Marriage of Grimes and Mou

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 19, 2020
DocketH046035
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Grimes and Mou (Marriage of Grimes and Mou) 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 Grimes and Mou, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 1/28/20; Certified for Publication 2/19/20 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re the Marriage of JEFFREY GRIMES H046035 and MINGMING MOU. (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. 16FL174815) JEFFREY GRIMES,

Respondent,

v.

MINGMING MOU,

Appellant.

In this dissolution of marriage action, appellant Mingming Mou appeals from an order characterizing marital property and awarding spousal support. Mou claims insufficient evidence supports the trial court’s finding that certain money in Mou’s brokerage account was a loan from Mou’s relatives to the marital community. In addition, Mou contends the trial court abused its discretion by awarding permanent spousal support in an amount far below her needs based on the marital standard of living and for an unreasonably short period of time. For the reasons explained below, we affirm the trial court’s order. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Procedural History Respondent Jeffrey Grimes and Mou married in January 2004 and separated in July 2015. Grimes filed a petition for dissolution of the marriage in April 2016. On April 26 and May 10, 2018, the trial court held a hearing on reserved issues in the action, including property division and permanent spousal support requested by Mou. On May 24, 2018, the trial court entered its Findings and Order After Hearing on Spousal Support and Division of Scottrade Account.1 Mou filed a notice of appeal of the May 24 order on July 23, 2018.2 On October 29, 2018, the trial court issued further Findings and Order After Hearing, appending to that order a document titled “Attachment 7 to Findings and Order After Hearing.” In the attachment, the trial court ordered Mou to transfer half of the funds then in the brokerage account to Grimes and ordered Grimes to pay directly to Mou his one-half share of the debt owed to Mou’s relatives on their loan to the marital community. On January 23, 2019, the trial court entered an uncontested judgment of dissolution. The judgment incorporated and appended the May 24, 2018 order.3

1 The appellate record indicates that the brokerage firm Scottrade was acquired by TD Ameritrade in late 2017. The account at issue here is referenced in the record variously as “the Scottrade account” and the “TD Ameritrade account.” For clarity, we principally refer to the disputed account as the “brokerage account.” 2 There is no indication in the record that Mou obtained a certificate of probable cause for appeal from the trial court under Family Code section 2025 and California Rules of Court, rule 5.392. 3 Mou did not appeal from either the October 29, 2018 order or the January 23, 2019 judgment. 2 B. Evidence Presented at the Hearing At the hearing held on April 26 and May 10, 2018, that led to the order at issue in this appeal, the trial court heard testimony from Grimes, Mou, forensic accountant Reagan Wade, and vocational expert Richard Lyness. Grimes and Mou lived in San Francisco for a few years after they married in 2004—first in a rental property and then in a condominium they purchased.4 They had a child in November 2005. Around August 2008, the family moved into a rental property in Palo Alto. In November of that year, Grimes and Mou had their second child.5 In 2013, Grimes and Mou had talked about purchasing a home. According to Grimes, during their conversations Mou said her family was willing to give them money for the home purchase. Grimes testified that his “understanding, initially, was that [the money from Mou’s relatives] was to be a gift.” In a December 2013 e-mail exchange, Grimes and Mou communicated about a $2 million potential bid on a particular home and the funds they could marshal for the purchase. Mou wrote that she “can always borrow some [money] from [her] brother to cover” a temporary shortfall in their bid due to Grimes’s inability to sell certain stock until February 2014. Mou described in an e-mail the money that she had for purchasing the home as “my cash (400K at today’s stock price, though $300K is from my brother but we can use it for a while).” The money that Mou described as being “from [her] brother” had initially been deposited into Mou’s account at Wells Fargo and then transferred into Mou’s Scottrade brokerage account. Grimes testified that he did not know about the amounts or dates of

4 Grimes and Mou ultimately sold the condominium for $1 million after their separation in 2015. Mou received $65,000 from that sale. As for other community property, Grimes estimated that he and Mou would each receive about $1 million from its division (excluding the brokerage account and Grimes’s and Mou’s retirement accounts). 5 At the time of the issuance of the May 2018 order, Grimes and Mou were sharing joint legal and physical custody of the children. 3 these deposits and transfers when they were made. In addition, Grimes said he did not know in 2013 about Mou’s brokerage account, and Mou did not give him an IRS Form 1099 for her brokerage account when he prepared their jointly-filed 2013 tax return. In 2015, the IRS notified Grimes and Mou of their failure to report on the brokerage account in their 2013 tax return.6 Grimes testified he first became aware that Mou had the brokerage account when he received the 2015 IRS notice. In a March 2014 e-mail exchange regarding “Taxes/Gifts from foreign persons,” Grimes told Mou, “Looks like we need to file [IRS] Form 3520 to avoid being penalized on any gifts received from foreign persons by April 15th.” Mou responded, “[T]hanks. [C]an you take care of that? [W]hat do you need?” Grimes said he “just need[ed] details to fill out the form.” Later, in an e-mail from Mou to Grimes regarding “info for tax filing,” dated April 15, 2014, Mou listed four dates and dollar figures (totaling $299,936)7 and wrote: “those are not gifts, those are loans from my brother. I’m not sure if you need to file differently.” Grimes testified that he and Mou filed joint tax returns for 2014 and 2015, and those returns included income from Mou’s brokerage account. He reiterated his belief that the $299,936 received from Mou’s relatives “was originally intended as a gift or at worst an interest[-free] loan.”8 Grimes claimed that Mou “recharacterized it as a loan”

6 Although Grimes prepared an amended return for 2013 in response to the IRS notice, the IRS informed him it was unnecessary to submit it, so Grimes never filed an amended return. Grimes also acknowledged that he did not “file a gift return” for the money received from Mou’s relatives in 2013. 7 Specifically, Mou listed the following dates and figures: “4/08/13, from China $50,000.00 [¶] 4/03/13, from China $50,000.00 [¶] 5/16/13, check from beibei, $99,936.00 (maybe you don’t have to file this one?) [¶] 5/01/13, check from Zhuang Yuan, $100,000.00 (maybe you don’t have to file this one?).” 8 The reporter’s transcript from the hearing states that Grimes referred to an “interest reloan.” We agree with Mou’s contention that “interest reloan” appears to be a mis-transcription, and it is reasonable to conclude that Grimes actually said “interest-free loan.” Grimes does not challenge this interpretation. 4 over time, including in the December 2013 e-mail. Grimes said that he and Mou did not enter into any agreement about how the money should be characterized. In addition, Grimes explained that he did not exchange any documents concerning the money with Mou’s relatives or otherwise discuss with them the money, its repayment, or payment of interest on it. Mou’s family did not attempt to join the dissolution action to claim the money. Mou testified that the $299,936 in her brokerage account “was originally borrowed from her family members.

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