Sekou Wiggs, Sr. v. Tamikya St. Clair ( 2020 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    SEKOU WIGGS SR.,
    No. 80003-5-I
    Appellant,
    DIVISION ONE
    v.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    TAMIKYA ST. CLAIR,
    Respondent.
    DWYER, J. — Sekou Wiggs Sr. appeals from the superior court’s order
    revising a commissioner’s order denying Tamikya St. Clair’s petition to modify an
    order of child support. He asserts that the superior court erred in finding that St.
    Clair met the statutory predicates for modifications. He further asserts that the
    judge erred by imputing income to him, ordering postsecondary education
    support, and awarding attorney fees and costs to St. Clair. Because the trial
    court failed to enter findings of fact and conclusions of law to support its fee
    award, we remand for further proceedings on that request for relief. We
    otherwise affirm.
    I
    Sekou Wiggs Sr. and Tamikya St. Clair were involved in a lengthy intimate
    relationship but they never married. At the time the superior court entered the
    order at issue in this appeal, the children were 25, 19, and 8 years old. Wiggs is
    No. 80003-5-I/2
    also the father of a minor child with Phala Sir. Wiggs has worked as a real estate
    agent and St. Clair is a teacher for the Seattle School District.
    In March 2013, Wiggs filed a petition to dissolve the committed intimate
    relationship with St. Clair. Final agreed orders and a decree of dissolution were
    entered on July 18, 2014. The final order of child support required Wiggs to
    make monthly $500 child support payments to St. Clair based on Wiggs’s
    monthly net income of $2,311.1 This amount represented a downward deviation
    from the standard child support calculation of $567 because of Wiggs’s
    responsibility to support his other minor child with Sir. The order also required
    Wiggs to pay support until the children reach age 18 or graduate from high
    school, whichever is later. The order reserved the matter of postsecondary
    education support.
    On April 23, 2015, Wiggs filed a petition for modification of child support,
    claiming that he had lost his job as an apartment manager. That petition was
    dismissed based on a procedural error. On July 24, 2015, Wiggs filed another
    petition for modification. On November 13, 2015, after a trial by affidavit, the
    superior court entered an order denying and dismissing Wiggs’s petition, finding
    that he failed to satisfy his burden under RCW 26.09.170 to prove a significant
    change in circumstances. The court found that the existing child support order
    was predicated on Wiggs earning approximately $15 per hour and that any
    subsequent modification would support imputation of income at the same level.
    1   At that time, the parties’ middle child was age 14 and the youngest was age 8.
    2
    No. 80003-5-I/3
    The court further found that Wiggs had not shown any “medical, psychological, or
    physical reasons why he is unable to work.”
    On September 1, 2016, Wiggs filed a petition to vacate the July 2014
    decree. The parties resolved the dispute by agreement, and the court entered
    amended orders on September 21, 2017. The agreed amended child support
    order was in most respects unchanged from the 2014 order. The order still
    identified Wiggs’s actual monthly income to be $2,311, required him to pay $500
    per month to support the two minor children, required support to be paid until the
    children turn 18 or complete high school, and reserved the issue of
    postsecondary support.
    On May 24, 2018, St. Clair filed a pro se petition to modify child support.
    Referring to the original 2014 child support order, St. Clair alleged that the court
    should modify the child support amount because the current order was signed at
    least two full years previously and the parents’ income had changed. She further
    alleged that there had been a substantial change in circumstances since the
    current order was signed. Specifically, St. Clair alleged that her financial
    situation had worsened, that Wiggs was earning unreported income, and that
    their eldest daughter’s needs had changed because she would still be in high
    school past age 18 and was preparing to enter college in September 2018.
    In a declaration in support of her petition, St. Clair asserted that Wiggs
    had been concealing income to avoid his child support obligations. She
    presented evidence that Wiggs had a significant presence in the community as a
    successful real estate agent. St. Clair alleged that Wiggs was funneling his real
    3
    No. 80003-5-I/4
    estate commissions through Sir, who had become a real estate agent and joined
    Wiggs’s real estate team. On this basis, St. Clair asked the court to impute
    income to Wiggs.
    Wiggs admitted that he was working as a real estate agent and earning
    income on a commission basis. But he asserted that he was existing day to day
    on a very limited income, relying substantially on public assistance, and living in
    a small rented room with his minor child from his relationship with Sir. Wiggs
    also claimed that he suffers from depression, anxiety, and severe uncontrolled
    hypertension.
    In response, St. Clair submitted another declaration, which called to
    attention issues regarding Wiggs’s credibility. Wiggs responded by defending his
    credibility and continuing to assert that he is destitute. Sir filed a declaration
    asserting that Wiggs is struggling financially and that she sometimes allows him
    to assist her with real estate transactions.
    On December 21, 2018, following a hearing, a commissioner denied St.
    Clair’s petition. The commissioner found that, at the time of St. Clair’s petition,
    two years had not passed since the September 21, 2017 child support order was
    issued and that St. Clair had not pled that the prior order worked a severe
    economic hardship. The commissioner, citing Wiggs’s receipt of food stamp
    benefits, further found that Wiggs had no ability to pay postsecondary support
    and that he was not voluntarily unemployed.
    On December 31, 2018, St. Clair filed motions to revise and reconsider
    the commissioner’s ruling regarding modification of child support. In the revision
    4
    No. 80003-5-I/5
    motion, St. Clair asserted that the agreed 2017 child support order was not a
    modification of the original 2014 child support order.
    On revision, the superior court granted St. Clair’s petition, modified the
    child support amount based on imputed income, and ordered postsecondary
    support. The judge found that St. Clair sufficiently pleaded the requirements for
    modification under RCW 26.09.170(6) due to “severe economic hardship” and
    because there was a child in high school after age 18. The court similarly found
    that St. Clair met the requirements for modification under RCW 26.19.090 based
    on the need for postsecondary support on the older child’s entrance into college.
    Having found that St. Clair met the statutory predicates for modification,
    the judge further found that St. Clair provided sufficient evidence that Wiggs was
    voluntarily unemployed or underemployed. The judge rejected Wiggs’s account
    of his current financial status and found that Wiggs “lacks any credibility that he
    cannot continue to work as a real estate agent, earning similar income as
    before.”
    Next, pursuant to RCW 26.19.071(6)(b), the court used historical data
    from 2011 and 2012 to impute Wiggs’s annual income at $76,616.50. The court
    also ordered support for the older child to continue until postsecondary education
    commenced, and postsecondary support for her education. The court denied a
    requested deviation from the standard calculation and ordered Wiggs to pay
    support of $654.31 per month for the younger minor child. The court further
    awarded attorney fees and costs to St. Clair. Wiggs appeals.
    5
    No. 80003-5-I/6
    II
    Wiggs asserts that the superior court committed multiple procedural and
    factual errors in revising the commissioner’s ruling by granting St. Clair’s petition
    to modify the existing child support order. We disagree.
    A
    “‘The actions of a superior court commissioner are subject to revision by a
    superior court judge.’” In re Marriage of Dodd, 
    120 Wn. App. 638
    , 643, 
    86 P.3d 801
     (2004) (quoting State v. Lown, 
    116 Wn. App. 402
    , 407, 
    66 P.3d 660
     (2003)).
    “‘In cases such as this one, where the evidence before the commissioner did not
    include live testimony, then the superior court judge’s review of the record is de
    novo.’” Dodd, 120 Wn. App. at 643 (quoting In re Marriage of Moody, 
    137 Wn.2d 979
    , 993, 
    976 P.2d 1240
     (1999)). “[T]he revision court has full jurisdiction over
    the case and is authorized to determine its own facts based on the record before
    the commissioner.” Dodd, 120 Wn. App. at 644 (citing In re Dependency of
    B.S.S., 
    56 Wn. App. 169
    , 171, 
    782 P.2d 1100
     (1989)). So long as new evidence
    is not relied on, the superior court “may conduct whatever proceedings it deems
    necessary to resolve the matter.” In re Welfare of McGee, 
    36 Wn. App. 660
    , 662,
    
    679 P.2d 933
     (1984) (citing In re Welfare of Smith, 
    8 Wn. App. 285
    , 
    505 P.2d 1295
     (1973)); accord, B.S.S., 
    56 Wn. App. at 171
    .
    We review a trial court’s modification of an order for child support for an
    abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of Schumacher, 
    100 Wn. App. 208
    , 211, 
    997 P.2d 399
     (2000). “Discretion is abused where it is exercised on untenable
    grounds for untenable reasons.” In re Marriage of Tang, 
    57 Wn. App. 648
    , 653,
    6
    No. 80003-5-I/7
    
    789 P.2d 118
     (1990). Substantial evidence must support the trial court’s factual
    findings. In re Parentage of Goude, 
    152 Wn. App. 784
    , 790, 
    219 P.3d 717
    (2009). “[C]redibility determinations are left to the trier of fact and are not subject
    to review.” In re Marriage of Burrill, 
    113 Wn. App. 863
    , 868, 
    56 P.3d 993
     (2002).
    B
    RCW 26.09.170 governs a parent’s ability to modify a child support order.
    Modifications are generally limited to situations in which there has been a
    “substantial change of circumstances.” RCW 26.09.170(1). A petition may be
    filed on this basis at any time. RCW 26.09.170(5)(a). As an exception to this
    general rule, a parent may request a modification one year or more after it has
    been entered without showing a substantial change in circumstances if the
    original order “works a severe economic hardship on either party or the child” or if
    “there is a need to extend support beyond the eighteenth birthday to complete
    high school.” RCW 26.09.170(6)(a), (b). Likewise, a parent can file a motion for
    adjustment without showing a substantial change of circumstances when two
    years have passed since entry of the last adjustment or modification and the
    parents’ income has changed. RCW 26.09.170(7)(a).
    C
    Wiggs first argues that the superior court erred in determining sua sponte
    that St. Clair’s petition qualified to modify the child support order on the basis of
    “severe economic hardship.” He points out that St. Clair actually petitioned on
    the basis that more than two years had passed since entry of the 2014 child
    support order and that the parties’ income had changed, not on the basis of
    7
    No. 80003-5-I/8
    severe economic hardship. Wiggs further contends that principles of finality and
    res judicata bar St. Clair from relitigating the 2014 and 2017 child support orders,
    and that the mechanism for overturning these prior orders is a CR 60(b)(4)
    motion to vacate. Wiggs is mistaken.
    The 2014 and 2017 child support orders were both entered by agreement.
    “Washington courts have general and equitable powers to modify any order
    pertaining to child support payments when the child’s needs and parents’
    financial ability so require.” Schumacher, 100 Wn. App. at 213. When the
    parties arrived at their own agreement, we presume that the trial court did not
    examine the evidence, and the party arguing against the modified order must
    overcome this presumption with clear evidence. Schumacher, 100 Wn. App. at
    213. Although the superior court ruled on a different basis, we may affirm on any
    basis the record supports. Truck Ins. Exch. v. Vanport Homes, Inc., 
    147 Wn.2d 751
    , 766, 
    58 P.3d 276
     (2002). There is nothing in the record before us to rebut
    the presumption that the trial court never independently examined the evidence
    underlying the agreed orders. Contrary to Wiggs’s assertions, principles of
    finality and res judicata have no applicability in this context. The trial court was
    well within its discretion and equitable powers to independently review the
    evidence and modify the child support order as the needs of the children and the
    finances of the parties required.
    Moreover, as Wiggs properly concedes, modification was proper on the
    basis of postsecondary support because the 2014 and 2017 orders both
    reserved that issue and St. Clair invoked it in her petition to modify. When the
    8
    No. 80003-5-I/9
    issue of postsecondary support has been reserved, the trial court may modify the
    order and award postsecondary support as if the issue were being decided in an
    initial dissolution proceeding. In re Marriage of Morris, 
    176 Wn. App. 893
    , 902,
    
    309 P.3d 767
     (2013).
    D
    Wiggs next argues that the trial court’s method of calculating his imputed
    income was based on an incorrect interpretation of RCW 26.19.071. The
    interpretation and applicability of a statute presents questions of law that we
    review de novo. Grey v. Leach, 
    158 Wn. App. 837
    , 844, 
    244 P.3d 970
     (2010).
    When interpreting a statute, we seek to ascertain the legislature’s intent. State v.
    Jacobs, 
    154 Wn.2d 596
    , 600, 
    115 P.3d 281
     (2005). Where a statute’s meaning
    is plain on its face, we must give effect to that meaning as expressing the
    legislature’s intent. Jacobs, 
    154 Wn.2d at 600
    .
    RCW 26.19.071 governs the standards for determining income when
    calculating child support obligations. RCW 26.19.071(1) through (5) specify
    methods and processes for the precise calculation of actual net and gross
    monthly income based on documentary evidence. However, when the trial court
    finds that a parent is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed, no precise
    calculation of actual income is possible. In that case, the court must impute a
    parent’s income using the best information available in accordance with a
    specified order of priority. RCW 26.19.071(6).
    Here, after finding that Wiggs was voluntarily unemployed or
    underemployed, the judge found that imputation of income was appropriate
    9
    No. 80003-5-I/10
    under RCW 26.19.071(6)(b) based on historical income data from tax years 2011
    and 2012, the two years immediately preceding the original petition for
    dissolution. Based on the average of those two years, the judge imputed
    Wiggs’s income at $76,616.50. Wiggs asserts that this amount is too high
    because the judge chose only the figures from Wiggs’s gross profits without
    subtracting expenses to arrive at a calculation of net monthly income, as required
    by RCW 26.19.071(5). We disagree.
    In enacting the child support schedule statute, the legislature intended to
    ensure that child support orders were adequate to meet a child’s basic needs
    and to provide additional child support commensurate with the parents’ income,
    resources, and standard of living. In re Marriage of Fiorito, 
    112 Wn. App. 657
    ,
    664, 
    50 P.3d 298
     (2002). RCW 26.19.071(1) through (5) provide for a precise
    calculation of income based on the existence of reliable documentary evidence.
    When a parent is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed, no such information
    exists, and the court must impute income based on the best information
    available. RCW 26.19.071(6) does not specify or require particular exclusions or
    deductions in the process of imputing income. Nor does it make reference to
    RCW 26.19.071(1) through (5). Wiggs’s interpretation of RCW 26.19.071 finds
    no support in the statute’s plain meaning or in legislative intent. The trial court’s
    calculation of imputed income was supported by substantial evidence and was
    proper as a matter of law.
    10
    No. 80003-5-I/11
    E
    Wiggs next challenges the amount of the award of postsecondary support.
    He acknowledges that the modification was proper on this basis and that the
    judge considered the required statutory factors pursuant to RCW 26.19.090(2).
    However, he contends that the award was nevertheless improper because it was
    based on the judge’s erroneous determination of his imputed income. He claims
    that, in reality, he cannot afford to provide the ordered support because he has
    little income.
    Wiggs cites to In re Marriage of Shellenberger, 
    80 Wn. App. 71
    , 
    906 P.2d 968
     (1995), in support of his contention that he cannot afford to pay the amount
    awarded. In Shellenberger, the trial court ordered the father to make
    postsecondary educational support payments that, “when combined with his debt
    service and living expenses, exceed his income, even the net income amount
    imputed by the trial court.” 80 Wn. App. at 83. In this context, the Shellenberger
    opinion noted that a postsecondary support obligation that would force the
    obligor parent into bankruptcy or prevent the parent from meeting their obligation
    to another minor child would in most cases amount to an abuse of discretion. 80
    Wn. App. at 84. The appellate court directed the trial court to make findings of
    fact on remand as to the parent’s ability to pay while still meeting his own
    reasonable needs and obligations. Shellenberger, 80 Wn. App. at 84.
    Here, in contrast, there is no need for remand based on ability to pay. The
    court found Wiggs not credible regarding his financial status and properly
    imputed his income based on the evidence in the record that it did credit.
    11
    No. 80003-5-I/12
    F
    Wiggs similarly challenges the judge’s decision to decline a discretionary
    step increase pursuant to RCW 26.09.170(7)(c). That statute provides that “[i]f
    the court adjusts or modifies a child support obligation pursuant to this
    subsection by more than thirty percent and the change would cause significant
    hardship, the court may implement the change in two equal increments, one at
    the time of the entry of the order and the second six months from the entry of the
    order.” The superior court based its decision on Wiggs’s lack of credibility
    regarding his financial situation. This decision was not an abuse of discretion.
    G
    Wiggs next asserts that the superior court abused its discretion in
    modifying child support pursuant to RCW 26.09.170(6) for the middle child for the
    time period between high school and college. RCW 26.09.170(6)(b) provides
    that an order of child support may be modified without a showing of substantially
    changed circumstances “[i]f a child is still in high school, upon a finding that there
    is a need to extend support beyond the eighteenth birthday to complete high
    school.” Wiggs contends that, to the extent the court extended support beyond
    high school, it cannot do so under this provision.
    Here, the court found that the middle child was a “dependent adult child”
    after completing high school, and that support should continue for the three-
    month period between high school and college. Regarding postsecondary
    support, the court found that there has been a substantial change in
    circumstances and that child support for the middle child should continue for the
    12
    No. 80003-5-I/13
    three-month period between high school and college. The order also specifies
    that “[p]ost-secondary educational support may include support for the period
    after high school and before college or vocational school begins.” The court did
    not abuse its discretion in making this award of postsecondary support.
    H
    Wiggs next contends that the superior court exceeded the scope of review
    under RCW 2.24.050 by considering the entire case file rather than limiting its
    review to the documents the parties submitted to the commissioner. We
    disagree. RCW 2.24.050 provides that a superior court’s revision of a
    commissioner’s ruling “shall be upon the records of the case, and the findings of
    fact and conclusions of law entered by the court commissioner.”
    Here, both the commissioner and the superior court judge had access to
    the entire record of the dissolution case, including child support matters.
    Because the commissioner did not find the imputation of income to be warranted,
    the commissioner did not consider all of the contents of the court file. However,
    the superior court judge was free to do so on determining that Wiggs’s testimony
    was not credible and that such imputation was warranted. The judge made the
    imputation calculation based solely on evidence submitted by the parties prior to
    the commissioner’s ruling. This is not “new” evidence within the meaning of
    RCW 2.24.050, which—by its terms—allows the judge to consider “the records of
    the case.” This is especially so given the discretion afforded superior court
    judges in resolving motions for revision. See B.S.S., 
    56 Wn. App. at 171
    ;
    McGee, 
    36 Wn. App. at 662
    ; Smith, 8 Wn. App at 288-89. There was no error.
    13
    No. 80003-5-I/14
    i
    Wiggs further contends that the superior court erred by considering new
    evidence in connection with St. Clair’s motion for reconsideration, which St. Clair
    improperly filed with the superior court rather than the commissioner. However,
    the record does not show any action by the judge on the motion for
    reconsideration. In the order granting St. Clair’s motion for revision, the judge
    expressly stated that “[t]his Court has reviewed the current Motion, and the past
    history of this case.” The order cites solely to evidence before the commissioner,
    including the case file. There is no indication that the court considered,
    reviewed, or relied on any of the documents submitted in connection with the
    motion for reconsideration. No error is demonstrated.
    III
    Wiggs challenges the superior court’s award of attorney fees and costs to
    St. Clair. He asserts that the award was improper and that reversal is required
    because the order is not supported by findings of fact or conclusions of law. St.
    Clair asserts that the basis and amount of the award was proper. But she
    concedes that we must remand for entry of findings and conclusions to support
    the award.
    The trial court must calculate the award of fees using the lodestar method,
    and it must enter findings of fact and conclusions of law supporting its decision to
    award fees. Mahler v. Szucs, 
    135 Wn.2d 398
    , 434-35, 
    957 P.2d 632
    , 
    966 P.2d 305
     (1998). Such a record is necessary for an appellate court to review the
    award. Deep Water Brewing, LLC v. Fairway Res., Ltd., 
    170 Wn. App. 1
    , 6, 282
    14
    No. 80003-5-I/
    15 P.3d 146
     (2012). Where a trial court fails to provide sufficient findings of fact and
    conclusions of law to develop an adequate record for appellate review of the fee
    award, we must vacate the award and remand for a new hearing and the entry of
    findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the fee request. In re Marriage
    of Bobbitt, 
    135 Wn. App. 8
    , 30, 
    144 P.3d 306
     (2006). On this basis, we reverse
    the award of attorney fees and remand to the trial court.
    St. Clair requests an award of attorney fees on appeal, pursuant to RAP
    18.9(a), which authorizes an award of attorney fees as a sanction for filing a
    frivolous appeal. “An appeal is frivolous if ‘no debatable issues are presented
    upon which reasonable minds might differ, i.e., it is [so] devoid of merit that no
    reasonable possibility of reversal exists.’” Hartford Ins. Co. v. Ohio Cas. Ins. Co.,
    
    145 Wn. App. 765
    , 780, 
    189 P.3d 195
     (2008) (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (quoting Olson v. City of Bellevue, 
    93 Wn. App. 154
    , 165, 
    968 P.2d 894
     (1998)).
    Because Wiggs raised a meritorious challenge to the attorney fee award, his
    appeal was not frivolous. We decline to award fees to St. Clair on appeal.
    15
    No. 80003-5-I/16
    Affirmed in part and reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
    WE CONCUR:
    16