Marriage of Brown CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 2013
DocketD060142
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Brown CA4/1 (Marriage of Brown CA4/1) 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 Brown CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 3/27/13 Marriage of Brown CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

In re the Marriage of MICHELLE M. and GARY L. BROWN. D060142 MICHELLE M. BROWN,

Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. D508947)

v.

GARY L. BROWN,

Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Christine K.

Goldsmith, Judge. Affirmed.

Michelle Brown (Michelle) moved to set aside a judgment of dissolution to the

extent it incorporated a portion of a Marital Settlement Agreement (MSA) purporting to

waive her rights to share in the sales proceeds from a sale of real property in Barstow.

She asserted, among other grounds for setting aside that aspect of the judgment, that (1)

her former husband Gary Brown (Gary) did not comply with the disclosure requirements of Family Code1 section 2100 et seq., which provided grounds for relief under section

2122, subdivision (f); and (2) the judgment was agreed to by Michelle based on a mistake

of fact and/or law within the meaning of section 2122, subdivision (e). The court agreed,

finding Gary had not complied with the disclosure requirements imposed by section

2104, and Michelle was also entitled to pursue relief under the mistake of law and/or fact

provisions of section 2122, subdivision (f). The court granted Michelle the requested

relief and determined the proceeds from the sale of the Barstow property were an

unadjudicated asset within the meaning of section 2556 over which the court retained

jurisdiction for purposes of division between the parties, and ordered Gary to contribute

to her attorney fees. On appeal, Gary asserts the evidence was insufficient to support the

order.

I

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Genesis of the Dispute

The facts, viewed most favorably to the order, showed Gary and Michelle were

married in 2004. Shortly after they married, Michelle used approximately $85,000 of her

separate property to pay creditors of Gary's father (Father). Father did not reimburse

Michelle for these expenditures; instead, in March 2005, he quitclaimed property he

owned in Barstow to Michelle and Gary as repayment for Michelle's payments to Father's

creditors.

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

2 In February 2008, Michelle and Gary sold the Barstow property and received net

equity proceeds of over $127,000 (the proceeds), which was deposited into a joint bank

account on April 10, 2008. These proceeds are the subject of Michelle's petition to set

aside a portion of the judgment.

Five days after the proceeds were placed into the joint account, Michelle filed her

action to begin dissolution proceedings. Within three days after Michelle's action was

filed, and without her knowledge or consent, Gary withdrew more than $77,000 from the

account. One month later, again without Michelle's knowledge or consent, Gary

withdrew another $42,000, and apparently placed those funds in a Certificate of Deposit.

The remaining approximately $8,000 was used to pay household expenses, refinance

expenses, and miscellaneous items.

When Michelle filed her property declaration, she listed the proceeds as having

been placed into an account at Bank of America. Gary did not file a property declaration.

Instead, Gary filed a schedule of assets and debts, but that schedule did not mention the

proceeds.2 In a letter apparently accompanying Gary's schedule of assets, his attorney

proffered numerous suggestions for resolving and settling the various issues between the

parties, including child custody, spousal and child support, and the division of assets. In

that settlement proposal, Gary's attorney responded to Michelle's listing of the proceeds

as an asset held at Bank of America by asserting the proceeds actually belonged to

2 One year later, Gary also filed an income and expense declaration that mentioned he held a "community CD" worth $42,000, but there was no identification of what funds had been used to acquire that CD.

3 Father, who used some of the money to repay a loan from Gary to Father. The attorney's

letter proposed the Bank of America account would be closed and Gary would receive

only the remaining $300 in the account.

The parties apparently tried to negotiate a resolution of their disputes, including

the dispute over the proper division of the proceeds, well into the spring of 2009.

However, the parties were unable to agree and Michelle filed a settlement brief in

connection with a scheduled August 6, 2009, mandatory settlement conference. Her

settlement brief proposed (among other things) that she receive $64,000 as her equal

share of the proceeds.

During the two-hour settlement conference, Michelle explained to the settlement

judge that she had used her separate property to pay Father's creditors and that Father

deeded the Barstow Property to her and Gary as consideration for her payment of Father's

debts. Gary claimed, apparently for the first time, that he had inherited the property and

it was his separate property. Gary's counsel then stated, considering this new

information, the parties should go to trial because they would not be able to reach a

settlement. The settlement judge then suggested the parties enter into a partial

agreement, which would resolve most issues but would exclude the proceeds from the

agreed-on division of assets and would leave the latter issue to be addressed later. The

settlement judge stated that, if Michelle was amenable to that disposition, she should not

initial the particular page of the MSA containing reference to the proceeds of the sale of

the Barstow property. Michelle was agreeable to severing this issue from the other

agreed-on terms, and therefore did not initial the page of the MSA containing references

4 to waiving any claim to the Barstow proceeds. Michelle was not represented by counsel

during the August 6, 2009, hearings.

After the August 6, 2009, mandatory settlement conference concluded, the parties

appeared before Judge Foster. The parties orally affirmed that the terms of the MSA

represented their agreement and that it should be incorporated into the judgment. The

court ordered the MSA incorporated into the judgment. However, because the settlement

judge was not present and Michelle was unrepresented by counsel, Michelle was unaware

that the parties' agreement (to sever her claim to a portion of the Barstow proceeds from

the MSA and leave that issue to later resolution) should have been placed on the record

by a request that the court reserve jurisdiction over the Barstow proceeds issue. A

judgment incorporating the MSA was ultimately entered on November 5, 2009.

After the August 9, 2009, proceedings, Michelle made numerous attempts to

follow up and resolve the issue of the Barstow proceeds by contacting both Gary and his

counsel, but she was unsuccessful. On November 5, 2010, Michelle filed her set-aside

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