J.J. v. E.C. CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 2014
DocketE056988
StatusUnpublished

This text of J.J. v. E.C. CA4/2 (J.J. v. E.C. CA4/2) 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
J.J. v. E.C. CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 1/22/14 J.J. v. E.C. CA4/2

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

J.J.,

Petitioner, E056988

v. (Super.Ct.No. HED017064)

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF OPINION RIVERSIDE COUNTY,

Respondent;

E.C., et al.,

Real Parties in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for extraordinary writ. Irma Poole

Asberry, Judge. Petition granted.

Law Offices of Toby Bowler and Toby Bowler; Tenner Johnson, LLP and J. Craig

Johnson, attorneys for Petitioner.

No appearance by Respondent.

A.T., in pro. per., for Real Party in Interest.

1 This case must be one of the saddest ever to come before this court. The child real

party in this matter, E.C., once had two fathers who were either financially and/or

emotionally willing to support her. Now she has none, although both men are still alive

and theoretically available to assume those responsibilities.

The record before us does not contain a complete record of the various

proceedings in which the parties have been embroiled over the years, and to a

considerable extent, we are indebted to a careful summation prepared by the trial court in

June 2010, the accuracy of which we presume will not be disputed.

The formal petitioner below is E.C., a minor, who was born in September 2000.

At the time of the birth her mother, A.T. (Mother), was married to, but separated from,

P.C. However, P.C. and Mother were cohabiting at the time the minor was conceived, so

that the semi-conclusive presumption of Family Code1 section 7540 applied to P.C. The

minor’s biological father, however, is J.J., petitioner in this proceeding and respondent

below. J.J. does not dispute this, and his paternity was in fact confirmed by private DNA

testing performed shortly after E.C.’s birth.

In March 2001, Mother instigated a support action through the district attorney for

the formal establishment of paternity and support. This led to negotiations between J.J.

and Mother and eventually a support agreement. In this agreement J.J. admitted paternity

“[f]or purposes of this agreement” and agreed to pay $625 per month for E.C.’s support,

1 All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise indicated.

2 subject to cost of living increases. The agreement also provided for contact between J.J.

and E.C. at the latter’s request once she reached the age of 12. The agreement included a

confidentiality agreement prohibiting any discussion of E.C.’s paternity with others.

Meanwhile, P.C. had filed a dissolution action that was eventually settled by

stipulation and order on April 29, 2002. This petition and order listed only Mother’s two

older children as children of the marriage.

It appears that at this time, or shortly thereafter, Mother became dissatisfied with

the amount of support provided in the agreement. As our opinion in a previous case

involving Mother and J.J. recites, Mother breached the confidentiality agreement by, inter

alia, contacting J.J.’s elderly and ailing mother and informing her of E.C.’s existence.

(See Claudio v. Johnson (Mar. 8, 2007, E039609) [nonpub. opn.].) Mother also

threatened to bring E.C. to J.J.’s office2 or home, and to publicize the relationship by any

means possible, including newspaper advertisements. Mother also demanded that J.J.

purchase a home for her; he declined. She then retained counsel to assist her in obtaining

more child support.3

At first J.J.’s attorney (then Toby Bowler) was cooperative, but once he realized

that Mother had been married to P.C. at the time E.C. was conceived, matters changed.

Bowler advised J.J. that because Mother had breached the confidentiality provisions of

2 J.J. is an attorney.

3 By that time J.J.’s monthly payments were $850.

3 the support agreement, he could consider the agreement terminated. J.J. therefore

stopped paying support for E.C. in October 2002.

Mother then filed a paternity action in her own name against J.J., seeking a

judgment that he was E.C.’s legal father. E.C. was not formally made a party to this

matter. Most of the proceedings in that matter are not relevant,4 but it resulted in a

“judgment of non-paternity” entered on February 10, 2005. This judgment found that the

conclusive presumption of section 7540 applied and that P.C. was E.C.’s legal father and

that he had held the child out as his daughter after her birth. The judgment also recited

that no request for genetic testing had been made within two years of the child’s birth, as

required by section 7541,5 and that “there is not a parent-child relationship in existence

between [J.J.] and [E.C.]. . . .” This judgment duly became final.

Mother’s next step was to file an action for breach of contract and fraud, acting as

guardian ad litem for E.C.—a status she had not sought with respect to the paternity

action. This case came to this court when J.J. appealed the trial court’s denial of his

special “anti-SLAPP” motion to strike a cause of action for “promissory fraud.” (Code

Civ. Proc., § 425.16.) We found that Mother had presented insufficient evidence that J.J.

4Apparently J.J. filed a motion to join P.C., but at a later hearing both he and Mother stipulated that the presence of P.C’s attorney was not required, thereby apparently abandoning the attempt.

5 Section 7541, subdivision (b) allows the conclusive presumption of the preceding statute to be challenged by genetic/DNA testing, but “[t]he notice of motion for blood tests under this section may be filed not later than two years from the child’s date of birth by the husband. . . .”

4 had harbored a secret intent not to perform his obligations when he entered into the

support agreement, and directed that J.J.’s motion be granted as to that cause of action. It

appears that Mother was similarly unsuccessful with the remainder of the action, as then

Commissioner Asberry noted below that J.J.’s motion for summary judgment was

granted.

Mother then6 filed a motion to set aside the nonpaternity judgment. This motion

was heard and denied in April 2009.

The case now before us was filed by E.C. in her own name on June 23, 2009, to

establish paternity and obtain related relief. Mother was later joined as a party and

apparently also appointed as guardian ad litem. The instant petition involves J.J.’s

motion for summary judgment, which was based on the 2005 judgment of nonpaternity.7

The issue on which we decide the case is whether E.C., who was not a formal party to the

original paternity action, is bound by that judgment. We determine that she is.8

6In fact, there were intervening proceedings in the dissolution action between Mother and P.C., although the import cannot be ascertained from this record.

7 The motion also argued the conclusive presumption and policy factors, but we find the effect of the previous judgment to be dispositive. Hence, we have no further need to consider the support agreement and surrounding circumstances or the relationship vel non of P.C. to E.C. after her birth. Nor do we consider Mother’s arguments as to J.J.’s moral obligation.

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