Featherstone v. Martinez

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2022
DocketB316280
StatusPublished

This text of Featherstone v. Martinez (Featherstone v. Martinez) 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
Featherstone v. Martinez, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 12/21/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

ANNAQUITE FEATHERSTONE, B316280

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. v. 19WHPT00603)

BRIAN MARTINEZ,

Defendant and Respondent;

CRYSTAL HILL,

Objector and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, James E. Horan, Judge. Reversed. Decker Law and James D. Decker for Plaintiff and Appellant and Objector and Appellant. No appearance for Defendant and Respondent. This is an appeal from a family court’s self-described sua sponte sanctions order under Family Code section 271.1 The family court judge ordered appellants Annaquite Featherstone (Mother) and her attorney, Crystal Hill (Hill), to each pay $10,000 to respondent Brian Martinez (Father) and partly justified the sanctions on its finding that appellants unjustifiably accused the judge of being biased (or appearing to be biased). We consider whether the sanctions order represents an abuse of the family court’s discretion.

I. BACKGROUND A. Case History 1. The petition Mother and Father had a child (Minor) together in 2019. Approximately two months after Minor was born, Mother filed a parentage petition requesting primary physical and joint legal custody of Minor. In her supporting declaration, Mother represented Father traveled a lot for work and was usually in town only three to four days every month. Mother acknowledged Father had been heavily involved in caring for Minor and had visited Mother’s house every day he was in town. Mother declared she wanted Father to visit Minor, but she wanted each visit to be preceded by two weeks’ advance notice, to last only three to four hours, and to take place at Mother’s home until Minor was six months old. Father filed a response with his proposed visitation schedule, and Mother filed a second declaration. Mother

1 Undesignated statutory references that follow are to the Family Code.

2 expressed concerns with Father’s proposal, particularly his requests that each visit with Minor last eight hours and that overnight visits commence when Minor was six months old. Mother proposed overnight visits be delayed until Minor was two years old.

2. The first hearing The initial hearing in the case was held in December 2019. Mother was not represented by counsel at the time and asked for a continuance so she could obtain counsel. The family court granted the request but discussed visitation with the parties so it could make an initial interim visitation order. Mother said she was very open to allowing Father to see Minor at any time. In response, the family court referred to the declaration Mother filed with her parentage petition and expressed concern with the manner in which she drafted it: “[T]he way you wrote it, it was along the lines of, I control everything, I’m the boss, and, you know, I’ll do him a favor and let him see his child. [¶] That is not how it works. You are co- equal parents. Moms get the advantage because technically, literally, when a child is born, they are there, obviously. But then when it comes to court, they think, well, I’m the mom. I always win.” Mother agreed Father had always been involved in Minor’s life and the court then remarked, “So it’s not a lack of familiarity. You should literally be at 50/50. Not, I let him see her whenever he wants. [¶] But he has a weird travel schedule.” The court also asked Mother if she was breast-feeding— admonishing her “[d]on’t . . . lie” and “[d]on’t exaggerate”—before she answered. When Mother said she was not breast-feeding, the

3 court observed that this meant there were “no logistical problems” with visitation. When Mother informed the court that, during mediation, she offered Father six hours of visitation “or whenever he’s home[,]” the court asked Mother if she would like it if the roles were reversed and said: “I know how hard it is. You gave birth to the child. You held the child. You’ve taken care of this child. It’s hard to conceptualize that he is every bit of the parent that you are, especially in this case because he’s been there from birth.” The court then said, “So here’s the law: If everything is equal, you’re supposed to be sharing 50/50. Not six hours. 50/50.” Father clarified he was only requesting for one weekend of visitation per month, with eight hours on Saturday and eight hours on Sunday. The court asked Mother if she thought that was unreasonable, and she replied that Minor was young and she wanted Father to get to know Minor. The court then made its ruling as follows: “I’m going to side completely with respondent today, and I think in the future you’re going to have a really hard time, because although I’ve tried to explain it, emotionally—and I understand—you do not feel like he’s an equal parent and you feel like you need to drag this out and make it slow.”

3. Mother’s motion to disqualify the judge Mother retained Hill after this first hearing, and Hill filed a motion in March 2020 to disqualify the family court judge under Code of Civil Procedure section 170.1 because the judge exhibited bias against her at the earlier December hearing we just described. When the parties appeared in court before the hearing date on the motion to disqualify, Hill informed the family court that she had filed a motion for disqualification.

4 The family court judge stated the motion to disqualify him was “almost by definition untimely under these circumstances.” Hill, however, represented that her office received the transcript for the earlier December hearing only earlier that same week and the delay in transcript preparation prevented pursuing the motion to disqualify more quickly. The judge stated he was advancing the motion to the hearing and striking it as untimely because, in his view, Mother should have filed the motion in December 2019 or January 2020 when she was aware of the asserted bias. The family court also briefly addressed visitation issues during this same hearing. During the course of argument, the court stated Hill was not directly answering the court’s questions and warned that, without improvement, they would “start talking about sanctions.”

4. Proceedings in 2020 that are pertinent to the court’s later award of sanctions Mother submitted a proposed judgment in July 2020. Father objected to the judgment and contended it did not reflect orders the court had made in several respects.2 The family court rejected the proposed judgment.

2 Specifically, Father objected the proposed judgment: (1) did not specify the child custody and support orders were “Non- Montenegro”; (2) did not include the date on which Mother’s “tie- breaking authority” would end; (3) misstated aspects of temporary visitation ordered by the court; (4) did not specify the parties would share joint legal custody; (5) misstated the child support amount by $70; (6) stated additional child support had been ordered when the court had not ordered additional support;

5 At a hearing in November 2020, the family court instructed the parties to share driving duties for physical custody exchanges and to record the exchanges so they would have evidence in case an issue arose. The court also made a record regarding the proceedings that had transpired in the case and expressed concern with, among other things, the initial declarations Mother filed earlier in the case.

5. Proceedings in 2021, and the court’s return to discussing sanctions In February 2021, Father filed a trial brief in which he requested Mother be ordered to pay $7,000 toward the cost of his attorney fees (that amounted to $24,851 by that point).

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

Related

Orange County Department of Child Support Services v. Superior Court
28 Cal. Rptr. 3d 877 (California Court of Appeal, 2005)
In Re Marriage of Tharp
188 Cal. App. 4th 1295 (California Court of Appeal, 2010)
In Re Marriage of Abrams
130 Cal. Rptr. 2d 16 (California Court of Appeal, 2003)
Burkle v. Burkle
50 Cal. Rptr. 3d 436 (California Court of Appeal, 2006)
Goodman v. Lozano
223 P.3d 77 (California Supreme Court, 2010)
Kington v. Fong
193 Cal. App. 4th 278 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Featherstone v. Martinez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/featherstone-v-martinez-calctapp-2022.