Guasch v. Guasch

201 Cal. App. 4th 942, 134 Cal. Rptr. 3d 358
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 2011
DocketNo. H036582
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 201 Cal. App. 4th 942 (Guasch v. Guasch) 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
Guasch v. Guasch, 201 Cal. App. 4th 942, 134 Cal. Rptr. 3d 358 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion

ELIA, J.

Appellant Pamela Carmody served a writ of execution on community property held by respondents Charlene and James Guasch, who were undergoing marital dissolution proceedings. The family court granted Charlene’s request to quash the writ of execution and enjoin further enforcement of a default judgment appellant had obtained against James after his separation from Charlene. Appellant contends that the court should have applied Code of Civil Procedure section 529 (hereafter, section 529) by requiring Charlene to post a bond to secure payment of James’s debt. We disagree and affirm the order.

Background

Charlene filed a petition for dissolution of her marriage to James on April 18, 2006. By stipulation appellant was joined in the proceeding. Both before and during the divorce proceedings James expressed threats and a desire to kill Charlene, and in June 2007 he solicited Charlene’s murder, for which he [945]*945was subsequently convicted.1 Appellant, who was James’s girlfriend, was convicted by plea in November 2007 as an accessory to the solicitation, among other offenses.

On April 28, 2010, appellant obtained a default judgment against James for $224,177.61, resulting from her loan of funds for James’s bail and other obligations. On August 5, 2010, the family court authorized Charlene to withdraw funds from investment accounts owned by both Guasches. Implementing this order was problematic, however, in part because appellant had served a writ of execution on one of the affected funds based on her judgment against James. Charlene advised the court that James had allowed appellant’s judgment to be entered against him so that appellant could execute and enforce the judgment against community property rather than property held by James alone. Charlene asked the court to direct the American Fund to release the funds in accordance with the August 5 order, and to quash the writ of execution and abstract of judgment obtained by appellant against James. She also asked the court to restrain appellant from levying on any other property held by her and James, including community real property.

Appellant opposed Charlene’s request, contending that it was appropriate to seek satisfaction of the judgment from community property. Appellant also invoked section 529, insisting that if the court were to enjoin execution of the judgment, Charlene should be required to post a bond equal to one and one-half times the amount of the judgment to prevent dissipation of the Guasches’ assets. Charlene, however, maintained that a restraining order could be issued against appellant without a surety bond. Distinguishing In re Marriage of Van Hook (1983) 147 Cal.App.3d 970 [195 Cal.Rptr. 541], on which appellant was relying in her request for a bond, Charlene noted that appellant, unlike the creditor in Van Hook, was a party to the instant action. Calling attention to appellant’s conviction of “conspiring with” James to murder her, Charlene urged the court to consider James and appellant “as one.” In Charlene’s view, James and appellant, having been unsuccessful in accomplishing her murder, were “now attempting to ruin [Charlene] financially. [James] allowed Claimant [(appellant)] to obtain a default judgment against him so that Claimant could attempt to execute and enforce the judgment against community assets of the party’s [sic].” Charlene emphasized that appellant had sought execution only as to community funds, while leaving alone accounts held solely in James’s name, even though the judgment was against only James.

Appellant, however, insisted that Charlene’s only remedy was either “to satisfy the judgment voluntarily and seek reimbursement from the judgment [946]*946debtor spouse [(i.e., James)] upon division of the property or to post a sufficient undertaking to protect the creditor’s [(i.e., appellant’s)] interest pending division of the property.” The court, she acknowledged, had jurisdiction to issue Charlene’s injunction, but an undertaking to such an order was a “mandatory” prerequisite under section 529. Otherwise, the injunction would be “void.”

The family court determined that appellant was attempting to use her civil judgment and ensuing writs and abstracts of judgment as an end run around the court’s exclusive jurisdiction over community property. In addition, the fact that appellant had not attempted to reach James’s separate property, even while admitting that her purpose was to collect on his separate debt, indicated to the court that appellant was “using the civil judgment as a means of harassing [Charlene], especially since she failed to disclose the existence of the judgment or writ of execution at the hearing on August 5th. That is entirely improper and inequitable, and cannot be tolerated.” The court further found both section 529 and the Van Hook case inapplicable. Accordingly, the court granted all of the relief requested by Charlene.

Discussion

Although appellant takes issue with the subordinate points in the family court’s reasoning, the central issue she raises is whether a bond was required under section 529 before the court was permitted to issue an injunction against her enforcement of her judgment against James. Because the appellate court reviews the correctness of the ruling, not the lower court’s reasons, we focus on appellant’s primary contention, that section 529 compelled the posting of an undertaking in this case.2 She again invokes In re Marriage of Van Hook, supra, 147 Cal.App.3d 970, where the Third District held that courts are authorized to restrain judgment creditors from executing judgments against community property during the pendency of marital dissolution proceedings, but that the lower court had erred in entering a preliminary injunction against the creditor without requiring “satisfactory sureties” in accordance with section 529. (147 Cal.App.3d at p. 989.) The Van Hook court applied former Civil Code section 4359, which provided for ex parte restraining orders when the applicant followed the procedures outlined in Code of Civil Procedure section 527. The court extended this reference to Code of Civil Procedure section 527 to the sections following that section, and thus held that the family court should have required an undertaking under section 529 as well.

[947]*947It is unnecessary to weigh in on the soundness of this holding, because we agree with the court below that Van Hook is inapposite in light of subsequent legislative revisions of the applicable statutes. Even if former Civil Code section 4359 had been intended to encompass section 529 as well as section 527 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the enactment of the Family Code did not carry along that reference. In Family Code section 2045, the successor statute to former Civil Code section 4359, the Legislature dispensed with the requirement that a party seeking the ex parte order follow the application procedures outlined in former Code of Civil Procedure section 527; and like its predecessor, it certainly did not mention section 529.3

Appellant argues that the court “erroneously relied on Family Code [section] 2045.” She notes that this statute pertains to ex parte orders, which were not sought in this case, and that the Van Hook court’s reference to former Civil Code section 4359 (the predecessor to Fam.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 Cal. App. 4th 942, 134 Cal. Rptr. 3d 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guasch-v-guasch-calctapp-2011.