Marriage of Goodpaster CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 2014
DocketG047295
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Goodpaster CA4/3 (Marriage of Goodpaster 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 Goodpaster CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/11/14 Marriage of Goodpaster 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 JEFFREY A. and CHERYL GOODPASTER.

JEFFREY A. GOODPASTER, G047295 Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 10D003730) v. OPINION CHERYL L. GOODPASTER,

Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, James L. Waltz, Judge. Affirmed. Merritt L. McKeon for Appellant. Law Office of Ronald B. Funk and Ronald B. Funk for Respondent. * * * On appeal from a marital dissolution judgment, Cheryl L. Goodpaster (wife) contends the court showed gender bias against her and refused to hear her testimony about her health. We affirm the judgment.

FACTS

In April 2010, Jeffrey A. Goodpaster (husband) petitioned for dissolution of marriage. Three months later, the parties agreed husband would pay wife $2,400 a month in spousal support. That same month, in an ex parte order to show cause (OSC), wife requested a domestic violence prevention order against husband, seeking, inter alia, an order that husband move out of the family residence. Wife declared that husband verbally and psychologically abused her. Among other allegations of husband’s domestic violence against her, wife described an incident involving laundry: “This last weekend on Sunday I was out of the residence for most of the day and I returned at approximately 8:30 p.m. The garage door was open and I decided I was going to do a load of wash. I put in a load of wash and then returned to the house. While inside the house in the hallway I was confronted by [husband]. I told him I had just put a load of wash in, and his response was, ‘Oh, that’s fucking great; I’ve been fucking washing?’ I said ‘I’m sorry, the washer and dryer were empty.’ Later I went out to the garage and picked up my laundry and returned to the house; at that point [husband] confronted me in the hall, I had both my arms filled with laundered clothes. I got down to the end of the hall, [husband] turns off the light switch at the other end of the hall, leaving the hall dark. [husband] then comes up and stands right in front of me, in my face; I went to flip the light switch back on and he whacked my hand to prevent me from turning on the light switch.” Wife further declared that for years she had helplessly watched husband physically abuse their eldest son, Curtis.

2 Prior to receiving a copy of wife’s declaration, husband filed a declaration opposing wife’s OSC, as did Curtis Goodpaster, the parties’ adult son. Curtis declared: “I love both of my parents and don’t want to hurt either one of them. Having said that, and not being privy to any allegations coming from my mother, as my father has not received any paperwork with any allegations, I can only say, that my father has never been violent with my mother, or threatened her in any way whatsoever, even since the divorce papers have been filed. [¶] I go to the house at least once or twice per week, and my father is always very calm, and is always trying [to] mind his own business, wheras [sic] my mother is the one who is out of control, accusing my father as being the one out of control. Before I moved out of the house, about one year ago, it was always my father that was in control of himself, and never laid a hand on my mother, nor threaten her in any way. [¶] All my father wants to do, is live in peace, and tries to avoid my mother as much as possible.” After receiving a copy of wife’s allegations, husband filed another declaration opposing wife’s OSC, in which he challenged, inter alia, her description of the laundry incident: “Cheryl was gone all day long from the house, she returned home at approximately 8:30 p.m. She must have decided that this would be an opportunity for her to start an argument with me as she soon realized that I had been using the washer and dryer at that moment. She entered the house, and must have gathered something of her own to put in the washer as an excuse to use the washer at the same time as I was, hoping that would start a fight between us. In the meantime, I went to close the garage door for theft reasons. So, while I was elsewhere in the house, and also got the comforter from my room for washing, she came out of her room stating that the laundry is being used. I answered back, ‘Yes, I know I’m doing my wash.’ She then advised me that she had just filled the washer with her things. I was shocked that in what seemed a couple of minutes, she could put her things in the washer, so that I wouldn’t be able to use it. She could tell that the dryer was running, and that someone else was using the washer & dryer

3 at that time. . . . I went about my business at that point, and I never touched her or confronted her in the hall as she claims. Her assertion that the hallway was dark, would make it difficult for me to slap her hand away from the light switch in the darkness.” Commissioner Thomas H. Schulte presided over the hearing on wife’s OSC. Inter alia, wife testified that husband forced her to have sex with him at least 15 times, including once in December 2009 when she was wearing a hard collar after neck surgery. Commissioner Schulte granted wife’s request for a domestic violence restraining order against husband. Prior to announcing his ruling, however, he criticized current law, which authorizes a move-out order only on specific grounds such as domestic violence. Commissioner Shulte explained that the prior law would have allowed him to issue a move-out order simply by finding “that the degree of acrimony [or] emotional stress to the parties or the children” warrants such an order to “keep the peace.” Commissioner Schulte queried: “Do we leave families who are in the [throes] of divorce, who are locking one another in and out of rooms, who are in constant debate [about] who is going to use the washing machine, who is going to pay the bills, to the point they don’t even speak with one another except when they are arguing, as in this case[?] Do we leave them there until somebody gets hurt?” Noting that the standard of proof was “a mere preponderance of the evidence,” Commissioner Schulte found true wife’s allegations that husband had (1) confronted her about the washing machine and scared her by turning off the light, (2) prevented her from leaving his bedroom when he wanted to talk with her about getting a mediator instead of a lawyer and she refused, and, in a “close call” finding, (3) kept her from leaving the car (when they were arguing about the divorce after a marriage counseling session) by hitting the lock button whenever she tried to open the door. In January 2011, after husband had lost his job, the parties entered into a stipulation and order, agreeing that husband would pay temporary spousal support of

4 $1,450 per month and the parties would sell the house and a motor home. In June 2011, husband sought a modification of spousal support because his unemployment award was $450 per week. Judge James L. Waltz suspended the temporary spousal support order and set the matter for trial. Judge Waltz presided over the dissolution trial. Prior to the attorneys’ closing statements, Judge Waltz announced and explained his tentative decision. With respect to Commissioner Schulte’s domestic violence finding, Judge Waltz stated, “There are different grades, shades, quality and character to domestic violence and I think you have to understand the circumstances behind the so-called domestic violence and I endeavor to do so in this case.

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Marriage of Goodpaster CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-goodpaster-ca43-calctapp-2014.