Marriage of Blake & Langer

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 2022
DocketB311966
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Marriage of Blake & Langer, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 11/10/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

In re the Marriage of MEREDITH B311966 BLAKE and JEREMIAH (Los Angeles County LANGER. Super. Ct. No. 17STFL04444)

MEREDITH BLAKE,

Respondent,

v.

JEREMIAH LANGER,

Respondent;

DANIEL S. WOHL,

Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Lawrence P. Riff, Judge. Affirmed. Garner Health Law Corporation and Craig B. Garner for Appellant. No appearance for Respondent Meredith Blake. Stephen Temko for Respondent Jeremiah Langer. In September 2017, Meredith Blake initiated a marital dissolution action against her estranged husband, Jeremiah Michael Langer. As that dissolution action proceeded, the family court granted Langer’s motion to join as parties Blake’s brother and father (Daniel Wohl and Steven Wohl, respectively)1 for interfering with the court’s ability to adjudicate the dissolution action. After Langer filed a joinder complaint against Daniel and Steven, Daniel filed a motion to disqualify Langer’s attorneys. The court denied Daniel’s motion, finding it to be frivolous and sanctionable. Thereafter, Langer filed a motion for attorney fees as sanctions against Daniel pursuant to Family Code section 271 (section 271) for conduct that “frustrates the policy of the law to promote settlement of litigation and . . . to reduce the cost of litigating by encouraging cooperation between the parties and attorneys.” (§ 271, subd. (a).) At the sanctions hearing, the court ruled that it would impose sanctions against Daniel for his frivolous disqualification motion but postponed its final order to allow the parties to submit additional documentation pertaining to the appropriate amount of the sanctions award. Between the initial sanctions hearing and the court’s final order awarding Langer $58,400 in attorney fees, Langer voluntarily dismissed his joinder complaint against Daniel and Steven. Daniel appeals from the postdismissal sanctions order. As his sole contention on appeal, Daniel argues that Langer’s voluntary dismissal of the joinder complaint divested the trial court of jurisdiction to issue the sanctions order against Daniel. We disagree and affirm.

1 We refer to Daniel and Steven Wohl by their first names to avoid confusion. We intend no disrespect.

2 BACKGROUND The underlying facts are of limited relevance to the issue raised in this appeal. For context, we briefly recite portions of the factual and procedural background.2

A. Events Preceding Langer’s Request for Joinder in the Dissolution Action Blake and Langer married in September 2004 and separated in June 2017. In September 2017, Blake filed the underlying action for dissolution of marriage. In January 2018, Langer’s attorneys Elyse Margolin and Tess Cozine sent an email to MetLife Investors USA Insurance Company (MetLife) instructing it to maintain the named beneficiaries or covered dependents under any policy issued to Langer or Blake, including a $2 million term life insurance policy that had been taken out on Blake (the Blake policy). Langer and Daniel (Blake’s brother) were the named beneficiaries of the Blake policy. Langer and Daniel had taken out the policy in 2012 in their capacity as trustees of the Meredith Blake Irrevocable Trust (the 2012 Blake trust), which was drafted by Steven (Blake’s father), a trust and estate attorney in New York. The Blake policy was administered through Brighthouse Life Insurance Company (Brighthouse). In August 2018, Steven wrote to Brighthouse and enclosed forms purportedly assigning the Blake policy to another trust created by Steven,

2 We take portions of the background from our prior opinion (In re Marriage of Meredith Blake and Jeremiah Michael Langer (B298280, Oct. 27, 2020) [nonpub. opn.] (Marriage of Blake & Langer)), which comprises part of the record in this appeal. We have also granted Langer’s request to take judicial notice of the appellate record in Marriage of Blake & Langer.

3 the Blake Issue Irrevocable 2018 Trust (the 2018 Blake trust), for which Steven was the trustee. In early 2019, Steven sent MetLife and Brighthouse several emails urging the assignment of the Blake policy to the 2018 Blake trust. When sending one email (which was also sent to Langer’s attorneys), Steven inadvertently attached an email he had sent to Blake in November 2018 in which he stated: “I have reviewed [your residence trust] and believe I have a method of indefinitely tying your house up in litigation against [Langer], IN NEW YORK.” Steven then stated, “My action may well not succeed, but it would have a very good chance of tying up your house for years—and deterring any would- be buyer who would be offput 100% from buying a house in litigation, especially in NY.”

B. Langer’s Motion for Joinder and the Joinder Complaint On March 13, 2019, Langer filed an ex parte request for order (RFO) in family court asking the court to grant his motion for joinder of Daniel, Steven, and the 2012 Blake trust, and requesting the court to enjoin Steven and Daniel from attempting to modify or transfer the Blake policy or transfer or interfere with the sale of the family residence. Before the hearing on his motion, Langer lodged evidence that Daniel and Steven had filed a petition in New York state court requesting various declarations and orders regarding the Blake policy, as well as seeking $10,000 in sanctions against Langer and his attorneys Margolin and Cozine, and $100,000 in punitive damages against Margolin for interfering with the property and contractual rights of the 2012 and 2018 Blake Trusts.

4 The family court granted Langer’s original motion for joinder,3 and on January 29, 2020, Langer filed the operative first amended joinder complaint (FAC), alleging five causes of action against Daniel and Steven for conversion; breach of fiduciary duty; wrongful use of civil proceedings; conspiracy; and ongoing conspiracy. The causes of action were based on the attempted transfer of the Blake policy, the filing of the New York lawsuit, and the attempts by Daniel and Steven to interfere with the dissolution action.

C. Daniel’s Motion to Disqualify Langer’s Attorneys On May 19, 2020 (one month before Blake filed her prior appeal), Daniel filed a RFO to disqualify Langer’s attorneys (Margolin and Cozine) and refer them to the California State Bar for ethical violations. In substance, Daniel argued that Margolin “provok[ed] the former judge” in the dissolution action by filing pleadings that referenced Steven’s email to Blake discussing a plot to thwart the sale of the family residence. Daniel argued that the email constituted privileged attorney-client material, and thus Margolin should not have submitted it to the family court.4 In opposition, Langer argued that Steven was never Blake’s attorney in the dissolution

3 In the prior appeal in this case, we affirmed the court’s order granting the joinder motion. (See Marriage of Blake & Langer, supra, at p. *54.)

4 Rule 4.4 of the California Rules of Professional Conduct mandates that a lawyer must promptly notify the sender of a writing, and refrain from further examining it, whenever “it is reasonably apparent [that the] writing relat[es] to a lawyer’s representation of a client [and] the writing was inadvertently sent or produced, and the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that the writing is privileged or subject to the work product doctrine.”

5 action, and therefore his email to Blake did not constitute privileged material. At an October 5, 2020 hearing, the court agreed with Langer and denied Daniel’s motion to disqualify Langer’s attorneys.

D.

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Marriage of Blake & Langer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-blake-langer-calctapp-2022.