Marriage of Breen CA4/1 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 12/2/13 Marriage of Breen CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    In re the Marriage of NORMAN PAUL and
    DEBERAH L. BREEN.
    D062502
    NORMAN PAUL BREEN,
    Appellant,                                              (Super. Ct. No. D515906)
    v.
    DEBERAH L. BREEN,
    Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Lorna A. Alksne and Maureen F. Hallahan, Judges. Affirmed.
    Norman Paul Breen, in pro. per., for Appellant.
    Deberah L. Breen, in pro. per., for Respondent.
    The trial court entered a judgment denying a motion filed by Norman Paul Breen
    (Husband) to reduce the amount of spousal support payable to his former wife Deberah
    L. Breen (Wife) and a subsequent order granting in part Husband's motion to reduce the
    amount of spousal support payable to Wife. The court also awarded Wife attorney fees
    incurred in defending those motions. Husband appeals, contending the court abused its
    discretion in: (1) determining his current income; (2) setting spousal support at an amount
    greater than his current income allowed; and (3) awarding Wife attorney fees based on its
    erroneous determinations of his current income and without considering the effect of
    Wife's bankruptcy discharge of a debt owed her former attorney. We are not persuaded
    by Husband's contentions.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Husband and Wife married in 1975 and separated in 2009. At the time of their
    separation, they had one adult child and one 17-year-old child. In July 2009, the trial
    court awarded Wife temporary spousal support of $3,500 per month.1
    In November 2010, Husband filed an order to show cause (OSC), requesting his
    temporary spousal support obligation be reduced from $3,500 to $2,500, or less, per
    month. In support of his OSC, Husband filed an income and expense declaration (IED),
    stating that he was self-employed as an attorney, working as an independent contractor
    for a law firm, and attached photocopies of certain checks issued to him by that firm
    during the period September 13, 2010, through November 1, 2010. In January 2011,
    Husband filed another IED, stating he had last filed income tax returns for 2009 and
    setting forth his monthly income during 2010 on an attachment (showing income that
    1      Although the record on appeal does not contain a copy of Wife's petition for
    dissolution of marriage, we presume a dissolution petition was filed and resulted in the
    subsequent orders for temporary and permanent spousal support.
    2
    ranged from $7,481 to $19,773 per month). In March 2011, he filed another IED,
    restating the income information from his January IED and attaching copies of portions
    of his 2009 federal income tax return. In his trial brief, Husband discussed each of the
    Family Code2 section 4320 factors a court must consider in establishing spousal support.
    On March 11 and 17, 2011, the trial court (San Diego County Superior Court
    Judge Lorna A. Alksne) held an evidentiary hearing on Husband's OSC. On March 21,
    2011, the court heard closing arguments and stated its findings and order on the record.
    The court stated it had considered all the section 4320 factors. The parties' marital
    standard of living was $12,000 per month. The court found Husband had the ability to
    pay spousal support and was earning between $11,000 and $13,000 per month. It stated
    Husband "has very good marketable skills as a successful trial attorney." It ordered
    Husband to pay Wife spousal support of $3,500 per month. It also ordered him to pay
    Wife's attorney $5,000 in attorney fees at a rate of $500 per month. The court directed
    Wife's attorney to prepare the judgment and submit it to Husband for his signature. The
    court granted Wife's dissolution petition effective as of that date (i.e., March 21, 2011).
    The court's minutes reflect that the court granted the judgment of dissolution effective
    March 21, 2011.
    In June 2011, Husband filed a declaration in support of his proposed judgment,
    stating he and Wife's attorney could not agree on the form of judgment and submitting
    2      All statutory references are to the Family Code.
    3
    their respective versions of the judgment to the court for it to decide and sign. The record
    on appeal does not show any action taken by the court on that request during 2011.
    In February 2012, Husband filed a second OSC, requesting that his spousal
    support obligation be reduced from $3,500 per month. He asserted he was not able to pay
    more than $1,000 per month in spousal support. He stated his average monthly income
    during 2011 was $8,955.71, but was only $7,257.92 over the past six months because of
    reduced legal work. Husband also requested that the court choose one of the two
    versions of the 2011 judgment to sign and enter because no judgment had yet been
    entered. In support of his OSC, Husband filed an IED with an attachment stating his
    2011 income was $107,468.50 and itemizing his monthly income from August 2011
    through January 2012.
    Wife filed a responsive declaration, opposing Husband's OSC to modify spousal
    support and requesting an order directing him to pay the $3,000 amount remaining of the
    attorney fees awarded her in 2011. In April 2012, Husband filed a declaration stating his
    gross income in February 2012 was $4,389 and in March was $4,920.
    On April 11, 2012, the trial court (San Diego County Superior Court Judge
    Maureen F. Hallahan) held a hearing on Husband's second OSC. The court chose Wife's
    version of the proposed 2011 judgment with one modification (regarding the amount of
    the spousal support arrearages) and stated it would enter that judgment. Husband stated
    he did not take an appeal from the court's action in 2011 because there was no "actual
    judgment entered yet." He therefore requested the court enter that judgment as of April
    11, 2012, rather than nunc pro tunc to allow him to appeal that judgment. The court
    4
    stated it was entering the judgment, which was taken and put on the record on March 21,
    2011.3 It informed Husband that his "rights are your rights with respect to an appeal. I
    can't advise you on that."
    On the issue of spousal support, the court found there had been a significant
    change of circumstances regarding Husband's earnings. Rather than considering the
    matter on a month-to-month basis, the court considered the matter overall and found all
    of the court's findings in 2011 to be the same except for Husband's earnings. The court
    looked at Husband's earnings for the prior year (i.e., 2011), which were about $9,000 per
    month. The court reduced Husband's spousal support obligation from $3,500 to $2,800
    per month. The court then continued the hearing for consideration of the remaining
    issues.
    On May 29, 2012, the trial court resumed the hearing and determined that
    Husband's spousal support arrears obligation to Wife was $28,832.52 as of April 30,
    2012, found Husband still owed Wife $3,000 for attorney fees from the 2011 award, and
    awarded Wife an additional $1,500 for attorney fees. The court found the total net
    amount that Husband owed Wife was $39,560.86.
    On June 12, 2012, the court issued written findings and an order after hearing
    (First Order), setting forth its findings and order from the April 11, 2012, hearing. In
    reducing Husband's spousal support obligation to $2,800 per month, the court stated it
    3      The court's minutes state: "[Husband's] motion for the Entry of Judgment is
    granted in part. The Court enters the judgment today (nunc pro tunc to 3/21/11) with
    the exception of the arrears amount (through 2/28/11)."
    5
    had considered the section 4320 factors and found his average monthly income during
    2011 was $9,000 per month for work as an attorney and $300 per month from the sale of
    dolls. The First Order also stated: "4. The Court enters the Judgment submitted to Court
    by [Wife's] former counsel . . . with the exception of Section 13[,] which shall be
    amended in regards to the amount of spousal support arrears through February 28,
    2011[,] to read '$16,030.21' and Section 13 shall state that these arrears shall be
    considered a debt in the division between the parties."4
    Also on June 12, 2012, the court issued written findings and an order after hearing
    (Second Order), setting forth its findings and order from the May 29, 2012, hearing.
    On August 8, 2012, Husband filed a notice of appeal appealing:
    "1. Judgment after court trial, which Judgment may have been
    entered after a hearing on April 11, 2012, and which Judgment was
    modified or amended after a hearing on May 29, 2012. . . .
    "2. Orders made at a hearing on April 11, 2012, and as recited in
    [the First Order]. . . .
    "3. Orders made at a hearing on May 29, 2012, and as recited in [the
    Second Order]. . . ."5
    4      The record on appeal does not contain any separate document entitled "Judgment,"
    signed and entered by the trial court.
    5      We deny Wife's request to augment the record on appeal with a report of a special
    master that recommended certain divisions of the parties' property and debts in their
    marital dissolution proceeding.
    6
    DISCUSSION
    I
    Modification of Spousal Support Generally
    "[A]n order for spousal support must be based on the facts and circumstances
    existing at the time the order is made." (In re Marriage of Sinks (1988) 
    204 Cal. App. 3d 586
    , 592.) On filing of a motion or OSC, a trial court may modify an order for spousal
    support. (§ 3651, subds. (a), (c); In re Marriage of Tydlaska (2003) 
    114 Cal. App. 4th 572
    , 575.) "Modification of a spousal support order may be made only on a showing of a
    material change in circumstances after the last order." (Tydlaska, at p. 575.) "The
    moving party bears the burden of establishing a material change of circumstances since
    the last order was made in order to obtain modification of the spousal support order.
    [Citations.] In determining whether a change of circumstances has occurred, the trial
    court is required to reconsider the same standards and criteria set forth in . . . section 4320
    it considered in making the initial long-term order at the time of judgment and any
    subsequent modification order." (In re Marriage of Stephenson (1995) 
    39 Cal. App. 4th 71
    , 77-78, fn. omitted (Stephenson).) Section 4320 factors include the extent to which
    each party's earning capacity is sufficient to maintain the standard of living established
    during the marriage, taking into account the supported party's marketable skills and
    periods of unemployment; the supporting party's ability to pay spousal support; the
    parties' respective needs, obligations and assets, including their separate property; their
    ages and health; the duration of the marriage; and the supported spouse's ability to engage
    in gainful employment. (§ 4320, subds. (a)-(h); Stephenson, at p. 78.) The court must
    7
    also consider the "balance of the hardships" (§ 4320, subd. (k)) to the parties and "[a]ny
    other factors [it] determines are just and equitable." (Id., subd. (n).) "Furthermore, the
    court does not have discretion to ignore any relevant circumstance enumerated in the
    statute. To the contrary, the trial judge must both recognize and apply each applicable
    statutory factor in setting spousal support. [Citations.] Failure to do so is reversible
    error." (In re Marriage of Cheriton (2001) 
    92 Cal. App. 4th 269
    , 304.)
    "The trial court has broad discretion to decide whether to modify a spousal support
    order. [Citation.] On appeal, we review the trial court's modification decision for abuse
    of discretion. An abuse of discretion is shown only when, ' ". . . after calm and careful
    reflection upon the entire matter, it can fairly be said that no judge would reasonably
    make the same order under the same circumstances. [Citation.]" ' " (In re Marriage of
    Tydlaska, supra, 114 Cal.App.4th at p. 575.)
    II
    First OSC to Modify Spousal Support
    Husband contends the trial court abused its discretion in denying his OSC
    requesting that his spousal support obligation be reduced from $3,500 per month to
    $2,500, or less, per month.6 He argues the court erred in determining his current income
    6      As a preliminary matter, it is not entirely clear, based on the record on appeal, that
    Husband timely appealed the decision denying his OSC. In general, a notice of appeal
    must be filed no later than 180 days after entry of judgment. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.104(a)(1)(C).) However, it is unclear in this case on what date the judgment denying
    Husband's OSC was entered. At the March 21, 2011, hearing, the trial court ordered
    Husband to pay Wife spousal support of $3,500 per month and directed Wife's attorney to
    prepare the judgment and submit it to Husband for his signature. Thereafter, the parties
    8
    and setting spousal support at an amount (i.e., $3,500 per month) greater than his current
    income allowed.
    Husband argues the trial court did not consider all of the section 4320 factors in
    setting the amount of his spousal support obligation. As discussed above, a trial court
    must consider all of the section 4320 factors when setting spousal support, whether
    initially or a subsequent modification thereof. (Stephenson, supra, 39 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 77-78; In re Marriage of Lynn (2002) 
    101 Cal. App. 4th 120
    , 132.) In this case, the
    trial court's minute order expressly states: "The Court has considered all the [section]
    4320 factors." Furthermore, the reporter's transcript for the March 21, 2011, hearing
    includes many references to section 4320 factors, showing the court considered those
    factors. At that hearing, the court stated:
    were unable to agree on the form of judgment and, in particular, the spousal support
    arrearages amount. No written judgment was entered in 2011. Instead, the matter was
    submitted to the trial court and at the April 11, 2012, hearing the court chose Wife's
    version of the proposed 2011 judgment with one modification (regarding the amount of
    the spousal support arrearages) and stated it would enter that judgment. The court's April
    11, 2012, minutes state: "[Husband's] motion for the Entry of Judgment is granted in
    part. The Court enters the judgment today (nunc pro tunc to 3/21/11) with the exception
    of the arrears amount (through 2/28/11)." Based on this record, it is unclear whether the
    judgment was entered on March 21, 2011, or April 11, 2012. However, because the 2011
    order directed Wife's attorney to prepare the form of judgment and submit it to Husband,
    that order presumably contemplated further action before a judgment was entered
    regarding Husband's spousal support obligation. That further action ultimately occurred
    on April 11, 2012, when the trial court chose Wife's version of the judgment, with
    modification regarding the spousal support arrearages amount. Therefore, for
    determining the timeliness of Husband's notice of appeal, the entry date of the judgment
    apparently was April 11, 2012, when the court chose the form of judgment and entered it,
    albeit nunc pro tunc to March 21, 2011. (Cf. In re Marriage of Taschen (2005) 
    134 Cal. App. 4th 681
    , 685-686.) Accordingly, we presume Husband's August 8, 2012, notice
    of appeal was timely filed within 180 days of the entry of judgment.
    9
    "[Y]ou're going to have my findings as of the trial, okay, under the
    [section] 4320 factors, which I am required to do. [¶] So under
    support the court has considered all the [section] 4320 factors. The
    court is going to find that this is an upper to upper middle class
    standard of living. $12,000 a month was the marital standard. [¶]
    The court, under [section] 4320[, subd.] (a), will find that . . . [¶]
    [Wife] does not have the earning capacity to maintain the marital
    standard of living. . . . [¶] The marketable skills. Obviously,
    [Husband] has very good marketable skills as a successful trial
    attorney. The wife in this case has music teacher skills and needs to
    continue to develop those skills. In this economy I'm not sure that
    music teacher is the most marketable skill at the moment, but you
    may want to see what other areas of teaching you can turn that into,
    and you might need to take some retraining. [¶] It's obvious that the
    wife's current earnings are impaired by her periods of unemployment
    that were more incurred during the marriage to full-time raise the
    children." (Italics added.)
    The court further found Husband "has the ability to pay spousal support. He has a current
    income which is between 11- and 13,000 dollars a month, and that's the court's finding."
    Based on this record, it is clear the trial court considered all of the section 4320
    factors. Although it did not cite and discuss each factor set forth in section 4320, it
    expressly discussed many of them. We conclude the court implicitly considered each of
    the section 4320 factors in setting the amount of his spousal support obligation. We
    presume the trial court's order is correct, "and all intendments and presumptions are
    indulged in favor of its correctness." (In re Marriage of Arceneaux (1990) 
    51 Cal. 3d 1130
    , 1133.) Husband does not cite any case or other authority showing the court was
    required to expressly cite and discuss each section 4320 factor on the record before it
    could make a determination of his spousal support obligation.
    Husband also asserts the trial court erred by finding his current income was
    $11,000 to $13,000 per month because he filed two IED's before the March 21, 2011,
    10
    hearing showing his average income was only about $9,000 per month. Husband's
    January 2011 IED stated he had last filed income tax returns for 2009 and set forth his
    monthly income during 2010 on an attachment (which showed income ranging from
    $7,481 to $19,773 per month). His March 2011 IED restated that income information
    and attached copies of portions of his 2009 federal income tax return. Schedule C to
    Husband's 2009 Form 1040 tax return shows his gross earnings from practicing law in
    2009 were $162,056, an average of about $13,500 per month.7 Furthermore, based on
    his attachment showing his 2010 income for each month, he earned an average income of
    about $11,300 per month during 2010 (per our mathematical calculations). There is
    substantial evidence for the trial court's finding that Husband's current income as of
    March 21, 2011, was between $11,000 and $13,000 per month. The court was not
    required to consider only his income for the past six months in determining his current
    income for purposes of setting spousal support. Rather, a court may reasonably consider
    a longer period of time in determining current income, especially as in this case when the
    supporting spouse's income has varied considerably over that longer period of time and
    the court determines the most recent monthly income amounts may not accurately reflect
    what that spouse's income will be in the future. In the circumstances of this case, we
    conclude the court did not abuse its discretion by considering Husband's 2010 income
    along with his monthly income for January and February 2011 (i.e., $10,323 and $7,364)
    7      Husband's IED's did not attach a copy of his entire Form 1040. We, like the trial
    court, must base Husband's gross earnings for 2009 on those portions provided, as well as
    any other relevant information pertaining to that year.
    11
    in determining his current income and ability to pay spousal support.8 To the extent
    Husband argues there was substantial evidence to support a finding his current income
    was only $9,000 per month at that time, he misconstrues and/or misapplies the applicable
    standard of review.
    The record supports an inference that the trial court considered whether to impute
    income to Wife when it discussed her employment history and chances of obtaining
    employment in her field (i.e., teaching music). The court stated Wife needs to continue
    to develop music teaching skills and may need some retraining in the current economy.
    The court also noted Wife's current earnings are impaired by her periods of
    unemployment during the marriage when she raised their children. We do not conclude
    the court abused its discretion by not imputing current income to Wife in determining
    Husband's spousal support obligation.
    Finally, Husband appears to argue the trial court abused its discretion by relying
    on a computer software program (i.e., DissoMaster) in determining the amount of his
    spousal support obligation. His entire argument on that issue is as follows: "Because the
    $3,500 figure had first been determined in July 2009 by using the DissoMaster guidelines
    for temporary support, the trial court could not rely on those guidelines when setting the
    amount of permanent support at trial in March 2011. (In re Marriage of Zywiciel (2000)
    
    83 Cal. App. 4th 1078
    , 1081-1082.)" However, in so arguing, Husband does not cite to the
    8     The record does not show the trial court relied on its prior findings in July 2009 in
    determining Husband's current income on March 21, 2011.
    12
    record on appeal showing the trial court did, in fact, rely on the DissoMaster guidelines.
    Furthermore, our independent review of the record does not support Husband's assertion.
    The fact the trial court set Husband's permanent spousal support obligation at the same
    amount as his temporary spousal support obligation (i.e., $3,500 per month) does not
    show it relied on the same computer program (i.e., DissoMaster) as it did in setting
    temporary spousal support. We conclude Husband has not carried his burden on appeal
    to show the trial court abused its discretion in denying his first OSC and setting his
    spousal support obligation at $3,500 per month.
    III
    Second OSC to Modify Spousal Support
    Husband contends the trial court abused its discretion by denying his second OSC
    requesting that his permanent spousal support obligation be reduced from $3,500 per
    month. He argues the court erred in determining his current income and setting spousal
    support at an amount (i.e., $2,800 per month) greater than his current income allowed.
    Husband argues the trial court did not consider all of the section 4320 factors in
    setting the amount of his spousal support obligation. As discussed above, a trial court
    must consider all of the section 4320 factors when setting spousal support, whether
    initially or a subsequent modification thereof. (Stephenson, supra, 39 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 77-78; In re Marriage of Lynn, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th at p. 132.) On June 12, 2012,
    the court issued the First Order, setting forth its findings and order from the April 11,
    2012 hearing. In reducing Husband's spousal support obligation from $3,500 to $2,800
    per month, the court expressly stated it had considered the section 4320 factors and found
    13
    his average monthly income during 2011 was $9,000 per month for work as an attorney
    and $300 per month from the sale of dolls. Based on this record, we infer the trial court
    considered all of the section 4320 factors. Although it did not cite and discuss each
    factor set forth in section 4320, it expressly discussed many of them. We conclude the
    court implicitly considered each of the section 4320 factors in setting the amount of his
    spousal support obligation. We presume the trial court's order is correct, "and all
    intendments and presumptions are indulged in favor of its correctness." (In re Marriage
    of Arceneaux, supra, 51 Cal.3d at p. 1133.) Husband does not cite any case or other
    authority showing the court was required to expressly cite and discuss each section 4320
    factor on the record before it could make a determination of his spousal support
    obligation.
    Husband also argues the trial court erred by finding his current income at the time
    of the April 11, 2012, hearing was about $9,000 per month as an independent contract
    attorney and $300 per month from the sale of dolls. However, in support of his second
    OSC filed February 23, 2012, Husband submitted an attachment stating that his 2011
    income from providing legal services was $107,468.50, which is about $8,900 per month.
    He also set forth the amounts of his legal services income for each of the six months
    immediately preceding that date (i.e., from August 2011 through January 2012), which
    ranged from $5,381.50 to $8,996.00.9 At the April 11, 2012, hearing, the trial court
    9     Five of those six months were in 2011 and were included in calculating his
    monthly income for 2011. His January 2012 income was $7,286.50.
    14
    stated: "I do find a lawyer, independent contractor, especially an independent contractor's
    income, varies from month to month, and you should not just take one month or, frankly,
    six months, but I am looking at what was earned last year [2011] with the hope and
    expectation [Husband] will continue to search out work, and there will be work for him.
    [¶] The court does [find] that [Husband's] self-employment income is $9,000 [per]
    month."
    We conclude there is substantial evidence for the trial court's finding that
    Husband's current income from providing legal services as of April 11, 2012, was about
    $9,000 per month. The court was not required to consider only his income for the past
    six months (which averaged about $7,258 per month) in determining his current income
    for purposes of setting spousal support. Rather, a court may reasonably consider a longer
    period of time in determining current income, especially as in this case when the
    supporting spouse's income has varied considerably over that longer period of time and
    the court determines the most recent monthly income amounts may not accurately reflect
    what that spouse's income will be in the future. In the circumstances of this case, we
    conclude the court did not abuse its discretion by considering all of Husband's 2011
    income along with his monthly income for January 2012 in determining his current
    income and ability to pay spousal support. To the extent Husband argues there was
    substantial evidence to support a finding his current income was only $7,200 or less per
    month at that time, he misconstrues and/or misapplies the applicable standard of review.
    The record supports an inference that the trial court considered whether to impute
    income to Wife. Wife's attorney stated that she had submitted 526 job applications over
    15
    the past year. Although she had held seven jobs during that period, she was "laid off
    right away" from each one because of the fickle retail industry. Her attorney stated Wife
    continued to look for work. He argued she could not pursue teaching without first
    becoming recertified in Arizona and was not in a financial position to do so at that time.
    The trial court stated it was disappointed Wife was not able to obtain work. The record
    therefore shows the court did, in fact, consider whether to impute income to Wife, but
    implicitly decided not to do so. Husband has not carried his burden on appeal to
    persuade us the court abused its discretion by not imputing current income to Wife in
    determining his spousal support obligation.
    Finally, Husband argues the trial court abused its discretion by relying on a
    computer software program (i.e., DissoMaster) in determining the amount of his spousal
    support obligation. "[I]t would constitute an abuse of discretion for the trial court simply
    to substitute the use of a computer program for the required consideration and appropriate
    weighing of the statutory factors." (In re Marriage of Olson (1993) 
    14 Cal. App. 4th 1
    , 9;
    see also In re Marriage of Zywiciel, supra, 83 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1081-1083.) Although
    neither the First Order nor the reporter's transcript for the April 11, 2012, hearing shows
    the court expressly considered the DissoMaster guidelines, the court's minutes for the
    April 11, 2012, hearing appear to support Husband's assertion that the court considered
    those guidelines. Attached to the April 11, 2012, minutes is a "DissoMaster Data Screen"
    dated April 11, 2012, showing proposed spousal support of $2,795. However, the fact
    the trial court considered the DissoMaster calculations in determining the amount of his
    spousal support does not show it "relied primarily, if not exclusively," on those
    16
    calculations. The fact the trial court reduced Husband's spousal support obligation to
    $2,800 per month, about the same amount as the DissoMaster program calculates for
    temporary spousal support obligation (i.e., $2,795 per month), does not show it relied
    primarily--or exclusively--on that computer program in determining his spousal support
    obligation.
    Because of the fluctuating nature of Husband's income, the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion by considering the DissoMaster calculation, together with all of the
    section 4320 factors, in determining his spousal support obligation. (In re Marriage of
    Olson, supra, 14 Cal.App.4th at p. 9 [case involving fluctuating income, trial court did
    not use "computer program as a substitute for judicial discretion or in lieu of considering
    the [statutory] factors"]; cf. In re Marriage of Schulze (1997) 
    60 Cal. App. 4th 519
    , 525-
    528 [case without fluctuating income, trial court abused its discretion by beginning with
    proposed DissoMaster amount and making adjustments thereto based on § 4320
    factors].)10 We conclude Husband has not carried his burden on appeal to show the trial
    court abused its discretion by denying his second OSC and setting his spousal support
    obligation at $2,800 per month.
    10     To the extent In re Marriage of Schulze, supra, 
    60 Cal. App. 4th 519
    , is factually
    similar to this case, we nevertheless are not persuaded by its reasoning and decline to
    apply its holding in the circumstances of this case.
    17
    IV
    $3,000 Remainder of Attorney Fees Award
    Husband contends the trial court erred by finding on May 29, 2012, that he still
    owed Wife $3,000 of the 2011 attorney fee award of $5,000 because the court initially
    erred in 2011 in determining his current income and in 2012 did not consider the effect of
    Wife's subsequent bankruptcy discharge of a debt owed her former attorney.
    A
    On March 21, 2011, the trial court ordered Husband to pay Wife's attorney (Neill
    Marangi) $5,000 in attorney fees at a rate of $500 per month. In opposition to Husband's
    second OSC in 2012, Wife filed a responsive declaration, requesting an order directing
    him to pay the unpaid $3,000 remaining amount of the $5,000 in attorney fees awarded
    her in 2011.
    In reply, Husband filed a declaration arguing the 2011 award had been based on
    attorney fees Wife owed her former attorney, Julia Garwood, and Wife's current attorney
    was supposed to forward his $500 monthly payments to Garwood. Husband asserted that
    when Wife filed for bankruptcy in August 2011 and had her debt to Garwood discharged,
    he believed "the basis on which the attorneys' fees had been awarded no longer existed.
    That is why I stopped making those payments after August 2011." Husband filed another
    declaration asserting that Wife agreed with Garwood that she would instruct Marangi to
    forward to Garwood the attorney fee installment payments made by Husband to pay off
    the balance of $4,400 still owed her. He asserted he made four monthly payments of
    $500, which he understood would be used to pay attorney fees Wife still owed Garwood.
    18
    He asserted that when Wife filed for bankruptcy in August 2011, she listed her attorney
    fee debt to Garwood on Schedule F, which Husband lodged with the court. Husband
    asserted that "[b]ecause [Wife] was going to be discharged from having to pay the subject
    fees to Attorney Garwood, I did not believe that there was any need for me to pay the
    remaining $3,000 in attorneys' fees. For that reason, I did not make any $500 monthly
    payments of attorneys' fees after August 2011. [Wife] was then discharged in her
    bankruptcy in December 2011, including a discharge of the fees she owed to Attorney
    Garwood." Husband lodged with the court a copy of the agreement between Wife and
    Garwood, in which Wife agreed to pay Garwood $4,400 out of the $5,000 in attorney
    fees awarded to Wife on March 21, 2011, by having Marangi, her current attorney,
    forward Husband's installment payments to her up to $4,400.
    In the Second Order, the trial court stated: "The Court GRANTS [Wife's] request
    to confirm that the remainder of the attorney fees and costs ordered to be paid by
    [Husband] at trial, totaling $3,000[,] is still owed by [Husband]."
    B
    Husband first argues the trial court abused its discretion by confirming he still
    owed Wife $3,000 of the original $5,000 attorney fee award in 2011 because that original
    award was based on the trial court's erroneous finding in 2011 that his current income
    was between $11,000 and $13,000 per month. However, because we concluded in
    section II above that the trial court did not err in determining Husband's current income
    on March 21, 2011, we likewise reject his challenge to the court's attorney fee award in
    2011 based on that same income determination.
    19
    Husband also argues the trial court abused its discretion by confirming he still
    owed Wife $3,000 out of the original $5,000 attorney fee award because Wife's debt to
    Garwood had been discharged in her 2011 bankruptcy. However, assuming arguendo
    Wife had a debt of $4,400 to Garwood, her former attorney, for past legal services and
    that debt was discharged in bankruptcy in December 2011, that bankruptcy discharge did
    not, either directly or indirectly, affect Husband's obligation to pay Wife's current
    attorney, Marangi, $500 monthly payments toward the remaining $3,000 of the original
    $5,000 amount ordered by the trial court. On March 21, 2011, the trial court ordered
    Husband to pay Wife's current attorney, Marangi, $5,000 in attorney fees at a rate of
    $500 per month. Therefore, Husband owed Wife and/or her current attorney, Marangi, a
    total of $5,000 in attorney fees. Wife's subsequent bankruptcy discharge in December
    2011 did not affect Husband's court-ordered obligation to pay attorney fees to her and/or
    her current attorney. There is nothing in the record on appeal to support Husband's
    apparent position that the 2011 order obligating him to pay $5,000 in attorney fees to
    Wife's current attorney, Marangi, had subsequently been modified by the court to require
    him to instead pay Wife's former attorney, Garwood, that amount (up to $4,400). To the
    extent Wife agreed with Garwood to have her current attorney forward Husband's $500
    monthly payments to Garwood toward her $4,400 debt to Garwood, that agreement did
    not amend, modify, or otherwise absolve Husband of his court-ordered obligation to pay
    Wife attorney fees of $5,000 at a rate of $500 per month. We conclude the trial court
    correctly confirmed in the Second Order that Husband still owed Wife's current attorney
    20
    $3,000 out of the original $5,000 attorney fee award. Husband does not cite any apposite
    case or other authority persuading us to reach a contrary conclusion.
    V
    $1,500 in New Attorney Fees
    Husband contends the trial court erred by awarding Wife $1,500 in attorney fees
    for opposing Husband's second OSC because it erred in determining his current income.
    In part III above, we concluded the trial court did not err in finding in April 2012 that
    Husband's current income from providing legal services was $9,000 per month.
    Therefore, to the extent Husband challenges the trial court's June 2012 award of $1,500
    in new attorney fees based on that purported erroneous income determination, we
    likewise reject that challenge. To the extent Husband challenges the $1,500 award of
    attorney fees based on insufficient evidence to support the court's implicit finding he had
    the ability to pay for legal representation by both parties (see, e.g., § 3557, subd. (a)), he
    misconstrues and/or misapplies the applicable standard of review by citing only evidence
    favorable to his position and arguing the court should have reached a contrary result.
    Based on our review of the record, we conclude there is substantial evidence to support
    the trial court's finding Husband had the ability to pay for legal representation by both
    parties. Therefore, the court did not abuse its discretion by ordering Husband to pay
    Wife $1,500 in attorney fees.
    21
    VI
    Spousal Support Arrearages
    Husband finally contends the trial court erred in the Second Order by finding he
    owed $28,832.52 in spousal support arrearages because the amount of his spousal support
    obligation resulted from an erroneous determinations of his current income in March
    2011 and April 2012. However, because we concluded in parts II and III above that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in March 2011 and April 2012 in determining
    Husband's current income on which its determinations of spousal support were
    predicated, in part, we likewise reject his challenge to its June 2012 calculation of spousal
    support arrearages based on those prior spousal support orders predicated, in part, on
    those current income determinations. Husband has not carried his burden on appeal to
    persuade us the trial court erred in determining the amount of his spousal support
    arrearages.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment and order are affirmed. Wife is entitled to costs on appeal.
    McDONALD, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
    McINTYRE, J.
    22