Court of Appeals Division III
State of Washington
Opinion Information Sheet
Docket Number: |
28640-1 |
Title of Case: |
Jamie Ruff v. Dennis A. Knickerbocker |
File Date: |
05/08/2012 |
SOURCE OF APPEAL
----------------
Appeal from Spokane Superior Court |
Docket No: | 08-3-01628-3 |
Judgment or order under review |
Date filed: | 10/27/2009 |
Judge signing: | Honorable Annette S Plese |
JUDGES
------
Authored by | Dennis J. Sweeney |
Concurring: | Teresa C. Kulik |
Dissenting: | Stephen M. Brown |
COUNSEL OF RECORD
-----------------
Counsel for Appellant(s) |
| Dennis Charles Cronin |
| Law Office of DC Cronin |
| 1212 N Washington St Ste 304 |
| Spokane, WA, 99201-2401 |
Counsel for Respondent(s) |
| Peter S Lineberger |
| Attorney at Law |
| 900 N Maple St Ste 102 |
| Spokane, WA, 99201-1807 |
No. 28640-1-III
Brown, J. (dissenting) ? In my view, the Spokane County Superior Court acted
properly in asserting jurisdiction under our facts and procedural history.
First, the 2002 Montana Temporary Interim Parenting Plan was designed to
remain in effect solely when Jamie Ruff resided in Shelby, Montana; the record
indisputably shows years of Washington residency including a substantial time
immediately before the 2008 dispute arose without the parties once resorting to the
Montana court. During the intervening time, the parties completely ignored,
abandoned, abated, and for all practical purposes treated the Montana case as a
nullity.
Second, when the 2008 dispute arose, Ms. Ruff initially applied for an
emergency order in the Spokane County. Immediately, the parties simultaneously
petitioned for parenting plans in Spokane County and then jointly applied to have their
petitions consolidated, submitting to Washington jurisdiction.
Third, by a November and December 2008 stipulation, the parties recited their
agreement for Washington jurisdiction and attached the Washington consolidation
No. 28640-1-III
Jamie Ruff v. Dennis Knickerbocker
order and the temporary residential, visitation, and child support orders for the Montana
court's consideration. The Montana case was dismissed in January 2009 evidencing
the Montana court's acceptance of the recited premises, its declination of jurisdiction,
and its deferral to Washington -- thus obviating the need for further communication
between the courts.
Fourth, ten months after Montana deferred to Washington jurisdiction, the
parties in October 2009 fully litigated their parenting issues in Spokane County without
mention of any jurisdictional dispute. Solely after he became dissatisfied with the
outcome of the Washington litigation did Dennis Knickerbocker raise his hyper
technical UCCJEA jurisdictional challenge in this appeal in a thinly veiled attempt to
relitigate the issues in a new forum; this is forum shopping at its worst.
Given our factual and procedural background, I disagree with Mr. Knickerbocker
that the UCCJEA presents any remaining jurisdictional impediment to the validity of the
Spokane County Superior Court orders. This is not a case where the parties are
dealing with conflicting child custody orders from competing jurisdictions, forum
shopping by Ms. Ruff, or complex child custody legal proceedings with multiple states
involved. In re Custody of A.C., 165 Wn.2d 568, 574, 200 P.3d 689 (2009). This is a
case of a Montana court deferring to a Washington court when dismissing its 2002
case after considering the parties' stipulation. Generally, stipulated facts are binding
on the parties and the court, but the court's legal determinations are not controlled by
2
No. 28640-1-III
Jamie Ruff v. Dennis Knickerbocker
such factual stipulations. Ross v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co., 132 Wn.2d 507, 523,
940 P.2d 252 (1997). While judicial estoppel, abandonment, laches, and waiver
principles may cry out for recognition after about 18 months of Washington litigation, in
my view, A.C. is both distinguishable and not applicable for the reasons given above.
Considering all, I would affirm. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
________________________________
Brown, J.
3
|