In Re Marriage of De Prieto

128 Cal. Rptr. 2d 380, 104 Cal. App. 4th 748
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 2002
DocketD038136
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 128 Cal. Rptr. 2d 380 (In Re Marriage of De Prieto) 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 De Prieto, 128 Cal. Rptr. 2d 380, 104 Cal. App. 4th 748 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

*751 Opinion

HALLER, J.

When an obligor under a child support order is delinquent in payment, Family Code 2 section 4722 allows the obligee to file and serve a notice of delinquency and provides for a 6 percent monthly penalty to accrue for up to 12 months if the arrearages are not paid. Section 4726 allows the obligor to request that penalties not be imposed if he or she files a timely motion after service of the notice of delinquency.

Rosemary Corbin challenges the trial court’s discretionary reduction of penalties imposed on her former husband, Jaime De Prieto, pursuant to sections 4722 and 4726. Corbin contends the trial court erred in: (1) granting De Prieto relief from a penalty judgment under Code of Civil Procedure section 473’s mandatory attorney fault provision; (2) finding a section 4726 motion was timely; and (3) reducing the penalty below the 6 percent monthly statutory amount. We hold these rulings were not in error, and uphold the judgment reducing the penalty.

Factual and Procedural Background

After dissolution of their marriage, Corbin obtained a 1996 court order which established child support arrearages of $80,377.73, plus interest and other items. The order included a wage assignment for ongoing child support. In November 1997, Corbin filed a section 4722 notice of delinquency for $100,000.61 arrearages plus interest, and personally served it on De Prieto on December 1, 1997. The notice warned that if the arrearages were not paid within 30 days a penalty may be charged. De Prieto’s counsel at the time (Richard Prantil) was not served with the notice of delinquency, and no action was taken at that time to respond to the notice.

During 1998 and 1999, Corbin pursued and obtained several child support modifications, as well as a writ of execution on the arrearages, but did not request the court to enter judgment on the penalty. According to Attorney Prantil, during his representation of De Prieto from January 1996 to June 1998, 3 Corbin’s attorneys verbally communicated with him, served him pleadings, and sent him correspondence, but they never gave him any type of notification of the delinquency notice.

By letter dated May 18, 1999, De Prieto’s newly retained attorney (James Scott) received Corbin’s attorney’s calculations of the amount owed for arrearages, plus his calculation of a $72,001.16 penalty which had accrued in 1998 because of De Prieto’s failure to pay the arrearages.

*752 In May 1999, Attorney Scott filed a motion to appoint a special master to calculate disputed arrearage amounts and to develop a payment schedule for the arrearages. At the July 1999 hearing, Attorney Scott raised the issue of “the problem” of the $72,001.16 penalty requested by Corbin, and urged the trial court to make findings as to the penalty after the special master reported on the disputed arrearage issues. In its oral and written rulings, the court stated Attorney Scott was not precluded from filing “some sort of motion” to get relief from the penalty, but orally opined it did not think it could make the requisite findings for relief from imposition of the penalty under section 4726. The court also observed it might be difficult for De Prieto to prevail, but noted the penalty was “pretty stiff.” Concluding the parties were apart in their arrearage calculations (Corbin’s calculations were about $111,000 and De Prieto’s were about $101,000), the trial court appointed a special master, with the caveat that arrearages could not go below $101,000.

The special master utilized the 1996 court-ordered arrearage amount, which was not subject to challenge, and then calculated arrearages and accrued interest since that time, finding arrearages as of September 30, 1999, totaled $101,026.55. De Prieto paid these arrearages shortly after the special master’s report.

In April 2000, Corbin filed a section 4725 motion for a judgment on the penalty. In May 2000 De Prieto filed an opposition to the request for penalty judgment, asserting the May 1999 motion to set arrearages was a timely response to the notice of delinquency. At the June 2000 hearing on this and other motions, the trial court ordered entry of a $72,001.16 penalty judgment under section 4725. In doing so, the court found that although imposition of penalties is discretionary upon a proper motion for relief, De Prieto failed to file a section 4726 motion to show cause why penalties should not be imposed. The court also found that even if De Prieto’s May 1999 motion to establish arrearages could constitute a section 4726 motion for relief, it was not timely. At the hearing, the court noted the penalty was “very, very harsh,” “draconian,” and “drastic,” and it would impose a lesser penalty if it could, but it did not have the discretion to do so. 4

In August 2000, De Prieto filed a motion for relief from the penalty judgment under the mandatory attorney fault provision of Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b). In support of this motion, Attorney Scott declared his belief that filing opposition papers to Corbin’s April 2000 *753 motion for judgment on the penalty adequately complied with the section 4726 motion requirement. Attorney Scott explained that when he became aware of the notice of delinquency two years after its service, he filed the May 1999 motion to appoint a special master to set a firm number for the arrearages and to establish a monthly payment schedule on the arrearages. Thereafter, De Prieto was able to pay the arrearages in full. Attorney Scott then planned to show the court why no penalty would apply. When Corbin filed her April 2000 motion for judgment on the penalty, Attorney Scott thought it prudent to formally oppose the motion, rather than file a second motion as to why the penalty should not be assessed.

The trial court concluded the circumstances of the entry of the penalty judgment resembled a default, and thus granted the request for mandatory relief from the penalty judgment. The court found that although the penalty was mentioned in declarations and correspondence during the litigation, it was never actually adjudicated. Likewise, at the June 2000 hearing on the motion for penalty judgment, there was no litigation on the merits of De Prieto’s request for relief from imposition of the. penalty since no section 4726 motion had been brought. The cause of the failure to bring the section 4726 motion was attorney misfeasance: i.e., Attorney Scott mistakenly thought that filing an opposition to Corbin’s motion for judgment on the penalties was equivalent to filing a section 4726 motion. The court ordered Attorney Scott to pay Corbin’s counsel’s attorney fees and costs. 5

In October 2000, De Prieto filed a section 4726 motion requesting the penalties not be imposed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 Cal. Rptr. 2d 380, 104 Cal. App. 4th 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-de-prieto-calctapp-2002.