Kristin T. v. Dean K. CA2/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 22, 2016
DocketB259367
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kristin T. v. Dean K. CA2/3 (Kristin T. v. Dean K. CA2/3) 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
Kristin T. v. Dean K. CA2/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 6/22/16 Kristin T. v. Dean K. CA2/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

KRISTIN T., B259367

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. SF001288 v.

DEAN K.,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Melinda A. Johnson, Temporary Judge. (Pursuant to Cal. Const., art. VI, § 21.) Affirmed. Kolodny Law Group and Jeff M. Sturman for Defendant and Appellant. Trope and Trope, Thomas Paine Dunlap and Melanie Shornick for Plaintiff and Respondent. ___________________________________ Appellant Dean K. appeals from an order directing him to pay above-guideline child support and to pay Kristin T.’s attorney fees and costs. We affirm. BACKGROUND I. General background. Kristin and Dean dated for several months in 1997. She became pregnant with their son, Dylan, who was born in April 1998. Kristin and Dean had joint legal custody of Dylan, who initially lived primarily with his mother in Missouri. For about three and a half years, from 2003 to 2006, Dylan lived with his father in Florida. In 2006, Dylan returned to Missouri to live with his mother. Dean visited and paid Kristin $1,400 in child support. In 2008, Kristin moved to California, and Dylan lived with her but spent holidays, about two months each year, with Dean. Dean was now paying about $3,100 per month in child support. In June 2009, Kristin filed a petition to establish a parentage relationship and request for a child support order. Dean did not contest paternity. And, expecting that an $8.4 million investment in a hedge fund would return $1 million per year, Dean stipulated, in September 2009, to pay $5,500 per month in child support.1 But soon after agreeing to pay child support, Dean lost his investment in a Ponzi scheme. He and Kristin therefore agreed, in May 2011, to reduce his support payment to $3,100 per month.2 Dean’s fortunes turned again when, in about 2012, he recovered approximately $8.3 million of his investment.3 Because Dean had deducted or “carried back” a

1 The $8.4 million was Dean’s share of proceeds from the 2007 sale of a family business. 2 The court awarded Dean and Kristin joint legal custody but awarded Kristin primary physical custody. Dean continued to have Dylan for vacations. 3 Of that recovery, $1.7 million went to his attorneys and $1.1 million was prejudgment interest.

2 percentage of his Ponzi scheme losses to offset prior years’ income, resulting in tax refunds, Dean reported $3,622,161 as income on his 2012 tax return. During this time, Dean formed Soaring Eagle, a start-up bottled water business. Using money from the recovery of his investment, he invested $4.5 million in the business. As of 2014, the business was not operational. Also from his recovery, he tithed $564,769 to his church. II. Kristin files a request to modify child support and custody. A. Kristin’s modification request. After Dean recovered his investment, Kristin, in July 2013, filed a request to modify child custody and support to guideline or, in the event Dean was deemed to be a high wage earner, for support “sufficient to meet [Dylan’s] reasonable needs.” According to Kristin’s income and expense declaration, she made $4,500 per month as a registered nurse cosmetic specialist, although she later claimed a reduced income of $2,870 per month. She also asked for $100,000 in attorney and accountant fees. B. Dean’s responsive papers. Dean’s responsive papers detailed the history of his investment, its loss, and partial recovery. He described the $3,622,161 reported on his 2012 tax return as “phantom income,” because it was the recovery of his capital asset. Dean also denied having a lavish lifestyle. Instead, he used tax refunds and money borrowed from family to pay living expenses. To raise money, he was selling his Florida home. A house he was renting in Utah doubled as an office for his business, on which he was working 40-to-50 hours a week for no salary. According to his 2014 income and expense declaration, he had no income, $37,083 in monthly expenses, and $3.5 million in assets.4

4 Dean’s 2012 income and expense declaration reflected no income and monthly expenses of $16,661. At that time, he’d recovered $5.6 million, of which he used $875,000 to pay off a debt; $420,000 to pay off a loan from his parents; and $564,769 he tithed to his church. He used the remaining $3.2 million to pay expenses, including support. Since 2012, he’d recovered an additional $2.4 million, which he used to pay off loans totaling $1,050,000, and past due income taxes and property taxes.

3 C. Kristin’s reply. Kristin argued that Dean’s claimed expenses of $37,083 required a gross income of $61,805 per month. She requested above-guideline support, otherwise there would be an inequitable balance between Dylan’s lifestyle while in Dean’s versus Kristin’s custody. Her forensic accountant therefore proposed two child support figures: (1) $12,438 per month, based on Dean’s monthly expenses5 and (2) $24,807 per month, based on the $3,622,161 reported as income on Dean’s 2012 tax return. D. Dean’s supplemental memorandum. Dean countered that his guideline support was $2,541. He arrived at that figure by using the $34,057 declared as income on his 2013 tax return, plus $15,095 imputed monthly income from his startup business. He disagreed that child support should be based on his lifestyle and that income could be measured by expenses. E. Kristin’s supplemental reply memorandum. Kristin argued that Dean’s lifestyle contradicted his claim he had no income. In 2012, Dean bought three cars for $349,249. He sold two cars for $131,000 and two watches for $26,000 to pay living expenses. Dean was trying to sell a third car and his Fort Lauderdale home, a 6,000 square foot home he bought in 2007 for $2.95 million. The house has five bedrooms, eight bathrooms, a pool, theater, and wine cellar. In 2013, he spent $20,000 for house items. Dean also owned property in Utah, where he rented a house for $3,000 per month. In contrast, Kristin, Dylan and Tim (Dylan’s half-brother) live in a two-bedroom mobile home in Malibu. Dylan and Tim share a bathroom and a 10-by-10 foot bedroom, which Dylan described as half the size of his closet in Dean’s home.

5 The accountant used Dean’s monthly living expenses of $72,446 for January 1, 2013 through August 8, 2013 to assume a taxable income of $120,743 per month, which yielded $12,438 per month support.

4 III. The hearing on the request for modification. A hearing on Kristin’s modification request was held in March 2014. Dean testified that he listed his Florida home for sale for $4.195 million. He has $100,000 in electronics and nine or ten pieces of art work valued between $50,000 and $100,000. He owns 2007 and 2009 Escalade trucks, a 2009 Mosler sports car, and two racing cars, one of which he bought for Dylan. He’s been trying to sell the racing cars and the Mosler, which is listed for sale at $159,000. In 2012, he bought a 1965 replica Cobra for $57,999 and a 2007 Porsche for $90,000. He sold the Cobra for $41,500 and the Porsche for $90,000. He invested $4.5 million in his bottled water business. His total recovery to date after paying prejudgment interest and attorney fees and costs is $12 million. Dean takes Dylan to Utah every year to ski and snowboard.

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Kristin T. v. Dean K. CA2/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kristin-t-v-dean-k-ca23-calctapp-2016.