In Re Marriage of Jones
In Re Marriage of Jones
Opinion
Rita L. Lundin (Lundin) appeals from a judgment of dissolution and a subsequent order denying her motion to set aside the judgment pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section
The subsequent dissolution was tempestuous necessitating a number of court proceedings to determine and enforce domestic violence prevention, spousal support, temporary restraining orders regarding property control, contempt for failure to pay spousal support, contempt for failure to comply with property control orders, and discovery disputes.
Jones filed an at-issue memorandum in June 1994 and the matter was originally set for trial on September 8, 1994. Counsel later stipulated to vacate that trial date and the matter was set for mandatory settlement conference on October 11, 1994. The record does not indicate what happened on that date.
In January 1995, Lundin's attorney, Gary O'Neil, moved to withdraw as her counsel of record because she had not paid him. A week later, Jones's counsel, Robert Carbone, moved to specially set the case for trial. The court heard both matters on February 28, 1995. It granted Mr. O'Neil's request to withdraw as attorney of record. Mr. O'Neil told the court that Lundin was "out of state," and her work required her to be out of state for extended periods of time. Her current local address was a post office box in Canyon Country, California. The court set the case for mandatory settlement conference on April 10 and trial on April 12, 1995, to provide Lundin with sufficient time to obtain new counsel. The clerk of the court mailed notice of the trial date to both parties on March 24, 1995.
On April 10, 1995, Mr. Carbone appeared and, according to the minutes, the matter was confirmed for trial on April 12, 1995. Lundin did not appear.
On April 12, 1995, Jones and Mr. Carbone appeared for trial. Lundin did not appear. Jones stated he had not seen Lundin since September 1994. Mr. *Page 688 Carbone presented a trial brief detailing Jones's separate property, the community property, vehicles, bank accounts, reimbursements Jones was due for paying community debts, community debts he agreed to assume, and a proposed property division. The brief stated Lundin had "converted" some of Jones's separate property, the money in their community bank accounts and all the household furnishings. Jones submitted documentation to support his assertions and presented additional proof at trial. The court took the matter under submission but asked Mr. Carbone to prepare a proposed judgment incorporating what he believed had been proved at trial.
On May 22, 1995, before the court issued its decision, Lundin substituted Attorney Karen Gaul as her counsel of record.
On June 21, 1995, the court filed a statement of decision. In pertinent part, the court awarded Jones the business and the family residence; it awarded Lundin the $37,958 from the various bank accounts, a vehicle, and all the household contents and furnishings valued at $71,000, which she apparently had in her possession. The court noted that Jones owed Lundin $4,000 in spousal support but she had taken his separate property shop tools which were worth an equivalent amount. To equalize the division of community property, the court ordered Lundin to pay Jones $67,224.
There were a number of clerical errors in the statement of decision, so on August 8, 1995, Mr. Carbone prepared and the court signed an "Amended Further Proposed Judgment of Dissolution." Lundin, rather than her attorney, was served with the judgment on September 13, 1995. Judgment was entered on November 2, 1995.
On October 13, 1995, Lundin filed a motion to set aside the judgment pursuant to section 2122 et seq. and Code of Civil Procedure section
Jones opposed the motion. He contended his trial brief constituted the declaration of disclosure and Lundin had presented no facts to support her allegations of overreaching and unequitable division. Mr. Carbone filed a *Page 689 declaration stating he was not advised of Lundin's phone number or how to contact her. At the hearing on the motion, Lundin's attorney, Ms. Gaul, stated that her file indicated Mr. O'Neil wrote Lundin on March 17, 1995 (presumably at her post office box address), and advised her of the trial date and the need to secure new counsel. Lundin was out of state until April 15, 1995, and Mr. O'Neil did not know her parents' Colorado address. However, Jones knew Lundin's parents' address.
The trial court denied the motion on January 25, 1996. It found the court had notified Lundin of the trial date at her Canyon Country post office box address. Further, she failed to demonstrate mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section
Lundin filed a timely notice of appeal.2
1. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denyingrelief under Code of Civil Procedure section 473 or 594 .*
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2. Entry of judgment despite Jones's failure to execute andserve a declaration of disclosure was harmless error.
The Family Code embodies public policy designed to foster full disclosure and cooperative discovery concerning marital community assets and liabilities. (§ 2100.) Section 2104 requires that "each party shall serve on the other party a preliminary declaration of disclosure, executed under penalty of perjury" within 60 days of the filing of a petition for dissolution. Section"The parties may stipulate to a mutual waiver of [final declarations] by execution of a waiver in a marital settlement agreement or by stipulated judgment or a stipulation entered into in open court." (§
Section 2106 provides that absent a waiver, stipulation, or "good cause, no judgment shall be entered with respect to the parties' property rights without each party, or the attorney for that party in this matter, having executed and served a copy of the final declaration of disclosure and current income and expense declaration. Each party shall execute and file with the court a declaration signed under penalty of perjury stating that service of the final declaration of disclosure and current income and expense declaration was made on the other party or that service of the final declaration of disclosure has been waived pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section
Section 2107 states the procedures that a complying party may employ should the other party fail to comply with these requirements. The available remedies include imposition of cost and attorney fees sanctions, and contempt. (Elden v. SuperiorCourt, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th at p. 1507.)
The record indicates Jones prepared and served on Lundin a preliminary declaration of disclosure on March 15, 1994, which is included in the record as an exhibit, in his response to Lundin's request for spousal support. The declaration includes a schedule of assets and liabilities and an income and expense declaration. The record does not indicate whether Lundin prepared or served a preliminary declaration of disclosure. However, we can assume she did because her counsel wrote Jones's counsel requesting his declaration and only a complying party can make such a request. (§ 2107, subd. (a).)
Neither party executed or served a final declaration of disclosure pursuant to section
In Elden v. Superior Court, supra,
The husband sought a writ of mandate directing the superior court to set aside its order denying his petition to confirm the arbitration award. (Elden v. Superior Court, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th at p. 1501.) The appellate court held that the trial court erred in holding that the husband and wife were required, prior to their agreed-upon nonjudicial arbitration, to serve each other with final declarations of disclosure and current income and expense declarations under section
The court held that the trial court was precluded from entering judgment, including one confirming an arbitration award settling marital property rights, until (1) the court found good cause that no final declarations were necessary or (2) the parties had complied with section 2106. The only exception was that provided in section
In In re Marriage of Varner (1997)
The Court of Appeal reversed.3 The relationship between the parties and the higher duty of disclosure to which the parties were held under section 2102 regarding their community property was relevant to the determination that the mistake in the present case warranted setting aside the judgment. (In re Marriage ofVarner, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p. 143.)
In support of her motion for relief, the wife presented evidence which compelled a finding that the husband breached his duty to provide an "accurate and complete disclosure of all assets and liabilities" of the parties at the time of the negotiations surrounding the stipulated judgment. (§ 2102, subd. (a).) The wife submitted valuations of the property prepared by her experts, and even by the husband's experts, and compared them to the husband's testimony at trial regarding the value of the community property. The wife's evidence indicated the property was worth millions of dollars more than the husband had testified it was worth. The wife also provided loan applications submitted to banks by the husband near to the time of the testimony showing dramatically higher values given to the properties on the loan applications than were testified to by the husband at trial. (Inre Marriage of Varner, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p. 143.)
In addition, the wife's first accountant stated she had been unable to obtain information documenting the value of the property of the parties, and she had had to rely on the representations of the husband and the husband's attorney in valuing the property. Although the wife was not represented by counsel at the time of trial, the husband and his attorney indicated to the court that the stipulated judgment had been approved by the wife's previous attorney and accountant. The appellate court concluded that any approval by the wife's attorney or accountant was necessarily made in reliance on the representations made by the husband to them, which were subsequently shown to be questionable. (In re Marriage ofVarner, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p. 143.)
Under the Family Code requirements of full disclosure, the husband's failure to disclose the values of the assets, or even to give the wife's *Page 693
accountants access to the information from which the value could be derived, constituted a violation of section
The court noted that the remedy of setting aside a judgment was not offered for failure to disclose the existence or the value of assets; there would presumably be no judgment entered if there was a failure to disclose. However, like perjury, the failure to disclose would induce the other spouse to stipulate to a judgment on the basis of incomplete or inaccurate information. The court concluded the failure of a spouse to disclose the existence or the value of a community asset constituted a basis for setting aside a judgment on the grounds of mistake under section 2122. (In re Marriage of Varner, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p. 144.)
Finally, in In re Marriage of Fell (1997)
The husband argued the judgment should not be set aside because remedies for noncompliance with the disclosure requirements were limited to *Page 694
those set forth in section 2107. The court disagreed. The section 2107 remedies could be sought only by a party who had complied with the disclosure requirements. Where neither party complied with the requirements of section
(1) None of the three cases just discussed dealt with the precise issue facing us (i.e., whether noncompliance with section 2106 mandates vacating the judgment). In Elden v. SuperiorCourt, supra,
We view the trial court's error in entering judgment contrary to the provisions of section 2106 as one of a purely statutory dimension. That being so, we can reverse the judgment only if we conclude ". . . it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the appealing party would have been reached in the absence of the error." (People v. Watson (1956)
Although Lundin stated in her declaration that the judgment dividing the community property was "favorable to" Jones and she believed a different *Page 695 and more equitable division of property would have resulted if she had been present at trial, she presented no evidence to substantiate her claim or show a miscarriage of justice. She failed to show how she was prejudiced by the entry of judgment in violation of section 2106, especially in light of the fact that Jones complied with her discovery requests and included much of the information required in the declaration of disclosure in his trial brief.
Lundin's lack of evidentiary showing contrasts starkly with the record reviewed in In re Marriage of Varner, supra,
Dibiaso, Acting P.J., and Buckley, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In Re the Marriage of Rita L. and Michael W. Jones. Rita L. Lundin v. Michael W. Jones
- Cited By
- 14 cases
- Status
- Published