Marriage of Blum and Herbstman CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 2022
DocketH045460
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Blum and Herbstman CA6 (Marriage of Blum and Herbstman CA6) 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
Marriage of Blum and Herbstman CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 6/13/22 Marriage of Blum and Herbstman CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re the Marriage of ADAM BLUM and H045460, H046286, H047513 LAUREN HERBSTMAN. (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. FL129664)

ADAM BLUM,

Respondent,

v.

LAUREN HERBSTMAN,

Appellant.

In a series of appeals ordered considered together for oral argument and decision, Lauren Herbstman (mother) challenges an order modifying child support and related orders. Specifically, she appeals from a posttrial order reducing Adam Blum’s (father’s) child support obligation for the parties’ minor child. Mother also challenges various pretrial orders, including one reserving jurisdiction on her request for pendente lite attorney’s fees, and a posttrial order enforcing the order modifying child support. We reverse the order modifying child support and the later enforcement order and remand to the trial court with directions. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Mother and father married in 2004. Their only child was born later that year. They separated on December 31, 2004, and father filed for divorce the following year. Since that time, the parties have been engaged in high conflict litigation concerning child custody and support. In 2011, following a child support trial, father was ordered to pay mother $1,441 in monthly child support. On January 20, 2015, mother filed a request for order seeking to modify child support.1 She asserted that father’s annual income exceeded $4 million and requested $10,000 per month in child support. In a supporting declaration, mother declared that during the 2011 child support trial father sold a company he had founded to Motorola in exchange for $4.6 million in cash plus options and restricted stock valued at $3.7 million and that father had failed to disclose that fact at trial. Mother lodged supporting documents with the court. Those included documents subpoenaed from Motorola setting forth father’s proceeds from the sale of his business, father’s 2013 W-2 with total wages of nearly $2.5 million,2 and bank account statements showing father had a closing balance of approximately $1.4 million on both December 31, 2012, and January 1, 2014. Also attached to mother’s request for order was father’s February 14, 2014 Income and Expense Declaration. In it, father declared that he had earned, on average, $16,472 per month in the preceding 12 months. He further declared that he had $105,300 in cash and checking accounts, savings, credit union, money market, and other deposit accounts and $0 in stocks, bonds, and other liquid assets. Mother’s January 2015 request for order also sought Family Code section 20303 attorney’s fees and costs in the amount of $750,000. The court denied that request for

1 She also sought to set aside the earlier child support order. The trial court bifurcated the request to set aside from the request to modify and denied the motion to set aside as time barred. The request to set aside the 2011 child support order is not before us on appeal. 2 Mother acknowledged that father had filed a declaration in January 2015 stating

that the 2013 W-2 was erroneous and that Motorola had incorrectly categorized what should have been capital gains as W-2 income. 3 All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise

indicated.

2 attorney’s fees on April 23, 2015. Mother made numerous subsequent requests for section 2030 attorney’s fees in advance of the child support modification trial, including a request on July 26, 2017. At a hearing on September 9, 2017, the court reserved jurisdiction on attorney’s fees until after trial. That ruling was memorialized in an order dated November 3, 2017. Mother appeals from that order in case No. H045460 and reasserts her challenge to it in case No. H046286. Father moved in limine to exclude as irrelevant evidence as to his income or finances prior to the January 2015 filing of the request to modify child support. Mother opposed the motion, arguing that evidence of father’s income dating back to 2011 was relevant to show that his income fluctuates and to allow the trial court to determine whether child support should be adjusted under section 4064 to accommodate his fluctuating income. The court granted father’s in limine motion. The case went to trial on the issue of child support modification in September 2017. Mother represented herself for most of the trial, although she had representation for closing arguments. The following evidence was adduced at trial. Mother rents a home in Danville. At the time of the 2017 trial, she was the CEO and sole employee of a business called Personalized Gift Stop, which she ran out of her home. She owned the business until 2014, when she transferred ownership to her mother, to whom she owed personal and business-related debts. Mother earned $54,667 in 2015, $54,500 in 2016, and was earning $5,000 per month in 2017. She also had use of a company car and received $518 per month from Personalized Gift Stop as reimbursement for the home office space the company used in her home. Father was the CEO of Open Ed, a startup, from January 2015 until May 2016, when Open Ed was acquired by ACT. Father became an employee of ACT at that time. Father’s annual salary was $90,000 between January 2015 and May 27, 2016. On May 27, 2016, his annual salary increased to $200,000. Father received a retention bonus

3 of $125,000 in April 2017 and was contractually entitled to receive a retention bonus of $125,000 in May 2018. When Open Ed was acquired, father received $2,684,538. He represented that those funds were community property, and that he and his current wife invested $2,426,708 of the funds into two new companies and used the remaining funds ($257,830) to pay attorney’s fees. Father testified that he owns two homes outright, his family home in Santa Cruz and a rental property in Los Gatos. He received rental income of $2,093 per month in 2015 and $848 per month in 2016. The rental property was damaged by a landslide in 2016; it was undergoing repairs at the time of trial and was not generating rental income. Father’s expert in calculating guideline child support testified that the guideline child support should be $517 per month for 2015, $829 per month for 2016, and $1,058 per month for 2017 (plus $7,050 for the bonus father earned that year). Father argued that the court should impute $2,518 per month in additional income to mother based on the monthly rent subsidy she received from her employer, her use of the company car, and debt forgiveness from her mother. However, father’s expert considered only mother’s salary (and not any possible imputed income) in making the guideline child support calculations. The expert testified that he did not include the full proceeds from the Open Ed sale in father’s 2016 income. Instead, he included an imputed rate of return on the after-tax proceeds, which resulted in additional monthly income of $2,814. 4 The expert calculated the portion of the 2017 bonus to be paid in child support using a bonus table; based on the gross amount of the bonus, the table called for a percentage of 5.64 percent. The bonus table does not appear in the record.

4Based on the expert’s testimony, it appears he performed the calculation on the full amount of the proceeds, despite acknowledging that approximately $258,000 of the proceeds were not reinvested. The expert’s report is not in the appellate record.

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