Bindoy v. McCrary CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 2024
DocketA169165
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bindoy v. McCrary CA1/1 (Bindoy v. McCrary CA1/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bindoy v. McCrary CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 11/27/24 Bindoy v. McCrary CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

LEANNE BINDOY, Plaintiff and Respondent, A169165 v. MICHAEL MCCRARY, (San Mateo County Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. 19FAM02248A)

Michael McCrary appeals an order requiring him to pay child support, retroactive to the time the San Mateo County Department of Child Support Services (DCSS) filed a complaint seeking support. McCrary does not dispute his obligation to pay support—only the part of the order making the obligation run from when DCSS filed its complaint, rather than 15 months later, when McCrary was served. The court made its order retroactive because it found, that during those 15 months, McCrary intentionally evaded service. (Fam. Code, § 4009.)1 That finding, McCrary contends, rests on hearsay documents erroneously admitted over his objection. We affirm because, whether or not the documents were admissible, McCrary’s own testimony contains substantial evidence to support the finding of intentional evasion.

Statutory citations are to the Family Code unless otherwise 1

indicated.

1 BACKGROUND McCrary and Leanne Bindoy had a son in 2019. McCrary acknowledged his paternity and his duty to support his son. Bindoy filed a “parentage action” against him,2 and each retained counsel. In January 2022, DCSS prepared a supplemental complaint in the parentage action to require McCrary to pay child support. (§ 17400.) Shortly before DCSS filed the complaint, its employee Erica Orozco called McCrary to discuss child support. In May 2022, DCSS filed a proof of service of its complaint alleging— inaccurately, the parties now agree—personal service on McCrary on May 21. In June 2022, as DCSS prepared to seek a default judgment, a DCSS employee called McCrary to discuss child support. A week later, DCSS secured a default judgment requiring McCrary to pay support, effective retroactively to February 2022. In August 2022, DCSS filed a proof alleging personal service of the judgment on McCrary. In November 2022, McCrary learned that DCSS had a lien on his recovery for personal injuries from an accident and had caused his driver’s license to be suspended. When he called DCSS to inquire, an employee informed him of the default judgment, and he asked the employee “[t]o tell [him] the proof of service date.” McCrary reported the default judgment to his attorney, who moved to vacate it for lack of service, offering evidence that McCrary was in Texas on the day he was allegedly served. In March 2023, DCSS stipulated to set aside the judgment.

2 The Uniform Parentage Act (§ 7600 et seq.) is “the procedural vehicle by which unmarried parents establish their rights vis-à-vis each other and their children.” (Erika K. v. Brett D. (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 1259, 1267.)

2 DCSS then served the complaint and moved for entry of judgment requiring McCrary to pay support, retroactive to February 2022. McCrary opposed making the obligation retroactive. The court ordered him to pay support and continued the matter for briefing and an evidentiary hearing on whether he had intentionally evaded service, as would enable the court to make the order retroactive (§ 4009). In lieu of a brief, DCSS counsel Robert Sanchez filed a declaration. Two of its paragraphs noted DCSS employees’ phone calls to McCrary in January and June 2022. Each paragraph stated, “Below is an activity log entry made by [DCSS employee]” documenting the call, followed by text seemingly copied and pasted from a log in which the employee summarized the conversation. As an exhibit to his declaration, Sanchez attached a “NON SERVICE REPORT.” In the report, a registered process server (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 22350 et seq.) declared he had tried without success, on four dates in March and April 2022, to serve McCrary at his San Francisco home. For each date, the report alleges facts about the attempt. It is not filed-endorsed. At the start of the evidentiary hearing, Sanchez asked if the court had received his declaration, and McCrary’s attorney, Dawn Ward, objected to the attached nonservice report as hearsay. The court deferred ruling on the objection. Ward also noted the report “was not filed with the Court,” which Sanchez did not dispute. Sanchez said he would not call any witnesses; Ward said she would call only McCrary. The attorneys then disputed who bore the burden of proof on the issue of intentional evasion of service. To engage in such conduct, Ward argued, McCrary had to know of “something to be served.” The court then asked Ward to address Sanchez’s declaration, as it showed “several telephone calls

3 with your client, informing him a case will be opened, a [s]ummons and [c]omplaint will be issued [in] January of 2022,” which “seems to establish . . . knowledge that there was something in the offing.” At that point, Ward objected on hearsay grounds to the declaration’s recitals of the log entries. Sanchez replied the passages served a nonhearsay purpose: showing McCrary’s knowledge of DCSS’s complaint. The court overruled the objection. It ruled the log entries fell within hearsay exceptions for state of mind and “explaining subsequent actions.” Sanchez added, “It could also be a public record” (Evid. Code, § 1280), which led the court to muse that it could be a business record (id., § 1271). Ward replied that a recital of the entries’ text could not be a business record as “contained within a pleading”; the log would have to be “presented independently as an actual business record with the full context.” “Yeah,” the court replied, “that could be true.” McCrary then testified. He described contacting Bindoy’s counsel in 2020 to get a copy of the parentage complaint and having Ward file an answer. He added, “it was just like ‘You got a lawyer. I got a lawyer. There really ain’t too much for us to be talking about. The lawyers are going to handle it.’ ” After a relevance objection, Ward said the testimony showed McCrary had not evaded service of Bindoy’s complaint and expected communications to occur via counsel. When asked if he recalled “receiving a call in January [2022] from [DCSS employee] Erica Orozco,” McCrary answered, “Not really” but added, “If it’s documented, then it happened.” He was unaware at that time that DCSS had filed a complaint. Ward noted that, according to Sanchez’s declaration, the log entry for a June 2022 call stated: “somebody from DCSS called you and said they had a proof of personal service against you . . . [and]

4 that was the last date to file an answer,” and “you told them you had not been served.” McCrary replied, “Correct.” Ward further described the recital as stating “that you told them to call your lawyer,” but the court corrected her, noting it states that “McCrary said that he has an attorney, Dawn Ward, but did not specify whether or not they are representing [him] for the child support matter nor would he provide contact information.” McCrary interjected, “What [the court] just said, that definitely sounds correct because I’m not into doing nobody’s job. So it was like, ‘She work for the state. You work for the county. You get her number. You call her the same way you called me.’ ” McCrary testified he told the DCSS employee he had a lawyer because DCSS “shouldn’t be calling me, looking for me.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Bindoy v. McCrary CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bindoy-v-mccrary-ca11-calctapp-2024.