Douglas S. v. Jennifer E. CA4/3 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 4/29/22 Douglas S. v. Jennifer E. CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    DOUGLAS S.
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                        G058880
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 10P001296)
    JENNIFER E.,                                                          OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Nathan
    T. Vu, Judge. Affirmed.
    Holstrom, Block & Parke and Ronald B. Funk for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Hellman Law Group and Lawrence Hellmann for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    INTRODUCTION
    The parties in this matter are parents to an adolescent son. Sadly, for most
    of his young life, they have been locked in conflict over paternity, custody, and child
    support for him. The record in this case is replete with evidence of not only antagonism
    between the parties, but outright acrimony, marring their relationship and corroding their
    ability to communicate, even for their own son’s benefit. Indeed, it seems the child has
    been used by both parents as a means for inflicting pain or grief on each other.
    The latest front in the parties’ battle opened up in December 2015, when
    both sides sought modifications of custody and support orders in the judgment rendered
    two years prior. The dispute managed to persist over four years; the debate over whose
    fault that was will likely continue long into the future. Suffice it to say, when the smoke
    cleared, the parents were ordered to share joint legal custody and the mother was awarded
    a modification to her monthly child support.
    During the four-year pendency of the present phase of litigation, the
    conflict between the parents escalated to the point where respondent was criminally
    charged with unlawfully placing a tracking device on appellant’s car, and a domestic
    violence restraining order was entered against him. The biggest question we must now
    answer is whether this finding of domestic violence should have barred respondent from
    sharing custody of his child. While we find the trial court erred in its procedural
    application of Family Code section 30441 to this issue, we do not feel the error requires
    reversal because its judgment was well within his discretion. The child in this matter has
    been harmed enough by his parents’ bellicosity. Depriving his father of legal custody
    would only harm the child further and would not be in his best interests.
    1      All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise indicated.
    2
    FACTS
    Appellant Jennifer E. and respondent Douglas S. are the parents of their 12-
    year-old son. The couple was never married. Douglas’ paternity was established by way
    of a judgment entered on February 11, 2013 when the son was nearly three years old.
    The judgment gave Jennifer and Douglas joint legal custody of the son; Jennifer had
    physical custody while Douglas had visitation. He also had to pay monthly child support
    of $1,325 to Jennifer.
    On December 4, 2015, Douglas filed a request for modification (RFO) of
    the judgment to change his custody and visitation (Douglas’ custody RFO).2 On
    December 16, 2015, Jennifer filed her own RFO to modify child support based on the
    child support guidelines (Jennifer’s initial child support RFO). She requested that the
    modification be made retroactive to the date of filing the RFO, and she also requested
    attorney fees. Both RFO’s were set to be heard by the family court on March 1, 2016.
    On March 1, 2016, the parties entered into a stipulation, later entered by the
    court, to amend the 2013 judgment. By this stipulation, the son’s birth certificate would
    be amended to reflect Douglas as the father, and to include Douglas’ last name as part of
    the son’s last name (which heretofore had consisted solely of Jennifer’s last name).
    Jennifer and Douglas were to work together to ensure the paperwork to make the change
    was submitted to the state by March 7, 2016. Additionally, the court cleaved Douglas’
    custody RFO into two parts, and laid one part to rest. It denied the request to modify the
    custody order, and made some slight adjustments to the logistics surrounding custodial
    transfers. But all financial issues raised in Douglas’ RFO as well as Jennifer’s child
    support RFO were continued to September 2017. Requests for attorney fees were to be
    heard upon resolution of the financial issues.
    2       The record for this case contains numerous RFO’s. It can be difficult to parse those which were
    resolved and those which remained pending, and thus, we assign each RFO a specific name for purposes of clarity.
    3
    The hearings on the financial issues were continued into early 2018. In the
    meantime, in December 2017, Jennifer filed an application for a domestic violence
    restraining order (DVRO) against Douglas. She claimed he had been stalking and
    harassing her, and had damaged her vehicle. She also discovered he had installed a
    global positioning system (GPS) tracking device on the bottom of her vehicle. Jennifer
    called police, who observed the device and took a report. A temporary restraining order
    against Douglas issued on December 14, 2017 pending a hearing, set for January 3, 2018.
    Douglas, who was self-represented by this time, sought and obtained a continuance of the
    hearing to March 6, 2018, which coincided with the continued hearing on the financial
    issues related to child support.
    Judge Carol Henson of the family law court presided at the hearing on
    March 6, 2018. Jennifer’s counsel had not been paid and was thus relieved, leaving her
    in propria persona. Jennifer wanted Judge Henson to continue the DVRO and rule on her
    request for attorney fees, which had been trailing since March 2016, so that she could
    hire new counsel. Jennifer accused Douglas and his counsel of utilizing stall tactics
    which ran up attorney fees she was unable to pay. In turn, Douglas’ counsel claimed he
    was unable to proceed on the child support matter because Jennifer failed to provide up-
    to-date income and expense statements and other documentation of her financial status.
    Judge Henson, trying carefully and commendably to balance the concerns of both sides,
    ordered the DVRO and financial issues continued to April 27, 2018, and also ordered
    Douglas to pay $3,500 to Jennifer’s new attorney for the DVRO. Regarding the financial
    issues, the judge ordered Jennifer to turn over her tax returns for 2017, any profit and loss
    or earning statements, and any other financial documents requested by Douglas seven
    days prior to the April hearing date. In the same timeframe, Douglas was to produce the
    same documents regarding income. The $3,500 awarded to Jennifer that date for attorney
    fees was subject to reallocation if evidence arose later indicating Jennifer’s income was
    higher than she claimed.
    4
    A little over two weeks after the March 6 hearing, on March 14, 2018,
    Jennifer filed two new RFO’s. In the first (the motion to quash), she sought attorney fees
    as well as orders quashing Douglas’ subpoenas for her financial records, including from
    two of her credit card issuers. She claimed she had already provided redacted statements
    to Douglas’ attorney, and that Douglas had not provided the required notice to consumer
    when seeking to subpoena her records.3 Additionally, she alleged Douglas was only
    trying to get such documents in order to stalk and harass her. In the other RFO (name
    change RFO), Jennifer again requested attorney fees, but also orders requiring disclosure
    of the son’s birth certificate files and for his last name to be changed back to Jennifer’s
    last name. She claimed Douglas had changed the child’s name in a way that did not
    conform with the court’s March 2016 order, and she sought attorney fees to compensate
    her for having to file the RFO. Jennifer had both new RFO’s calendared to be heard on
    the same date as the continued DVRO and financial issues hearing – April 27, 2018.
    On April 2, 2018, Jennifer calendared another new RFO for the April 27
    hearing date. In this application (Jennifer’s custody RFO), Jennifer requested sole legal
    custody of the son, and sought to change Douglas’ existing visitation schedule.
    So far as can be determined from the record, Judge Henson addressed five
    of the six pending RFO’s at the April 27, 2018 hearing: Douglas’ RFO, Jennifer’s initial
    child support RFO, Jennifer’s custody RFO, the DVRO, and the motion to quash. The
    first three were continued to June 19, 2018, for an evidentiary hearing, and Judge Henson
    denied the motion to quash. She was “troubled by” Jennifer’s “lack of cooperation” and
    failure to provide Douglas’ lawyer with evidence of income, and she “threaten[ed] to take
    all of the financial matters off calendar if the court’s orders [we]re not complied with.”
    The DVRO was continued to May 14, 2018, so that witnesses could testify and records
    could be produced by subpoenaed parties.
    3      The record contains proof of service of the notices to consumer, contradicting Jennifer’s assertion.
    5
    Jennifer failed to heed Judge Henson’s warnings. She did not turn over pay
    stubs and credit card statements. She claimed to have shredded pay stubs due to mold in
    her apartment, even though she had moved out of the mold-infested residence over a year
    earlier. The court by this time was of the opinion that Jennifer “actually thwarted”
    Douglas’ counsel’s attempts to obtain documentation necessary to make determinations
    on the financial issues, and felt her “credibility [wa]s really lacking in front of th[e]
    court[.]” Judge Henson took all financial matters off calendar without prejudice and told
    Jennifer she could refile her first child support RFO when she was willing to be
    “forthcoming with her information.” The DVRO was continued to July 11, 2018,
    because criminal charges had been filed against Douglas related to the GPS tracking
    incident and the court did not wish to hold the hearing prior to his arraignment. The
    DVRO hearing had to be continued several more times while the criminal case was
    working its way through the initial stages.
    After her initial child support RFO was taken off calendar, Jennifer filed
    another income and expense statement in September 2018, and attempted to raise the
    financial issues again. The trial court refused to restore those RFO’s to the calendar, and
    told her she would need to file a new request in order to address them. Additionally, the
    trial court deemed the March 2016 stipulation dispositive of the name change RFO.
    On May 28, 2019, through new counsel, Jennifer filed a new RFO for
    change in custody, visitation, child support and name, and attorney fees (the May 2019
    RFO). The hearing for this was originally set for July 29, 2019, but then put over to
    October 1, 2019. The May 2019 RFO resurrected old issues – Jennifer sought child
    support according to the guidelines with retroactivity to the date of her initial filing, as
    well as sole legal custody and the previously requested change to the son’s name.
    With Douglas’ criminal case nearing dismissal, the DVRO was finally
    heard by Judge Nathan Vu on August 15, 2019, continuing into September 12, 2019. The
    court granted the DVRO on September 12 against Douglas, prohibiting him from
    6
    harassing or coming within 100 feet of Jennifer, except as necessary to carry out the son’s
    visitation orders. He was also prohibited from taking any action to obtain Jennifer’s
    address or location. The court also implemented a supplemental order for high-conflict
    parents because Jennifer and Douglas were unable to amicably communicate for the son’s
    benefit. The issue of attorney fees was reserved for the next hearing on October 1, 2019.
    On October 1, 2019, the court began hearing the May 2019 RFO. Judge Vu
    was inclined to award sole legal custody to Jennifer by operation of the domestic violence
    presumption under section 3044. However, because the parties had not yet been able to
    develop evidence regarding rebuttal of the presumption, he continued a final ruling on
    legal custody to December 5, 2019. He denied Jennifer’s request for retroactivity of any
    modification to child support to December 2015 because Judge Henson had taken the
    matter off calendar, and Jennifer had not filed a motion for reconsideration of this action.
    He denied Jennifer’s request for name change, noting the court had previously considered
    and overruled the same objections. And he denied Jennifer’s requests for attorney fees
    and sanctions, except that he allowed an appropriate amount in connection with the
    DVRO matter, $3,500. Judge Vu’s findings and order after the October 1, 2019 hearing,
    indicated that only the issues regarding legal custody and child support were continued to
    December 5, 2019. The parties were to supply appropriate income and expense
    information to allow the court to set the amount of child support, and file briefing
    regarding legal custody within timeframes provided by the court.
    Douglas’ briefing asserted he had tried to act in a civil way toward Jennifer
    regarding their son’s care and visitation. He also completed parenting and conflict
    resolution courses and said there was no evidence he had violated the DVRO since it
    issued. On December 5, 2019, Judge Vu awarded the parties joint legal custody, finding
    Douglas had rebutted the section 3044 presumption. Jennifer was awarded $2,078 in
    child support per month retroactive to the May 2019 RFO filing date.
    7
    DISCUSSION
    Jennifer’s contentions on appeal are fourfold: (1) the trial court erroneously
    found the section 3044 presumption had been rebutted, (2) the child support modification
    should have been made retroactive to the filing of Jennifer’s initial child support RFO (in
    December 2015), (3) the name change should have been granted, and (4) the trial court
    abused its discretion in denying Jennifer an award of attorney fees.
    There is first a threshold matter to resolve. Douglas argues the appeal is
    untimely as to the second, third, and fourth issues above, because they were not
    addressed in the appealed order. We agree as to the name change and attorney fees.
    “‘“Our jurisdiction on appeal is limited in scope to the notice of appeal and
    the judgment or order appealed from.” [Citation.] We have no jurisdiction over an order
    not mentioned in the notice of appeal.’ (Faunce v. Cate (2013) 
    222 Cal.App.4th 166
    ,
    170.)” (In re J.F. (2019) 
    39 Cal.App.5th 70
    , 75.) The notice of appeal here specifies the
    order being appealed is the December 16, 2019 order, not the order issued in November
    2019.
    Additionally, we are unconvinced it was even possible for Jennifer to
    challenge the November 2019 order. A postjudgment order is only appealable if it “is not
    preliminary to later proceedings, and will not become subject to appeal after some future
    judgment.” (Lakin v. Watkins Associated Industries (1993) 
    6 Cal.4th 644
    , 656.)
    As the above procedural summary makes clear, the only issues reserved for
    the December 5, 2019 hearing, were legal custody and the calculation of the modification
    to child support. The court’s October 1 minute order clearly denied the name change
    request and attorney fee requests outside of the amount Judge Henson had granted for the
    successful DVRO. The court’s findings and order filed November 7, 2019, also made
    clear it was denying these requests and there would be no further proceedings on these
    8
    issues. Jennifer thus had 60 days from November 7, 2019, to appeal the name change
    and attorney fee rulings. The appeal in this matter was not filed until February 18, 2020.4
    Jennifer argues that her appeal from the December 2019 order,
    encompasses all issues, including attorney fees and the name change, but the record of
    the hearing refutes this. Jennifer’s counsel attempted to raise the fee issue in December
    and was quickly shut down by Judge Vu, who stated he had already ruled on the matter
    and would hear no more argument on it. Jennifer had sufficient notice at this point that
    the issues ruled upon in the November 7 findings and order had been adjudicated. That
    was the time for an appeal. As for the name change, Jennifer’s counsel himself
    acknowledged on the record that the court had only reserved the child support and legal
    custody issues for the December hearing. There was nothing further to do regarding the
    name change or the attorney fee issues.
    We must disagree with Douglas’ procedural argument on retroactivity,
    however. Because the final child support modification was reserved for the December
    hearing, the court’s ruling on retroactivity in October was preliminary and not appealable.
    The October ruling merely impacted the scope of what the court would eventually decide
    in December. As such, Jennifer’s appeal of the retroactivity issue was timely.
    We now proceed to review the issues regarding legal custody and
    retroactivity of child support.
    I.               Section 3044 Presumption
    “We review custody and visitation orders for an abuse of discretion, and
    apply the substantial evidence standard to the trial court’s factual findings. (Celia S. v.
    Hugo H. (2016) 
    3 Cal.App.5th 655
    , 662.) On issues of statutory interpretation, however,
    review is de novo.” (Jaime G. v. H.L. (2018) 
    25 Cal.App.5th 794
    . 805.)
    4        We also note Jennifer’s name change RFO sought to hyphenate the son’s last name, but the parties
    March 1, 2016 stipulation contained no hyphen. Thus, to the extent Jennifer disagreed with the stipulated name, her
    time to appeal said stipulation expired long ago also.
    9
    Section 3044 states in pertinent part as follows: “Upon a finding by the
    court that a party seeking custody of a child has perpetrated domestic violence within the
    previous five years against the other party seeking custody of the child . . . there is a
    rebuttable presumption that an award of sole or joint physical or legal custody of a child
    to a person who has perpetrated domestic violence is detrimental to the best interest of
    the child, pursuant to Sections 3011 and 3020. This presumption may only be rebutted
    by a preponderance of the evidence.” (§ 3044, subd. (a).)
    There are two steps required to overcome the presumption. (§ 3044, subd.
    (b).) First, the parent who has perpetrated domestic violence must demonstrate that it “is
    in the best interest of the child pursuant to Sections 3011 and 3020” for him to have sole
    or shared custody. (Id., subd. (b)(1).) Second, the court must consider certain
    enumerated factors and determine whether they weigh in favor of the perpetrator in terms
    of protecting the child’s health, safety, and welfare. (Id., subd. (b)(2).) The trial court
    must “make specific findings on each of the factors in subdivision (b).” (Id., subd.
    (f)(1).) “If the court determines that the presumption . . . has been overcome, the court
    shall state its reasons in writing or on the record as to why” the two-step requirement has
    been met. (Id. at subd. (f)(2).)
    Jennifer contends the trial court failed to make specific findings on the
    factors in subdivision (b). This is only partially true. The trial court’s findings and order
    after the December 2019 hearing said: “In awarding the parties joint legal custody of
    their minor child, the court finds and orders that the petitioner has successfully rebutted
    the presumption contained in Family Code section 3044 by a preponderance of the
    evidence and that the award of joint legal custody is in the child’s best interests.” There
    were no specific written findings. But at the December 5, 2019 hearing, the trial court
    stated it was “inclined to find that [Douglas] has by a preponderance of the evidence
    overcome the presumption under . . . section 3044 and that the parties ought to have joint
    legal custody . . . for the reasons stated in Douglas’ declaration and his memorandum of
    10
    points and authorities.” The declaration and brief Douglas filed prior to the December 5
    hearing contained a listing of the factors in subdivision (b)(2) along with a statement
    regarding the applicability of each. Therefore, while the court did not make its own
    specific findings in the minute order of the hearing, it effectively adopted Douglas’
    analysis as its own.
    There was sufficient evidence in the record to support the trial court’s
    conclusion that the presumption had been rebutted as stated in Douglas’ declaration.
    (S.Y. v. Superior Court (2018) 
    29 Cal.App.5th 324
    , 340-341.) The temporary restraining
    order initially granted in December 2017 prohibited Douglas from contacting Jennifer
    except concerning custody and visitation, and also required he stay at least 100 feet away
    from her vehicle. Douglas was permitted to do curbside pickups of the child at Jennifer’s
    residence on non-school days. But he was not permitted to install any more tracking
    devices on her vehicle. After full hearing, the DVRO was ultimately granted based on a
    single act: installing the tracking device.
    Douglas’ declaration prior to the December 5 hearing stated he had
    completed two parenting classes and had attempted to communicate amicably with
    Jennifer in parenting and visitation issues. While Jennifer claimed Douglas had violated
    the DVRO several times by showing up at her house on non-custodial days or discerning
    her address or location, the court felt the evidence reflected communications and
    interactions regarding visitation. And based on our review of this evidence, we cannot
    take issue with the court’s conclusion. The communications and interactions at issue
    appear to be permitted under the temporary restraining order and DVRO and not to
    constitute violations. Jennifer had no evidence whatsoever that Douglas had attempted to
    put a tracking device on her vehicle again, surveil her or monitor her whereabouts, or that
    he intentionally violated the restraining order. Moreover, by all accounts, Douglas was
    engaged in fathering the son – utilizing his visitation, taking the child on trips, and going
    11
    to his athletic events. As such, there is substantial evidence rebutting the presumption as
    required under section 3044. We will not disturb the joint legal custody award.
    II.           Retroactivity of Child Support
    “An order modifying or terminating a support order may be made
    retroactive to the date of the filing of the notice of motion or order to show cause to
    modify or terminate, or to any subsequent date[.]” (§ 3653, subd. (a).) “When the order
    is based on a party’s unemployment or certain type of military activation, the order ‘shall
    be’ made retroactive, unless there is ‘good cause’ to deny retroactivity. (§ 3653,
    subds.(b), (c).) When the modification is based on other reasons, as is the case here,
    whether to order retroactivity is a matter within the trial court’s sound discretion. (See §
    3653, subd. (a).) In exercising its discretion, the trial court’s analysis must focus on the
    child’s needs, which is dependent on the parent’ ability to provide support.” (In re
    Marriage of Cryer (2011) 
    198 Cal.App.4th 1039
    , 1052.)
    Jennifer contends Judge Vu failed to take the son’s needs into account in
    denying retroactivity. Based on the record, we see the situation very differently. Judge
    Vu acted completely within his discretion, and indeed his jurisdiction, to deny
    retroactivity to any time period beyond the filing of the May 2019 RFO. The statute only
    allowed him to make the modification retroactive to the date of filing of the RFO he was
    then considering – not an RFO filed in December 2015 and then taken off calendar by
    another judge. Judge Vu correctly observed that Jennifer had not filed a motion for
    reconsideration of Judge Henson’s May 2018 ruling taking financial matters off calendar.
    And one and a half years after the fact, he was without authority to reconsider that ruling.
    (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1008, subd. (e).)
    Moreover, Judge Vu noted Jennifer’s initial child support RFO had not
    been resolved in 2018 because she had failed to be transparent about her income. And,
    contrary to Jennifer’s argument, her willingness to be transparent is directly tied into her
    child’s needs. Such transparency would allow the court to understand what amount of
    12
    child support would be reasonable and necessary for the son’s care in light of Jennifer’s
    financial means. If she failed to give the court insight into her financial means, this
    evaluation could not be made. We therefore uphold the trial court’s decision to deny
    retroactivity to the date of filing of Jennifer’s initial child support RFO.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondent to recover costs on appeal.
    BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    MOORE, J.
    ZELON, J.*
    *Judge of the Orange County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    13
    MOORE, J., Concurring.
    I concur with everything in the majority opinion. I write separately to
    express my concern for the child who is growing up in a toxic setting created by his
    parents. I want to remind the trial court that should the circumstances warrant it, the
    court may refer the case to the relevant social service agency for a possible dependency
    petition. (See Guardianship of Simpson (1998) 
    67 Cal.App.4th 914
    .)
    MOORE, J.
    1
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G058880

Filed Date: 4/29/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/29/2022