FILED
February 2,2016
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 re the Marriage of ) No. 32778-7-III
)
CYNTHIA SANCHEZ, )
)
Respondent, )
)
and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
STEVEN SANCHEZ, )
)
Appellant. )
LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. - Steven Sanchez appeals the trial court's failure to apply
equitable principles to reduce the harshness of back-owed child support. We construe the
trial court's ruling as a determination that it lacked authority to apply equitable principles
to reduce back-owed child support. Because this determination is an error of law, and the
error is not harmless under these facts, we reverse the trial court and remand for a new
hearing.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
Cynthia Sanchez and Steven Sanchez divorced through an uncontested dissolution
of marriage proceeding. In February 2002, the unrepresented parties entered a child
No. 32778-7-III
In re Marriage ofSanchez
support order that Mr. Sanchez would pay $609 total for two children in child support to
Ms. Sanchez directly each month. The order indicated that Mr. Sanchez (the obligor) has
a monthly income of$1,817 and Ms. Sanchez (the obligee) has a monthly income of
$263. The order also permitted each party to claim one of the two children as dependents
each year for tax purposes. Although the order allowed for periodic adjustments every
other year subject to income changes, neither of the parties ever sought judicial
modification of the original order.
Soon after entry of the order, Mr. Sanchez began paying Ms. Sanchez $400 per
month. According to Mr. Sanchez, the monthly support obligation was reduced by
agreement after the parties determined that Ms. Sanchez's monthly income was greater
than the $263 she represented. Mr. Sanchez had paid $400 per month during the
pendency of the divorce proceeding. And, rather than going to court to modify the child
support order, the parties informally agreed that the monthly support obligation would be
reduced to $400. According to Ms. Sanchez, however, Mr. Sanchez "badgered me from
the time we got divorced into believing that he was broke and could not afford to pay the
$609 in support" and "I never agreed that he would be relieved of his obligation to make
up the back support." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 91. In addition, the parties further
informally modified the child support order by allowing Ms. Sanchez to claim both
children as deductions every year except one for child support purposes.
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The record contains multiple letters from Ms. Sanchez to Mr. Sanchez. In October
2004, Ms. Sanchez sent Mr. Sanchez a letter that addressed financial matters relating to
the divorce. In the letter, Ms. Sanchez stated, "I let you pay $400/mo child support when
the court order is about $625." CP at 45. She then'referenced a joint tax debt, and gave
Mr. Sanchez the following options: (1) "[You] take care of that tax debt so I can get on
with my life," or (2) "[I'll] revisit child support and go back to support enforcement to
get the back child support." CP at 45. Mr. Sanchez paid the tax debt and continued to
pay $400 per month in child support.
In April 2007, Ms. Sanchez requested that Mr. Sanchez pay more, and he began
paying $500 per month in child support. In a September 2010 letter, Ms. Sanchez
proposed that he refinance his home loan and pay a $40,000 lump sum for back child
support. According to Ms. Sanchez in that letter, "if we went to court, they'd make you
pay all the back support even though we've agreed/or you to pay less." CP at 108
(emphasis added). In April 2014, Ms. Sanchez again threatened to collect back support
regardless of her agreement with Mr. Sanchez.
In May 2014, Mr. Sanchez filed a motion seeking judicial determination that he
did not owe any back child support. Mr. Sanchez claimed he would have earlier filed a
motion to modify the 2002 child support decree and to reduce support payments if the
parties had not earlier reached an agreement to reduce the amount. In response to Mr.
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Sanchez's motion, Ms. Sanchez moved for a judgment on the back child support. Ms.
Sanchez's motion indicated that by this time Mr. Sanchez was $22,119 behind on child
support payments. The court commissioner issued an order that estopped Ms. Sanchez
from claiming back child support and modified the child support to $500 per month. Ms.
Sanchez moved for revision of the commissioner's ruling.
In August 2014, the trial court granted Ms. Sanchez's motion for revision. In
granting revision, the trial court ruled that because child support is for the benefit of the
children, that neither the parties nor the court could modify or grant equitable relief even
if the parties informally agreed to reduce child support. Specifically, the trial court
stated:
Number one. . . . This child support order ... was never modified. $609 a
month. Now he says he discovered soon thereafter that was wrong, and
they figured this out themselves, and it should have been less. . . . But
another basic tenet of child support is it is absolutely not the obligee
parent's right to give up or compromise child support. She had no right.
She had no right to tell him you can pay less ... , [I]fthere was a bad here,
they both participated in this. . .. It was not her right to relinquish. So
that's number two.
Number three, there is the well established rule that periodic
adjustments are not self-executing. . . . You don't just agree to them and do
them. You have to do the modified order, have the court approve it.
Number four, I think he owes the difference between what the order
said and what he paid. . .. However, he gets credit for what he paid, and
that's different than the compromising amount. ... So do that math.
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Subtract [the items l he paid beyond his support obligation] from his past
due obligation.
CP at 147-49.
The court commissioner and the trial court based their respective decisions on
affidavits rather than live testimony. Mr. Sanchez appeals.
ANALYSIS
This appeal presents a conflict between two Washington policies: (I) judicial
oversight over setting support obligations to protect unrepresented children, and
(2) amelioration of the harshness of a judgment for back child support when the support
obligor detrimentally relied on actions or promises of the obligee. Ms. Sanchez seeks to
enforce the 2002 judgment requiring payment of $609 per month and to gain entry of a
judgment for the difference between the ordered amount and the amount actually paid by
Mr. Sanchez since 2002. Mr. Sanchez has consistently argued to the court commissioner,
the trial court, and this court that the doctrines of laches and equitable estoppel should be
applied to reduce the harshness of his back-owed child support obligation.
"A custodial parent has no personal interest in the support funds collected and
expended on behalf of his or her child, but rather acts as trustee for the child ~ s benefit."
1 Inits ruling, the trial court specified the items for which Mr. Sanchez was to
receive credit. The trial court overlooked the substantial tax benefits Ms. Sanchez
received by claiming both children, rather than only one, as deductions on her tax returns.
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Hartman v. Smith, 100 Wn.2d 766,768,674 P.2d 176 (1984) (citing Ditmar v. Ditmar,
48 Wn.2d 373, 374, 293 P.2d 759 (1956». "'A child's custodian receives support money
as a trustee and not in his or her own right.'" In re Marriage o/Watkins, 42 Wn. App.
371,373, 710 P.2d 819 (1985) (quoting Fuqua v. Fuqua, 88 Wn.2d 100, 105,558 P.2d
801 (1977». "For this reason, we have held agreements between parents regarding
modification of prospective support invalid as against public policy." Hartman, 100
Wn.2d at 768 (alteration in original) (citing Ditmar, 48 Wn.2d at 374); see Watkins, 42
Wn. App. at 373-74. Although Mr. Sanchez testified to an agreement to reduce the level
of child support, he correctly does not seek to enforce any agreement.
Generally, child support payments become vested judgments as the installments
become due. Hartman, 100 Wn.2d at 768. Money paid to the residential parent for past-
due support serves to reimburse the residential parent for monies actually expended. Id.
The accumulated child support payments may not be retrospectively modified. Id.
RCW 26.09.170(l)(a) provides, in part, that:
the provisions of any decree respecting ... support may be modified ... [0]nly as
to installments accruing subsequent to the petition for modification or motion for
adjustment ....
Despite RCW 26.09. 170(1)(a), Washington courts will apply traditional equitable
principles to mitigate the harshness of claims for back child support if it will not work an
injustice to the residential parent or the children. In re Marriage o/Shoemaker, 128
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Wn.2d 116, 122·23,904 P.2d 1150 (1995) (quoting Hartman, 100 Wn.2d at 769); see In
re Marriage a/Hunter, 52 Wn. App. 265, 270, 758 P.2d 1019 (1988); Watkins, 42 Wn.
App. at 374. The reason why back child support payments can be equitably reduced is
because the children, who are the beneficiaries of the support order, have already been
supported by the obligee parent; so collection of the debt is reimbursement for the obligee
parent,and any obligee can by words or actions forfeit the right of reimbursement.
When seeking to avoid past-due child support, the obligor typically relies on the
twin doctrines of laches and equitable estoppel. Although Mr. Sanchez mentions laches
in his appeal brief, he only provides argument based on equitable estoppel. This court
does not review issues not argued, briefed, or supported with citation to authority.
RAP 10.3(a)(6); Valente v. Bailey, 74 Wn.2d 857, 858,447 P.2d 589 (1968); Avellaneda
v. State, 167 Wn. App. 474,485 n.5, 273 P.3d 477 (2012) (quoting Escude v. King
County Pub. Hasp. Dist. No.2, 117 Wn. App. 183, 190 n.4, 69 P.3d 895 (2003».
Therefore, we address only equitable estoppeL Mr. Sanchez argues that the trial court
erred because it failed to analyze his arguments of equitable estoppel. We agree.
A party who asserts equitable estoppel must prove that: (1) the opposing party
asserted a statement or acted inconsistent with a claim afterward asserted, (2) the party
acted on the faith of that statement or act, and (3) the party would be injured if the
opposing party was allowed to contradict or repudiate the statement or act. Hunter, 52
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Wn. App. at 271 (quoting Roy v. Cunningham, 46 Wn. App. 409, 415, 731 P .2d 526
(1986)). A shorter version of equitable estoppel is a person by her acts or representations
causes another to change his position to his detriment. Id. "Equitable estoppel is not
favored, and the party who asserts it must prove every element with clear, cogent, and
convincing evidence." In re Marriage ofSanborn, 55 Wn. App. 124, 129, 777 P.2d 4
(1989). Decisions are very fact specific.
Mr. Sanchez presents evidence from which a trial court could apply equitable
estoppel. He offers testimony that shows inconsistent statements or actions by Ms.
Sanchez and his reliance on the conduct to his detriment. Mr. Sanchez asserts that the
parties discovered that Ms. Sanchez's reported income in her child support worksheet
was understated and the parties agreed to reduce the monthly obligation. Ms. Sanchez's
October 2004 letter implies a promise not to collect back-owed support if Mr. Sanchez
paid a mutual tax obligation, and Mr. Sanchez paid this obligation. Mr. Sanchez gave up
his right to claim one of his children as a tax deduction each year with one exception. He
forewent the opportunity to apply to the court for a reduction in the child support
obligation. Concerning the standard of proof, we have at least two documents sent by
Ms. Sanchez that verifies some sort of an agreement, arguably consistent with an
agreement to not assert back-owed support, not merely to delay assertion of that right, as
more recently argued by Ms. Sanchez. "On review, we ask whether the findings are
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supported by substantial evidence and whether the trial court has made an error of law."
In re Marriage a/Capetillo, 85 Wn. App. 311, 316, 932 P.2d 691 (1997). The trial court
here did not enter findings of fact and conclusions of law, beyond stating that its oral
ruling represented its findings. The trial court gave a credit to Mr. Sanchez for some
payments made other than child support, but did not base the credit on equitable estoppel
or laches. The trial court never mentioned equity, equitable estoppel, or laches in its oral
ruling; nor did it explain why it was denying equitable relief despite Mr. Sanchez and Ms.
Sanchez extensively briefing and arguing the equitable issues. Instead, the trial court
underscored that Ms. Sanchez could not relinquish her children's right to child support.
For these reasons, we construe the trial court's oral ruling as concluding it lacked
authority to provide equitable relief. Because trial courts have authority to apply
equitable principles to reduce the harshness of back-owed support, the trial court's legal
conclusion to the contrary is error.
On at least one occasion, this court has weighed the evidence as to equitable
estoppel anew when the trial court issued a ruling based only on affidavits rather than live
testimony. Hunter, 52 Wn. App. at 268. We decline to do so here. We believe the
parties are best served by the trial court first evaluating the evidence in light of the correct
legal principles.
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We reiterate that application of equitable principles is within the trial court's
discretion. The panoply of remedies is broad: reasonable relief under these facts might
be limited to an offset, it might additionally include a waiver of interest, or it might take
the form of complete relief as sought by Mr. Sanchez. Such relief could be anywhere in
between. Our reversal of the trial court is not based on the inadequacy of equitable relief.
Rather, it is based on our interpretation of the trial court's comments that it lacked
authority to provide equitable relief in this case. This was error, and the error was not
harmless.
Reversed and remanded.
A maj ority 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.
Lawrence-Berrey, J.
WE CONCUR:
Fearing, J.