In Re The Marriage Of: Paul David Shoemaker & Dawn Marie Shoemaker ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                                                                               FILED
    RI OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    20140JUL 15 Aid10: $43
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASH
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    In   re   the Marriage   of:                                                                  No. 43633 -7 -II
    PAUL DAVID SHOEMAKER,
    Appellant,
    and                                                                             UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    DAWN MARIE SHOEMAKER,
    Respondent.
    MELNICK, J. —         Paul David Shoemaker appeals the orders filed in this dissolution
    proceeding, arguing that the trial               court (    1)    lacked the personal and subject matter jurisdiction
    necessary to       enter   the    orders, (     2)    lacked sufficient evidence to impose the parenting plan
    restrictions    against    him,   and (    3)   violated       his due     process    right   to   a   fair trial.       Shoemaker also
    seeks to supplement the record on appeal, and in his reply brief requests an award of fees, costs,
    and sanctions against          his former       wife, now         known       as   Dawn Marie Harris.          Harris requests fees
    and costs on appeal.           Because Shoemaker sought relief from the Kitsap County Superior Court
    and is a resident of Washington as well as a member of the armed forces stationed in
    Washington, the         superior court      had      personal and subject matter             jurisdiction in this          case.       We see
    no    violation    of   Shoemaker'     s    right     to   a     fair trial    on   this   record.       We deny his motion to
    supplement the record as well as his untimely request for fees, costs, and sanctions, and we grant
    Harris'     s request   for fees based     on   Shoemaker'          s   intransigence. Affirmed.
    43633 -7 -II
    FACTS
    The   parties married          in Tacoma in 2004, shortly              after     the birth    of   their   son,   E. S.   During
    the   proceedings at        issue, Shoemaker            was   a member of        the United States Air Force.'                 On March
    16, 2006, Shoemaker filed a petition for legal separation in Kitsap County, stating that " this court
    has jurisdiction           over [    Harris]   because [ Harris            and   Shoemaker'       s]    home state of record is
    Washington."          Clerk'     s   Papers ( CP)   at   704.        Harris subsequently filed a dissolution petition in
    Pierce County, and Shoemaker obtained an ex parte order and temporary parenting plan in
    Kitsap County that granted him temporary custody of E. S.
    In June 2006, the parties signed an agreed order that dismissed Harris' s Pierce County
    dissolution petition, continued Shoemaker' s legal separation action filed in Kitsap County, and
    reaffirmed the temporary parenting plan. The order further stated that the parties were moving to
    Utah and were attempting to reconcile. The parties then moved together to Utah.
    In February 2008, the Kitsap County court dismissed the case for want of prosecution. In
    2009, the       parties      and     their   son   moved        to   Japan   where         Shoemaker         was     deployed.       After
    approximately          a   year,     Harris wanted to end the marriage and tried to file the necessary
    paperwork       to   return   to the United States            with   E. S. On September 10, 2010, Shoemaker obtained
    an ex parte order reinstating the dissolution case and again declaring that the Kitsap County court
    had jurisdiction because Kitsap County was his " designated home even though he is assigned out
    of    state   and    out    of   the country       by   the military."           CP   at   705.        In an attached declaration,
    Shoemaker stated that his " home address of record" was in Bremerton. CP at 355.
    In a recent affidavit, Shoemaker states that he was medically discharged on June 3, 2013.
    2
    43633 -7 -II
    Unbeknownst to Harris, the ex parte order also reactivated the temporary parenting plan.
    Based on this ex parte order, Shoemaker attempted to have Harris removed from the house and
    took custody of their son.
    On October 20, 2010, Harris obtained an ex parte restraining order placing E. S. in her
    custody      and      authorizing her to take E. S. if             she     had to leave Japan.            On October 25, 2010, a
    temporary restraining order issued prohibiting either party from taking E. S. out of Japan without
    further   court order.       On October 29, 2010, an agreed parenting plan was signed granting Harris
    custody      and      giving Shoemaker           alternate weekends and             splitting holidays.         The order stipulated
    that E. S.     could not     leave Japan           without      further    order.     The court issued a contemporaneous
    restraining order enjoining each party from disturbing the peace of the other party or any child.
    This court denied discretionary review of the order denying Shoemaker' s motion for
    reconsideration. By this time, Shoemaker had fired two attorneys and represented himself.
    In    January     2011,     Shoemaker began harassing Harris and refusing to return E. S. after
    weekend        visits.     On   one   occasion          he failed to       return   E. S. for     over    two   weeks.   Shoemaker
    threatened to move back into Harris' s house and several times came over and refused to leave.
    Shoemaker          cancelled    Harris'     s    cell   phone    and   internet      service.      The trial court described his
    behavior       as "   increasingly    odd,      hostile,   and   bizarre."     CP     at   705.    On January 20, 2011, the Air
    Force issued a no contact order forbidding Shoemaker from having any contact with Harris or
    their son.
    On February 11, 2011, the Kitsap County court held Shoemaker in contempt for violating
    the 2010 parenting           plan     and       restraint provisions        but     provided      purge   provisions.    With court
    permission, Harris          took E. S. out of Japan.              The court further ordered Shoemaker to give Harris
    the   child' s passport and         any     other       documents necessary to             remove   him from Japan.       The court
    3
    43633 -7 -I1
    also issued a warrant for . Shoemaker' s arrest and ordered him to pay child support and
    maintenance.
    Despite the court orders and orders from his commanding officer, Shoemaker failed to
    cooperate and          did   not provide   Harris   with   E. S.'   s passport.      Harris, stranded in Japan, left only
    after Shoemaker' s commanding officer personally gave her the child' s passport. Shoemaker also
    refused to comply with the orders to pay Harris child support, maintenance, and attorney fees.
    Following an investigation of two separate incidents, an Air Force commander issued
    reports   finding      that Shoemaker'      s   behavior      met   the   criteria   for "   child emotional maltreatment"
    and " adult emotional maltreatment."                CP   at   706.      On March 10, 2011, Shoemaker was arrested
    after   failing   to   appear.   to   show cause    why he       should not      be held in      contempt of court.   After
    posting bail, he was booked and released.
    On March 31, 2011, Shoemaker filed for divorce in Utah. The Utah court dismissed the
    action and stated in its order that Washington State had exclusive and continuing jurisdiction.
    This order was upheld on appeal. Shoemaker v. Shoemaker, 
    265 P. 3d 850
     ( Utah Ct. App. 2011).
    A federal district court subsequently dismissed two lawsuits Shoemaker filed against Harris,
    several Kitsap County judges, multiple Kitsap County employees, and several other parties.
    On August 19, 2011, the Kitsap County court granted an order compelling Shoemaker to
    respond to Harris' s interrogatories and request for production of documents, and also awarded
    terms.    Shoemaker          never complied with      this     order.     At a settlement conference on December 7,
    2011, Harris and her attorney appeared in person and Shoemaker appeared telephonically. Notice
    of the trial date was sent to Shoemaker' s last three known addresses.
    4
    43633 -7 -II
    Shoemaker did          not appear when         the trial began      on   Monday,       March 5, 2012. His mother
    informed the court that Shoemaker had been denied permission to leave Fort Lewis for any court
    hearings during the past year and that he was being taken to the Fort Lewis Clinic for heart tests.
    The court observed that Shoemaker had received notice of the trial date and had appeared at prior
    hearings       within    the    past   year.        The court also noted that there was no verification of his
    whereabouts.           The    court allowed         the   case    to   proceed   by   default,      and   Harris testified.     Before
    adjourning for the day, the court informed Shoemaker' s mother that trial would resume the next
    morning and that Shoemaker could either appear or provide verification from military personnel
    that   a medical condition            had   prevented       his   appearance on       the   first   day    of   trial.   When Harris' s
    attorney explained that his client would be returning to New York on Thursday and asked for
    completion of the trial by then, the court reconfirmed that the trial would resume the following
    morning.
    Shoemaker did          not appear      for   court   the   next   morning. When his mother asserted that he
    had been           confined    to   quarters   for 48 hours due to "             severe   medical         stress,"   Harris' s attorney
    responded that Shoemaker had not sought medical treatment until 5: 00 P. M. the previous day.
    CP     at   695.    The trial judge spoke with a military officer who confirmed that Shoemaker had been
    2
    confined       to   quarters   for 48 hours.         After Harris completed her testimony, the court continued the
    trial to March 14 and ruled that Harris would be allowed to appear telephonically due to
    Shoemaker' s unexcused absence the previous day.
    2
    The order showed that Shoemaker was confined to quarters from 7: 00 A.M. on March 6 through
    7: 00 A.M. on March 8.
    5
    43633 - -II
    7
    Shoemaker       appeared       on   March    14   and   testified   on   his   own   behalf.   Although he
    challenged the court' s jurisdiction, he admitted during cross examination that he had a current
    Washington driver' s license and that he had signed court filings stating that his home of record
    was Kitsap County. Shoemaker' s mother also testified.
    The trial court subsequently issued a lengthy memorandum decision setting forth the
    above facts and ruling that it had jurisdiction over Shoemaker because of his efforts to seek
    Washington jurisdiction. The court also ruled that Shoemaker' s residential time with E. S. would
    be   restricted   to   allow   only    written   communication       monitored     by   Harris.   The court left the
    restraining order in place because Shoemaker had withheld E. S. from Harris in violation of court
    orders and had stalked, intimidated, and harassed Harris.
    The court found no evidence that either party' s income had changed since entry of the
    temporary decree of dissolution and noted that Shoemaker had refused to comply with repeated
    discovery     requests   seeking      current   financial information.       The court ordered Shoemaker to pay
    approximately $ 25, 000 in unpaid child support and maintenance, and it based his ongoing child
    support obligation on          the 2010 information        he had   provided earlier.     The court awarded Harris
    45, 000 in attorney fees based on Shoemaker' s intransigence and bad faith, and it imposed
    sanctions of $9, 250 for Shoemaker' s failure to provide discovery.
    Shoemaker now appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    I.       JURISDICTION
    Shoemaker argues that the Kitsap County court lacked both personal and subject matter
    jurisdiction because neither the parties nor their son have lived in Washington since 2006.
    6
    43633 -7 -II
    Jurisdiction is        an   issue   of   law that      we review       de   novo.    Worden v. Smith, 
    178 Wn. App. 309
    , 328, 
    314 P. 3d 1125
     ( 2013);                    Cole v. Harveyland, LLC, 
    163 Wn. App. 199
    , 205, 
    258 P. 3d 70
    2011).       Jurisdiction is the power of a court to hear and determine a case and consists of personal
    and subject matter jurisdiction.. In re Marriage ofBuecking, 
    179 Wn.2d 438
    , 447, 
    316 P. 2d 999
    2013).
    Shoemaker possesses a Washington driver' s license and has alleged that Washington is
    his home         state    in his   petition and          subsequent pleadings.               Moreover, when the Kitsap County
    court dismissed the dissolution proceeding in 2008 for want of prosecution, Shoemaker moved to
    have the        petition reinstated.          Because Shoemaker sought its jurisdiction on multiple occasions,
    the   Kitsap County             court   had   personal      jurisdiction     over    him.     See Worden, 178 Wn. App. at 328
    party can consent to personal jurisdiction in an action by taking action that fairly invites the
    court to resolve a dispute between it and another party).
    The trial court found that it had personal jurisdiction over Harris because ( 1) the parties
    lived in Washington              during   their    marriage; (      2) Shoemaker continues to reside, or be a member of
    the armed forces stationed, in this state; and ( 3) the parties may have conceived a child while in
    Washington.              As the long -arm statute provides, such contacts submit a nonresident to the
    jurisdiction       of    Washington       courts.        RCW 4. 28. 185( 1)(       e), (   f). The court had personal jurisdiction
    over both parties.
    A   court    has    subject matter          jurisdiction if it   can     hear    a particular class of case.   Buecking,
    
    179 Wn.2d at 448
    .    The Washington Constitution grants superior courts original jurisdiction in
    divorce      matters.           WASH. CONST.             article   IV, §     6;    Buecking, 
    179 Wn.2d at
    449 -50.   RCW
    26. 09. 030 adds a residency requirement to this exercise of jurisdiction by requiring a party who
    files   a   dissolution     petition     to   be ( 1)    a resident of   this     state, (   2) a member of the armed forces who
    7
    43633 -7 -II
    is stationed in this state, or ( 3) married to a party who is a resident of this state or a member of
    the armed forces and stationed in this state. In re Marriage ofRobinson, 
    159 Wn. App. 162
    , 168,
    
    248 P. 3d 532
     ( 2010) ( quoting RCW 26. 09. 030);                  see Buecking, 
    179 Wn.2d at 452
     ( residency
    requirement of RCW 26. 09. 030 must be met for court to exercise jurisdiction over dissolution
    proceeding).        Shoemaker is a resident of this state as well as a member of the armed forces
    stationed in Washington. The court had subject matter jurisdiction over these proceedings.
    Shoemaker makes several references to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and
    Enforcement Act ( UCCJEA) in challenging the                   court' s   jurisdiction. As the Supreme Court has
    explained,
    The UCCJEA arose out of a conference of states in an attempt to deal with the
    problems of competing jurisdictions entering conflicting interstate child custody
    orders, forum shopping, and the drawn out and complex child custody legal .
    proceedings often encountered by parties where multiple states are involved. It is,
    in a sense, a pact among states limiting the circumstances under which one court
    may modify the orders of another.
    In   re   Custody   of A. C., 
    165 Wn.2d 568
    , 574, 
    200 P. 3d 689
     ( 2009) ( footnote             omitted) (   internal
    citations omitted).        The UCCJEA is not at issue because no other state is attempting to modify
    the orders issued in this case.
    Shoemaker also refers to the divisible divorce doctrine, which recognizes that divorce
    proceedings .     typically    contain   two     components:       the dissolution of the marital status and the
    adjudication of         the " incidences"   of   the   marriage.    Kelly v. Kelly, 
    759 N.W.2d 721
    , 723 ( N.D.
    2009); 20 KENNETH WEBER, WASHINGTON PRACTICE:                               FAMILY AND COMMUNITY PROPERTY
    LAW, § 30. 4,      at   16 ( 1997).   Each component has a separate jurisdictional foundation. Kelly, 759
    N.W.2d      at   723.    While a court need not have personal jurisdiction over both parties to dissolve
    the marriage, it must have personal jurisdiction over both parties to adjudicate matters of
    8
    43633 -7 -II
    alimony or spousal support, the division of property, the right to child custody, and an award of
    child support.       Kelly, 759 N.W.2d           at   723; 20 WASH. PRAC., § 30. 4,        at   16. Other states need not
    recognize orders adjudicating the latter matters where the entering court lacked personal
    jurisdiction    over one      of   the   parties.      Conlon v. Schweiker, 
    537 F. Supp. 158
    , 162 ( N.D. Tex.
    1982).    The divisible divorce doctrine is not relevant here because the trial court had personal
    jurisdiction over both parties.
    II.       PARENTING PLAN AND CHILD SUPPORT
    Shoemaker next challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the parenting plan
    restrictions as well as the award of child support.
    We begin our review by observing that trial court decisions in dissolution proceedings
    will seldom be changed on appeal. In re Marriage of Booth, 
    114 Wn.2d 772
    , 776, 
    791 P. 2d 519
    1990).    Such decisions will be upheld unless they demonstrate a manifest abuse of discretion. In
    re Marriage ofLandry, 
    103 Wn.2d 807
    , 809, 
    699 P. 2d 214
     ( 1985).
    In   fashioning      a   parenting          plan,    the court' s discretion must be guided by several
    provisions      of   the   Parenting     Act   of     1987 (   ch.   26. 09 RCW),   including    RCW 26. 09. 191.   In re
    Marriage of Katare, 
    175 Wn.2d 23
    , 35 -36, 
    283 P. 3d 546
     ( 2012), cent. denied, 
    133 S. Ct. 889
    2013).    This statute requires a court to limit a parent' s residential time with the child if that
    parent has engaged in physical, sexual, or emotional abuse of the child or if that parent' s conduct
    may have       an adverse effect on        the   child' s     best interests. RCW 26. 09. 191( 1), (   2), ( 3).
    The trial court found that restrictions on Shoemaker' s residential time with his son were
    required because Shoemaker had engaged in the following conduct:
    9
    43633 -7 -II
    Willful abandonment that continues for an extended period of time or substantial
    refusal to perform parenting functions[.]
    Physical, sexual or a pattern of emotional abuse of a child.
    A   history   of acts of     domestic   violence ...     or an assault or sexual assault which
    causes grievous bodily harm or the fear of such harm.
    CP   at   713 (   paragraph   2. 1).    The court also found that Shoemaker' s conduct might adversely
    affect the child' s best interests because the following factors existed:
    Neglect or substantial nonperformance of parenting functions.
    A long -term emotional or physical impairment which interferes with the
    performance of parenting functions [.]
    The absence or substantial impairment of emotional ties between the parent and
    child.
    The abusive use of conflict by the parent which creates the danger of serious
    damage to the child' s psychological development.
    CP   at   713 (   paragraph   2. 2).    Based on these findings, the trial court ruled that it would allow
    Shoemaker only          written communication with        E. S.,   subject to Harris' s monitoring.
    In its memorandum decision, the court stated that the testimony and record provided
    ample evidence to support its findings in paragraphs 2. 1 and 2. 2 of the parenting plan. The court
    described some of the evidence demonstrating why Shoemaker' s residential time with his
    son would be completely restrained:
    On October 29, 2010, a temporary parenting plan was issued, establishing [ Harris]
    as the primary residential parent for the minor child.   On January 20, 2011,
    Shoemaker' s] Air Force Commander issued him a no contact order, forbidding
    him from contacting  either [ Harris] or the minor child. On February 11, 2011,
    Shoemaker]        was held in contempt of court after he violated the visitation
    provisions of the temporary parenting plan in effect at that time and withheld the
    minor     child   from [ Harris].       Because of this violation, .a temporary restraining
    order also was entered against him, proscribing any contact between [ Shoemaker]
    and his child and between [ Shoemaker] and [ Harris].   On February 15, 2011, a
    second of [Shoemaker' s] Air Force Commanders issued a determination finding
    10
    43633 -7 -II
    that an investigation of [ Shoemaker' s]                   conduct met         the criteria    for both "   child
    emotional            maltreatment"       and "   adult   emotional       maltreatment." [        Shoemaker' s]
    behavior, exhibited during the course of this case and in his personal interactions
    with [      Harris]      and     minor    child,   reflects     a   pattern    of   harmful,   malicious,    and
    abusive decisions.
    CPat708.
    Shoemaker now argues that the evidence is insufficient to support the court' s restrictions
    on    his   contact with          E. S.    We cannot review this argument, however, because Shoemaker has not
    provided a transcript of Harris' s testimony. A party seeking review has the burden of perfecting
    the   record so         that this     court    has before it    all of    the evidence      relevant   to the issue.    Dash Point
    Village Assoc.              v.   Exxon    Corp.,    
    86 Wn. App. 596
    , 612, 
    937 P. 2d 1148
     ( 1997).           Even though the
    entire record          is    not required, "     those portions of the verbatim report of proceedings necessary to
    present      the issues           presented     on review"      must     be     provided   to the   court.    Dash .Point Village
    Assoc., 86 Wn.               App.   at    612 ( quoting RAP 9. 2( b)).          Harris' s testimony is essential to any review
    of    the trial        court' s     residential     restrictions.     Because Shoemaker has not met his burden of
    perfecting the record so that we may review his argument, we will not consider it further.
    Shoemaker also challenges the competency of the evidence supporting the child support
    order.      In its memorandum decision, the trial court noted that the proposed child support order
    mirrored         the   temporary          child support order.       There was no evidence that either party' s income
    had changed; Shoemaker had refused to comply with repeated discovery requests, as well as an
    order       to   compel,          that     sought    required    financial       information.       The court therefore listed
    Shoemaker' s income according to the 2010 information he had provided for purposes of the
    temporary child support order.
    11
    43633 -7 -II
    RCW 26. 19. 071( 1)        provides   that "[ a] 11 income and resources of each parent' s household
    shall be disclosed and considered by the court when the court .determines the child support
    obligation of each parent."           If a parent fails to supply this information, the court must impute
    income to that        parent.     RCW 26. 19. 071( 6).    Given Shoemaker' s refusal to meet his statutory
    obligation and to comply with related discovery requests and court orders, we see no abuse of
    discretion in the trial court' s decision to calculate child support based on the initial income
    information he provided.
    III.      DUE PROCESS
    Shoemaker argues further that he was denied his due process right to a fair trial for
    several reasons. Here again, the lack of a complete record hampers our analysis.
    Several of Shoemaker' s complaints stem from the trial court' s decision to proceed with
    Harris' s testimony in his absence. As the clerk' s minutes illustrate, Shoemaker did not notify the
    court    that   he   would   be   absent on   March 5, the first   day   of   trial.    His mother informed the court
    after the hearing began that Shoemaker did not have permission to leave his base for court
    hearings.       When Harris' s attorney responded that Shoemaker had been returned from Japan so
    that he could appear at trial, his mother told the court that he was being taken to a clinic for heart
    tests.    Because Shoemaker had provided no verification that a medical condition prevented his
    appearance, the court allowed Harris to testify.
    The clerk' s minutes reveal that the following day, Shoemaker' s mother informed the
    court    that Shoemaker       was under medical stress and confined             to     quarters   for 48 hours. The court
    eventually spoke to a sergeant who confirmed that Shoemaker had been confined to quarters for
    48 hours.        The court allowed Harris to complete her testimony but continued further trial
    proceedings to March 14.
    12
    43633 -7 -II
    When Shoemaker appeared on March 14, he complained that he had not had a chance to
    review       Harris'   s   exhibits.       The court responded that a copy of her exhibits had been left for
    Shoemaker in court; Shoemaker' s mother apparently had refused to take them. Harris' s attorney
    added that Shoemaker could have attended trial on March 5 because he went to the clinic that
    evening and was not quarantined until the following morning. The court declined to continue the
    trial   so   that Shoemaker       could review            Harris'   s exhibits.       When Shoemaker later complained that
    he had no opportunity to cross examine Harris, the court responded that he had waived that right
    by failing to        appear at   trial     on   March 5.        The court refused to continue the trial a second time so
    that Shoemaker could obtain a transcript of Harris' s testimony.
    Shoemaker appears to argue that the trial court' s refusal to stay the proceedings violated
    his   rights under         the Servicemembers            Civil Relief Act ( SCRA), 50                App.   U. S. C. A. §§ 501- 597( b).
    The SCRA entitles a member of the United States armed services to a mandatory stay of court
    proceedings when the servicemember is precluded from participating in such proceedings due to
    active military duty. In re Marriage ofHerridge, 
    169 Wn. App. 290
    , 292, 
    279 P. 3d 956
     ( 2012);
    50      App.    U.S. C. A. §      522;          see    also    RCW      38. 42. 060 (      providing similar relief under the
    Washington Service Members' Civil Relief Act). Where a servicemember has received notice of
    an action       or   proceeding,       a    stay may be          obtained     at "   any   stage     before final judgment,"      either
    upon        application by      the   servicemember"             or   by   the   court " on   its   own motion."       Herridge, 169
    Wn.     App.    at   297 -98 ( quoting 50             App.    USCA § 522( b)( 1)).         Here, Shoemaker' s absence was due
    to illness rather than active duty. Moreover, he never filed the application necessary to trigger
    13
    43633 -7 -II
    relief under     the SCRA.    3 See Herridge, 169 Wn. App. at 299 ( application for stay must contain
    specific information, and servicemember must comply expressly with the statute to be entitled to
    stay).
    Instead of applying the SCRA, we review the trial court' s refusal to continue the trial for
    abuse of   discretion. See In       re   Welfare of R. H., 
    176 Wn. App. 419
    ,   424, 
    309 P. 3d 620
     ( 2013) (   we
    review   denial     of continuance       for   abuse       of   discretion).      We see no abuse of discretion in the
    court' s decision to allow the trial to proceed on March 5 in the wake of Shoemaker' s unexcused
    absence.       Nor do we see any abuse of discretion in the trial court' s refusal to continue trial
    beyond the initial        continuance    to March 14.           Shoemaker never sought to review Harris' s exhibits
    before trial resumed on March 14, and he never sought to obtain a transcript of her testimony.
    See In   re    Marriage of Olson, 
    69 Wn. App. 621
    , 626, 
    850 P. 2d 527
     ( 1993) ( pro se litigants are
    held to same standards and rules of procedure as attorneys).
    Shoemaker also claims that he was denied the right to present evidence of Harris' s
    wrongdoing       during    trial. The trial court sustained most of Harris' s objections to this evidence on
    the basis that it was either hearsay or irrelevant, but the court did allow Shoemaker and his
    mother    to    testify   about   some   instances     of       Harris'   s   alleged   misconduct.   We see no abuse of
    discretion in the     court' s    limitation   of   this   evidence.          See Cole, 
    163 Wn. App. at 213
     ( we review
    evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion).
    3
    Shoemaker also appears to challenge entry of the 2011 contempt order and the 2010 parenting
    plan as violations ofhis SCRA rights. Shoemaker filed a letter from his commanding officer on
    February 11, 2011, stating that Shoemaker' s military service precluded his appearance at the
    contempt hearing scheduled that day. When Shoemaker did not call in to court as promised, the
    court issued the pending contempt order and warrant. The record does not show that Shoemaker
    sought relief under         the SCRA in 2010.              His attempts to seek relief under the SCRA from the
    2010 and 2011 orders are untimely as well as lacking in merit.
    14
    43633 -7 -II
    Shoemaker         also alleges      that the trial court      was   biased    against   him. The court is biased
    against a person' s case if it has a preconceived adverse opinion with reference to it, without just
    grounds       or   before   sufficient      knowledge.        In re Borchert, 
    57 Wn.2d 719
    , 722, 
    359 P. 2d 789
    1961).       We presume that the trial court performed its functions without bias or prejudice.
    Borchert, 
    57 Wn. 2d at 722
    ; In    re   Welfare of R. S. G.,   
    174 Wn. App. 410
    , 430, 
    299 P. 3d 26
     ( 2013).
    The fact that the trial judge               ruled   adversely does      not   demonstrate      prejudice.   See Rhinehart v.
    Seattle Times Co., 
    51 Wn. App. 561
    , 579 -80, 
    754 P. 2d 1243
     ( 1998) ( judge' s prior adverse
    rulings      did   not   demonstrate necessary            prejudice   for   recusal    of   judge).   We see no evidence of
    bias or prejudice on the record before us.
    Finally, Shoemaker complains that he did not have a jury trial and that his mother was
    not   allowed       to   help     him   present     his   case.    Trial by jury is dispensed with in dissolution
    proceedings.         RCW 26. 09. 010( 1).           And, while Shoemaker has the right to practice law on his
    own behalf, he may not transfer this right to be a self -
    represented litigant to another person who
    is   not a   lawyer. State        v.   Hunt, 
    75 Wn. App. 795
    , 807, 
    880 P. 2d 96
     ( 1994).         We see no error in
    this regard and no violation of Shoemaker' s right to a fair trial.
    IV.          MOTION TO SUPPLEMENT RECORD
    Shoemaker      seeks      to   supplement      the   record with    the    following     materials:   handwritten
    statements from Harris regarding crimes she has committed; affidavits from witnesses at the
    hearing       of   August 19, 2011,           concerning the trial court' s prejudice and conflict of interest;
    affidavits from a witness who attended trial on March 5 and 6 concerning judicial bad faith, bias
    and denial of due process; documents erroneously shredded by the superior court clerks; and trial
    15
    43633 -7 -II
    court records inadvertently omitted from the original designation of clerk' s papers due to
    extreme confusion. "            4 Appellant' s Br. at 49.
    We may direct that additional evidence on the merits of the case be taken before deciding
    a case on review if all of the following factors are satisfied:
    1)    additional proof of           facts is      needed   to   fairly   resolve    the    issues      on review, ( 2)
    the decision                   reviewed, ( 3)   it
    the    additional evidence would             probably       change                         being
    is    equitable   to    excuse a            s failure to     present      the   evidence     to the trial    court, ( 4)
    party'
    the remedy available to a party through postjudgment motions in the trial court is
    inadequate        or   unnecessarily          expensive, (   5) the appellate court remedy of granting
    a     new     trial    is inadequate          or    unnecessarily     expensive,           and (   6)    it would be
    inequitable to decide the case solely on the evidence already taken in the trial
    court.
    RAP 9. 11(       a);   Mission Ins. Co.            v.   Guarantee Ins. Co.,          
    37 Wn. App. 695
    , 702, 
    683 P. 2d 215
    1984).         We reject Shoemaker' s contention that the documents he seeks to admit satisfy these
    factors, and we deny his motion to supplement the record.
    V.        FEES, COSTS, AND SANCTIONS
    Harris       argues    that   she   is   entitled   to   an award of      fees,   costs, and sanctions on appeal.          She
    describes the behavior that justifies such an award as including Shoemaker' s filing of a series of
    incomprehensible            and perjurious          documents"     that has greatly increased her attorney fees and
    resulted in this matter still being active almost 24 months from the filing of the notice of appeal.
    Resp' t' s Br. at 3.
    Harris contends that she is entitled to fees on appeal on several grounds, including CR 11
    and    RAP 18. 7.'       CR 11 sanctions are awarded by the superior court and not the appellate court.
    Bldg Industry Ass 'n            of Wash.      v.   McCarthy,       
    152 Wn. App. 720
    , 750, 
    218 P. 3d 196
     ( 2009). While
    CR 11         sanctions     were        formerly        available    on    appeal    under     RAP      18. 7,      a 1994 amendment
    4
    This court accepted two supplemental designations of clerk' s papers from Shoemaker.
    16
    43633 -7 -II
    eliminated the reference to CR 11 in RAP 18. 7 and provided for sanctions on appeal only under
    RAP 18. 9. Bldg Industry Ass 'n, 152 Wn. App. at 750.
    RAP 18. 9 allows an appellate court to impose sanctions against a party who uses the rules
    for the purposes of delay, files a frivolous appeal, or fails to comply with the rules. RAP 18. 9( a);
    3 K. TEGLAND, WASHINGTON PRACTICE: RULES PRACTICE, RAP 18. 9, at 505. (7th                                  ed.   2011).   We
    have already denied Harris' s motion for sanctions under RAP 18. 9( a) and RAP 10. 2 based on
    Shoemaker' s delay in perfecting this appeal and filing his opening brief, and we decline to award
    sanctions on        this   basis   now.    We also decline to award sanctions based on a frivolous appeal,
    which is an appeal that presents no debatable issues on which reasonable minds might differ and
    which     is   so   totally devoid     of merit   that there    is    no   reasonable   possibility   of reversal.    Reid v.
    Dalton, 
    124 Wn. App. 113
    , 128, 
    100 P. 3d 349
     ( 2004). For the same reason, we decline to award
    fees under RCW 4. 84. 185, which provides for an award of fees and costs to the prevailing party
    when the action            is frivolous.   Protect the Peninsula' s Future v. City of Port Angeles, 
    175 Wn. App. 201
    , 218, 
    304 P. 3d 914
    ,          review    denied, 
    178 Wn.2d 1022
     ( 2013).              Finally, we decline to
    award sanctions under RAP 18. 9 based on Shoemaker' s failure to comply with the appellate
    rules.
    We also decline to sanction Shoemaker for contempt under RCW 7. 21. 020, and we deny
    Harris' s request for fees based on financial need under RCW 26. 09. 140 because she has not filed
    the necessary        affidavit.     See RAP 18. 1(   c) (   fees under RCW 26. 09. 140 are awarded only when the
    requesting party files an affidavit of financial need no later than 10 days before a case is
    considered).
    17
    43633 -7 -II
    Nonetheless,      we   may         award     Harris    fees    based       on    Shoemaker'     s        intransigence.
    Intransigence includes obstruction and foot dragging, filing repeated unnecessary motions, or
    making a proceeding unduly difficult and costly. In re Marriage ofBobbitt, 
    135 Wn. App. 8
    , 30,
    
    144 P. 3d 306
     ( 2006).      If one spouse' s intransigence caused the spouse seeking a fee award to
    require additional     legal fees, the financial      resources of     the    spouse     seeking fees   are   irrelevant.     In
    re   Marriage of Morrow, 
    53 Wn. App. 579
    , 590, 
    770 P. 2d 197
     ( 1989).            The trial court awarded
    Harris fees based on Shoemaker' s intransigence and bad faith and explained its award as follows:
    Shoemaker] filed       against [     Harris] numerous idle claims in state and federal
    courts outside of Kitsap County; these claims all were dismissed as devoid of
    merit, but cost [ Harris] an exorbitant amount of attorney fees far above and
    beyond what otherwise would have been accrued to resolve this dissolution
    action.       Additionally, [       Shoemaker]        filed   manifold        irrelevant,   nonsensical
    documents,      motions,        and discovery requests necessitating attention from and
    responses
    by [   Harris'  attorney. This court finds that [ Shoemaker' s] behaviors
    s]
    reflected in the record doubtlessly constitute intransigence and an award of
    attorney fees to [ Harris] as requested is appropriate.
    CP at 709- 10.
    Shoemaker' s intransigent behavior has continued in this court, as his actions in perfecting
    this   appeal   have caused Harris to incur            substantial     fees   and   costs.     Before the briefing was
    completed,        Shoemaker     filed       several   nonmeritorious          motions,       including        a     motion    for
    discretionary     review   in the Supreme Court, that           required attention        from Harris'   s    attorney:      This
    behavior is a basis for awarding fees on appeal separate from RAP 18. 9 and RCW 26. 09. 140. In
    re   Marriage of Mattson, 
    95 Wn. App. 592
    , 605, 
    976 P. 2d 157
     ( 1999).           We award Harris fees on
    appeal   based    on   Shoemaker'    s    intransigence.   Based on this ruling, we need not award statutory
    attorney fees under RCW 4. 84. 080.
    18
    43633 -7 -II
    Shoemaker requests an award of fees, costs, and sanctions for the first time in his reply
    brief. This request comes too late. See Hawkins v. Diel, 
    166 Wn. App. 1
    , 13 n.2, 
    269 P. 3d 1049
    2011) (   fee request must be raised in opening brief under RAP 18. 1).
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2. 06. 040, it is so ordered.
    We concur:
    19