In the Matter of the Marriage of: Crystal Dawn Ballard & Scott Ballard ( 2024 )


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  •                                                                FILED
    OCTOBER 17, 2024
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    In the Matter of the Marriage of:             )        No. 39468-9-III
    )
    CRYSTAL DAWN BALLARD,                         )
    )
    Respondent,              )
    )
    and                             )        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    SCOTT BALLARD,                                )
    )
    Appellant.               )
    LAWRENCE-BERREY, C.J. — In this dissolution matter, Scott Ballard appeals the
    trial court’s parenting plan and property award. He argues the trial court lacked sufficient
    evidence to impose parental restrictions, erred by declining to consider whether the
    parties were in a committed intimate relationship (CIR) at the time Crystal Ballard
    purchased the family home, and erred when it adopted Ms. Ballard’s lay opinion of their
    home’s value. We disagree with his arguments and affirm.
    FACTS
    On January 8, 2022, Scott Ballard consumed so much vodka that he was unable to
    stand. Emergency personnel responded to the scene and eventually transported Mr.
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    Ballard to the hospital, where his blood-alcohol content (BAC) was 0.36 percent.1 In the
    wake of this incident, Mr. Ballard’s wife, Crystal Ballard, discovered alcohol bottles
    concealed throughout the Ballards’ home and in an outbuilding on the couple’s property.
    Ms. Ballard petitioned to dissolve the couple’s marriage.
    Relevant to this appeal, the Ballards at trial contested the following: (1) custody of
    their two-year-old son, (2) the character of their family home as a separate or community
    asset, and (3) the value of their home.
    Custody
    In her proposed parenting plan, Ms. Ballard sought primary residential placement
    of the Ballards’ son on the basis that Mr. Ballard suffered from long-term alcohol abuse
    that obstructed his ability to parent. Ms. Ballard further argued that Mr. Ballard’s
    alcoholism warranted the following parenting restrictions:
    • Substance abuse evaluation
    • Substance abuse therapy
    • Substance abuse testing
    • Prohibition against consuming alcohol
    • Supervision of parental visits.
    1
    By comparison, a BAC reading of 0.08 or higher within two hours of
    driving renders a person guilty of the crime of driving while under the influence.
    RCW 46.61.502(1)(a).
    2
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 9.
    Conversely, Mr. Ballard argued that his history as the child’s primary caregiver
    warranted awarding him primary residential placement. While Mr. Ballard conceded that
    he had abused alcohol on January 8, 2022 and for roughly one year prior, he
    characterized this abuse as an isolated interval that did not reflect a longer-term problem.
    Specifically, Mr. Ballard argued that his drinking during this period was attributable to
    marital stress and to grief over the death of his mother.
    Ultimately, the trial court awarded Ms. Ballard primary custody and imposed
    parenting restrictions on Mr. Ballard. When imposing its restrictions, the court cited not
    just the January 8, 2022 incident but indeed a pattern of incidents that suggested recurrent
    intoxication on Mr. Ballard’s part—incidents both preceding January 8, 2022 and
    subsequent to that date.
    Of the incidents cited, two derived from Mr. Ballard’s own testimony.
    Specifically, Mr. Ballard admitted that on consecutive nights, two months after the
    January 8, 2022 incident, he had consumed multiple shots of vodka.
    The balance of the incidents derived from Ms. Ballard’s testimony, which Mr.
    Ballard did not meaningfully contradict. Specifically, Ms. Ballard testified that Mr.
    Ballard had, variously: (1) cursed, with slurred speech, at Ms. Ballard’s daughter from
    another marriage, (2) become intoxicated and refused “about ten times” to complete his
    3
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    tax return, (3) left “huge food messes in the kitchen” late at night, (4) become so
    intoxicated that Ms. Ballard’s son from another marriage had needed to lift Mr. Ballard
    off the floor, and (5) become so intoxicated that Mr. Ballard had yelled at Ms. Ballard’s
    son—then an eighth grader—about not having sexual intercourse. Rep. of Proc. (RP) at
    213, 211. The first incident described above occurred seven months before January 8,
    2022.
    Finally, the trial court when imposing its parenting restrictions cited Mr. Ballard’s
    “very, very high” BAC on January 8, 2022—implying that this BAC was relevant to a
    finding of long-term alcohol abuse. RP at 381.
    Family home
    In her petition for dissolution, Ms. Ballard characterized the Ballards’ family
    home as separate property she had acquired before marriage. Supporting this contention
    was a tax affidavit indicating that Ms. Ballard had purchased the home from her parents
    in 2016, prior to the Ballards’ 2017 marriage.
    Mr. Ballard did not dispute that Ms. Ballard had purchased the home from her
    parents prior to the couple’s marriage. However, in his response to Ms. Ballard’s
    petition, Mr. Ballard disagreed with Ms. Ballard’s characterization of the couple’s real
    property, and instead argued that there was a “community interest in the [couple’s]
    home.” CP at 33.
    4
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    At trial, Mr. Ballard argued for the first time that the couple’s home had been
    purchased during a time when the Ballards were engaged in a CIR—an assertion that if
    true would render the home presumptive community property. Mr. Ballard offered this
    argument even though his previous attorney, at a pretrial hearing, had not corrected
    opposing counsel’s statement that Mr. Ballard was alleging only a community interest in
    the home, and not alleging a CIR.
    Ms. Ballard moved to exclude Mr. Ballard’s evidence of a CIR, arguing Mr.
    Ballard had waited too long to raise that issue, creating unfair surprise. The court granted
    Ms. Ballard’s motion, stating that, “We don’t do trial by surprise here.” RP at 101. The
    court further stated that “alleging a committed, intimate relationship is different than . . .
    alleging that there’s a community interest in a separate property home.” RP at 101.
    At the close of trial, the court awarded the family home, as separate property, to
    Ms. Ballard. However, the court also found that Mr. Ballard, an architect, had created a
    $10,000 community interest in the home by designing and implementing various
    renovations. The court further found that the Ballards had created a $16,457 community
    interest in the home through joint mortgage payments. The court awarded the home’s
    full community interest—$26,457—to Ms. Ballard, while compensating Mr. Ballard with
    full ownership of a $30,000 lot the community owned in the Bahamas.
    5
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    Home valuation
    Ms. Ballard valued the family home at $380,000. Ms. Ballard derived this figure
    from the property’s tax-assessed value of $340,000, adjusted upward to reflect unfinished
    improvements the community had administered to the home. However, because Mr.
    Ballard objected to the home’s tax-assessed value as hearsay, Ms. Ballard withdrew the
    exhibit containing the tax-assessed value. As a result, Ms. Ballard’s $380,000 valuation
    remained on the record with no context to support it besides Ms. Ballard’s descriptions of
    the home’s partly finished state. Ms. Ballard did not order an appraisal.
    Mr. Ballard, on the other hand, valued the family home at $500,000. Mr. Ballard
    derived this figure from his expertise as an architect, and from the fact that the home in
    its renovated condition had five bedrooms and three bathrooms, rather than the two
    bedrooms and one bathroom Mr. Ballard claimed the tax report reflected. Mr. Ballard
    also testified that he and Ms. Ballard, when discussing refinancing, had together assumed
    that the house was worth $500,000. Although Mr. Ballard ordered an appraisal, he
    ultimately did not offer the appraisal as evidence.
    In its oral ruling, the trial court concluded that “[n]either party really provided a
    basis for their assessments.” RP at 387-88. Nevertheless, the court adopted Ms.
    Ballard’s $380,000 valuation, finding this figure to be “a more appropriate assessment of
    the value of the home, particularly given the amount of credit card debt Ms. Ballard has
    6
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    assumed post separation in getting those bathrooms done, replacing the stairs on the deck
    and other trim work and different things.” RP at 388. The court also noted that
    photographs of the home, submitted as evidence, established that the house, as of the
    couple’s separation, clearly was not finished.
    Mr. Ballard timely appeals the court’s (1) parenting restrictions, (2) refusal to
    consider evidence of a CIR, and (3) valuation of the Ballards’ home.
    ANALYSIS
    PARENTING RESTRICTIONS
    Mr. Ballard argues the parenting restrictions the trial court imposed were improper
    where no evidence supported the conclusion that Mr. Ballard suffered from long-term
    alcohol abuse. We disagree.
    Standard of review
    This court reviews parenting plans for abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of
    Chandola, 
    180 Wn.2d 632
    , 642, 
    327 P.3d 644
     (2014). A trial court operates within its
    discretion where its findings derive from the factual record, its conclusions apply sound
    law, and its decisions are not manifestly unreasonable. In re Marriage of Bowen, 
    168 Wn. App. 581
    , 586-87, 
    279 P.3d 885
     (2012). Where a trial court in a family law matter
    enters findings of fact, those findings must derive from substantial evidence. In re
    Marriage of Rideout, 
    150 Wn.2d 337
    , 352, 
    77 P.3d 1174
     (2003). Substantial evidence is
    7
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    that quantum of evidence necessary to persuade a fair-minded person of the truth of the
    premise. In re Dependency of J.D.P., 17 Wn. App. 2d 744, 755, 
    487 P.3d 960
     (2021).
    Alcohol abuse
    A trial court may impose parenting restrictions where a child’s best interests
    are put at hazard by a parent’s “long-term impairment resulting from drug, alcohol, or
    other substance abuse that interferes with the performance of parenting functions.”
    RCW 26.09.191(3)(c). Courts should impose such restrictions only where “necessary to
    ‘protect the child from physical, mental, or emotional harm.’” Chandola, 180 Wn.2d at
    648 (quoting RCW 26.09.002). However, courts need not wait for such harm to accrue
    before intervening. Id. at 645.
    Here, Mr. Ballard argues the trial court should not have imposed restrictions under
    RCW 26.09.191(3)(c) because there was “no evidence whatsoever indicating that Scott
    ha[d] a long-term impairment from alcohol abuse.” Br. of Appellant at 19.
    Underpinning this contention is the assumption that Mr. Ballard’s alcohol-related
    incident on January 8, 2022 was merely an isolated occurrence.
    However, the trial court determined and this court agrees that sufficient evidence
    supported the finding that Mr. Ballard’s alcohol abuse was long-term. First, Ms.
    Ballard’s testimony recounted five or more occasions on which Mr. Ballard had
    exhibited drunken behavior, the earliest of which incidents occurred seven months before
    8
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    January 8, 2022. Moreover, Mr. Ballard himself testified that he drank multiple vodka
    shots on separate nights in March 2022—two months after the January 8, 2022 incident.
    Taken as a whole, this evidence suggests that Mr. Ballard drank heavily in the runup to
    January 8, 2022, and continued drinking after that date, despite suffering alcohol-related
    hospitalization. In other words, his consumption on January 8, 2022 was not an isolated
    occurrence.
    Second, the details surrounding Mr. Ballard’s hospitalization on January 8, 2022
    suggest that his drinking that day was not an isolated affair. Specifically, Mr. Ballard
    registered a BAC of 0.36 percent, which is more than four times the BAC threshold for
    being guilty of driving under the influence. This BAC alone suggests that Mr. Ballard’s
    body was accustomed to abusive drinking. Were his body not so accustomed, such a
    quantity of alcohol would likely have made it impossible for Mr. Ballard to maintain
    consciousness, interact with responding paramedics, and be led out of the house on his
    feet.
    Finally, the fact that Mr. Ballard, as of January 8, 2022, was concealing alcohol
    throughout the Ballard home and in outbuildings on the Ballard property suggests that his
    drinking had reached an advanced stage. Simply put, an individual on a one-day bender
    does not lay up stores of alcohol that he may avail himself of later.
    9
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    Because the evidence, taken as a whole, suggests that Mr. Ballard’s alcohol abuse
    was both (1) long-term, and (2) corrosive to his conduct, the trial court was justified in
    concluding that Mr. Ballard’s alcohol abuse posed a threat to his child’s best interests.
    As such, Mr. Ballard’s drinking warranted parenting restrictions. RCW 26.09.191(3)(c).
    While the evidence did not show that actual harm had befallen the Ballards’ son, the mere
    threat of such harm justified those restrictions. Chandola, 180 Wn.2d at 645.
    COMMITTED INTIMATE RELATIONSHIP
    Mr. Ballard argues the trial court erred where it refused to consider evidence of a
    CIR between him and his wife at the time she purchased the family’s home. We
    disagree.
    Standard of review
    Where a trial court refuses to consider the existence of a CIR, we review that
    decision for abuse of discretion. See In re Marriage of Neumiller, 
    183 Wn. App. 914
    ,
    920, 
    335 P.3d 1019
     (2014). This standard applies irrespective of whether we color the
    court’s decision as an evidentiary matter or as a matter of leave to amend pleadings.
    State v. Munguia, 
    107 Wn. App. 328
    , 334, 
    26 P.3d 1017
     (2001) (evidentiary matter);
    Neumiller, 
    183 Wn. App. at 920
     (leave to amend pleadings).
    10
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    Existence of CIR
    Just as property acquired during a marriage presumptively belongs to the marital
    community, property acquired during a CIR likewise belongs, presumptively, to both of
    the relationship’s parties. In re Committed Intimate Relationship of Muridan, 3 Wn. App.
    2d 44, 56, 
    413 P.3d 1072
     (2018). Where a party in a dissolution action alleges that a CIR
    predated the marriage, that party may raise the CIR issue as late as the day of trial.
    Neumiller, 
    183 Wn. App. at 918, 923
    . Notwithstanding this rule, a trial court may
    exclude otherwise admissible evidence where the evidence’s probative value “is
    substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.” ER 403.
    Here, Mr. Ballard argues the trial court should have allowed him to allege the
    existence of a CIR on the day of trial, even though his response to Ms. Ballard’s petition
    alleged only a community interest in the family home, and not a CIR. In support of his
    argument, Mr. Ballard relies almost exclusively on Neumiller, where this court held that a
    party to a dissolution action may allege a CIR as late as the day of trial. 
    183 Wn. App. at 918, 923
    .
    In many respects, Neumiller is analogous to the case at bar and would be
    controlling. In Neumiller, as in this case, the respondent spouse purchased what would
    become the family home while the couple was dating but before the couple married.
    
    183 Wn. App. at 917
    . The marriage dissolved, and in the runup to a dissolution trial, the
    11
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    respondent claimed the family home was separate property while the appellant claimed
    the house was community property. 
    Id. at 917-18
    . It was not until the day of trial that
    the appellant alleged the existence of a CIR that would potentially alter the character of
    the disputed property. 
    Id. at 918
    . The trial court refused to consider the existence of a
    CIR, concluding that the appellant had raised the issue “‘way too late in the game.’” 
    Id.
    We reversed, and held that a party in a dissolution action may allege the existence of a
    CIR as late as the day of trial. 
    Id. at 923
    .
    However, Neumiller is distinguishable on two bases. First, Mr. Ballard’s counsel
    at the hearing before trial stood silent while Ms. Ballard’s counsel stated on the record
    that she expected Mr. Ballard to allege only a community interest in the family home, and
    not to allege a CIR. Indeed, the trial court after counsel made this statement even asked
    Mr. Ballard’s attorney if she wished to respond, to which Mr. Ballard’s attorney replied,
    “No, Your Honor. I think the information I provided is sufficient.” RP at 88. By failing
    to correct Ms. Ballard’s expectation, Mr. Ballard’s attorney signaled to Ms. Ballard that
    she could reliably assume he would not allege a CIR.
    12
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    Second, we determined 2 in Neumiller that the wife’s late assertion of a CIR should
    not have surprised Mr. Neumiller. 
    Id.
     By contrast, the trial court here stated that Mr.
    Ballard’s late assertion of a CIR would surprise Ms. Ballard. This statement by the trial
    court amounts to a finding, and as such, we must defer to it. Zink v. City of Mesa, 17 Wn.
    App. 2d 701, 708, 
    487 P.3d 902
     (2021).
    Having determined that Mr. Ballard’s late assertion of a CIR would unfairly
    surprise Ms. Ballard, the trial court was justified, under ER 403, in excluding evidence of
    such a relationship.
    HOME VALUATION
    Mr. Ballard argues the trial court erred where it valued the Ballards’ home at
    $380,000 despite (1) Ms. Ballard offering no evidence supporting that value, and (2) Mr.
    Ballard, an architect, assigning a significantly higher value to the home. However, Mr.
    Ballard’s professional credentials did not obligate the trial court to adopt his valuation of
    the Ballards’ home. Because the value the court assigned to the home derived from
    available evidence, we affirm.
    2
    In Neumiller, the trial court concluded that amending a pleading could not be
    done at trial. 
    183 Wn. App. at 922
    . On that basis, we reversed. 
    Id.
     The Neumiller trial
    court did not make a finding whether the late amendment created an unfair surprise to
    Mr. Neumiller.
    13
    No. 39468-9-III
    Marr. of Ballard
    Standard of review
    Findings of fact supporting a division of marital property draw review under the
    substantial evidence standard. In re Marriage of Rockwell, 
    141 Wn. App. 235
    , 242, 
    170 P.3d 572
     (2007). Substantial evidence is that quantum of evidence necessary to persuade
    a fair-minded person of the truth of the premise. Dependency of J.D.P., 17 Wn. App. 2d
    at 755.
    Valuation
    Where parties to a marital dissolution assign conflicting values to an asset, the trial
    court “may adopt the value asserted by either party or any value in between the two.”
    Rockwell, 
    141 Wn. App. at 250
    . A party who testifies as to the value of their home has
    furnished admissible evidence as to that value, to which evidence the trier of fact may, in
    its discretion, assign appropriate weight. Worthington v. Worthington, 
    73 Wn.2d 759
    ,
    763, 
    440 P.2d 478
     (1968).
    Here, the trial court adopted the $380,000 home value Ms. Ballard proposed.
    Because Ms. Ballard proposed that value, the value was supported by at least some
    measure of evidence. 
    Id.
     Moreover, the value Ms. Ballard proposed and the trial court
    adopted plainly satisfied the Rockwell principle articulated above. 
    141 Wn. App. at 250
    .
    Further supporting the $380,000 valuation was testimony and photographic
    evidence establishing that the home improvements on which Mr. Ballard based his higher
    14
    No. 39468-9-111
    Marr. ofBallard
    valuation were, as of the date of separation, unfinished. Because the renovations were
    not finished, the trial court was justified in discounting Mr. Ballard's valuation even if
    Mr. Ballard's professional credentials might have bolstered his credibility. Mr. Ballard
    also effectively conceded that the home's tax-assessed value-reflecting its unimproved
    condition-was meaningfully less than the value he proposed.
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
    RCW 2.06.040.
    l ......,..,....."'~ C!,....._"'    , C~
    Lawrence-Berrey, C.J.                 1
    WE CONCUR:
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    Fearing,f                                 Cooney, J.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 39468-9

Filed Date: 10/17/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/17/2024