Marriage of Goodwin-Mitchell and Mitchell

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 24, 2019
DocketA154915
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Goodwin-Mitchell and Mitchell (Marriage of Goodwin-Mitchell and Mitchell) 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 Goodwin-Mitchell and Mitchell, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 9/24/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re the Marriage of CAROLYN GOODWIN-MITCHELL and MICHAEL MITCHELL.

CAROLYN GOODWIN-MITCHELL, Respondent, A154915 v. (Alameda County MICHAEL MITCHELL, Super. Ct. No. HF17862586) Appellant.

Michael Mitchell appeals from a judgment annulling his marriage to Carolyn Goodwin-Mitchell.1 Uncontradicted evidence shows that Carolyn did not prove the requirements for annulment under Family Code section 2210, subdivision (d),2 so we reverse the judgment. BACKGROUND In June 2017, Carolyn filed a petition for nullity or, in the alternative, dissolution of the parties’ marriage on the basis of fraud. Both parties appeared in pro per and testified at the one-day evidentiary hearing.

1 We refer to the parties by their first names to avoid any confusion from the similarity of their surnames. We intend no disrespect by this practice. 2 Further statutory citations are to the Family Code. 1 Carolyn’s Testimony Before she met Michael, Carolyn helped obtain a green card for her Jamaican first husband. That marriage ended in divorce. Michael is also from Jamaica. In January 2015, Carolyn met him online and they began dating over the internet. Michael started discussing marriage in February or March. Around the same time, he told Carolyn he wanted to move to the United States so that he could live with her, start a restaurant business, and join the U.S. army. In June 2015, Carolyn went to Jamaica and met Michael for the first time. The couple married during that visit. Carolyn returned home and applied for a two-year conditional visa for Michael. The visa was approved in September 2016. In November 2016, Michael flew to the United States and moved in with Carolyn. Within a week of Michael’s arrival, he “was soliciting call girls, prostitution, and other women off of sites.” In February 2017, he was jailed for a day and a half and a restraining order was issued after an incident of domestic violence between the parties.3 While he was in jail, Carolyn discovered text messages to his mother in Jamaica on his phone. Michael wrote, “Me na lef, me na lef til me get my rass papers” and “Cody n u affi fuck reach.” Carolyn interpreted these to mean Michael was “not leaving [Carolyn’s] house until he gets his papers, and “his brother and his mom has to reach the United States.” Carolyn also found extensive text messages between Michael and DeAndra. From the nature of the messages, Carolyn believed DeAndra to be Michael’s girlfriend. Michael repeatedly told DeAndra he loved her. He wrote, “Wife call police how I hit her[.] [¶] Pure fuckery” and that he was “[j]ust waiting for army to come through[.]” Referring to Carolyn, he wrote, “By right she should treat me better but immigration will look at it n I can get divorce quicker [¶] . . . [¶] I have rights to here as she signed for it[.] [¶] . . . [¶] If I left immigration gonna be after me. . . [¶] Just waiting papers then I can move[.]” DeAndra urged Michael to leave Carolyn. He responded,

3 Michael testified he entered a no contest plea and was released on probation. 2 “Am here soon move out. Just waiting on my papers ok[.] [¶] . . . [¶] If I [move] I’ll av to marry some one else.” The restraining order was lifted not long after Michael was released from jail. Michael moved back in with Carolyn. According to Carolyn, this was because Michael had nowhere to go and she believed she was legally responsible for him until he obtained permanent resident status. The couple continued their sexual relationship, but they “did not act as a couple to other people.” In March 2017, Michael had sex with another woman in Carolyn’s home. In June Carolyn filed divorce papers. Nonetheless, the couple continued to live together and maintained their sexual relationship until November, when Michael’s temper worsened, and Carolyn asked him to move out. Michael complied. Michael’s Testimony Michael and Carolyn fell in love after internet dating for two months. Carolyn filed a petition enabling him to come to the United States, but his permission to remain was conditioned on staying married for two years. Michael denied soliciting women for sexual relations after his arrival. He had one friend in the bay area, DeAndra, whom he knew “from a friend from Jamaica.” They were friends “up to the point until I got [to the United States].” When Michael texted DeAndra about having to marry someone else, he meant Carolyn would report him to immigration authorities if he moved out, and he would be deported unless he remarried. Michael came to the United States to be with Carolyn, have a family, open a restaurant and join the military. He did not return to Jamaica when his relationship with Carolyn started to fall apart because he was on probation and feared extradition if he left the country without resolving his legal problems. Michael’s relationship with DeAndra was not sexual. They met in Jamaica through his aunt in late 2015 or early 2016, after Michael and Carolyn were married, but DeAndra lived in a different part of the island. They “used to text as friends but it was nothing.” Carolyn took his phone two weeks after he came back, not while he was in jail, and the texts she found on it were written after his release. He told DeAndra he loved her

3 only because he was “deeply hurt” and “seeking comfort, because I was torn. I was traumatized because I went to jail. I was torn. I was just looking for love.” Carolyn’s Further Testimony Carolyn disputed Michael’s denial of having sex with other women during their marriage. In March 2017, she recorded audio of him having sex with another woman in their home.4 Describing the recording, she testified “The audio told me that he invited this woman into my home. He was giving her directions there. Shortly upon her arriving they were in the living room talking and it got really quiet. After that, you could hear sexual contact, kissing, and after that you could hear full-blown on sexual misconduct or conduct I’m sorry. [¶] . . . [¶] It started in the living room. And they moved to my bed.” Carolyn later found the woman’s phone number on Michael’s phone and spoke with her. Carolyn believed Michael was also soliciting other women because other numbers on his phone belonged to “[e]scort lines, all that type of stuff.” Michael’s Further Testimony Michael remained adamant that he did not have sexual relations with other women during the marriage. Carolyn’s testimony about taping a sexual encounter was a lie. Kim, the woman in question, was an acquaintance who stopped by the house not long after Michael’s arrest. She “started to kiss on my neck, and started commanding sexual favors. . . and started like playing with herself, and was just carrying on.” Michael “asked her to leave, and she was like you know, let’s just take care of business.” He touched her breast but did not have sex with her. It was Kim, not Carolyn, who recorded the incident, “[b]ecause she wanted sexual favors” from Michael. The Court’s Ruling The court stated its decision from the bench as follows. “The Court heard testimony from both parties with respect to the marriage that took place in June of 2015

4 Carolyn said she had the audio recording with her in court, but it was not played or entered into evidence. The court excluded from evidence an unsigned handwritten letter from the woman in question purportedly describing the incident and a March 2018 e-mail exchange between Michael and an immigration attorney. 4 when the parties married in Jamaica. After the marriage was concluded, [Carolyn] made a request of the U.S. Immigration Department to . . . for [Michael] to be authorized to come to the United States, and that petition was approved in September 2016. “. . . [Michael] came to the United States after receiving that approval in November of 2016.

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Marriage of Goodwin-Mitchell and Mitchell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-goodwin-mitchell-and-mitchell-calctapp-2019.