Fernandez-Abin v. Sanchez

191 Cal. App. 4th 1015, 120 Cal. Rptr. 3d 227
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 2011
DocketNo. D056010
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 191 Cal. App. 4th 1015 (Fernandez-Abin v. Sanchez) 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
Fernandez-Abin v. Sanchez, 191 Cal. App. 4th 1015, 120 Cal. Rptr. 3d 227 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion

BENKE, Acting P. J.

Higinio Sanchez (husband) appeals the restraining order issued under the Domestic Violence Protection Act (DVPA) (Fam. Code,1 § 6200 et seq.) protecting Maria Del Carmen Fernandez-Abin (wife) and their minor son and daughter. Husband claims the California court erred when it included the children within the scope of the restraining order and made various rulings regarding visitation and custody because, in an earlier proceeding before a different judge, that court had granted his motion brought under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (§ 3400 et seq. (UCCJEA)) to dismiss the children. In so doing, that court found it lacked emergency jurisdiction over the children because wife already had initiated divorce and custody proceedings in family court in Tijuana, Mexico, and thus the court in Mexico had exclusive and continuing jurisdiction over them.

According to husband, because wife did not appeal the earlier order from the California court, and because the issue of jurisdiction was adjudicated on the merits and allegedly was a final appealable order, that court was barred on a number of grounds from subsequently revisiting the jurisdiction issue in the evidentiary hearing in connection with wife’s request for a domestic violence restraining order against husband.

Finally, husband claims the restraining order had the effect of denying him “all contact with his children” in violation of his fundamental rights under the Fourteenth Amendment and, claims the California court’s finding regarding the “habitual residence” of the children is not supported by substantial evidence in the record.

For reasons we explain, we conclude the California court erred when, at the subsequent evidentiary hearing on wife’s request for a permanent restraining order, it included the children within the scope of that order and made various rulings regarding custody and visitation ostensibly without regard to the jurisdiction of the Tijuana family court and the UCCJEA. As we discuss, [1020]*1020the UCCJEA is the exclusive means to determine jurisdiction over a child in connection with any “child custody proceeding,” which includes custody and/or visitation orders made in a domestic violence proceeding (§ 3402, subds. (c), (d)) and applies to child custody determinations made in a foreign country (§ 3405), even if the competing forum has not adopted the UCCJEA.

However, we also conclude the California court was not precluded from revisiting the issue of whether to exercise temporary emergency jurisdiction over the children under section 3424, subdivision (a), after it made findings in the evidentiary hearing that husband committed acts of domestic violence against wife witnessed by the children and that husband took the children without a court order and kept wife from seeing them for over three months.2 Because the record shows the California court neither based its decision on section 3424 nor followed the requirements of that statute when it included the children within the permanent restraining order, and because the record also shows the California court effectively disregarded the jurisdiction of the Tijuana family court in making custody and visitation determinations in connection with that order, we conclude the prudent course is to reverse the permanent restraining order as it pertains to the children, and custody and visitation, and to remand the matter with instructions.

On remand, the California court is directed to follow the UCCJEA, including, but not limited to, section 3424, subdivision (a), in determining whether jurisdiction existed over the children when it included them within the protection of wife’s restraining order and made custody and visitation determinations. The California court is further directed to make appropriate findings based on this statutory scheme and if jurisdiction exists, to adhere to the statutory requirements of the UCCJEA, including, but not limited to, those set forth in subdivisions (c) and (d) of section 3424.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Husband and wife were married in Mexico in 1995. They have two children, both bom in San Diego. Their daughter was bom in 1998 and their son in 2003.

A. Wife Files a Petition for Separation and Divorce in Tijuana, Mexico

In early October 2007, wife filed a petition for legal separation in the family court in Tijuana. Later that month, husband requested visitation with [1021]*1021the children, case No. 1676/2007, later renumbered case No. 702/2008 (custody proceeding). In late October 2007, husband and wife reached an agreement regarding husband’s visitation rights, which wife claims never became an order of the Mexican court.

In early December 2007, wife filed for divorce in Tijuana, case No. 1995/2007 (divorce proceeding). The court in Tijuana “opened the case” in January 2008, granted wife legal and physical custody of the children and ordered husband to pay child support. The court in Tijuana also ordered husband not to leave the country without the court’s permission, unless husband had an attorney available in Mexico.

In April 2008, wife filed a challenge to the judge in the custody proceeding. However, before her motion was heard, that judge withdrew from the case. In late April 2008, the custody proceeding was reassigned to Judge Josefina Magana.

In mid-June 2008, husband, accompanied by about 10 armed men carrying assault weapons, went to wife’s parents’ house in Tijuana, took the children and never returned them home.3 The following day, wife went to the district attorney in Tijuana and reported the abduction of the children. Wife also filed a request in the custody proceeding for the return of her children. In early July 2008, Judge Magana ordered the Tijuana district attorney to investigate the abduction of the children and terminated the parties’ visitation agreement.

Although husband admitted he took the children and had them in his custody, he alleged he did so because wife committed incest and abused the children. Husband thus sought his own order for custody of the children.

On July 9, 2008, Judge Magana confirmed husband did not have primary custody over the children and ordered husband not to have any visitation with them or to remove them from Tijuana. That same day, the Tijuana district attorney notified Judge Magana that an investigation had been initiated regarding the children and their abduction.

In mid-July 2008, wife completed a Hague Convention petition, which was sent to the United States Central Authority, forwarded to the California Attorney General’s Office and finally sent to the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office. In August 2008, wife moved to San Diego after she obtained legal residency.

[1022]*1022In August 2008, Judge Magana denied husband any visitation with the children unless and until he returned them to wife. Husband refused.

In early September 2008, the family court in the Mexico divorce proceeding ordered the court clerk and law enforcement to use any force necessary to recover the children from husband’s Tijuana residence and return them to wife.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 Cal. App. 4th 1015, 120 Cal. Rptr. 3d 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernandez-abin-v-sanchez-calctapp-2011.