Marriage of Bell CA4/1 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 9/10/14 Marriage of Bell 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 CATHERINE BELL
    and JON D. BELL.
    D064293
    CATHERINE BELL,
    Appellant,                                              (Super. Ct. No. D525101)
    v.
    JON D. BELL,
    Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, David M.
    Rubin, Judge. Affirmed.
    Law Office of Katherine Winn and Katherine Winn for Appellant.
    Jon Bell, in pro. per., for Respondent.
    In this appeal following dissolution proceedings, Catherine Bell challenges an
    award of $70,000 in sanctions to her former husband, Jon Bell, under Family Code
    section 271.1 Catherine argues there is insufficient evidence to support that she engaged
    in sanctionable conduct. She also asserts the court erred because the award sanctioned
    her in a duplicative manner; the court did not consider the conduct of both parties; and
    the court failed to properly consider the financial burden placed on her. We reject these
    contentions and affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL OVERVIEW
    The dissolution proceedings before the trial court commenced in September 2010
    and involved protracted, highly contentious litigation. The parties were married for 16
    years and had two children, a daughter and a son, who at the time of the dissolution
    petition were ages 12 and eight. Numerous experts were retained to address the parties'
    disputes over child custody and division of community assets, including a court-
    appointed child custody evaluator, a family court services counselor, a parenting
    coordinator, a reunification therapist and other individual therapists, and a court-
    appointed special master for the financial and property issues.
    Jon was represented by the same attorney throughout the proceedings. Catherine
    was represented by an attorney when she filed the dissolution petition; about three weeks
    later she hired a different attorney who represented her for one year; she thereafter
    represented herself throughout the custody and property trials; and she then retained a
    third attorney to represent her at posttrial proceedings. The custody issues were litigated
    in April 2012; the property issues were litigated in May 2012; and additional posttrial
    1      Subsequent unspecified statutory references are to the Family Code.
    2
    proceedings occurred in August 2012 and thereafter. Before and after the trial portions of
    the proceedings, the parties filed numerous motions and repeatedly appeared before the
    court to address a wide variety of disputes, related to such matters as vocational and
    psychological evaluations, judge disqualification, discovery, protective orders, child and
    spousal support, child custody and visitation, trial bifurcation, and attorney fees and
    sanctions.
    Two judges presided over the proceedings; Judge Robert Longstreth ruled on
    many of the pretrial motions, and Judge David Rubin presided over the case through trial
    and posttrial proceedings. By June 2012, Jon reported that he had spent $217,126.08 on
    attorney fees, and he requested that Catherine pay him $112,500 of this amount. In
    support, Jon relied on the family law need-based statute (§ 2030), the family law
    sanctions statute (§ 271), and a Code of Civil Procedure sanctions statute for discovery
    violations.
    In its written statement of decision filed on December 17, 2012, the court denied
    Jon's request for need-based attorney fees, but awarded him $70,000 in sanctions under
    section 271. The court found that considering Catherine's actions as a whole, she had
    "frustrated efforts to minimize litigation"; used an "unnecessarily aggressive approach to
    the case thwarting the reduction of litigation and possibility of settlement"; and
    "unjustifiably and unnecessarily lengthened" the court proceedings. The court stated her
    actions "violate[d] the public policy of encouraging early settlement" and admonished her
    that "[v]igorous pursuit of the legal objective is encouraged; wasteful, time consuming
    and frivolous tactics are discouraged."
    3
    To support its conclusion that sanctions were warranted, the court focused on
    several different actions taken by Catherine during the litigation, including her (1)
    withdrawal of over $75,000 in community funds the same day she filed the dissolution
    petition; (2) frivolous objections to Jon's interrogatories; (3) refusal to cooperate with
    admission of a report prepared by the court-appointed custody expert; (4) failure to give
    requested documents to the court-appointed special master, disclose a 401K account to
    the special master, and pay her share of fees owed to the special master and court-
    appointed custody expert for their trial testimony; (5) inappropriate interference with the
    real property appraiser during his inspection of the community residence; and (6) arrival
    at the property trial two hours late and waiting until her arrival to submit her voluminous
    trial brief and exhibits.
    The record reflects that the trial court gave both parties a full opportunity to
    present their cases and was particularly patient and accommodating to Catherine when
    she was representing herself. During the lengthy proceedings, the trial court had the
    opportunity to observe and assess the overall nature of Catherine's conduct and to
    determine whether she was improperly protracting the litigation by unreasonably refusing
    to cooperate. On appeal, we draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the judgment
    below, and it is not our role to second-guess a sanctions award that is supported by the
    record. (See In re Marriage of Falcone & Fyke (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 964
    , 995.) As
    we shall explain, the record supports the court's conclusion that Catherine's actions went
    beyond vigorous representation and fell into the category of unreasonable and
    4
    uncooperative conduct that thwarts the policy of expeditious adjudication and promotion
    of settlement.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Law Governing Section 271 Sanctions
    Section 271 authorizes the trial court to award attorney fees and costs as sanctions
    based "on the extent to which the conduct of each party or attorney furthers or frustrates
    the policy of the law to promote settlement of litigation and, where possible, to reduce the
    cost of litigation by encouraging cooperation between the parties and attorneys." (§ 271,
    subd. (a).) Sanctions may be appropriate if a party takes an unreasonable position or
    engages in uncooperative conduct that frustrates settlement and increases litigation costs.
    (In re Marriage of Fong (2011) 
    193 Cal.App.4th 278
    , 290; In re Marriage of Quay
    (1993) 
    18 Cal.App.4th 961
    , 970.)
    In deciding the issue of section 271 sanctions, the trial court is required to consider
    the parties' financial situations and should not order a sanction that would impose an
    unreasonable financial burden on a party. (§ 271, subd. (a).) However, section 271 is not
    a need-based statute and the party requesting sanctions "is not required to demonstrate
    any financial need for the award." (Ibid.; In re Marriage of Falcone & Fyke, supra, 203
    Cal.App.4th at p. 990.) Further, there is no requirement of " 'a correlation between the
    sanctioned conduct and specific attorney fees . . . .' " (In re Marriage of Falcone & Fyke,
    supra, at p. 990.) The trial court's broad discretion to award sanctions is premised on the
    recognition that in marital dissolution cases cooperation between the parties is of
    paramount importance. (In re Marriage of Norton (1988) 
    206 Cal.App.3d 53
    , 58.)
    5
    "Because of the complex and sensitive nature of marriage dissolution proceedings, it is in
    the best interests of both parties to resolve all issues expediently and congenially: 'The
    public policy of California strongly favors settlement as the primary means of resolving
    legal disputes. This is especially true in marital dissolution litigation where it is so
    clearly in the financial and emotional interests of the parties, especially where they have
    children, to reach an expeditious and final resolution of their dispute.' " (Ibid.)
    On appeal, we review a sanctions order for abuse of discretion, and apply a
    substantial evidence standard of review to any findings of fact. (In re Marriage of
    Falcone & Fyke, supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 995.) The order will be overturned " 'only
    if, considering all of the evidence viewed most favorably in its support and indulging all
    reasonable inferences in its favor, no judge could reasonably make the order.' " (Ibid.)
    II. Sufficiency of Evidence To Show Sanctionable Conduct
    To evaluate Catherine's claim that the record does not support that she engaged in
    sanctionable conduct, we consider the various areas of conduct identified by the trial
    court in its written statement of decision.
    A. Withdrawal of Community Funds
    On the date Catherine filed the dissolution petition in September 2010, she
    withdrew over $75,000 from the community assets. In an October 2010 ex parte motion,
    Jon requested that she be ordered to return half of the money to him, stating she had
    "cleaned out" their accounts and used some of the funds to buy a new car with cash. In
    response, Catherine stated Jon had stopped depositing his earnings in their joint account,
    and she used the funds to buy the car as planned by the parties, and to pay her attorney,
    6
    the custody mediator, various community debts, and living expenses since she was a stay-
    at-home mother and Jon was the primary wage earner. At a hearing in November 2010,
    the court ruled the question of the return of community cash would be an issue for trial if
    not resolved earlier. In its written decision after trial, the court stated that Catherine's
    withdrawal of the cash was in violation of the automatic temporary restraining orders
    governing community assets and/or unreasonable behavior that added to the
    contentiousness of the case, created more litigation, and "consumed more time from the
    court and special master than was defensible or warranted."
    Challenging this finding on appeal, Catherine argues her conduct was not
    unreasonable because the parties had planned to purchase the car prior to separation, and
    she used the funds to support the family until child and spousal support orders were in
    effect. Further, she asserts citation of this factor reflects a duplicative award of sanctions
    because she was charged for the money she withdrew when the community assets were
    divided. The record shows that child and spousal support orders were entered in
    November 2010, at the same hearing where the court ruled the issue of the return of the
    cash would be deferred to trial. Even though as of November 2010 Catherine had a
    means of supporting the family, she continued to dispute Jon's claim regarding her
    withdrawal of the community funds, thereby requiring this issue to be addressed by the
    special master in her May 2012 report and resolved by the court at the ensuing property
    trial. Even though the court included Catherine's withdrawal of the money when it ruled
    on the division of assets, it could reasonably conclude her withdrawal of such a large
    amount of money and her refusal to acknowledge Jon's right to a portion of these
    7
    community funds was uncooperative conduct that increased litigation costs and frustrated
    resolution of the case.
    B. Frivolous Objections to Interrogatories
    During pretrial discovery, Jon served interrogatories on Catherine requesting
    details concerning her expenses for maintaining the family residence and for her personal
    support. In her responses, Catherine (who at the time was represented by counsel) failed
    to provide the requested information, and instead listed a variety of objections (such as
    unintelligible, ambiguous, vague, compound, undue harassment); stated some of the
    expenses varied from month to month; and claimed she had insufficient time to review
    her documents and provide the precise requested information. Thereafter, the parties
    exchanged correspondence in which Catherine promised to provide the information by a
    particular date and also agreed to several extensions of the statutory deadline for Jon to
    file a motion to compel discovery. After Catherine missed the agreed-upon date for
    providing the information and several more weeks had passed, Jon filed a motion to
    compel. Even though she had missed the agreed-upon response date and no new
    response date had been selected, Catherine complained that Jon should not have filed the
    motion to compel because the extended statutory deadline for the motion was not set to
    expire for 10 more days. Prior to the hearing on the motion to compel, Catherine
    provided responses to the interrogatories that were satisfactory to Jon.
    At the hearing on the motion to compel, the court (Judge Longstreth) deemed the
    motion moot because Catherine had complied with the discovery. In his motion to
    compel Jon had requested $8,828.50 in sanctions based on the fees and costs incurred in
    8
    filing the motion, and the court deferred this issue for trial. However, in its oral
    statements at the motion to compel hearing, the court stated its view that Catherine's
    objections to the interrogatories were frivolous. Further, the court stated that since
    Catherine missed the agreed-upon date for responses and no new response date had been
    set, Catherine could not reasonably expect Jon to wait to file a motion to compel until the
    arrival of the extended statutory deadline for filing the motion.2
    In its written ruling after trial, the court (Judge Rubin) awarded $5,000 in
    sanctions for Catherine's noncompliance with discovery. The court noted Judge
    Longstreth's finding that the objections were frivolous, and stated Catherine's
    "unwarranted responses to legitimate queries necessitated lengthy preparation for a meet
    and confer" which did not occur, and although Catherine ultimately complied with the
    discovery and made the motion to compel moot, Jon's counsel had to expend many
    unnecessary hours working on the issue.
    When awarding the $70,000 in sanctions under section 271, the court cited
    Catherine's conduct during discovery as supporting its conclusion that overall her conduct
    warranted sanctions, stating: "As noted above, [Catherine's] approach to discovery
    caused thousands of dollars in delays and unnecessarily hampered efficient court
    administration." At a later proceeding addressing the parties' objections to its tentative
    2      The actual reporter's transcript of the hearing on the motion to compel is not
    included in the appellate record; our summation of its contents is derived from quotes in
    Jon's pleadings.
    9
    written statement of decision, the court emphasized that the $5,000 discovery sanction
    was meant to be distinct from the overall $70,000 sanction.
    On appeal, Catherine does not assert the $5,000 discovery sanction was
    unsupported; however, she contends the $70,000 sanction award included a duplicative
    amount based on the $5,000 discovery sanction. We reject this contention. The court
    merely cited Catherine's discovery conduct as one factor, among many, that showed her
    uncooperative actions that protracted the litigation, and made clear the discovery sanction
    was separate from the $70,000 sanction. As we shall discuss below, Catherine has not
    shown the $70,000 amount of the award was an abuse of discretion.
    C. Refusal To Cooperate with Admission of Report
    From Court-Appointed Custody Expert
    Shortly after their separation, the parties stipulated to the use of a private mediator
    (Dr. Stephen Doyne) to assist them in resolving their child custody issues. The parties
    agreed that if they did not resolve their dispute, Dr. Doyne would provide the court with a
    recommendation; his written report would be received into evidence without further
    foundation; and this agreement did not preclude either party from calling Dr. Doyne for
    cross-examination. Thereafter, the parties reported the mediation was unsuccessful, and
    they stipulated that Dr. Doyne would act as a court-appointed child custody evaluator.
    The stipulation stated the parties would not challenge Dr. Doyne's credentials "when his
    report and recommendations are submitted to the Court."
    Dr. Doyne completed his custody evaluation in April 2011. In his written report,
    Dr. Doyne recommended joint legal custody and shared physical custody of both
    10
    children; appointment of a parent coordinator to assist with scheduling and conflict
    resolution; appointment of a reunification therapist to assist with issues between Jon and
    the children; and commencement or continuation of therapy for the parties and the
    children. Dr. Doyne recommended that in therapy, Catherine should work on boundary
    issues so she could put " 'a firewall between her feelings about her ex-husband and the
    children, especially [the daughter],' " and on limit setting and supporting the father's
    relationship with the children. Jon should work on his mood changes, frustrations
    working with Catherine, and issues related to discipline and alcohol consumption.
    Further, Dr. Doyne recommended that the parent coordinator be authorized to make
    changes in the custody arrangements if Catherine continued to " 'involve the children in
    her issues to such an extent that the children's relationship with the father is impeded' " or
    if Jon should " 'drink to excess when the children are around him or use inappropriate
    discipline . . . .' "3
    After Dr. Doyne provided his April 2011 report to the parties, Catherine filed
    several pleadings in which she expressed her opposition to the use of the report in the
    proceedings. In pleadings filed in August 2011, Catherine stated that although she had no
    significant objections to Dr. Doyne's recommendations, his report included factual
    misrepresentations, incomplete evaluations of the children, and incorrect insinuations
    about her. In March 2012 (shortly before the commencement of the custody trial),
    Catherine reiterated her complaints about Dr. Doyne's report, and stated his report was
    3     Dr. Doyne's report is not included in the appellate record, and our references to its
    contents are derived from Jon's pleadings.
    11
    stale because it had been compiled a year earlier; there was no reason to have Dr. Doyne
    involved in the case since he had nothing of value to offer; and family court services had
    prepared a more recent and accurate report. Jon, meanwhile, was aware of Catherine's
    position that Dr. Doyne's report was stale, and accordingly sought to have Dr. Doyne
    update his report by contacting the parties and various evaluators who had met with the
    children after his evaluation. Because Catherine opposed any further services by Dr.
    Doyne, Jon obtained an ex parte order stating that Dr. Doyne, as the court-appointed
    custody expert, was authorized to perform whatever work he deemed necessary to update
    his custody evaluation, including meeting with the parties and communicating with other
    persons, although the parties were not required to meet with him.
    In her April 2012 trial brief, Catherine again set forth her complaints about
    inaccuracies in Dr. Doyne's report and characterized it as "nothing more than a fictional
    novel with little to do with what was going on in any reality." At the custody trial in
    April 2012, Jon called Dr. Doyne to testify and Catherine cross-examined him. During
    his testimony on direct examination, Dr. Doyne stated that his recommendations
    essentially had not changed since his April 2011 report, except he raised the possibility
    that the parties' daughter might need to be placed in an out-of-home therapeutic
    environment to deal with her mental health issues and estrangement from her father that
    Catherine may be exacerbating. Dr. Doyne emphasized, however, that he could not give
    a full recommendation on this matter because he had updated information only from Jon;
    Catherine had not spoken with him to update his report; and Catherine had refused to sign
    12
    releases so he could speak with the children's other evaluators although he had read their
    reports.
    On cross-examination, Catherine elicited testimony from Dr. Doyne
    acknowledging that some of his information was not entirely accurate. During
    Catherine's cross-examination of Dr. Doyne, the court suggested at several points that she
    focus her questioning on any defects in Dr. Doyne's actual recommendations, and assured
    her that notwithstanding Dr. Doyne's report, the court viewed her as a devoted mother
    and it was not going to send her daughter to a residential care facility at this juncture.
    The court also asked questions of Dr. Doyne to clarify some of the matters at issue,
    particularly related to mental health concerns for the parties' daughter and the plans for
    the daughter's phased visitation with Jon.
    At the conclusion of the April trial when Jon moved to admit Dr. Doyne's report
    into evidence, Catherine objected to its admission. The court admitted the report, with a
    proviso noting that Catherine had pointed out discrepancies in the report.
    In its written ruling awarding sanctions, the court stated Catherine "unreasonably
    refused to cooperate with opposing counsel regarding Dr. Doyne's appearance . . . ." The
    court stated that neither Jon nor Catherine were pleased with aspects of Dr. Doyne's
    report, but Jon was prepared to stipulate to its admission whereas Catherine was not. The
    court reasoned that Catherine's conduct would have been justifiable if Dr. Doyne's
    testimony had been designed to yield new information, but nothing in his report was
    undermined by Catherine and she did not elicit anything from him that was not in his
    13
    written findings. The court concluded that Catherine could have stipulated to admission
    of the report, and then she and Jon could have argued its weight and merit to the court.
    The record shows that immediately upon receipt of Dr. Doyne's report, Catherine
    was adamantly opposed to its use in the proceedings. The court could reasonably
    conclude this was an untenable position since Dr. Doyne had been appointed by the court
    to evaluate the child custody issue and submit a report, and there was no justification for
    Catherine's unrelenting efforts to prevent the report from being provided to the court.
    Further, if Catherine had cooperated with Jon's efforts to have Dr. Doyne receive updated
    information, Dr. Doyne could have spoken with both parties and the various other
    evaluators to supplement his report before the custody trial. Although Catherine, of
    course, retained her right to cross-examine Dr. Doyne and the court may well have
    wanted to ask Dr. Doyne questions, Catherine's pretrial cooperation would have assured
    that Dr. Doyne had all reasonably available information at his disposal, which could have
    streamlined presentation of the custody materials to the court. Because Catherine
    continued fighting use of Dr. Doyne's report and thwarted efforts to update it, Jon's
    counsel had to obtain an ex parte order confirming that Dr. Doyne had the authority to
    perform additional services to update his information and had to be prepared to question
    Dr. Doyne in detail at the custody trial to ensure full presentation of the information in
    the report. Although ultimately the court admitted the report over Catherine's objection,
    the court could reasonably conclude that her opposition protracted the custody trial by
    creating uncertainty, diminishing Dr. Doyne's access to relevant information, and
    foreclosing the use of stipulations to facilitate resolution of the child custody issues.
    14
    The record supports that Catherine unreasonably opposed admission of the report
    from the court-appointed custody expert.
    D. Failure To Give Requested Documents to Court-Appointed Special Master,
    Nondisclosure of 401(k) Account to Special Master,
    and Refusal To Pay Fees to Experts for Testimony
    When awarding sanctions, the court found that Catherine "further complicated" the
    litigation by refusing to pay her share of the special master's and custody expert's fees;
    not providing the special master with requested documents; and failing to disclose to the
    special master her $47,000 401(k) account.4 Regarding the failure to disclose the 401(k)
    account, the court elaborated that this conduct further reflected Catherine's inability "to
    recognize the importance of fully sharing information to assist the court and reduce the
    amount of litigation necessary to bring this matter to a close."
    In her May 2012 report submitted for the property trial, the court-appointed
    special master stated she had not been provided with all the documents she had requested
    so her task was not as complete as she would have preferred. The missing documents
    included cash flow documents for Catherine's business (Isagenix International) and
    documents to support several of Catherine's requests for reimbursement. The special
    master also reported that although the parties were ordered to share her fees equally,
    Catherine stated she would not pay her one-half share ($600) of the cost of the special
    master's testimony because Catherine did not request that she testify. Similarly,
    4     The court identified the undisclosed account as an IRA account, but according to
    Catherine it is a 401(k) account.
    15
    Catherine maintained she should not have to pay her one-half share ($2,262.50) of the
    cost of testimony from the court-appointed custody expert (Dr. Doyne) because she did
    not request that he testify. In its written statement of decision, the court rejected
    Catherine's claim in this regard, stating the special master provided important information
    on issues disputed by Catherine and the custody expert had to testify because of
    Catherine's refusal to stipulate to the admission of his report.
    As to the undisclosed 401(k) account, in his trial brief Jon informed the court of
    the existence of this account, provided a December 2009 statement for the account, and
    noted the special master had not addressed it, apparently because Catherine had not
    disclosed it to the special master. At trial, Catherine claimed she had not been receiving
    e-mailed statements for this account because they had been sent to someone else's e-mail,
    but after seeing the information in Jon's trial brief she contacted the financial institution
    and obtained information about the account. On cross-examination of the special master,
    Catherine elicited testimony that it appeared the account was primarily separate property,
    and the court thereafter ruled the account was 10 percent community property and 90
    percent separate property.
    Catherine argues the failure to provide documents concerning her reimbursement
    requests was already sanctioned because she did not obtain the requested
    reimbursements; she legitimately declined to pay fees for expert testimony she did not
    request; Jon knew about the 401(k) account; and the amounts at issue for these matters
    were not significant. Notwithstanding these claims, the trial court could reasonably
    consider this conduct as an additional indication of her failure to cooperate in a manner
    16
    that reduced litigation costs. The court could properly assess that her submittal of
    reimbursement claims without providing supporting documentation improperly increased
    the work of the special master and the court because the claims still had to be reviewed.
    Further, the court could determine that her refusal to pay one-half of the fees for the
    court-appointed experts' testimony was unwarranted given that these experts were
    charged with providing information to the court and the parties had not stipulated that the
    court could use their reports in lieu of their testimony. Finally, Catherine has not shown
    the court erred in relying on her failure to tell the special master about her 401(k) account
    as another example of her failure to cooperate. Given the totality of her conduct, the trial
    court was entitled to deduce this nondisclosure reflected her indifference to the need to
    make reasonable efforts to achieve an expedient resolution of the case.
    E. Interference with Real Property Appraiser
    To further support its sanctions decision, the court stated that Catherine engaged in
    unacceptable conduct towards the appraiser who examined the family residence for
    purposes of valuing this community asset. The court stated the appraiser testified that he
    left the residence while he was conducting the inspection "because [Catherine] would not
    leave him alone, walking right behind him as he tried to do his work." The court found
    that Catherine's conduct in this regard demonstrated an attitude "inconsistent with trying
    to resolve the case early."
    When testifying at trial, the appraiser stated he received a lot of information from
    Catherine regarding deferred maintenance at the property which he reviewed for purposes
    of his valuation of the property. When Catherine asked him on cross-examination if he
    17
    was aware that the base of all the wooden fence posts were disintegrating, the appraiser
    answered, "I didn't take notice of that because you were following so closely behind me, I
    had to pay attention to what you were saying as well as make my observations and do my
    job."
    On appeal, Catherine argues the court's finding on this point is unsupported by the
    appraiser's testimony. Although the appraiser did not testify that he left the property
    because of Catherine's conduct, the trial court could reasonably deduce that Catherine
    was following and talking to the appraiser in an overbearing and inappropriate manner
    while he was trying to examine the property for appraisal purposes. That is, the appraiser
    stated he failed to notice some deferred maintenance because of Catherine's presence,
    which inferentially suggests she was not letting him perform his job properly. The court's
    partial inaccuracy in its summation of the appraiser's testimony does not defeat its general
    finding that her interaction with the appraiser was another example of her unreasonable
    conduct that undermined expeditious and cooperative resolution of the case.
    F. Late Arrival and Submittal of Documents at Property Trial
    On the first day of the financial portion of the trial, Catherine arrived at court
    about two hours late and handed the court "a 4-inch thick binder" of documents, which
    apparently included her trial brief and 57 exhibits. Catherine told the court she was late
    because her daughter was ill. Jon's counsel objected to admission of the materials
    presented by Catherine because he had not had an opportunity to review them. The court
    told Catherine that it was rarely speechless but it was "speechless today"; it understood
    how difficult the process was without representation by counsel and it tried to "give pro
    18
    pers a lot of leeway" but she had gone "too far"; it had never had "400 pages, 500 pages
    of documents dropped on [it] two hours late for the actual hearing and then expect [it] to
    be up to speed" on the documents; and she could not treat the court or opposing counsel
    like this. The court stated it would not review the documents, although Catherine was
    free to use the documents to refresh witness recollection.
    When awarding the sanctions, the court stated that notwithstanding Catherine's
    explanation that her daughter was ill, her conduct of arriving two hours late and
    presenting the voluminous documents was "inexcusable" and caused great inconvenience
    to the court and Jon.
    On appeal Catherine argues this factor is duplicative because the trial court already
    sanctioned her for this conduct by refusing to review her trial brief and exhibits.5
    Further, she contends sanctions were unwarranted for this conduct because it did not
    delay the trial or increase the litigation costs to Jon. We are not persuaded. First, her
    conduct made the court and Jon's counsel wait for two hours, which caused an
    unnecessary increase in Jon's litigation costs and loss of court time. Second, the court
    could properly conclude that her failure to submit her trial brief and documents before
    trial hampered expeditious preparation and resolution of the case because Jon and the
    5       The record shows that at the conclusion of the property trial the court did admit
    some of Catherine's exhibits. Catherine claims that because of her late submission of
    documents the trial court precluded her from raising at trial her request for fees and
    sanctions, whereas Jon disputes that the court imposed this sanction. Catherine has not
    cited to anything in the record reflecting a discussion of this specific matter with the
    court, and accordingly we decline to consider it further. (See In re Marriage of Freeman
    (1996) 
    45 Cal.App.4th 1437
    , 1450-1451; Amato v. Mercury Casualty Co. (1993) 
    18 Cal.App.4th 1784
    , 1794-1795.)
    19
    court had no definitive guidance concerning what positions she would take during the
    trial regarding the disputed issues. Although the court may have partially sanctioned her
    by declining to review some of her documents and/or claims, the court did not err in
    citing her tardiness and late presentation of documents as an additional factor supporting
    sanctions.
    III. Other Contentions of Error
    As set forth above, the record supports that Catherine engaged in uncooperative
    conduct that increased litigation costs and frustrated settlement, warranting an award of
    section 271 sanctions. We are not persuaded by Catherine's claim that the court abused
    its discretion because it did not consider Jon's conduct. While presiding over the lengthy
    proceedings, the trial court had ample opportunity to observe Jon's actions, and absent an
    affirmative showing to the contrary, we presume the court was cognizant of Jon's
    litigation conduct and did not find it inappropriate. (See Evid. Code, § 664; In re
    Marriage of Davenport (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 1507
    , 1526 [presume court aware of law
    and of evidence that may properly be considered].) In support of her contention,
    Catherine sets forth various actions by Jon during the course of the litigation that she
    perceives as uncooperative. We have reviewed the record, and none of Jon's actions
    compel a finding that he was uncooperative. The fact that Catherine may have been
    displeased with Jon's actions during the litigation does not show the court was required to
    view his actions as unreasonable.
    20
    Further, Catherine has not shown that the $70,000 sanctions award was an
    unreasonable amount.6 At the time of Jon's sanctions request, he had incurred over
    $217,000 in legal fees, and he requested that Catherine pay for $112,500 of these fees
    under the need-based and sanctions statutes. Jon's counsel submitted detailed
    declarations that set forth his hourly rate and the hourly rate of his support staff;
    delineated the ever-increasing accrual of fees, including, in particular, after Catherine
    began representing herself; and specified actions undertaken by Catherine that prolonged
    the litigation. After presiding over the lengthy proceedings and considering the
    information submitted by the parties, the trial court declined to award Jon fees under the
    need-based statute but awarded him $70,000 under section 271. The record supports that
    Catherine's uncooperative conduct commenced at the inception of the litigation when she
    withdrew $75,000 in community funds, continued into discovery when she raised
    frivolous objections to Jon's interrogatories, reached a high level of unreasonableness
    when she relentlessly attempted to thwart admission of the report generated by the court-
    appointed custody expert, and spread into a variety of other avenues that frustrated the
    resolution of the disputed issues. Given the amount of fees incurred by Jon and the
    6      In its tentative written decision, the court ordered $65,000 in sanctions under
    section 271, but prior to its final written decision it increased these sanctions to $70,000.
    At a hearing on the parties' objections to its tentative decision, the court explained it was
    increasing the section 271 sanctions because it had erroneously been led to believe that
    Catherine's status in propria persona meant she had no access to money other than what
    she would receive through the division of the community assets, whereas it was now
    apparent she did have funds at her disposal because she had again retained an attorney.
    21
    pervasiveness of Catherine's uncooperative conduct, the trial court reasonably selected a
    sanctions award of $70,000.
    Finally, we are not persuaded by Catherine's contention that the court did not
    properly consider the financial burden placed on her. She asserts the court did not
    evaluate her financial circumstances or ability to pay $75,000 sanctions (i.e., $70,000
    under section 271 and $5,000 discovery sanctions). The court made the sanctions award
    at the same time as it resolved the disputed property issues and Jon's claim for need-based
    attorney fees; thus, the court was well aware of Catherine's financial resources. In its
    December 2012 ruling, the court stated Jon's monthly net income was $9,026, and
    ordered monthly payments to Catherine of $1,400 in spousal support (reduced to $1,100
    in January 2014) and $2,645 in child support. Further, the court noted Catherine was
    receiving substantial assets from her share of the community property. The family's
    mortgage-free residence was valued at $580,000 to $590,000, and the court ordered that
    Catherine be reimbursed for her $34,925 separate property down payment for the
    purchase of the home. Under the court's ruling, Catherine was allowed to live in the
    residence with no payments for rent until the house was sold, at which time she would
    pay the community an amount equal to $1,000 per month from her one-half share of the
    sale proceeds. Given the court's awareness of the parties' financial circumstances and the
    22
    sums Catherine would receive upon the sale of the family residence, she has not carried
    her burden to show the court failed to properly consider the financial burden on her.7
    A trial judge who presides over prolonged, highly contentious dissolution
    proceedings is uniquely positioned to ascertain whether a party is refusing to cooperate
    and engaging in conduct that exacerbates the parties' disputes and obstructs expedient
    resolution of the case. The record supports the trial court's conclusion that sanctions were
    warranted against Catherine, and as an appellate court we defer to this assessment.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Costs to respondent.
    HALLER, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O'ROURKE, J.
    IRION, J.
    7      The court made some adjustments to the support orders during additional hearings
    held before entry of the final judgment in May 2013. These changes do not reflect that
    the $70,000 sanctions would impose an undue burden on Catherine.
    23
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D064293

Filed Date: 9/10/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021