Susan Kay Steele, V David J. Steele

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 23, 2019
Docket50671-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Susan Kay Steele, V David J. Steele (Susan Kay Steele, V David J. Steele) 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
Susan Kay Steele, V David J. Steele, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

July 23, 2019

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II SUSAN KAY STEELE, No. 50671-8-II

Respondent, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

DAVID J. STEELE,

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J. — David Steele and Susan McClain (formerly Steele) married and had three

children. McClain petitioned to dissolve their marriage. Steele did not appear or respond in the

dissolution proceedings. The superior court entered an order of default against Steele, dissolved

the marriage, and entered a final order of child support. Years later, Steele sought to modify his

child support obligation. Steele appeals the superior court’s order on revision arising from the

child support modification proceedings.

Steele argues the superior court erred when it (1) considered new evidence on revision

that was not before the superior court commissioner, (2) found him voluntarily underemployed

and imputed his income despite his claimed medical disabilities, (3) included his military

1 No. 50671-8-II

disability income but excluded McClain’s social security disability income in calculating their

respective child support obligations, and (4) failed to verify McClain’s income as required by

statute.

We affirm the superior court’s order on revision.

FACTS

Steele and McClain married in September 2005 and had three children together. McClain

also had custody of her five children from a previous marriage. The United States Army

honorably discharged Steele due to a disability in the fall of 2010. Steele and McClain also

separated that fall.

A. The Original Child Support Order

McClain sought dissolution in February 2011. She was not able to personally serve

Steele with the dissolution petition and related documents because he apparently had moved to

Asia. The court entered an order allowing service by mail. McClain then served Steele by mail

at his last known address. McClain did not appear or otherwise respond to the petition.

That summer, the superior court granted McClain’s motion for default. The court entered

a decree of dissolution and a final parenting plan granting her sole custody. The court ordered

Steele to pay maintenance and entered restraining orders against him. For purposes of

calculating child support, the court adopted McClain’s description of Steele’s recent military

income and entered a final order of child support with a transfer payment from Steele to McClain

of $1,293.30. Finally, the court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law.

2 No. 50671-8-II

B. Motion to Vacate

In October 2014, after having had his passport confiscated at a United States Embassy for

failure to pay child support, Steele returned to the United States and sought modification of his

child support obligation. He also moved to vacate the default judgment, arguing he did not

receive proper notice.

The superior court determined that McClain had properly served Steele by mail. The

court explained that it did not believe that Steele was completely unaware of the dissolution

proceedings even though he was overseas. The superior court vacated the restraining orders

against Steele and set a maintenance termination date. The court declined to vacate the rest of

the prior orders, but it did determine that Steele could seek modification of child support from a

court commissioner by filing a new motion for modification.

C. Motion for Modification

More than a year later, Steele moved to modify child support. Steele alleged that he had

served in the Army for a number of years, working as a linguist, a chief warrant officer, and a

helicopter pilot. Upon his discharge, the Department of Veterans Affairs gave him an overall

combined disability rating of 70 percent and a total benefit of $1,228 per month.

Steele claimed to have looked for jobs and educational opportunities since his Army

discharge, but he was unable to find gainful employment. He also claimed that he may be

unemployable due to disability and that he had been working with the Department of Veterans

Affairs to make this determination. Steele asserted that he had meanwhile begun to experience

other medical conditions, including severe headaches, insomnia, and unexplained fevers.

3 No. 50671-8-II

Steele reported that his military disability benefit had recently increased to $1,512 per

month. Steele submitted his old military pay stubs, bank statements, and disability award

information for consideration.

McClain did not respond to the motion for modification, nor did she appear at the

hearing. She later claimed that she was never served with this motion or notified of the hearing.

A pro tem commissioner heard the motion and adopted Steele’s proposed final order and

findings. The commissioner found that there was a change in circumstances warranting a

modification of child support because (1) Steele had been medically discharged from the Army,

(2) he was no longer receiving income as designated in the worksheets previously filed, (3) he

had not been served when child support was originally established, (4) McClain received the vast

majority of Steele’s separation pay (which was converted into disability pay), and (5) McClain

had received a joint tax refund the following year in the amount of about $15,000. The

commissioner found McClain did not disclose to the court that she had received part of Steele’s

separation pay or the tax refund when she initially filed for default.

The commissioner set Steele’s income at the amount he had received in military

disability benefits before the recent increase, without imputing more income. The commissioner

then imputed a minimum wage income to McClain. The order reduced Steele’s child support

payment from $1,293 to $153 per month.

D. Motion for Revision

Both parties moved for revision. Both parties also sought consideration of supplemental

narrative declarations, which had not been before the commissioner.

4 No. 50671-8-II

In her supplemental declaration, McClain explained that she was not currently working,

but she provided childcare for her children, the youngest still in elementary school. Both

McClain and her children had health issues that prevented her from working. One of their young

daughters had been severely injured in a fall and had to have multiple surgeries. McClain said

she was just trying to make ends meet. McClain attached Facebook pictures of Steele and his

new wife vacationing on a beach in the Caribbean.

In response, Steele explained in his supplemental declaration that he eventually found

some periodic work teaching English as a second language in Mexico. Steele said that he and his

new wife lived in Mexico, and the Facebook pictures were taken while on a short vacation in

Cancun.

The superior court held a contested hearing on revision. McClain represented herself at

the hearing. McClain advised the court that she had not been in the labor force since 2006. She

previously worked at a tanning salon and at a nursing home. McClain confirmed she received

child support from her previous marriage. She also confirmed she received social security

disability benefits in the amount of $730 per month. The superior court concluded that McClain

had a minimum wage skill level.

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