Marriage of Hall CA2/7 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 8/15/22 Marriage of Hall CA2/7
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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    has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    In re Marriage of KEITH HALL                                B311539
    and TONYA CLAYCOMB HALL.
    (Los Angeles County
    KEITH HALL,                                                 Super. Ct. No. BD646287)
    Petitioner and Respondent,
    v.
    TONYA CLAYCOMB HALL,
    Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County. Colin P. Leis, Judge. Affirmed.
    Tonya Claycomb Hall, in pro. per. for Appellant.
    Niddrie Adams Fuller Singh and Victoria E. Fuller for
    Petitioner and Respondent.
    _______________________
    INTRODUCTION
    Tonya Claycomb Hall (Claycomb) appeals from a family
    court order modifying temporary spousal support in the marital
    dissolution action between her and Keith Hall (Hall). Claycomb
    contends the family court abused its discretion in considering
    evidence of her domestic violence against the parties’ daughters
    in its order. The family court did not abuse its discretion when
    modifying temporary spousal support. We affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A.      The Parties’ Marriage and Prior Temporary Support
    Orders
    Hall and Claycomb were married for 23 years and had four
    daughters, Isabella, Arianna, Evaliese and Elysia.1 During the
    marriage Hall was the primary earner. Through Hall’s real
    estate investment activities the couple accumulated significant
    wealth, including an eight-figure estate property.
    Hall filed a petition for dissolution of marriage on
    September 22, 2016. On April 10, 2017, when two of their
    daughters were still minors, the parties entered into a stipulation
    and order regarding temporary spousal support and child
    support. The order provided Hall would pay Claycomb $45,000
    per month in temporary spousal support and $5,000 per month in
    child support. At the time of that order, Hall’s base pay was
    $250,000 per year, plus $2 million per year in quarterly bonuses.
    In February 2018, Hall filed a request for an order
    seeking modification of support after his bonuses were halted.
    1     By the time of trial, the parties’ daughters ranged in age
    from 19 to 25 years old.
    2
    On July 26, 2018, the family court granted the request and
    entered an order reducing temporary spousal support to $5,394
    per month (less child support of $149 per month payable by
    Claycomb to Hall). The order also provided for additional Ostler-
    Smith spousal support calculated from an annual accounting of
    the larger of Hall’s taxable income or cash distributions from
    various entities.2
    B.     Claycomb’s Request To Modify Temporary Spousal
    Support and Hall’s Allegations of Claycomb’s
    Domestic Violence Against the Couple’s Children
    On May 28, 2020, Claycomb filed a request for order
    seeking an increase of her temporary spousal support from
    $5,394 to $54,000 per month. In his opposition, Hall asked the
    family court to consider Claycomb’s domestic violence when
    setting the amount of spousal support. As an offer of proof of
    their testimony at trial, Hall submitted declarations from
    Isabella, Arianna and Elysia, which graphically described
    Claycomb’s repeated acts of domestic violence against her
    daughters.3
    2     An Ostler-Smith provision is an additional support award
    calculated as a percentage of any discretionary bonus income
    actually received. (See In re Marriage of Minkin (2017) 
    11 Cal.App.5th 939
    , 949; Marriage of Ostler & Smith (1990) 
    223 Cal.App.3d 33
    , 54.)
    3      Claycomb disputes the allegations of domestic violence. At
    trial, she moved to strike her daughters’ declarations, but her
    motion was taken off calendar at her request. Although Isabella,
    Arianna and Elysia testified at trial, Claycomb only designated
    the fourth day of trial for inclusion in the record, which solely
    includes testimony from Hall and Claycomb.
    3
    Isabella attested Claycomb beat her and her sisters, “from
    the day [they] were old enough to handle physical abuse,”
    including choking and kicking them, spitting in their faces and
    pulling their hair. Isabella stated Claycomb often called her
    demeaning and offensive names and stole thousands of dollars
    from her summer job earnings for Claycomb’s own use. She
    asserted Claycomb’s “tactics were more aggressive” when their
    father was not present.
    In her declaration Arianna stated Claycomb pushed her
    and her sisters down flights of stairs and threw plates and knives
    at them. She described her 15th birthday party, when Hall
    discovered Claycomb beating Arianna; Hall shoved Claycomb
    away to protect Arianna, which Claycomb later described as an
    instance of violence by Hall against Claycomb. Arianna
    witnessed repeated instances of violence by Claycomb toward her
    sisters and toward Hall, and she defended her two younger
    sisters, Evaliese and Elysia, from their mother after their eldest
    sister Isabella left for college.
    Elysia, the youngest daughter, described similar incidents
    of abuse throughout her childhood, including Claycomb locking
    her in the closet and beating her with a wooden hanger. She also
    described witnessing Claycomb beat her sister Evaliese with a
    belt. Elysia disclosed that when she was four years old, she told
    Hall that Claycomb had beaten her. After Hall confronted
    Claycomb she beat Elysia “twice as hard” the following day and
    threatened Elysia that she would “pay for it worse” if she “ever
    said anything to anyone again.” After that, Elysia said she never
    disclosed the abuse to anyone. She lived with persistent anxiety,
    suicidal thoughts, and “constant fear” of Claycomb until she was
    14 years old and moved in with Hall.
    4
    Noting the amount of his annual salary without bonuses,
    Hall requested the court maintain base spousal support at $5,394
    per month. However, he sought a modification of the Ostler-
    Smith component, requesting that it be calculated from
    distributions he actually received from various entities, rather
    than “phantom” income attributed to him on his tax returns
    based on illiquid gains. Finally, because Claycomb purported to
    incur expenses exceeding $75,000 per month, Hall asked that the
    family court cap the Ostler-Smith support at $94,870 per month
    based on the marital standard of living (though he did not
    anticipate earning sufficient income to reach the cap).
    C. The Family Court’s Order
    The bench trial occurred over four days, during which
    Isabella, Arianna and Elysia testified.4 On the final day of trial
    the court requested the parties “brief the application of Family
    Code Section 4320(i) [requiring courts to consider “documented
    evidence” of domestic violence by either spouse in ordering
    spousal support] to Family Code Section 3600 [authorizing
    temporary support during a pending dissolution].”
    On January 24, 2021, the family court issued an order
    modifying spousal support. The court found Claycomb committed
    “numerous severe acts of domestic violence and abuse over many
    years against the parties’ daughters.” The court explained that
    “in making that finding, the court fully credits the daughters’
    testimony, and disbelieves [Claycomb]’s denials. The court
    concluded the legislative history of Family Code section 4320,
    4     Evaliese was prepared to testify but was not called as a
    witness.
    5
    subdivision (i)(5), showed intent to disfavor spousal support
    orders in favor of abusers.
    Based on its finding, the family court found “it equitable
    that [Hall] should pay no more support than [Claycomb]
    reasonably needs to maintain hearth and home based upon the
    parties’ marital standard of living.” The court explained: “By
    limiting [Claycomb’s] support to her financial needs, the court
    intends that [Claycomb’s] domestic violence denies [her] the
    greater support that might flow from [Hall’s] high income under
    typical Santa Clara guideline support and Ostler-Smith
    calculations.” The court stated it did “not aim to impoverish
    [Claycomb] by forcing her to descend several levels of lifestyle;
    instead, the court aims to avoid the inequity of adding insult to
    [Hall’s] injury by making him support [Claycomb] beyond her
    financial needs commensurate with her needs established during
    marriage.”
    The family court found Claycomb’s “reasonable needs”
    amounted to $43,000 per month, or $522,000 annually. The court
    observed that Claycomb “lives rent-and-mortgage-free in a three-
    story, five-bedroom, three-bath marital home two blocks from the
    beach.” However, it found Claycomb reasonably incurred costs
    relating to property taxes, insurance and other monthly
    expenses, plus $30,000 per month for savings and investments.
    The family court ordered Hall to pay Claycomb “base support of
    $4,255 per month in accord with his $250,000 base pay.” The
    court also ordered Hall to make an annual Ostler-Smith payment
    based on a percentage of the lesser of his taxable income or cash
    distributions received, “in order to avoid the inequity of husband
    paying support to wife from phantom income from which he did
    6
    not receive cash,” in an amount not to exceed $470,940 ($522,000
    total need minus $51,060 [12 months x $4,255]).
    Claycomb timely appealed the family court’s order.
    DISCUSSION
    A.    Standard of Review
    “An order regarding the modification of spousal support is
    reviewed for abuse of discretion.” (In re Marriage of Samson
    (2011) 
    197 Cal.App.4th 23
    , 29.) Awards of temporary spousal
    support “will not be reversed on appeal absent a showing of a
    clear abuse of discretion.” (In re Marriage of MacManus (2010)
    
    182 Cal.App.4th 330
    , 337 (MacManus).)
    B.     Analysis
    1.    Temporary spousal support and modification of
    temporary spousal support order
    “An award of temporary spousal support ‘“is utilized to
    maintain the living conditions and standards of the parties in as
    close to the status quo position as possible pending trial and the
    division of their assets and obligations.”” (MacManus, supra, 182
    Cal.App.4th at p. 337.) Pursuant to Family Code section 3600,
    “‘[p]ending a marriage dissolution . . . the court . . . may order
    either spouse to pay “any amount that is necessary” for the other
    spouse’s support, consistent with the requirements of sections
    4320, subdivisions (i) and (m), and 4325.’”5 (In re Marriage of
    Freitas (2012) 
    209 Cal.App.4th 1059
    , 1067 (Freitas).)
    5    Further undesignated statutory references are to the
    Family Code.
    7
    By its reference to section 4320, subdivisions (i) and (m),
    and section 4325, section 3600 “requires the trial court to
    consider domestic violence between the parties when evaluating
    requests for . . . temporary spousal support.” (In re Marriage of
    Brewster & Clevenger (2020) 
    45 Cal.App.5th 481
    , 501 (Brewster);
    accord, Freitas, supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at p. 1067; MacManus,
    supra, 182 Cal.App.4th at p. 336.) For temporary spousal
    support, “the trial court need consider only the history of
    domestic violence, not all the factors in section 4320.” 6
    (MacManus, supra, 182 Cal.App.4th at p. 336, fn. 5.) Specifically,
    section 4320, subdivision (i), requires the court to consider “[a]ll
    documented evidence of any history of domestic violence” when
    ordering spousal support, whether “between the parties or
    perpetrated by either party against either party’s child.” Section
    4320, subdivision (m), provides, “[t]he criminal conviction of an
    abusive spouse shall be considered in making a reduction or
    elimination of a spousal support award in accordance with
    Section 4325.”7 Beyond this statutory directive to consider
    domestic violence when making an award of temporary spousal
    support, “[a]wards of temporary spousal support rest within the
    broad discretion of the trial court and may be ordered in ‘any
    6     “Permanent support, by contrast, is constrained by
    numerous statutory factors set out in section 4320.” (In re
    Marriage of Murray (2002) 
    101 Cal.App.4th 581
    , 595 (Murray),
    disapproved on another ground in Conservatorship of O.B. (2020)
    
    9 Cal.5th 989
    , 1010, fn. 7.)
    7     Section 4325 sets forth a rebuttable presumption that a
    spouse who has been convicted of domestic violence against the
    other should not receive an award of temporary or permanent
    spousal support.
    8
    amount’ (§ 3600) subject only to the moving party’s needs and the
    other party’s ability to pay.” (Murray, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 595; accord, MacManus, supra, 182 Cal.App.4th at p. 337.)
    A temporary spousal support award “may be modified or
    terminated at any time except as to an amount that accrued
    before the date of the filing of the notice of motion or order to
    show cause to modify or terminate.” (§ 3603.) Courts generally
    require a “material change of circumstances” to modify a
    temporary spousal support order. (See Freitas, supra, 209
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 1068-1069; In re Marriage of Gruen (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 627
    , 638; but see Murray, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 597, fn. 11 [noting in dicta that some courts have not required
    a showing of changed circumstances for modification of
    temporary spousal support, in contrast to permanent spousal
    support].) However, “[t]he changed circumstances rule is not to
    be applied mechanistically or without exception,” and “‘there can
    be cases where there [has] been no change of circumstances yet it
    would be just and equitable to modify an existing order.’”
    (Freitas, supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at p. 1069 [court did not abuse
    its discretion in terminating temporary spousal support award on
    the basis of past domestic violence by the supported spouse,
    which the parties had not addressed before the prior support
    order].)
    2.    The family court did not abuse its discretion
    when it considered evidence of Claycomb’s
    domestic violence against her daughters in its
    modification of temporary spousal support
    Claycomb contends the court lacked jurisdiction to consider
    evidence of her domestic violence because she did not raise
    domestic violence in her request for modification of temporary
    9
    spousal support, and there was no domestic violence conviction,
    restraining order (DVRO) or DVRO request before the court.
    Claycomb asserts the court abused its discretion when it
    permitted declarations and testimony from the parties’ adult
    daughters about her abuse of them during their childhood, and
    when the court made a finding of domestic violence against her.
    We find no error. There is no statutory requirement that a
    preexisting DVRO, DVRO request or criminal conviction be in
    place before the court may consider evidence of domestic violence,
    and Claycomb provides no authority for such a proposition.
    Although a domestic violence criminal conviction or issuance of a
    protective order, if present, must be considered by the court in
    modifying or terminating temporary spousal support (§§ 3600,
    4320, subds. (i)(4), (m), 4325), it is not a necessary prerequisite. 8
    Rather, section 4320, subdivision (i), expressly and broadly
    requires the court to consider “[a]ll documented evidence of any
    history of domestic violence, as defined in Section 6211, between
    the parties or perpetrated by either party against either party’s
    child, including, but not limited to, consideration of: [¶] (1) A plea
    of nolo contendere. [¶] (2) Emotional distress resulting from
    domestic violence perpetrated against the supported party by the
    supporting party. [¶] (3) Any history of violence against the
    supporting party by the supported party. [¶] (4) Issuance of a
    8     Even in the context of rebutting the section 4325
    presumption against spousal support by a convicted abuser, the
    [Legislature] “did not include language requiring that the
    convicted spouse prove that the payor spouse was convicted of a
    domestic violence offense in order to rebut the section 4325
    presumption against spousal support, opting instead to use the
    more inclusive term, ‘documented evidence’ of a history of
    domestic violence.” (Brewster, supra, 45 Cal.App.5th at p. 504.)
    10
    protective order after a hearing pursuant to Section 6340.
    [¶] (5) A finding by a court during the pendency of a divorce,
    separation, or child custody proceeding, or other proceeding
    under Division 10 (commencing with Section 6200), that the
    spouse has committed domestic violence.” (Italics added.) In
    exercising its discretion to award temporary spousal support, a
    family court may rely on a documented history of domestic
    violence to modify the amount of temporary spousal support it
    otherwise would have awarded based on the parties’ need and
    ability to pay. (See MacManus, supra, 182 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    337-338; Freitas, supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at p. 1069 [court had
    discretion to terminate temporary spousal support based on past
    domestic violence by the supported spouse not considered in prior
    support order].)
    The sworn testimony of the parties’ daughters constituted
    documented evidence of a history of domestic violence
    perpetrated by Claycomb against her children and was properly
    considered by the family court. “Indeed, domestic violence is the
    only issue that the Legislature has expressly mandated that a
    trial court consider in determining whether to award temporary
    spousal support.” (Freitas, supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at p. 1071; cf.
    In re Marriage of Cheriton (2001) 
    92 Cal.App.4th 269
    , 304,
    superseded by statute on other grounds as stated in In re
    Marriage of Morton (2018) 
    27 Cal.App.5th 1025
    , 1049 [In making
    a spousal support order, “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.”].) Given that
    “the Legislature has singled out domestic violence as a critical
    11
    factor that a court must consider in determining whether to
    award temporary spousal support” (Freitas, supra, 209
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1071), the family court did not abuse its
    discretion in considering evidence of domestic violence by
    Claycomb against the parties’ daughters.
    Claycomb asserts she did not abuse her daughters and was
    instead the victim of domestic violence by Hall during the
    marriage. The family court, however, explained that it “fully”
    credited the daughters’ testimony and did not believe Claycomb.
    The daughters also refuted Claycomb’s accusations against Hall,
    explaining that Claycomb falsely claimed Hall physically abused
    her after occasions where she injured herself and that Hall only
    pushed Claycomb away from himself or the children when she
    “wouldn’t back down.” In making a finding of domestic violence,
    it is “well within the trial court’s discretion to determine the facts
    and judge the credibility of the witnesses.” (Brewster, supra, 45
    Cal.App.5th at p. 507.) “[W]e do not judge credibility on appeal”
    (id. at p. 508), and the family court had authority to believe the
    daughters’ statement of events over Claycomb’s. Their
    testimony, which the court determined was credible, provides
    substantial evidence in support of the family court’s domestic
    violence finding against Claycomb. (See id. at p. 509 [court was
    within its discretion to deny additional temporary spousal
    support to wife where husband’s testimony of alleged domestic
    violence incident was found more credible].)
    We disregard Claycomb’s factual assertions and arguments
    that are founded on information not in the appellate record. “A
    reviewing court must accept and is bound by the record before it
    [citations], cannot properly consider matters not in the record
    [citations], and will disregard statements of alleged facts in the
    12
    briefs on appeal which are not contained in the record.” (Weller v.
    Chavarria (1965) 
    233 Cal.App.2d 234
    , 246; accord, Cal. Rules of
    Court, rules 8.204(a)(1)(C) [appellate brief must support
    references with specific citations to the record], 8.204(a)(2)(C)
    [opening brief must “[p]rovide a summary of the significant facts
    limited to matters in the record].) We also decline to grant Hall’s
    motion for sanctions. “An appeal that is simply without merit is
    not by definition frivolous and should not incur sanctions.” (In re
    Marriage of Flaherty (1982) 
    31 Cal.3d 637
    , 650.)
    DISPOSITION
    The order modifying temporary spousal support is affirmed.
    Hall is awarded his costs on appeal.
    WISE, J.
    We concur:
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    FEUER, J.
    
    Judge of the Alameda County Superior Court, assigned by
    the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the
    California Constitution .
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B311539

Filed Date: 8/15/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/15/2022