on the April 23-26 weekend proved to be the

first of continuing disagreements. It turned out Ms. Evenson had taken the children to

Oregon on the April 23-26 weekend, and she told Timothy that future pickups would

have to take place in Kennewick. Despite his efforts, Timothy was unable to see his

children again until Father’s Day, June 21, 2020.

In the meantime, on May 13, 2020, the Lincoln County prosecutor charged Ms.

Evenson with committing custodial interference in the first degree “on or about April 23,

2020.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 1. She was found indigent and was appointed counsel.

The case proceeded to trial. Ms. Evenson defended on the basis that she reasonably took

the children to Oregon during the April 23-26 charging period because it was not

Timothy’s weekend under the parenting plan.

The State called only two witnesses at trial. Timothy was its first. He testified

consistent with the facts recounted above, telling jurors that the only reason Ms. Evenson

3 No. 37921-3-III State v. Evenson

gave him for denying him visitation on the weekend of April 23-26 was because he

planned to take the children to the motel.

The State’s other witness was Chief Manke. He testified to receiving Timothy’s

complaint on April 23 and that he reviewed the parenting plan the following day with

Timothy and then called Ms. Evenson. He testified that Ms. Evenson stated to him at that

time that she was in Oregon with her boyfriend and “it wasn’t Tim’s weekend—to have

the kids, and that he’d gone weeks without asking to seek the kids or even seeing the

kids.” RP at 67. He testified that she also said she had not received enough notice from

Timothy for the visit. In a follow-up call that Chief Manke made to Ms. Evenson a few

days later, she told him she was still in Oregon and would be there another week because

she had entered a nursing program and was trying to get licensed as a nurse in Oregon.

Asked when cross-examined whether Ms. Evenson told him why she did not

believe April 23-26 was Timothy’s weekend, Chief Manke testified he would have to re-

read his notes,

But I believe that—the way the parenting plan is written, every other weekend is vague because if they miss a weekend do they get—the immediately next weekend or they have to wait two weeks is not in here. So, she—presumably meant that it wasn’t Tim’s weekend because of that.

RP at 71.

In the defense case, Ms. Evenson testified on her own behalf. In her direct

examination, she testified that when Timothy asked her to keep the children on his April

4 No. 37921-3-III State v. Evenson

9-12 weekend, her understanding was that his next visitation was “[n]ot that next

weekend but the weekend after. Unless I decided to forfeit my weekend so he could

make up his weekend.” RP at 78-79. She persisted in that position when provided with a

calendar and asked about it again by her lawyer:

Q And (inaudible) every other weekend visitation, if you had the 12th,— A If I had them the 9th through the 12th, because he didn’t, on his weekend, then he wouldn’t have them again until the 23rd through the 26th, was my understanding.

RP at 79.

Having received two answers from Ms. Evenson that were unhelpful to the

defense case, defense counsel moved on to other topics. She only touched on the April

23-26 weekend one more time, shortly before the lunch break, when she asked Ms.

Evenson the following question to which she received the following answer:

Q Did you tell Chief Manke that the weekend of the 23rd was not Tim’s weekend[?] A Yes, Ma’am.

RP at 88.

Cross-examination took place after the lunch break. When cross-examined, Ms.

Evenson reiterated that April 9-12 was Timothy’s weekend, which he missed because of

his move. Contrary to her earlier testimony, however, she testified that Timothy “should

have had [the children] that next weekend,” meaning April 16-18. RP at 94. The

prosecutor reminded her of her earlier testimony:

5 No.

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