Marycruz Villegas, V. Jonathan Ada
84193-9
Wash. Ct. App.Jun 20, 2023Background
- Parents dissolved marriage in 2020; agreed parenting plan gave primary residence of the child (Z.A.) to the mother, with alternate-weekend visitation for the father; child support set at $100/month by deviation and parties shared certain expenses.
- Mother gave statutory notice in Aug 2021 of intent to relocate with Z.A. to Los Angeles; father objected and sought to keep child in Washington with expanded time for himself during school breaks.
- After temporary orders and a three-day trial (May 2022) when Z.A. was six, the trial court permitted the relocation but structured a parenting plan that awards the father concentrated residential time during summer and most school holidays (including every Thanksgiving and winter break in Washington; alternating Christmas Eve overnight), and apportions travel costs equally.
- Trial court denied the mother’s request to modify child support for three independent reasons: relocation notice alone did not provide statutory basis; no properly noticed petition to change support; and the evidence did not justify modification in mother’s favor.
- Trial court made unchallenged findings that Z.A. has equally strong, stable relationships with both parents and significant extended-family ties in Washington; mother’s income had increased since 2020 while father’s income at trial (including temporary unemployment benefits) was roughly comparable to 2020.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument (Mother) | Defendant's Argument (Father) | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential schedule / holiday allocation after relocation | Court’s requirement that most school holidays be spent with father undermines mother–child relationship and improperly restricts mother’s time (esp. brief alternate-year Christmas overnight) | Concentrating father’s residential time during school breaks maximizes meaningful contact with father and extended family in Washington | Court affirmed: no abuse of discretion; schedule supports best interests and maximizes non‑relocating parent’s time |
| Relocation itself (permission to move child to California) | Mother sought relocation to LA for employment/partner transfer | Father objected, citing child’s strong Washington ties and inability to relocate | Court allowed relocation (mother permitted to move) but adjusted residential time to protect father’s contact; mother does not prevail on holiday-allocation challenge |
| Child support modification | Mother argued she properly sought modification via amended petition and produced worksheets showing higher income and claim that underlying $100 deviation was premised on promises of tangible support | Father asked court to keep 2020 order; evidence showed father’s income near 2020 level and mother’s income rose; documentary evidence did not support claimed expenses or verbal side‑agreements | Court affirmed denial: modification not warranted—procedural and substantive grounds; no abuse of discretion |
| Attorneys’ fees on appeal | Mother sought fees based on alleged briefing defects | Father sought fees under RCW 26.09.140 or RCW 4.84.185 | Both requests denied: father failed to submit financial declaration; appeal not frivolous; frivolous‑suit statute inapplicable on appeal |
Key Cases Cited
- In re Parentage of Jannot, 149 Wn.2d 123 (trial judge best positioned to weigh affidavits and evidence)
- In re Marriage of Katare, 175 Wn.2d 23 (trial court has broad discretion in structuring a parenting plan)
- In re Marriage of Black, 188 Wn.2d 114 (standard: review for abuse of discretion)
- In re Marriage of Knight, 75 Wn. App. 721 (unchallenged trial findings are verities on appeal)
- In re Marriage of McNaught, 189 Wn. App. 545 (appellate court will not reweigh evidence)
- Choate v. Choate, 143 Wn. App. 235 (child support modification reviewed for abuse of discretion)
- In re Marriage of Schumacher, 100 Wn. App. 208 (courts have equitable power to modify support)
- Pippins v. Jankelson, 110 Wn.2d 475 (substantial‑change standard and its presumption when prior order was contested)
- Advocates for Responsible Dev. v. W. Wash. Growth Mgmt. Hr’gs Bd., 170 Wn.2d 577 (definition of frivolous appeal)
