Brothers v. Kern

64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 239, 154 Cal. App. 4th 126, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1348
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 17, 2007
DocketF048970
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 239 (Brothers v. Kern) 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
Brothers v. Kern, 64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 239, 154 Cal. App. 4th 126, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1348 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

WISEMAN, Acting P. J.

Vincent Edward Brothers, plaintiff and appellant in this case, is also the defendant in a pending capital murder prosecution. The jury has found him guilty and has recommended that he receive the death penalty. Sentencing has not yet taken place. At the time of the killings, Brothers was subject to a child support order. After he was taken into custody on the murder charges, Brothers liquidated his assets and used the proceeds to hire an attorney, who took most of the money as a retainer and placed it in his client trust account. The court in this case then modified the child support order, basing the new monthly amount on the interest that could have been earned on the proceeds of the liquidated assets rather than on Brothers’s income before his arrest. It directed that the current amount due, as modified, *130 be paid to the mother from the client trust account. It also required Brothers to use funds from the account to post a security deposit for future support payments, to be held by the Kem County Department of Child Support Services and disbursed monthly. The deposit was to cover all payments that would become due during the two years remaining before the child reached majority.

The total support amount Brothers was ordered to pay out of the client trust account funds was $17,399.95. The liquidated assets amounted to approximately $150,000.

We reject Brothers’s contentions on appeal that the trial court applied the Family Code incorrectly when it modified the support order and that no support or a smaller amount of support should have been ordered. We also reject his argument that, even if the modification was consistent with the Family Code, it violated Brothers’s constitutional right to criminal defense counsel of his choice by diminishing the amount he had available to pay his retained counsel. The United States Constitution does not insulate a criminal defendant from third party claims just because the satisfaction of those claims reduces the defendant’s ability to afford retained counsel. We affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORIES

The present lawsuit began in 1993 when Brothers sued Shann Terese Kem to establish his paternity of their daughter, who was bom in 1988. He obtained a judgment of paternity, was awarded joint custody and visitation rights, and was ordered to pay support in the amount of $350 per month. In 1997 the support obligation was increased to $500 per month and in 2003 to $771 per month. Brothers and Kem were not on amicable terms and were subject to restraining orders barring each from contacting the other except for purposes of visitation.

Brothers was married to Joanie Harper. The couple had three young children. In July 2003, Harper, her mother, and the three children (ages four years, 23 months, and six weeks) were found dead. Brothers was arrested on April 30, 2004, and charged with five counts of first degree murder. He has remained in custody since his arrest.

Brothers was current in his support payments when he was arrested, after which time the payments stopped. The Kem County Department of Child Support Services (the department) filed a motion on October 7, 2004, to modify the support order in light of Brothers’s incarceration. The court placed the support order in a “reserved status” pending production of documents disclosing the status of Brothers’s assets.

*131 Before the documents were produced, Kevin Little, whom Brothers had retained for his criminal defense, attempted to persuade the court that no assets were available. In a letter to the court, Little claimed that, because the criminal court had found Brothers indigent, “there is little point in further inquiring as to [his] financial status.” In a letter to the department’s counsel, Little asserted that because of the indigency determination, it had been “judicially established that Mr. Brothers has no means to pay the amounts requested in this proceeding.”

When the documents were produced, they revealed that Brothers had sold his house shortly after his arrest. A title company sent a $128,508.19 check payable to Brothers, representing the proceeds of the sale, to the law firm of Floyd & Horrigan on May 4 or 5, 2004. The check was immediately delivered to Little, whom Brothers had retained some time earlier. Pursuant to the retainer agreement, Little placed $100,000 in his client trust account as a retainer. The appellate record does not show what happened to the remaining $28,508.19. Little also placed a lien on Brothers’s retirement account, which was worth between $80,000 and $90,000. On February 3, 2005 (the day before the first hearing on the request for modification of the support order), $48,823.14 remained in Little’s client trust account for Brothers.

After these facts emerged, the department argued that the court should reinstate the support obligation in the previously established amount of $771 per month. It further contended that the court should order immediate disbursement of this amount going back to Brothers’s last payment and going forward to the date when the daughter would reach majority. The portion covering the future payments would be deposited with the department as security. The payment, which would total $27,746.88, would come from Little’s client trust account. Assets from the retirement account would not be available for many years.

Through Little, Brothers argued that the support obligation was zero because, being incarcerated, he had no earnings. The imposition of a support obligation based on assets, he claimed, would be improper under the Family Code. Even if an obligation could be imposed, it should not include a deposit to secure future payments. Further, Brothers contended, all the assets had already been spent. The cash retainer and the lien on the retirement account constituted a “true retainer” and therefore were “the property of the attorney, not the client.” Finally, according to Brothers, “[t]he deprivation of funds legally, reasonably and in good faith paid to his attorney for his representation in a case where his life is at stake would be in blatant violation of his constitutional right to retain counsel of his own choice with funds that were completely his at the time.”

*132 The trial court rejected Brothers’s arguments. It did not, however, reimpose the support obligation at the previous level. Instead, it established a new figure based on interest Brothers could reasonably have earned—5 percent—on the assets he liquidated or could have liquidated after his arrest. Talcing into account the house, a car, bank accounts, and a refrigerator (but not the retirement account), the court found that $155,000 in assets were available as a “conservative estimate.” Of this amount, $150,000 was available after payment of debts and expenses accrued before Brothers’s incarceration. The interest on this amount would be $625 per month.

Applying the statutory child support guideline to this amount of income, the court found that the normal support payment would be $171 per month. Considering the best interest of the child, it then exercised its discretion to depart from the guideline figure and set the support obligation at $600 per month.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marriage of More CA4/3
California Court of Appeal, 2025
Woodlief v. Woodlief CA1/5
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Swan v. Hatchett
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Marriage of Macilwaine
California Court of Appeal, 2018
Macilwaine v. Macilwaine (In re Macilwaine)
237 Cal. Rptr. 3d 156 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)
Marriage of Huffman CA1/5
California Court of Appeal, 2016
Marriage of Sanidad CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2014
Marriage of Franco CA5
California Court of Appeal, 2013
State v. Cook
265 P.3d 342 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2011)
Sherman v. Securities & Exchange Commission
658 F.3d 993 (Ninth Circuit, 2011)
Plumas County Department of Child Support Services v. Rodriquez
76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1 (California Court of Appeal, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 239, 154 Cal. App. 4th 126, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brothers-v-kern-calctapp-2007.