Michelangelo Borrello v. Chandra Long ( 2018 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    In the Matter of the Marriage of          )
    )     No. 77630-4-I
    CHANDRA LONG,                             )
    )     DIVISION ONE                   _
    Respondent,        )                                    ~
    )
    and                                 )     PUBLISHED OPINION
    MICHELANGELO BORRELLO,                    )                                     ,~,
    Petitioner         )     FILED July 9, 2018              1~0
    LEACH, J.   —    Michelangelo Borrello appeals the trial court’s decisions
    requiring the relocation of the parties’ nine-year-old daughter, A., from Italy to
    Washington state before a permanent parenting plan has become final.           His
    challenge requires resolution of the relationship between an emergency order
    entered by the Court of Rome under article 11 of the 1996 Hague Convention on
    Jurisdiction, Applicable Law, Recognition, Enforcement and Co-operation in
    Respect of Parental Responsibility and Measures for the Protection of Children
    (1996 Hague Convention),1 article 5 of this treaty, Washington’s Uniform Child
    1  Hague Convention on Jurisdiction, Applicable Law, Recognition,
    Enforcement and Co-operation in Respect of Parental Responsibility and
    Measures for the Protection of Children, Oct. 19, 1996, 35 I.L.M. 1391,
    https://assets/hcch net/docs/fi 6ebd3d-f398-489 I -bf47-1 1 0866e 171 d4. pdf.
    .
    No. 77630-4-I I 2
    Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA)2, and a later order entered
    by a Washington court asserting jurisdiction under the UCCJEA.
    The trial court properly exercised jurisdiction under the UCCJEA.
    Because its order temporarily relocating A. addressed “the measures required by
    the situation,” it satisfied the requirements of the 1996 Hague Convention, and
    the Court of Rome’s emergency order lapsed.             The order did not violate the
    doctrine of comity or RCW 26.09.197. We affirm.
    FACTS
    Borrello is an Italian citizen, and Chandra Long is a United States citizen
    who grew up in Everett, Washington. They married in the United States in 2008
    but later moved to Italy. A., their only child, was born in Italy in March 2009. In
    March 2011, Long brought A. to Washington. Borrello petitioned a Washington
    court under the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International
    Child Abduction (1980 Hague Convention)3 for A.’s return to Italy.             In August
    2011, the Washington court granted Borrello’s request and ordered that A. return
    to Italy.
    2 Ch. 26.27 RCW.
    ~ Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction,
    Oct.      25,     1980,    T.I.A.S.   No.    11670,     1343     U.N.T.S.     49,
    https:I/assets. hcch netldocs/e86d9f72-dc8d-46f3-b3bf-e 102911 c8532 pdf.
    .                                                  .
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    No. 77630-4~I I 3
    In December 2012, the Court of Rome approved the parties’ “non
    consensual separation” agreement.      The agreement stated that Borrello and
    Long would have shared custody of A. but A. would be placed with Long. It also
    permitted Long to transfer A.’s residence to Washington state and specified
    Borrello’s visitation rights and child support obligations. Long and A. moved from
    Italy to Everett, Washington, in September 2013. In April 2015, Borrello asked
    the Court of Rome to modify the agreement, claiming that Long prevented him
    from contacting and forming a relationship with A. The Court of Rome exercised
    jurisdiction in October2015.
    In November 2015, Long filed a petition for dissolution in Washington. In
    December, she appealed the Court of Rome’s decision to Italy’s highest court,
    the Court of Cassation, challenging its jurisdiction.   In February 2016, Long
    asked the Washington court to move forward with the dissolution proceedings,
    and Borrello asked the court to dismiss them. The Washington court stayed both
    requests pending the outcome of the Italian proceedings.
    In June 2016, A. returned to Italy for her summer visitation with Borrello.
    The Court of Rome then awarded Borrello temporary sole custody of A. to allow
    A. to live in Italy for the 2016-2017 school year pending the outcome of the Court
    of Cassation’s ruling. In February 2017, the Court of Cassation held that Italy
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    No. 77630-4-1/4
    lacked jurisdiction over Borrello’s request to modify the parties’ separation
    agreement.         Borrello later asked the Court of Rome to exercise emergency
    jurisdiction under article 11 of the 1996 Hague Convention.
    In June 2017, the Court of Rome closed the pending proceedings based
    on the Court of Cassation’s decision that it lacked jurisdiction but granted
    Borrello’s request that it take urgent measures.        It held that it was “absolutely
    necessary for [A.’s] interest” that she remain in Italy and continue her schooling
    based on a number of factors, including Long’s behavior suggesting that she was
    trying to make it difficult for Borrello to develop a relationship with A. It ordered
    that A. remain in Italy until “such time when the American court will be able to
    evaluate the array of elements indicated so far [and] may make any final decision
    attributable to it alone.”
    In July 2017, Long asked the Washington trial court to order A.’s return to
    Washington, to lift the stay on the dissolution proceedings, and to convert the
    parties’ 2012 separation agreement to a decree of dissolution, permanent
    parenting plan, and order of child support.          Long alleged that the court had
    jurisdiction under the UCCJEA. Borrello disagreed. He also petitioned the Civil
    Court of Milan to confirm A.’s sole custody with him and her continued residence
    in Italy.
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    No. 77630-4-lI 5
    In September 2017, a Washington state superior court commissioner
    found that Washington had jurisdiction to decide parenting issues involving A.
    under the UCCJEA, lifted the stay on the dissolution proceedings, denied
    Borrello’s motion to dismiss, and refused to order A.’s return to Washington. In
    October, the superior court granted Long’s request to revise the commissioner’s
    decision and ordered A.’s return to Washington state within two weeks.              In
    November, the court denied Borrello’s motion for reconsideration.
    Borrello asked this court for interlocutory review of the trial court decisions
    finding jurisdiction under the UCCJEA and ordering the return of A. The trial
    court denied his motion to stay the trial court proceedings pending appellate
    review. In December, this court stayed all trial court proceedings. In January
    2018, we granted discretionary review and extended the stay. Borrello appeals.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    An appellate court reviews de novo questions of law, including
    jurisdictional issues.4   It reviews temporary parenting plans for an abuse of
    discretion.5   “A trial court abuses its discretion when its order is manifestly
    unreasonable or based on untenable grounds.”6
    ~ In re Marriage of Tostado, 
    137 Wash. App. 136
    , 144, 
    151 P.3d 1060
    (2007).
    ~ In re Parentage of Jannot, 
    149 Wash. 2d 123
    , 128, 
    65 P.3d 664
    (2003).
    6 Wash. State Physicians Ins. Exch. & Ass’n v. Fisons Corp., 
    122 Wash. 2d 299
    , 339, 
    858 P.2d 1054
    (1993).
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    No. 77630-4-I /6
    ANALYSIS
    The Trial Court’s Order Was Not in Conflict with the 1996 Hague
    Convention
    Borrello asserts that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to order A.’s return
    from Italy until it entered a final parenting plan and the parties had exhausted
    their right to appellate review of it. He claims that article 11 and article 5 of the
    1996 Hague Convention require this result. We disagree.
    Both Italy and the United States are contracting states to the Hague
    Conference.7 Article 5 of the 1996 Hague Convention generally describes the
    authority of contracting states to make child custody decisions.          It gives the
    “Contracting State”8 of the child’s “habitual residence” jurisdiction to take
    protective measures:      “(1) The judicial or administrative authorities of the
    Contracting State of the habitual residence of the child have jurisdiction to take
    measures directed to the protection of the child’s person or property.”
    ~ Hague Conference Members, HAGUE CONF. ON PRIv. INT’L L.,
    https://www. hcch.net/en/states/hcch-members (last visited June 29, 2018).
    8 “Contracting State’ refers to a state which has consented to be bound
    by a convention, whether or not that Convention has entered into force for
    that State.” FAQ: What Is the Difference between Member, State Party
    and Contracting State?, HAGUE CONF. ON PRIv. INT’L L.,
    https://www. hcch net/en/instruments/conventions/specialized
    .
    sections/apostille/faqi (last visited June 29, 2018).
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    No. 77630-4-I I 7
    But article 11 provides that any contracting state where the child is located
    has jurisdiction to take protective measures “[i]n all cases of urgency”: “(1) In all
    cases of urgency, the authorities of any Contracting State in whose territory the
    child or property belonging to the child is present have jurisdiction to take any
    necessary measures of protection.”
    Article 11 also limits the duration of urgent protective measures taken
    under it: “(2) The measures taken under the preceding paragraph with regard to
    a child habitually resident in a Contracting State shall lapse as soon as the
    authorities which have jurisdiction under Articles 5 to 10 have taken the
    measures required by the situation.”
    In February 2017, the Court of Cassation held that the Italian courts did
    not have jurisdiction under article 5 to modify the parties’ parenting agreement:
    “[T]he fact that [A.] has been habitually residing in the US since 2013 is clearly
    reflected in the court records, therefore the Italian courts lack of jurisdiction is
    confirmed.”
    Borrello then asked the Court of Rome to exercise its authority under
    article 11 to impose urgent protective measures and prevent Long from returning
    A. to the United States.     The Court of Rome granted Borrello’s request.          It
    ordered that A. remain in Italy until “such time when the American court will be
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    No. 77630-4-I / 8
    able to evaluate the array of elements indicated so far” and “may make any final
    decision attributable to it alone.” Borrello claims that this provision limited the
    trial court’s authority under article 5 to decide for itself when it had “taken the
    measures required by the situation” as article 11 requires. Borrello misinterprets
    the Court of Rome’s authority under article II.
    Under article 11(2), a contracting state’s emergency measures “shall lapse
    as soon as the authorities which have jurisdiction under articles 5 to 10 have
    taken the measures required by the situation.” Both the Court of Cassation and
    the Court of Rome acknowledged that the United States is A.’s habitual
    residence and that the United States has jurisdiction under article 5.          As
    discussed below, the Washington superior court determined that it had
    jurisdiction under the UCCJEA. Thus, under article 11(2), when the trial court
    exercised its article 5 authority and issued its temporary order, the Court of
    Rome’s order lapsed.
    Borrello misinterprets the scope of article 11 authority when he claims that
    “the Court of Rome identified the ‘measures required by the situation’ that the
    Article 5 court must take.” Article 11 states that a court exercising emergency
    jurisdiction may take “any necessary measures of protection,” which lapse when
    an article 5 court has “taken the measures required by the situation.”9 Article 11
    ~ 1996 Hague Convention art. 11(1)-(2).
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    No. 77630-4-I / 9
    does not grant to that court the authority to define what measures taken by an
    article 5 court are those “required by the situation.” Borello cites no authority
    interpreting the 1996 Hague Convention to provide a court exercising emergency
    jurisdiction under article 11 to so limit the authority of a court exercising
    jurisdiction under article 5. He offers no persuasive reason why this court should
    interpret the 1996 Hague Convention this way.
    Article 5 gave Washington state, as the habitual residence of A., the
    authority to decide and take “the measures required by the situation,” including
    the authority to enter a temporary parenting plan. Article 11 did not limit this
    authority nor could the Court of Rome’s order.       The trial court’s temporary
    parenting plan and associated orders did not contravene the 1996 Hague
    Convention.
    Washinciton State Has Jurisdiction over A. under the UCCJEA
    Borrello claims that the UCCJEA did not provide the trial court with
    authority to enter a temporary parenting plan. In July 2017, when Long asked
    the Snohomish County Superior Court to order a temporary parenting plan and
    require A.’s return to Washington, the trial court exercised jurisdiction over A.
    under the UCCJEA. Borrello asserts that the trial court should not have looked to
    the UCCJEA to determine whether it had jurisdiction to enter temporary orders.
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    No. 77630~4-I /10
    He claims that because Italy and the United States are both contracting states to
    the 1996 Hague Convention, article 5 of the 1996 Hague Convention determines
    jurisdiction, not the UCCJEA.    Relatedly, he asserts that the trial court should
    have determined A. habitually resides in Italy within the meaning of article 5,   SO
    Washington does not have article 5 jurisdiction.       We address each of his
    arguments in turn.
    Article 5 of the 1996 Hague Convention resolves the general authority of
    two contracting states, the United States and Italy, to decide the parenting
    dispute between Long and Borrello. The Court of Cassation decided that the
    courts of the United States, and not Italy, had jurisdiction to decide this dispute
    because A. habitually resided in the United States. So Borrello’s claim that the
    trial court should have looked to article 5 instead of to the UCCJEA makes little
    sense. The same is true for his claim that A. habitually resided in Italy. But this
    does not resolve the authority of the courts of Washington state to resolve the
    custody issue. Borrello provides no authority to support the proposition that the
    1996 Hague Convention, rather than the UCCJEA, determines Washington
    State’s jurisdiction. Neither Washington case law nor the UCCJEA supports his
    position.
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    No. 77630-4-I / 11
    Washington courts look to the UCCJEA to determine their authority to
    decide a child custody dispute.1°         This includes making an initial custody
    determination, modifying a custody determination, or issuing a temporary
    emergency custody order. The petitioner has the burden to establish
    jurisdiction.~ Apart from his failed argument about the relationship of articles 5
    and 11, Borrello does not identify any legal authority questioning the UCCJEA as
    the legal authority for determining the trial court’s authority to act in this case.
    Borrello also contends that Long did not establish jurisdiction under the
    UCCJEA. But Long met her burden to establish jurisdiction in Washington.
    The UCCJEA defines an “initial determination” as “the first child custody
    determination concerning a particular child.”12 Here, the Court of Rome made
    the initial determination in 2012 when it approved the parties’ “non-consensual
    separation” agreement. The trial court’s order requiring A.’s temporary return to
    Washington state is therefore a modification of the original determination.            A
    Washington state court has jurisdiction to modify a child custody determination
    made by a court of another state or foreign country13 if (1) it has jurisdiction to
    10  In re Marriage of leronimakis, 
    66 Wash. App. 83
    , 90, 
    831 P.2d 172
    (1992)
    (referring to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act, the previous iteration of
    the UCCJEA); see ch. 26.27 RCW.
    1~ 
    leronimakis, 66 Wash. App. at 90
    .
    12 RCW 26.27.021(8).
    13 “A court of this state shall treat a foreign country as if it were a state of
    the United States for the purpose of applying Articles 1 and 2.” RCW 26.27.051.
    —11—
    No. 77630-4-I /12
    make an “initial custody determination” and (2) the court of the other state
    “determines it no longer has exclusive continuing jurisdiction   .   .   .   or a court of this
    state would be a more convenient forum.”14
    (1) [A Washington state court] has jurisdiction to make an initial
    child custody determination only if:
    (a) This state is the home state of the child on the date of the
    commencement of the proceeding, or was the home state of the
    child within six months before the commencement of the
    proceeding and the child is absent from this state but a parent or
    person acting as a parent continues to live in this state;
    (b) A court of another state does not have jurisdiction under (a)
    of this subsection, or a court of the home state of the child has
    declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that this state is the
    more appropriate forum under RCW 26.27.261 or 26.27.271, and:
    (i) The child and the child’s parents, or the child and at least one
    parent or a person acting as a parent, have a significant connection
    with this state other than mere physical presence; and
    (ii) Substantial evidence is available in this state concerning the
    child’s care, protection, training, and personal relationships;
    (c) All courts having jurisdiction under (a) of this subsection
    have declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that a court of
    this state is the more appropriate forum to determine the custody of
    the child under RCW 26.27.261 or 26.27.271; or
    (d) No court of any other state would have jurisdiction under the
    criteria specified in (a), (b), or (c) of this subsection.[15]
    “Home state’ means the state in which a child lived with a parent or a
    person acting as a parent for at least six consecutive months immediately before
    the commencement of a child custody proceeding.”16               Here, Long started
    modification proceedings when she filed a petition for dissolution in Washington
    14   RCW 26.27.221.
    15   RCW 26.27.201.
    16   RCW 26.27.021(7).
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    No. 77630-4-I /13
    state in November 2015. A. lived continuously with Long in Washington from
    September 2013 until June 2016.         Then A. went to Italy for her scheduled
    summer visitation with Borrello. The Court of Rome then ordered A. to remain in
    Italy with Borrello until the Court of Cassation issued its decision on whether the
    Italian courts had jurisdiction to modify the parties’ parenting plan.        So A.
    remained in Italy until the trial court ordered that she return to Long’s care in
    Washington by October 24, 2017. Because A. continuously lived with Long in
    Washington for more than two years before Long started the dissolution
    proceedings in 2015, Washington is A.’s “home state” under the UCCJEA.
    Further, no other state is A.’s home state. The Court of Cassation held
    that Italy lacked jurisdiction based on its finding that A. had habitually resided in
    the United States since 2013. In addition, both A. and Long have a significant
    connection with Washington. A. lived in Everett, Washington, from September
    2013 until June 2016.     Long was raised in Everett and has lived there since
    2013. In her motion to establish jurisdiction under the UCCJEA, Long identified
    substantial evidence of the care and protection A. receives in Washington:
    before October 2016 when the Court of Rome ordered that A. stay in Italy for the
    school year, A. had a number of friends at her elementary school where she
    attended kindergarten and first grade, she participated in weekly activities such
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    No. 77630-4-1/14
    as art class, her maternal grandparents lived four blocks away, and her
    pediatrician and dentist were located in Everett. Finally, no court of any other
    state could satisfy the UCCJEA requirements and exercise jurisdiction to make
    an initial child custody determination.     The trial court thus properly exercised
    jurisdiction under the UCCJEA.
    The Trial Court’s Order Does Not Contravene the Doctrine of Comity or
    RCW 26.09.197
    A.     The Doctrine of Comity
    Borrello claims that the trial court’s order temporarily relocating A. violates
    the doctrine of comity because it does not respect the Court of Rome’s order
    requiring that A. remain in Italy until an American court makes a final decision.
    This doctrine provides that “a court has discretion to ‘give effect to laws [and
    resulting judicial orders] of another jurisdiction out of deference and respect,
    considering the interests of each [jurisdiction].”17 “Orders ‘will be recognized and
    given force if it be found that they do not conflict with the local law, inflict an
    injustice on our own citizens, or violate the public policy of the state.”18
    17  MacKenzie v. Barthol, 
    142 Wash. App. 235
    , 240, 
    173 P.3d 980
    (2007)
    (alterations in original) (quoting Haberman v. Wash. Pub. Power Supply Sys.,
    
    109 Wash. 2d 107
    , 160-61, 
    744 P.2d 1032
    , 
    750 P.2d 254
    (1987)).
    18 
    MacKenzie, 142 Wash. App. at 240
    (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (quoting Reynolds v. Day, 
    79 Wash. 499
    , 506, 
    140 P. 681
    (1914)).
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    No. 77630-4-1/15
    The doctrine of comity does not apply here because the trial court was not
    recognizing or enforcing the Court of Rome’s order. In its original order, the trial
    court did “confirm[   ] registration” of the Court of Cassation and the Court of
    Rome’s orders.     But because the trial court had jurisdiction over A. under the
    UCCJEA and its orders were independent of the Court of Rome’s temporary
    order under article 11 of the 1996 Hague Convention and caused the Court of
    Rome’s order to lapse, it had no obligation to address the Court of Rome’s order
    and did not fail to respect it.     The trial court did not abuse its discretion by
    entering temporary orders.
    B.     RCW26.09.197
    Finally, Borrello relies on In re Marriage of Kovacs,19 in which our
    Supreme Court examined a previous version of RCW 26.09.19720 to support his
    claim that the trial court’s order ignores the considerations listed in this statute,
    The first factor in the former version of the statute interpreted in Kovacs
    required a trial court awarding temporary custody to consider “[w]hich parent has
    taken greater responsibility during the last twelve months for performing
    parenting functions relating to the daily needs of the child.”21 Borrello claims that
    because A. lived with him for more than 12 months leading up to the trial court’s
    19   
    121 Wash. 2d 795
    , 808-09, 
    854 P.2d 629
    (1993).
    20   Former RCW 26.09.197 (1987).
    21   Former RCW 26.09.197; 
    Kovacs, 121 Wash. 2d at 808
    .
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    No. 77630-4-1/16
    order temporarily relocating A. to Washington state, the trial court did not
    adequately consider the first factor and erred in issuing its orders.    Borrello’s
    argument does not take into consideration the legislature’s substantial
    amendment of RCW 26.09.197 in 2007. The amended statute states as follows:
    After considering the affidavit required by RCW 26.09.194(1) and
    other relevant evidence presented, the court shall make a
    temporary parenting plan that is in the best interest of the child. In
    making this determination, the court shall give particular
    consideration to:
    (1) The relative strength, nature, and stability of the child’s
    relationship with each parent; and
    (2) Which parenting arrangements will cause the least disruption
    to the child’s emotional stability while the action is pending.
    The court shall also consider the factors used to determine
    residential provisions in the permanent parenting plan.
    The trial court’s orders are consistent with the current version of the
    statute. The UCCJEA and the parties’ 2012 separation agreement state that A.
    has a stronger relationship with Long in Washington than with Borrello in Italy.
    Before living with Borrello during the 2016-2017 school year, A. lived with Long in
    Washington for almost three years. Washington is A.’s “home state” as defined
    by the UCCJEA, and Borrello’s and Long’s 2012 separation agreement stated
    that A. would be placed with Long.       The trial court modeled the temporary
    parenting plan after the parties’ 2012 separation agreement and thus designated
    Long as A.’s custodian. The trial court’s decision that A. live in her “home state”
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    No. 77630-4-I / 17
    with her custodial parent is not contrary to the statute and is not an abuse of
    discretion.
    CONCLUSION
    The trial court’s temporary orders do not contravene the 1996 Hague
    Convention, the rule of comity, or RCW 29.09.197. The trial court has jurisdiction
    under the UCCJEA. We affirm.
    WE CONCUR:
    4~f ~1
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