County of Fresno v. Regalado CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 2013
DocketF064146
StatusUnpublished

This text of County of Fresno v. Regalado CA5 (County of Fresno v. Regalado CA5) 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
County of Fresno v. Regalado CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 7/24/13 County of Fresno v. Regalado CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE COUNTY OF FRESNO et al., F064146 Plaintiffs and Respondents, (Super. Ct. No. 01CEFS03891) v.

JUAN REGALADO, OPINION Defendant and Respondent;

RICO R. LOPEZ-FLORES,

Movant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Fresno County. Jonathan Skiles, Judge. Stanley S. Ma for Movant and Appellant. No appearance for Defendant and Respondent. Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Julie Weng-Gutierrez, Assistant Attorney General, Linda M. Gonzalez, Jessica Foster, and Ricardo Enriquez, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiffs and Respondents. -ooOoo- INTRODUCTION Appellant Rico R. Lopez-Flores claims that DNA testing shows he is the biological father of a minor child. This appeal concerns his challenge to an October 2002 judgment, which declares that another man is the child’s father. The judgment was entered in a child support action brought by the County of Fresno Department of Child Support Services (Department) against the other man. Lopez-Flores filed a postjudgment motion for joinder in the child support action, which the superior court denied. Lopez-Flores filed this appeal, contending the trial court erroneously denied the motion for joinder. We conclude that the order denying the joinder is equivalent to an order denying a request to intervene and, therefore, is a final and appealable determination of Lopez- Flores’s right to proceed in this litigation. We further conclude that Lopez-Flores failed to establish that his motion for joinder, which is unusual because it was made postjudgment, was mandatory under the circumstances of this case. We therefore affirm the order denying the motion for joinder. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS During the fall of 1999, Teena Chavez was intimate with Juan Antonio Regalado and appellant Rico Lopez-Flores. In June 2000, Chavez gave birth to a female child (minor child). At that time, Regalado was 16 years old and Lopez-Flores was leaving home for basic training in the Marine Corp. The legal proceeding involved in this appeal began in November 2001 when the Family Support Division of the Fresno County District Attorney’s Office filed a complaint regarding parental obligations against Regalado. The complaint was filed to establish a paternity and child support judgment for the minor child. In January 2002, Regalado’s mother filed an answer to the complaint, since Regalado was still a minor. The answer admitted Regalado was the minor child’s father and disagreed with the proposed support payment because Regalado was a minor

2. attending high school fulltime, was unemployed, and could not afford the requested child support payments. In May 2002, the superior court held a hearing at which Regalado and his mother did not appear. The commissioner noted the admission of paternity and made a finding of parentage as to the minor child. The commissioner also found that Regalado had the ability to earn minimum wage and ordered temporary monthly child support payments of $246, commencing on July 1, 2002 (a date after Regalado turned 18 years old). In September 2002, the superior court held another hearing, which Chavez and Regalado attended. The court reiterated its previous finding of parentage and entered final judgment by stipulation of the parties. On October 28, 2002, the superior court entered a judgment regarding parental obligations that stated the mother and father listed in the complaint (i.e., Chavez and Regalado) were the parents of the minor child and ordered child support payments of $246 per month. Approximately nine years later, on September 19, 2011, Lopez-Flores filed a notice of motion and declaration for joinder using mandatory Judicial Council Form FL- 371 (rev. Jan. 1, 2003). He requested an order joining him as a party to the proceedings in which the judgment regarding parental obligations was entered. In a declaration attached to the notice of motion, Lopez-Flores made the factual assertions described in the following two paragraphs. Lopez-Flores had dated Chavez in the fall of 1999, but stopped dating her in November 1999. In January 2000, he heard a rumor that Chavez was pregnant. When he saw Chavez in March 2000, he asked her who was the father of her unborn child and she told him that Regalado was the father. In June 2000, he left town for basic training, followed by advanced individual training in Virginia. From April 2001 until January 2006, he was stationed in Oceanside, California. During that time, he saw Chavez five or

3. six times when he returned to Fowler to visit family and friends. During the occasions he saw Chavez, they did not discuss her children. From June 2006 until June 2009, Lopez-Flores was stationed in Arlington, Virginia. In November 2008, he returned to Fowler and asked Chavez whether he was the minor child’s father because he had been told the minor child resembled him. Chavez again told him that he was not the minor child’s father and, even if he was, she would never consider telling him. In August 2010, he returned to Fowler and continued to be told by family and friends that the minor child resembled him. He called Chavez and asked whether she was sure Regalado was the father, to which Chavez told him Regalado was the father and asked him not to bring the subject up again. In 2011, while working in Afghanistan, he communicated with Chavez through Facebook and asked her for a DNA test to see if he was the minor child’s father. In June 2011, when he returned from Afghanistan, Chavez agreed to DNA testing. In July 2011, they used DNA swabs and submitted the samples. The results estimated that there was a 99.7 percent probability that Lopez-Flores was the biological father of the minor child. They submitted a second DNA sample, and the tests came back with virtually identical results. Lopez-Flores’s motion for joinder included a request for (1) an order vacating the judgment of paternity, (2) further DNA testing, and (3) an order identifying him as the minor child’s father and changing the minor child’s last name to Lopez. The motion did not explicitly request visitation, physical control or custody rights.1 Instead, Lopez- Flores stated that he believed he and Chavez could “work out a parenting plan for our child.”

1 Notwithstanding this omission, Lopez-Flores’s opening appellant’s brief asserts that he “was seeking to enforce his rights and interests in the care, custody and control of [his] biological daughter .…”

4. Lopez-Flores’s motion also asserted that he had filed his own Uniform Parentage Act (UPA) case as Fresno County Superior Court case No. 11CEFL04866, and requested a consolidation of the two cases. On October 6, 2011, Chavez filed a responsive declaration to Lopez-Flores’s notice of motion. Chavez’s declaration stated that Lopez-Flores was claiming custody and visitation rights regarding the minor child, indicated that she did not consent to such an order granting such custody or visitation, and stated that she would consent to an order granting her sole legal and physical custody of minor child and providing Regalado with no visitation rights. She also stated she consented to an order that “Rico R. Lopez-Flores is the biological father of the child … and to vacate the judgment in this matter and the orders relating to custody and visitation.” The narrative of Chavez’s declaration did not discuss Lopez-Flores’s paternity claim.

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