¶1 The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act
¶2 Here, Cecil Herridge appeals from the trial court’s denial of his motion to vacate a final order of child support. He asserts that the trial court was required to issue a stay of proceedings pursuant to the SCRA and that the child support order, issued in his absence, should have been subsequently vacated. However, because Cecil
I
¶3 Following the dissolution of the marriage of Stacey and Cecil Herridge, a final order of child support and a final parenting plan were entered in December 2004. In April 2008, Stacey, who was residing in Florida with their two children, filed a petition to modify both the parenting plan and the order of child support. The trial court subsequently
¶4 Cecil, who is a member of the United States Navy, thereafter filed a motion requesting a deviation in the temporary order of child support. He additionally requested that the court disqualify Stacey’s attorney based upon Cecil’s prior consultation with that attorney regarding the calculation of child support payments. The court denied the motion for disqualification without written explanation but granted Cecil’s request for a deviation in the temporary order of child support.
¶5 In the months that followed, Cecil repeatedly failed to comply with Stacey’s requests for discovery. He did not respond to her interrogatories or requests for production, failing to provide information regarding the income of his current wife or income derived from his military employment. Stacey thereafter filed a motion to compel discovery. In response to this motion, Cecil’s wife filed a declaration indicating that her husband was deployed and requesting that the motion be denied due to his absence. Although Cecil had deployed well after his responses to discovery were due, Stacey voluntarily struck the motion to compel.
¶6 Cecil returned from deployment in March 2009. However, he did not thereafter respond to discovery or otherwise take action in the case. Instead, in November 2009, Stacey filed a motion for a final hearing on her petition to modify the final parenting plan and order of child support. The motion was noted for November 16, 2009.
¶7 Cecil received a copy of the motion on November 3, 2009. Three days later, he filed a response. In his declaration, Cecil stated that he would be unable to attend the hearing because he would “be deployed at that time over seas [sic].” He also attached a redacted letter from his commanding officer. The letter, dated October 30, 2009, stated, “A01 Herridge is an active member of the U.S. Navy and attached to [redacted]. He will be deployed November 2009 to June 2010.” The entire second paragraph of this letter was redacted.
¶8 Cecil deployed to Iraq on November 13, 2009. Accordingly, he did not appear at the November 16 hearing. In his absence, Stacey delivered copies of Cecil’s declaration and his commanding officer’s letter to the trial court for evaluation. While recognizing that the SCRA requires a stay of proceedings upon the proper application of a service-member, the trial court determined that Cecil had failed to comply with the relevant provisions of the Act. The court further noted, “It appears to me that Mr. Herridge is using his status as a military member to try to get out of his responsibilities.” The court then entered final orders modifying the child support order and the final parenting plan.
¶9 Cecil did not appeal from the trial court’s final orders. Instead, in December 2009, he filed a motion to vacate the final orders. Because Cecil was still deployed, he did not appear at the hearing on this motion. Cecil’s wife sought to argue on his behalf; however, the court denied this request. After noting that it had carefully considered the record, the trial court determined that the time for reconsideration had elapsed and that Cecil had failed to comply with the proper procedures for bringing a motion to vacate. The trial court further stated, “The Court was well within its authority and discretion to enter the previous order. Mr. Herridge did not comply with the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act in seeking the stay previously.” Moreover, because Cecil’s motion was “not supported by any proper factual investigation,” the court awarded terms of $500 for attorney fees to Stacey pursuant to Civil Rule 11.
¶10 Cecil took no further action until September 2010 when he filed a motion to vacate the November 2009 final orders and the December
¶11 However, the trial court granted Cecil’s motion to vacate the final parenting plan entered at the November 2009 hearing, explaining that “Mr. Herridge was entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the modification of the parenting plan.” Because Cecil was entitled to this partial relief, the trial court did not award the full amount of attorney fees requested by Stacey, instead limiting its award of such fees to $750.
¶12 Cecil appeals.
II
¶13 Cecil first asserts that the trial court was required to issue a stay of proceedings pursuant to the SCRA and, thus, that the trial court’s subsequent orders, issued in his absence, should necessarily have been vacated. We disagree.
¶14 “A motion to vacate a judgment is to be considered and decided by the trial court in the exercise of its discretion, and its decision should be overturned on appeal only if it plainly appears that it has abused that discretion.” Haller v. Wallis,
¶15 Here, the trial court’s denial of Cecil’s motion to vacate depended upon the court’s previous interpretation and application of the SCRA. In interpreting a statute, “[c]ourts should assume [Congress] means exactly what it says.” State v. Keller,
¶16 The purpose of the SCRA “is to suspend enforcement of civil liabilities of persons in the military service of the United States in order to enable such persons to devote their entire energy to the defense needs of the Nation.” Engstrom v. First Nat’l Bank of Eagle Lake,
¶17 Where a servicemember has received notice of an action or proceeding,
(A) A letter or other communication setting forth facts stating the manner in which current military duty requirements materially affect the servicemember’s ability to appear and stating a date when the servicemember will be available to appear.
(B) A letter or other communication from the service-member’s commanding officer stating that the servicemember’s current military duty prevents appearance and that military leave is not authorized for the servicemember at the time of the letter.
50 U.S.C. app. § 522(b)(2). Where a servicemember has made proper application for a stay of proceedings, a 90-day stay is mandatory. 50 U.S.C. app. § 522(b)(1). It is within a court’s discretion to issue a stay where the servicemember has not complied with the provisions of the statute. In re Marriage of Bradley,
¶18 Here, Cecil asserts that he complied with the requirements of the Act by (1) explaining in writing that he would be unavailable to appear at the November 2009 hearing because he would “be deployed at that time over seas [sic]” and (2) attaching a copy of a letter from his commanding officer indicating that Cecil would be “deployed November 2009 to June 2010.” However, Cecil does not dispute that his letter to the court did not state a date upon which he would be available to appear. Nor does he contend that the letter from his commanding officer apprised the trial court of the availability of military leave to Cecil at the time of the letter. Instead, he asserts that, pursuant to a liberal construction of SCRA, his request for a stay was sufficient..
¶19 Cecil is correct that, pursuant to a former version of the SCRA, a bare assertion of active military service was, in some instances, determined to be sufficient for a mandatory stay.
¶20 However, Congress substantially amended the Act in 2003. As discussed above, the SCRA now mandates that an application for a stay by a servicemember contain specific information in support of that request. 50 U.S.C. app. § 522. Although no Washington court has yet considered the issue, those courts that have assessed the effect of the 2003 amendments have generally held that a servicemember must now comply with the express requirements of that statute in order to be entitled to a mandatory stay of proceedings. See, e.g., Teas v. Ferguson, No. 07-5146,
¶21 For instance, in City of Pendergrass v. Skelton,
“Skelton is a member of my command and is currently attending training at Fort Irwin, CA until 30 April 2005. Due to the circumstances of training [Specialist] Skelton is unable to attend any legal proceedings.”
Skelton,
¶22 We recognize that some courts have continued to overlook deficiencies in a servicemember’s application in determining that a stay of proceedings is warranted even in the absence of compliance with the express language of the statute. See, e.g., In re Amber M.,
¶23 In amending the SCRA, Congress struck a careful balance between competing policy concerns. We must respect that determination and, accordingly, hold that a service-member must fully comply with the express language of the SCRA before a stay of proceedings is mandated.
¶24 Here, it is clear that the information provided by Cecil to the trial court prior to the November 2009 hearing did not comply with the requirements of the SCRA. Cecil did not state a time at which he would again be available to appear, nor did his commanding officer’s letter indicate that military leave would be unavailable to Cecil during his deployment.
¶25 Nor did the trial court abuse its discretion by declining to issue a stay on its own motion. Although a stay of proceedings is mandatory upon a properly supported application by the servicemember, a court may also grant a stay “on its own motion.” 50 U.S.C. app. § 522(b)(1). As the Kansas Supreme Court has explained, the statute “does not address what standard is to be applied by a trial court in considering whether to stay an action upon a service-member’s application that does not meet the statutory conditions.” Bradley,
¶26 Here, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by declining to issue a stay with respect to Stacey’s motion to modify the child support order. Where a court is “sufficiently convinced that a stay is necessary to avoid undue prejudice to a party’s prosecution [or defense] of a matter,” a discretionary stay may be warranted. Keane v. McMullen, No. C 07-04894 SBA,
¶27 Under these circumstances, the trial court was authorized to modify the order of child support without hearing oral testimony. Former RCW 26.09.175(5). Accordingly, Cecil’s rights were not prejudiced by the entry of the final order in his absence.
¶28 The remainder of this opinion has no precedential value. It will, therefore, be filed for public record in accordance with the rules governing unpublished opinions.
Notes
50 U.S.C. app. §§ 501-597b.
In order to avoid confusion, the parties are referred to by their first names throughout this opinion.
The attorney thereafter continued in his representation of Stacey and now represents her in this appeal.
Cecil stated in his declaration that sections of the letter had been redacted because “the contact info is null and void [because] we will be deployed and when Mrs. Herridge has my command contact she harasses them.”
Cecil did, however, refuse to pay the modified child support, as ordered by the trial court in November 2009.
Former RCW 26.09.175(5) (2002) states that “[ujnless both parties stipulate to arbitration or the presiding judge authorizes oral testimony pursuant to subsection (6) of this section, a petition for modification of an order of child support shall be heard by the court on affidavits, the petition, answer, and worksheets only.”
Cecil concedes that he had notice of the proceeding at issue.
Prior to 2003, the SCRA. was titled the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940.
Although the trial court later received two additional letters from officers of Cecil’s command containing more extensive information regarding his deployment, the court’s orders modifying the order of child support and the final parenting plan were entered prior to the submittal of these letters. Accordingly, there were no proceedings to stay at the time the court received this additional information.
Cecil additionally contends that the trial court erred by finding that Cecil waived reliance on the SCRA by filing his motion to vacate in December 2009. Because the court’s ultimate decision to deny Cecil’s 2010 motion to vacate did not depend upon this reasoning, however, any such error was harmless.
In contrast, by granting Cecil’s motion to vacate the final parenting plan, the trial court recognized that the denial of a stay with respect to that matter compromised Cecil’s rights, in that he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing on that request.
Cecil’s assertion that the trial court erred by declining to appoint counsel in his absence is also without merit. Although the SCRA requires that a court appoint counsel where an additional stay of proceedings is denied, this provision applies only to those cases where an initial stay was granted. 50 U.S.C. app. § 522(d)(2). Because the trial court did not grant an initial stay, the provision does not apply.
Insofar as Cecil challenges the denial of his motion to vacate based on the merits of the trial court’s decision to modify the order of child support, this determination is reviewed for abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of Pollard,
