   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
                                    DIVISION ONE

MARLOW TODD EGGUM,                                 No. 72194-1-1


                     Appellant,

          and


JANICE GRAY-EGGUM,                                 UNPUBLISHED OPINION

                     Respondent.                   FILED: October 3, 2016


       Verellen, C.J. — When Janice Gray-Eggum and Marlow Eggum dissolved

their marriage, the trial court entered a final decree dividing their marital property.

The final decree, however, apparently did not address certain videotapes portraying

Gray-Eggum taken during the time of the marriage. Ultimately, the court entered an

order on the use and ownership of the videotapes. The May 6, 2005 order expressly

states in part:

       Janice Gray is hereby awarded any and all property held by the
       Whatcom County Sheriff's Department that contains images of herself.



       Any and all property held by the Whatcom County Sheriff's Department
       which do not contain any images of Janice Gray are hereby awarded to
       Mr. Eggum.



       As to the website, the Court finds that it is also a mechanism for
       Mr. Eggum to continue to utilize the property and images in an
No. 72194-1-1/2



       inappropriate manner, and Mr. Eggum is permanently enjoined from
       using any image, the name, or anything else identified with Janice Gray
       without her express written consent on that website. Mr. Eggum may
       run a website, but if there is anything of Janice Gray on there, he is
       enjoined permanently on that, and can be sued for damages if he
       continues to do so.

       Mr. Eggum may not disseminate or distribute through any action of his
       own, any image of Janice Gray on the internet.

       Mr. Eggum is restrained and enjoined from doing all the things the
       Court has stated including facilitating and participating and/or
       encouraging any such actions by third parties.

       Mr. Eggum may not work with anyone else, interact with anyone else,
       or act in anyway with anyone else to do any of the things that he is
       prohibited by the Court from doing.[1]

       Nine years later, Eggum moved to vacate the order as void for lack of

jurisdiction. He alternatively argued he was entitled to relief from the order under CR

60(b)(1) (mistake), (4) (fraud), and (11) (any other reason justifying relief from the

operation of the judgment). The trial court denied Eggum's motion.

       Eggum appeals.

       The essence of Eggum's argument is that the May 6, 2005 order on its face

purports to regulate his activities in Canada.2 But on Eggum's motion to vacate, the

trial court recognized in its oral ruling and minute entry that the May 6, 2005 order

only limits his conduct in the state of Washington:

              The order is not void. The order is limited. The order's effect
       can only be limited to those areas that this court has jurisdiction over,
       and as you say, it's true that the court does not have jurisdiction over
       Canada, and I acknowledge that. Then this court's order is not effective


       1 Clerk's Papers (CP) at 9-10 (emphasis added).
     2 Eggum filed a reply brief that is untimely and fundamentally repeats his
argument that the trial court has no jurisdiction over his Canadian business.
No. 72194-1-1/3



       there. It's only effective as to you individually and within the [sjtate of
       Washington, and I hope that clarifies it as much as—and that's about as
       much as I can say to clarify it.[3]

       It is clear that in entering the May 6, 2005 order on the use and ownership of

the videotapes, the trial court had in personam jurisdiction over Eggum, along with

subject matter jurisdiction over the dissolution decree, which included the distribution

of the marital property.4 It is also clear there was no mistake or fraud in entering the

order. Finally, the circumstances here do not rise to the extraordinary circumstances

required to vacate an order under CR 60(b)(11).5

       It appears Eggum also challenges the trial court's failure to rule on his motion

to clarify the ruling denying his motion to vacate. But Eggum did not designate his

motion for clarification as part of the record on appeal. Therefore, the record is

inadequate for review of this motion.6


       3 Report of Proceedings (RP) (May 26, 2015) at 14; CP at 53 ("Court informed
parties that the order applies to the state of Washington and to Mr. Eggum's acts in
the state of Washington.'"): see Goodman v. Darden, Doman & Stafford Assocs.. 100
Wn.2d 476, 481, 670 P.2d 648 (1983) (where the trial court does not enter written
findings of fact and conclusions of law, the panel may look to the trial court's oral
opinion to clarify the basis for the trial court's ruling).
      4As Eggum concedes, "In paragraph 1.7 of the Petition for Dissolution, Eggum
admits (1) he currently lives in Washington state, (2) and had lived there while
married, and (3) they conceived a child in Washington state." Appellant's Br. at 13.
       5 Shum v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 63 Wn. App. 405, 408, 819 P.2d 399 (1991)
(vacation of judgment is not proper under CR 60(b)(11) absent extraordinary
circumstances relating to irregularities which are extraneous to the court's action or
implicate the regularity of its proceedings).
        6 Regardless, at the end of the hearing on his motion to vacate a void order,
Eggum acknowledged he was the prevailing party: "[Yjou've denied the order.
You're going to leave it in place, and I believe that at this point given what has been
said, I'm the prevailing party here because you said, stated three times that it has no
jurisdiction in Canada, and that was my only point that Iwanted to make is if the
petitioner in this case believes that somehow this order directs me to shut down my
No. 72194-1-1/4



      Accordingly, we affirm.




WE CONCUR:




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Canadian business, they're sorely mistaken." RP (May 26, 2015) at 19. Therefore,
to the extent the hearing on the motion to vacate does clarify the court's ruling, there
is no issue on appeal.
