Marriage of C.C. and T.D. CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 16, 2025
DocketD083820
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of C.C. and T.D. CA4/1 (Marriage of C.C. and T.D. 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 C.C. and T.D. CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 10/16/25 Marriage of C.C. and T.D. CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 C.C. and T.D. D083820 C.C.,

Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. D351571)

v.

T.D.,

Appellant;

SAN DIEGO DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES,

Respondent.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Adam Wertheimer, Commissioner. Affirmed. T.D., in pro. per., for Appellant. No appearance for Respondent C.C. Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Cheryl L. Feiner, Assistant Attorney General, Maureen C. Onyeagbako and Jennifer C. Addams, Deputy Attorneys General, for Respondent San Diego Department of Child Support Services. I. INTRODUCTION T.D. (Father) owed C.C. (Mother) child support arrears (unpaid support and interest) dating back to 1994, which, with interest, grew to more than $245,000. When Mother requested in 2024 that the family court increase Father’s monthly arrears payment from $150 to $1,000, Father requested equitable relief to set aside arrears for a period decades earlier (1994 to 2000) during which Father claims Mother concealed the children from him. The family court denied Father’s request and granted Mother’s. On appeal, Father contends the family court misapplied case law and equitable principles in denying his motion and lacked evidentiary support to grant Mother’s request to increase his arrears payment. For reasons we will explain, we conclude Father’s claims lack merit. Accordingly, we affirm the family court’s orders. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Father and Mother married in 1981 and had four children together — sons born in August 1983 and October 1985, and twin daughters born in December 1987. Mother filed for divorce in 1992. In January 1994, Mother moved to establish child support arrears owed by Father. As of March 1994, arrears totaled $7,737.50. Father made no support payments from March 1994 to January 2000 and made payments only sporadically thereafter. The San Diego County Department of Child Support Services (the Department) became actively involved in child support matters in January 1998. In 2016, the family court ordered Father to pay

2 $150 per month toward arrears. As of November 2023, Father’s arrears totaled $245,551.56 ($62,746.70 in principal and $182,804.86 in interest). A. Mother’s Request to Increase Father’s Arrears Payment On August 30, 2023, Mother requested an order increasing Father’s monthly arrears payment from $150 to $1,000 to “liquidate the arrears

balance in a more reasonable time.”1 At the repayment rate of $150 per month, it would take Father well in excess of 100 years to pay off the arrears. At $1,000 per month, it would take Father more than 20 years. Father was 65 years old at the time of the hearing on Mother’s request. Father filed a responsive declaration opposing Mother’s request. He asserted Mother “actively concealed the four children” from January 1994 to March 2000 by leaving the state without notifying him or providing new contact information. Father recounted his efforts to find his children. He searched for Mother through her work and “called every elementary school” in the Seattle area. “The DA’s office child abduction unit told [Father] there was nothing [he] could do since [Mother] was [the] custodial parent.” “Child support services told [him] there was no request to collect child support payments.” Father also contacted Mother’s parents, who told him “ ‘to leave their daughter alone’ ” and “ ‘she didn’t want [him] to know where she was.’ ” Father stated that Mother “hinder[ed]” his search efforts by remarrying and changing her last name, “chang[ing] her own name two more times,” “illegally chang[ing] the children’s last name,” changing their address four times, and “chang[ing] the [children’s] school six times in the first [five] years of concealment.” Father argued his request for relief was supported by In re Marriage of Boswell (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 1172 (Boswell), which held that a

1 Mother also requested that the case be transferred to a different courthouse. That request, which the family court denied, is not at issue in this appeal. 3 custodial parent’s active concealment for 15 years, followed by a 15-year delay in seeking support payments from the noncustodial parent, constituted unclean hands barring the custodial parent’s request. (Id. at p. 1175.) Father attached to his responsive declaration two other affidavits he filed in November and December 1994. In those, Father discussed visitation issues and alleged misconduct by Mother. In the December 1994 declaration Father explained he had not visited the children because he could not afford to pay for a visitation supervisor. Once Father could afford to pay a supervisor, the supervisor contacted Mother and reported to Father that Mother “did not feel [visitation] would be a good idea” because Mother “had recently been remarried and was plan[n]ing to move to Seattle Wash[ington] on Jan[uary] 1, 1995.” Father requested a temporary restraining order “keeping the children in San Diego.” It appears the court denied that request. The Department also filed a responsive declaration to Mother’s request to increase Father’s arrears payment. The Department requested that any court order provide for “a reasonable payment sufficient to liquidate the arrearages in a reasonable amount of time.” The family court ordered the parties to submit additional briefing — Mother and the Department regarding Father’s concealment claim, and Father regarding the merits of Mother’s request to increase arrearage payments, and the timeliness of his own request to delete any amounts accrued between 1994 and 2000. The Department argued in its supplemental filing that Father’s concealment claim in 2023 was untimely because the court established arrears in 1994 and Father was “well aware of this judgment for years.” The Department also argued Father failed to establish any of the elements of a

4 concealment defense — active concealment by the custodial parent until the children reach the age of majority, reasonably diligent location efforts by the noncustodial parent, and concealment rendering the noncustodial parent unable to pay. (See In re Marriage of Damico (1994) 7 Cal.4th 673, 685 (Damico); In re Marriage of Comer (1996) 14 Cal.4th 504, 517 (Comer).) The Department argued that any concealment ended before the children reached the age of majority, Father had not searched diligently, and Father was able to make support payments through the Department. In her supplemental filing, Mother “agree[d] with” the Department’s positions. She also denied she had concealed herself and the children. Mother stated she notified Father and the court of her move by certified letter dated November 1, 1994, which was not returned as undeliverable. The letter states in substantive part: “This letter shall serve to notify you that I intend to move the residence of our children . . . out of the State of California effective January 1, 1995.” Mother stated she moved with the children to Washington on January 6, 1995. Mother denied changing names to conceal the children — Mother changed her name in 1994 when she remarried, the eldest son changed his own name when he turned 18 in 2001, the younger son changed his own name when he turned 18 in 2003, one of the daughters changed her name when she got married in 2022, and the other daughter never changed her name. Mother stated she also sought child support enforcement assistance from a Washington agency in 1995.

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Marriage of C.C. and T.D. CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-cc-and-td-ca41-calctapp-2025.