Celia S. v. Hugo H.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 2016
DocketG052124
StatusPublished

This text of Celia S. v. Hugo H. (Celia S. v. Hugo H.) 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
Celia S. v. Hugo H., (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 8/26/16: pub. & mod. order 9/23/16 (see end of opn)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

CELIA S.,

Appellant, G052124

v. (Super. Ct. No. 13P001238)

HUGO H., OPINION

Respondent.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Theodore R. Howard, Judge. Reversed and remanded. Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, Blaine H. Evanson, Krista Hernandez, Jennafer M. Tryck, Krista DeBoer, Vania Wang; Family Violence Appellate Project, Jennafer Dorfman Wagner, Shuray Ghorishi, Erin C. Smith, Nancy K.D. Lemon; Legal Aid Society of Orange County, Robert Cohen, Yolanda Omana, and Jamie Sanderson for Appellant. Law Offices of D. Michael Bush and D. Michael Bush for Respondent. * * * Family Code section 3044 establishes a rebuttable presumption that prevents a trial court from awarding sole or joint physical or legal custody of a child to a parent who commits an act of domestic violence against the other parent, unless the offending parent establishes by a preponderance of the evidence that an award of custody to that parent is in the child’s best interest.1 Here, the trial court found respondent Hugo H. committed an act of domestic violence against appellant Celia S., and therefore awarded her sole legal and physical custody of the couple’s two children because Hugo presented no evidence showing an award of custody to him was in the children’s best interest. Nonetheless, the court also awarded Hugo “visitation” consistent with the “50/50 timeshare” arrangement to which Celia and Hugo agreed nearly a year earlier. Under that arrangement, the children alternated living with Celia for one week and then Hugo for a week. Celia appeals, arguing the trial court may not circumvent section 3044 by characterizing its order that granted Hugo joint physical custody as an order that merely awarded him visitation. We agree. The nature of any order must be determined based on the order’s legal effect, not the label the trial court attaches. Based on the Family Code definition of “joint physical custody” and the case law applying that definition, we conclude any arrangement authorizing children to spend roughly equal time with each parent is a joint physical custody arrangement. The trial court therefore abused its discretion in awarding Hugo equal time with the children without requiring him to establish that arrangement was in the children’s best interest. We reverse that portion of the court’s order and remand for further proceedings.

1 All statutory references are to the Family Code.

2 I

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Celia and Hugo maintained a romantic relationship for many years, but never married. They have two children: Christian, age 12, and Jayleen, age 6. According to Celia, several acts of domestic violence marred their relationship and eventually led to their separation. In February 2014, Celia and Hugo stipulated to joint legal and physical custody of their children with a “50/50 timeshare” under which the children alternated weeks with each parent. The trial court entered the stipulation as an order. In January 2015, Celia invited Hugo to her apartment to have dinner with her and the children. While Celia prepared dinner in the kitchen, Christian did his homework at the dining room table and Jayleen took a nap on the living room couch. Hugo also sat at the dining room table waiting for Christian to finish his homework. According to Celia, Hugo was watching loud videos on his cell phone that disrupted Christian. Hugo denies this, and instead testified he simply was playing on his phone without disturbing anyone. When Christian asked Celia for help with his math homework, she came to the dining room table and set up her laptop computer to look up how to do Christian’s homework. At that point, Hugo received a phone call and got up from the table to answer it. Celia sat down in the chair where Hugo had been sitting and worked with Christian on his homework. According to Celia, Hugo returned to the table after he completed his call and demanded that Celia give him the chair back. When she refused to move, Celia claims Hugo grabbed her by the hair and pulled her toward him. Celia then tried to push Hugo away and he punched her in the ribs or stomach, causing her to lose her breath. An argument ensued and Celia demanded Hugo leave her apartment. Celia called the police when Hugo continued to loiter outside the apartment. The police arrived and arrested

3 Hugo for domestic violence after Christian told them he saw Hugo hit his mother. The police issued an emergency protective order requiring Hugo to stay away from Celia and the children.2 The next day, Celia filed a petition for a domestic violence restraining order against Hugo and also an order awarding her sole legal and physical custody of the children. The trial court issued a temporary restraining order and scheduled an evidentiary hearing. At that hearing, Celia testified Hugo pulled her hair and punched her in the stomach or ribs when she refused to yield her chair to him. Hugo testified that he did not pull Celia’s hair or hit her. According to Hugo, Celia came to the dining room table and started an argument about whether he was talking to other women. He testified he left the apartment without touching Celia, and then the police arrested him based on Christian’s false statement that Hugo had punched Celia. Neither child testified at the hearing, but the court received a report from a social worker who had interviewed both children. Although Christian told the police he saw Hugo punch Celia, he told the social worker he left to go to the bathroom when Celia came to the dining room table and he only heard the fight from the other room. But he also told the social worker he previously saw Hugo spit in Celia’s face. Jayleen told the social worker she woke up when her parents started to argue and she saw Hugo pull Celia’s hair and punch her. She also told the social worker she had seen Hugo hit Celia before and that she was afraid of Hugo when he hit her mother. At the time of these events, Christian was 10 years old and Jayleen had just turned five. The trial court acknowledged the many conflicts between Celia’s and Hugo’s testimony, the inconsistencies in the stories Christian told the police and the

2 The record does not include any information on how the criminal domestic violence proceedings against Hugo were resolved.

4 social worker, and the impact Jayleen’s age had on her ability to recollect and recount what she saw, but the court concluded Celia’s version of the events “hung together better” and was “more credible.” The court therefore found Celia “is a victim of domestic violence perpetrated by [Hugo]” and issued a one-year domestic violence restraining order that required Hugo (1) not to harass, threaten, assault, disturb or contact Celia or the children, “except in the course of court-ordered visitation with [the children],” and (2) to stay 100 yards away from Celia, her work and apartment, the children, and their school. The court also ordered Hugo to complete a 52-week batterer intervention program. As to custody, the court awarded Celia sole legal and physical custody, but ordered that Hugo “will have visitation with the minor children as the court will find that is still in the best interest.” The court explained the section 3044 rebuttable presumption against awarding sole or joint custody to a parent who committed domestic violence required the court to award Celia sole custody, but the court set a hearing to review the matter after Hugo completed the 52-week batterer intervention program to determine whether he could present evidence to rebut the section 3044 presumption.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Celia S. v. Hugo H., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/celia-s-v-hugo-h-calctapp-2016.