Marriage of Chalk CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 2026
DocketG064812
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Chalk CA4/3 (Marriage of Chalk CA4/3) 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
Marriage of Chalk CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 1/14/26 Marriage of Chalk CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re the Marriage of CATHY SPIER-CHALK and DANIEL CHALK. G064812 __________________________________ CATHY SPIER-CHALK, (Super. Ct. No. 21D001867)

v. OPINION

DANIEL CHALK,

Respondent;

ELIZABETH NIGRO,

Objector and Appellant.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Israel Claustro, Judge. Affirmed. Elizabeth Nigro, in pro. per., for Objector and Appellant. Elizabeth Nigro, former counsel for one of the parties in this matter, appeals from an order imposing $1,500 in sanctions against her for violating a court order. (Code Civ. Proc.,1 § 177.5.) Finding no error, we affirm. FACTS In 2021, Cathy Spier-Chalk filed a petition for dissolution and a civil complaint for domestic violence against her husband, Daniel Chalk.2 Nigro represented Cathy in both proceedings. When Cathy fell behind on paying her attorney fees, Nigro placed a family law attorney real property lien on Cathy’s house in Irvine to secure payment. The dissolution case was reassigned to the Honorable Israel Claustro in late 2022. In February 2023, when Nigro failed to appear at the trial setting conference, Judge Claustro ordered her to pay $995 in sanctions. The dissolution case went to trial in August 2023, and the family court issued a minute order dividing most of the marital assets and debts. However, the court declared a mistrial on the Irvine house due to a lack of evidence and set the matter for trial in 2024. Days later, Nigro filed a statement of disqualification against Judge Claustro under section 170.3, citing his February sanctions order against her and his failure to admonish or sanction Daniel’s counsel for alleged misconduct before and during trial. In response, Judge Claustro issued an order striking the statement of disqualification, or in the alternative, a verified answer. In striking the statement, the court reasoned

1 All undesignated statutory references are to this code.

2 We respectfully use the parties’ first names for clarity.

2 it was untimely and failed to state grounds for disqualification. (See § 170.4, subd. (b).) Nigro did not seek writ review of the order. (See § 170.3, subd. (d).) At a mandatory settlement conference in the civil case that fall, the parties negotiated a global settlement of both matters and documented their agreement in a signed memorandum of understanding. The MOU noted that the Irvine house was Cathy’s separate property, Daniel waived any interest in it, and the 2024 trial date would be vacated. The MOU also recited that a judgment of dissolution would be entered in the family law case and would “not incorporate Judge Claustro’s tentative orders.” In the months that followed, however, no judgment was entered in that matter. Meanwhile, Cathy listed the house for sale and entered escrow. When Daniel learned about it, he applied ex parte to stop the sale. The family court denied his application in December 2023 but ordered that if “the home is sold by [Cathy], funds [must be] held in trust pending orders of the family court, which has jurisdiction of this asset.” The court also issued an order to show cause concerning judgment and set a hearing in January 2024. Following that order, Cathy expressed concern to Nigro about going forward with the sale; she noted it would be “too risky” to close without a court order confirming Daniel had no claim to the property and she did not want the sale proceeds to be held in trust. In response, Nigro advised Cathy “it is possible Judge Claustro did not even have jurisdiction to make that

3 order regarding your house” given “the issue of his disqualification,” which Nigro advised was “a big issue for appeal or writ.”3 Nigro also reminded Cathy that she owed “tens of thousands of dollars” in attorney fees. She therefore suggested that Cathy lease back the property and “have the money withheld by escrow [for 30 to 60 days] so it doesn’t have to go into my trust account in the event we have to wait for the [January 2024] hearing before Judge Claustro.” The next day, Cathy confirmed she would go through with the sale, the proceeds would go directly to Cathy’s account (and “not go into a Trust Account as we discussed”), Nigro would be paid directly by Cathy or escrow, and Nigro did not “have to worry” about being paid. When the sale closed, the proceeds were distributed to Nigro (who received about $54,000) and Cathy (who received the remainder). None of the proceeds were held in trust. After learning about the sale, Daniel’s counsel sent Nigro a demand for an accounting and filed a request for attorney fees, costs, and sanctions against her and Cathy. Around that same time, Cathy grew concerned about how Nigro was handling the matter and sought a second opinion from a different lawyer. She hired that attorney, discharged Nigro, and placed her portion of the sale proceeds into her new counsel’s trust account. That spring, Daniel’s counsel filed a supplemental declaration in support of his request for attorney fees, costs, and sanctions against Nigro

3 We cannot find this particular e-mail in the record, but it is

quoted in the family court’s August 2024 minute order and was apparently admitted as Exhibit 2-2. We remind Nigro of her duty to provide a complete record on appeal.

4 and Cathy, seeking roughly $45,000 based on Nigro’s “improper conduct” under section 177.5, section 128.5, and Family Code section 271. Days later, Daniel and Cathy entered into a stipulation on the amount to be paid by Cathy personally. At the May 2024 hearing on the sanctions request against Nigro, Cathy testified that Nigro pushed her to sell her house and told her she did not need to put the proceeds into a trust account because Judge Claustro would be disqualified and had no jurisdiction over the case.4 Nigro testified she was aware of the family court’s December 2023 order, but the court did not specify which trust account any sale proceeds should be placed in. Nigro also admitted escrow paid her lien on the property after the sale closed and she did not hold those funds in trust. After excusing Nigro subject to recall, the family court continued the hearing and ordered Nigro to return so she could be heard. The court then held two additional hearings in June and August, during which Nigro presented evidence and testified further. After considering the evidence, the family court ordered Nigro to pay $1,500 in sanctions under section 177.5.5 Explaining its ruling in a five- page minute order, the court found Cathy’s testimony was “credible and

4 Nigro maintains the family court wrongfully excluded her from

this portion of the hearing, but the reporter’s transcript of Cathy’s testimony shows no such order. Notably, after Nigro testified that same day, the court excused her subject to recall but told her she was “free to remain in the courtroom”; she evidently did not stay. After brief testimony from Daniel, the courtroom deputy checked if Nigro was still outside the courtroom, but she had already left. 5 The family court declined to award sanctions under section

128.5 or Family Code section 271.

5 compelling” and that Nigro “intentionally violated” its December 2023 order to hold all sale proceeds in trust. Though not confirmed by the record, we accept Nigro’s representation that the court subsequently reported the sanctions order to the State Bar of California. (See Bus. & Prof.

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Bluebook (online)
Marriage of Chalk CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-chalk-ca43-calctapp-2026.