In Re Marriage of Braendle

46 Cal. App. 4th 1037, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4654, 54 Cal. Rptr. 2d 397, 32 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1161, 96 Daily Journal DAR 7435, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 574
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 1996
DocketB094105
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 Cal. App. 4th 1037 (In Re Marriage of Braendle) 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
In Re Marriage of Braendle, 46 Cal. App. 4th 1037, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4654, 54 Cal. Rptr. 2d 397, 32 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1161, 96 Daily Journal DAR 7435, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 574 (Cal. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Opinion

BARON, J.

The parties to this appeal, respondent Dina Braendle and appellant American Overseas Air Freight, Inc., (American Overseas) are both creditors of Ruediger Braendle and have conflicting claims to stock owned by him. We conclude that Dina Braendle holds a prior perfected security interest, and therefore has precedence. We further hold that American Overseas may not recover the debt owed by Ruediger from her or property assigned to her in the marital dissolution. Finally, we hold that the trial court erred in transferring title to the stock to Dina. As secured creditor, Dina was entitled to possession, not title, and must comply with the requirements of division 9 of the California Uniform Commercial Code.

Factual and Procedural Background

The marriage of Dina and Ruediger Braendle was dissolved by judgment entered December 11, 1991. In the division, Ruediger Braendle was awarded *1040 the stock in American Overseas, valued at $1,438,651. 1 Dina was awarded certain real and personal property and pension and bank accounts valued at less than the stock. To equalize the division, Ruediger was ordered to pay Dina the sum of $483,393. “Said equalizing payment” was “ordered to be secured by the stock in American Overseas Airfreight, awarded to [Ruediger].” In addition, Ruediger was “ordered to forthwith turn over all stock held in said corporation to [Dina’s] counsel, Mosten and Wasserstrom, to hold as security until such time as the equalizing payments are made to [Dina].”

Ruediger appealed from the judgment. The court granted his motion to stay enforcement of the judgment pending appeal, and ordered that the stock certificates be held by the court in lieu of an undertaking, along with the property deeds and pink slips. Ruediger delivered the stock certificates to the clerk of the court. This court affirmed the judgment in an unpublished decision dated February 17, 1994.

Ruediger had listed a debt to American Overseas in the amount of $58,000 on his schedule of assets and debts filed in the dissolution proceedings. The order of dissolution did not assign the debt for payment. On May 29, 1994, after the judgment of dissolution was entered, but before the appeal was concluded, American Overseas brought a breach of contract action against Ruediger alone. A judgment was entered in the amount of $70,842.52 plus “all attorneys’ fees, costs and disbursements incurred in enforcing and executing this Judgment” 2 on June 22, 1993. American Overseas obtained a writ of execution, filed a notice of judgment lien, filed a notice of lien in the appeal, and filed abstracts of judgment in Orange, Riverside, and Los Angeles Counties. In addition, American Overseas persuaded the sheriff to levy a writ of execution against the stock certificates in the hands of the clerk of the court. The clerk turned the stock certificates over to the sheriff’s office which retained possession indicating its willingness to hold a sale. Before the stock could be sold, however, Ruediger filed bankruptcy petitions in Arizona, first under chapter 13 and then under chapter 7 of title 11 of the United States Code.

At the joint request of American Overseas and Dina Braendle, the Arizona bankruptcy court issued an order granting relief from the automatic stay “to allow American Overseas to pursue and complete a sheriff’s sale of the *1041 American Overseas stock owned by Debtor, pursuant to state law and to apply the proceeds of such sale to the obligations of Debtor to American Overseas and Dina Braendle, as these interests may appear pursuant to the laws of the State of California” and “to allow Dina Braendle to pursue [her] state law of remedies . . . with respect to the Debtor’s ‘undertaking’ . . . pursuant to C.C.P. §§ 917.1 et seq. and to conclude currently pending litigation in Los Angeles County Superior Court, including but not limited to alimony and property settlement issues[.]” Any excess in proceeds over the amounts owed to American Overseas and Dina was to be “deposited with the Trustee appointed in this matter . . . to be held and accounted for . . . as part of the Debtor’s Chapter 7 estate[.]”

American Overseas noticed its intention to go forward with the sheriff’s sale. Dina Braendle moved ex parte before the family law court for an order releasing the stock certificates to her. At the initial ex parte hearing, the court ordered the sheriff to return the stock certificates to the superior court clerk. American Overseas filed an opposition in which it urged the court to assign the “community debt” to Dina under section 2556 of the Family Code, 3 or to recognize its “prior” lien. In its final ruling, the court found that the security interest described in the judgment of dissolution had priority over American Overseas’ judgment lien and that the certificates had been improperly transferred from the court to the sheriff. Since the parties were “unable to determine the value of the shares” or “to agree on whether the value of the subject share certificate will cover [Ruediger’s] dissolution judgment liability to [Dina],” the court transferred ownership and possession of the stock to Dina. American Overseas appealed from this order. 4

Discussion

I

Although American Overseas purports to raise a number of issues in its appeal, the determinative question here concerns which party has a priority *1042 interest in the stock owned by Ruediger Braendle. American Overseas’s contention that as a disclosed community creditor, it should be allowed to satisfy its judgment against community assets—including the stock—misses the point. While Dina and Ruediger were married, section 910 of the Family Code permitted Ruediger’s creditors to go after community property to satisfy his debts “regardless of whether one or both spouses are parties to the debt or to a judgment for the debt.” Once the marriage was dissolved and division of community property had occurred, however, the provisions of section 916 of the Family Code control. 5 Under that statute, “. . . the property received by the person in the division is not liable for a debt incurred by the person’s spouse before or during marriage, and the person is not personally liable for the debt, unless the debt was assigned for payment by the person in the division of the property.” (Fam. Code, § 916, subd. (a)(2), italics added.) Moreover, “[i]f a money judgment for the debt is entered after the division, the property [received by the married person in the division] is not subject to enforcement of the judgment and the judgment may not be enforced against the married person, unless the person is made a party to the judgment for the purpose of this paragraph.” (Fam. Code, § 916, subd. (a)(3).)

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46 Cal. App. 4th 1037, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4654, 54 Cal. Rptr. 2d 397, 32 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1161, 96 Daily Journal DAR 7435, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-braendle-calctapp-1996.