Marriage of Gordon and Stein CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 16, 2016
DocketB260994
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Gordon and Stein CA2/8 (Marriage of Gordon and Stein CA2/8) 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 Gordon and Stein CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 5/16/16 Marriage of Gordon and Stein CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 EIGHT

In re the Marriage of GILDA J. GORDON B260994 and ANDREW M. STEIN. GILDA J. GORDON, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BD513980) Respondent,

v.

ANDREW M. STEIN,

Appellant.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles. Bruce G. Iwasaki, Judge. Affirmed.

Brentford J. Ferreira for Appellant.

Law Office of Robert L. Schibel, Robert L. Schibel; Lipton and Margolin and Hugh A. Lipton for Respondent.

____________________________________ SUMMARY In November 2010, Gilda J. Gordon and Andrew M. Stein stipulated in writing to a judgment dissolving their marriage. The stipulated judgment, status only, stated it was intended to be binding and enforceable, and reserved jurisdiction over all other issues. The judgment stated the parties intended to sign a further judgment on reserved issues. No further judgment had been filed when, more than a year later, Ms. Gordon died intestate. In September 2014, almost four years after the stipulated judgment dissolving their marriage, and more than two and a half years after Ms. Gordon’s death, Mr. Stein filed a request for an order setting aside the stipulated judgment dissolving the marriage. He contended the judgment was void, and the court was without subject matter jurisdiction, because (1) the parties’ retirement or pension plans were not joined as parties to the dissolution proceeding, as required by Family Code section 2337;1 and (2) the judgment had “no original signature,” but only the stamped signature of the presiding judge, who “did not review, approve, or actually sign the . . . Judgment . . . .” Mr. Stein later submitted an affidavit from a deputy clerk stating she affixed the judge’s stamped signature pursuant to “established criteria” and, to her knowledge, the judge did not review the stipulated judgment. The trial court denied Mr. Stein’s motion and set an order to show cause why he should not pay sanctions to Ms. Gordon’s estate under section 271. After a hearing, the court ordered Mr. Stein to pay sanctions of $15,000. We affirm both orders. FACTS The stipulated judgment dissolving the marriage of Ms. Gordon and Mr. Stein (status only) was filed on November 5, 2010. Ms. Gordon and Mr. Stein had separated more than a year earlier, and the judgment indicated the case was a mediated case and identified the mediator. The stipulated judgment stated the parties intended to sign a

1 Further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise specified.

2 “Further Judgment on Reserved Issues” containing the executory provisions of their agreement; that either party could file the further judgment “as necessary to interpret or to enforce any of its provisions”; and that the further judgment “constitutes a mediated settlement agreement” protected from disclosure and not discoverable or admissible in any civil proceeding. The stipulated judgment expressly stated that it constituted “the written settlement agreement of the parties with respect to its subject matter,” and was “intended to be binding and enforceable” under section 664.6 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The stipulated judgment (form FL-180) also included a notice that dissolution “may automatically cancel the rights of a spouse . . . under the other spouse’s . . . will, trust, retirement plan, power of attorney, pay-on-death bank account, transfer-on-death vehicle registration, survivorship rights to any property owned in joint tenancy, and any other similar thing. . . . You should review these matters . . . to determine whether they should be changed or whether you should take any other actions.”2 Both parties signed the stipulated judgment, and it bears what appears to be the stamped signature of Judge Marjorie S. Steinberg. No further judgment was ever filed. On January 18, 2012, 14 months after entry of the stipulated judgment, Gilda J. Gordon died intestate. Her sister, Marcy Gordon, is the administrator of her estate and her heir-at-law. On September 17, 2014, Mr. Stein requested an order setting aside the stipulated judgment dissolving the marriage, contending the judgment was void.

2 On the same date the stipulated judgment was filed, Gilda J. Gordon also filed a declaration stating that the parties “have agreed that the matter may proceed as an uncontested matter without notice, and the agreement is attached or is incorporated in the attached . . . stipulated judgment.” Ms. Gordon’s declaration further stated both she and Mr. Stein “have filed, or are filing concurrently, a Declaration Regarding Service of Declaration of Disclosure (form FL-141) and an Income and Expense Declaration (form FL-150).” The declaration was “for the termination of marital . . . status only,” and asked the court to reserve jurisdiction over “all issues whose determination is not requested in this declaration.”

3 The first basis Mr. Stein cited was section 2337. Subdivision (d) of that section states: “Prior to, or simultaneously with, entry of judgment granting dissolution of the status of the marriage, all of the following shall occur: [¶] (1) The party’s retirement or pension plan shall be joined as a party to the proceeding for dissolution, unless joinder is precluded or made unnecessary” by applicable law. (Id., subd. (d)(1).) Section 2337 also requires the court to enter one of three orders for each retirement plan in which either party is a participant, in order to “preserve the claims of each spouse in all retirement plan benefits upon entry of judgment granting a dissolution of the status of the marriage . . . .” (Id., subd. (d)(2).)3 The stipulated judgment did not join any retirement plans and did not contain any of the orders mentioned in section 2337, subdivision (d)(2). (Much of section 2337 appears to apply to the severance and grant of an early and separate trial on the status issue “upon noticed motion,” and states numerous conditions a court “may impose” on a party when granting a severance of the status issue. (See id., subds. (a), (b), (c), (e).)) Mr. Stein also alleged on information and belief that the stipulated judgment “was not reviewed, approved nor signed by a Judicial Officer,” and asserted this “failure of a Judicial Officer to review, approve and actually sign the said Judgment is one of the grounds that make this said Judgment null and void.” Mr. Stein requested an evidentiary hearing so that representatives of the clerk’s office could “explain under oath what actually occurred with this said Judgment.”

3 The three possible orders are an order “disposing of each party’s interest in retirement plan benefits”; an interim order “preserving the nonemployee party’s right to retirement plan benefits . . . pending entry of judgment on all remaining issues”; or an attachment to the status only judgment of dissolution, containing specified language provisionally awarding each party a separate one-half interest in all benefits under the plan as a result of employment of the other party during the marriage, and requiring the plan to continue to treat the parties as married for purposes of any survivor rights or benefits available under the plan to the extent necessary to provide for payment of the separate interest. (§ 2337, subd. (d)(2)(A)-(C).)

4 A month later, Mr. Stein filed a declaration of Pamela Woods, a deputy clerk for the superior court. Ms.

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