Marriage of Furie CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 2014
DocketB241754
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Furie CA2/1 (Marriage of Furie CA2/1) 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 Furie CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 3/28/14 Marriage of Furie CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

In re Marriage of KELLY and RUSSELL B241754 FURIE. (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. PD048281)

KELLY FURIE,

Respondent,

v.

RUSSELL FURIE,

Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Michael Terrell, Judge. Remanded in part, affirmed in part. Russell Furie, in pro. per., for Appellant. Law Offices of Rosenthal & Associates, Lisa F. Rosenthal for Respondent. __________________________ SUMMARY Russell Furie (Father), in pro. per.,1 appeals from an order of the superior court increasing his child support obligations from $1,454 to $2,136 and awarding $5,000 in attorney fees to Kelly Marie Furie (Mother). Father also appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion for reconsideration. We reverse and remand in part and affirm in part.

BACKGROUND Mother and Father married in 1996. They had two children, one born in January 1998 and the second born in January 2001. I. Stipulated Judgment In February 2010, Mother, through counsel, filed an uncontested judgment for legal separation incorporating a signed settlement agreement between parties dated from September 2009 (”Judgment”). Under the Judgment, Mother and Father waived spousal support and agreed that the court “shall not retain jurisdiction to award spousal support to either party.” In the Judgment, Father agreed he would pay Mother $1,454 per month in child support, half of school or child care costs and half of uncovered medical bills as well as maintain health insurance for the children. The Judgment also provided that “[c]hild support will be guideline support and maybe [sic] modified accordingly.” Mother and Father also agreed to joint legal custody of their two children, but gave Mother full physical custody in the event she moved out of the family home. The Judgment also awarded certain community property assets to each party as his or her sole and separate property. Among other things, Father was awarded 100 percent ownership of RKF Investments Inc. (“RKF Investments”), 100 percent ownership in KMF Investments Inc. (“KMF Investments”) 100 percent ownership stake of RK Furie Family’s Trust’s 50 percent ownership of H. Roth Management LLC, the family home on Terravista Court (“Family Home”), a time share, and “[a]ll proceeds/income from either Skura International Trading Company or third parties, which relates to all of [Father’s]

1 Father was in pro. per. in the trial court for filings but had counsel for the limited purpose of argument at hearings.

2 actions/claims against Skura Intercontinental Trading Company, et al.” The Judgment also provided that Father would be responsible for all debts pertaining to the Family Home and provided that Mother “shall be allowed to reside in the family home” until their youngest child reached the age of majority. II. Mother’s February 2011 OSC and the March 29, 2011 Decision In February 2011, Mother filed an Order to Show Cause (“February 2011 OSC”) seeking to modify child support and for attorney fees and costs. Mother declared that after the February 2010 judgment, Father had “moved out of the family home and has purchased a townhome in his name only. He has stopped paying the mortgage on the family home and is refusing to pay the mortgage which has caused me to file for chapter 7 bankruptcy” and Father was in arrears on the family home in the amount of $40,361.20. Mother also declared that Father obtained a $250,000.00 lump sum cash settlement from “his former employer ‘Skura.’” Mother asserted her belief that Father did not intend to return to work and planned to live off of the lump sum settlement. Based on the DissoMaster software program, Mother contended that Father “should be paying $3,391.00 in child support and $4,380.00 in spousal support for a total of $7,771.00 per month,” based on an assumed monthly income for Father of $20,834.2 In March 2011, Father, in pro. per., filed a responsive declaration describing as false the “claim that I am responsible for the [family home] obligations” and asserting Mother and Father had an agreement for Father to give Mother all KMF assets in exchange for Mother releasing Father from the family home debt obligations. Father’s declaration also stated that there was never any agreement to use the Skura settlement funds to pay for the debt on the family home or to include the funds for purposes of calculating Father’s child support. In addition, Father’s declaration asserts that Mother

2 Apparently this amount was calculated by taking the $250,000 settlement from Father’s employer and dividing by 12 months and rounding up to the dollar.

3 should be assumed to have income of $2,000 per month from her “A+ business”, apparently referring to a teaching supply business run by Mother.3 At a March 29, 2011 hearing on Mother’s February 2011 OSC, the trial court stated that the Judgment would “remain in place except that the mortgage payments, instead of just being listed as to pay mortgage, mortgage is going to be converted to a dollar amount, whatever that dollar amount is.” The trial court also noted that parties were going “outside the narrow confines” of the pending February 2011 OSC and that Father should file his own Order to Show Cause if he wanted to alter the obligations under the Judgment. The trial court’s order after the March 29, 2011 hearing (“March 29, 2011 decision”) ordered Father to pay $4,709.09 “as support”4 and stated that the “figure represents the expenses associated with the family home to which [Father] agreed to pay for in the [Judgment].” The trial court’s March 29, 2011 decision also ordered Father to bring the mortgage current but did not order Father to pay any attorneys fees to Mother and left unchanged his child support obligation. Father filed a motion for reconsideration, which Mother opposed and sought attorneys fees. The trial court denied the motion for reconsideration, noting that no newly discovered evidence was presented and denying Mother’s request for sanctions.

3 Also in March 2011, Father filed an “Income and Expense Declaration” listing average monthly income of $1,542 from disability, $2,374 from workers’ compensation and $858 from other sources as well as $104,950 in assets held in deposit accounts and $218,000 in real and personal property. Father listed monthly expenses of $2,720 and $2,000 in credit card debt. 4 The trial court later characterized its March 29, 2011 decision as ordering “that spousal support would be set at $4,709, which is the equivalent amount as Father had been obligated to pay on a monthly basis to pay for the mortgage on the family residence in the Judgment” and characterized the decision as “not increase[ing] Father’s support obligations” but “merely convert[ing] Father’s obligation to pay the mortgage to a specific dollar figure, which the court designated as spousal support.”

4 III. Father’s July 2011 OSC On July 5, 2011, Father filed an “[Amended] Declaration in support of Order to Show Cause re Modification of Stipulated Judgment” (“July 2011 OSC”) in which Father asserted that he agreed to accept responsibility for the family home debt obligations in the Judgment only because of the expected income from KMF Investments as represented by Mother and that he no longer had ownership of KMF Investments’ assets because Mother had dissolved KMF and removed its assets.

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