Hetrick v. Clusin CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 30, 2015
DocketH038435
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hetrick v. Clusin CA6 (Hetrick v. Clusin CA6) 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
Hetrick v. Clusin CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 7/30/15 Hetrick v. Clusin CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

JANE HETRICK, H038435 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. CV149265)

v.

WILLIAM CLUSIN,

Defendant and Appellant.

Plaintiff Jane Hetrick brought this action for damages, alleging that defendant induced her to enter into an intimate relationship by fraudulently assuring her that he was free of sexually transmitted diseases, specifically including genital herpes. In a nonjury trial, plaintiff adduced evidence tending to establish, among other things, that defendant knew he had transmitted genital herpes to two previous wives. The trial court awarded compensatory and punitive damages to plaintiff. Appearing pro se, defendant contends that the judgment is unsound for various reasons. We detect no error. Accordingly, we will affirm. BACKGROUND Plaintiff is a retired professor. Before she met defendant, she had never been married and had borne no children. She testified that she had had relatively few sexual partners, and no reason to think any of them were infected with any sexually transmitted disease (STD). She was particularly concerned about such diseases, and especially herpes, because a brother had nearly died from herpes-related encephalitis. Accordingly, when contemplating possible physical intimacy, her practice was to ask whether the prospective partner had any STDs, specifically including herpes. When one potential suitor acknowledged that he had an STD, plaintiff stopped dating him. Her medical expert opined that, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, plaintiff was not carrying HSV-2—the virus generally implicated in genital herpes infections—when she met defendant. Defendant cites no evidence to the contrary. Defendant holds both a medical degree and a Ph.D. in molecular biology. In 1981, after a residency at Stanford University in internal medicine, he became a board certified specialist in that field. Since 1983 he has been a member of the faculty at a prominent medical school.1 Plaintiff and defendant met at a gathering of single professionals on January 4, 2004. Plaintiff was then 50 years old. Defendant was apparently about a half-decade older.2 Both were interested in having a child. Plaintiff testified that when they began dating seriously, she followed her usual practice by asking defendant whether he had any sexually transmitted diseases, including genital herpes. He replied “absolutely not, that he did not have genital herpes or any STD.” They thereafter commenced an intimate relationship. In 2005, they entered into a surrogacy agreement with a designated

1 In an effort to deflect any inference that he possessed special knowledge concerning genital herpes infections, defendant asserts that from 1982 on, his “clinical practice was limited to cardiology.” In his “corrected” reply brief, he describes himself as “a practicing cardiologist, who had been certified in internal medicine in the past.” Insofar as this is intended to mean that he was no longer qualified to practice internal medicine, the assertion fails for want of any supporting citation to the record. 2 Defendant testified that he went directly to undergraduate school after his junior year of high school and graduated in 1970. Assuming he spent four years as an undergraduate, he would presumably have been born around 1949.

2 surrogate mother and her husband under which defendant’s sperm would fertilize a donated egg for gestation in the womb of the surrogate mother. As called for in the agreement, plaintiff and defendant were both tested for sexually transmitted diseases. They were not, however, tested for HSV-2, apparently because it cannot be transmitted through gestational surrogacy. The parties were married on March 31, 2007. In August of that year, plaintiff was told by one of defendant’s sons from a previous marriage that defendant had infected the son’s mother— defendant’s then-wife—with genital herpes. Plaintiff informed defendant of the accusation and asked if it was true. He denied it nonchalantly, minimizing its seriousness. At her insistence, they were both tested for HSV-2—he on August 30, and she on September 13. Both tests were positive. When plaintiff showed her results to defendant, he exhibited not surprise, but indifference. Nor did he manifest concern about his own positive result. He showed no interest in where the infection had come from. When she directly accused him of infecting her, he did not deny it. Instead he suggested that since they were both already infected, their sexual relationship should continue. By the time this conversation took place, plaintiff already considered the marriage over. She had asked defendant to leave, and had consulted an attorney. Their divorce became final in November 2008. Plaintiff filed this action on August 6, 2009, asserting numerous theories of recovery sounding primarily in fraud and personal injury. The matter was tried without a jury, resulting in a judgment awarding plaintiff $500,000 in general damages, $11,500 in special damages, and $398,400 in punitive damages. DISCUSSION I. Appellate Irregularities Defendant’s briefs fail to conform to many requirements imposed by the rules of court. After plaintiff filed her brief, pointing these matters out, defendant filed a reply

3 brief containing similar irregularities, and then moved to file a “corrected” reply brief—a motion we granted, although the “corrected” brief is itself woefully deficient and is less a reply to plaintiff’s brief than an attempt to clarify the arguments presented in the opening brief. Our system demands of each party to an appeal that every assertion of fact be supported by a citation to the point in the record where that fact is substantiated, and that every assertion of law be supported by pertinent authority, argument, or both. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B), (C).) Defendant makes a few attempts to comply with these requirements, but mostly honors them in the breach. The table of authorities in the opening brief lists 10 statutes, one local rule, and four cases. Only two of the four cases are properly cited in the table, though one of these is cited only by name in the text. The other two cases—one from Ohio, and one from the United Kingdom—are identified only by name (in the latter case) or by name and docket number (in the former). No page references are provided in the table of authorities, so anyone wondering where and why a statute is cited must search the entire brief to find it. The brief also fails to articulate separate arguments under separate headings, as required by California Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B). Defendant appears unwilling or unable to distill his complaints into logical, which is to say syllogistic form, and separate them into a coherent structure. Instead the opening brief consists of 37 pages of meandering commentary under the heading “Statement of Case and Appealability,” followed by 11 pages of numbered paragraphs purportedly consisting of “Arguments,” but more accurately described as clusters of loosely associated protests. Rather than attempt to further catalog specific irregularities here, we will note them in the discussion below as and when they become relevant to our determination of the appeal.

4 Counsel for plaintiff has asked us to take judicial notice of a decision in which, more than a year before defendant filed his opening brief here, the First Appellate District chided him for violations resembling those in evidence here.

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Hetrick v. Clusin CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hetrick-v-clusin-ca6-calctapp-2015.