Marriage of Gutierrez

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 2020
DocketB291507
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Gutierrez (Marriage of Gutierrez) 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 Gutierrez, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 5/6/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

In re the Marriage of MAYELA B291507 and ALBERTO GUTIERREZ. ______________________________ (Los Angeles County MAYELA GUTIERREZ, Super. Ct. No. BD473221)

Respondent,

v.

ALBERTO GUTIERREZ,

Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Frederick C. Shaller, Judge. Affirmed. Holstrom, Block & Parke and Ronald B. Funk for Appellant. C. Athena Roussos for Respondent. ____________________ Father makes four appellate complaints about the family court’s division of marital property. First, from the value of the home awarded to Mother, the court subtracted $171,099, which was the balance outstanding on a home equity credit line. Father objects, saying his two witnesses testified the lender wrote off the loan, leaving a balance of zero, not $171,099. Second, the court sanctioned Father for failing to make proper disclosures about a different house. Father claims error because the court made no finding Mother was unaware of this other house. Third, Father argues the court misinterpreted a 2008 court order to sell a third property. The error, Father argues, was to read the order as requiring him to act swiftly. Fourth, Father complains about treatment of a Jeep, tools, an all-terrain vehicle, and his watch. We affirm. Citations are to the Family Code. I The parties are Mayela Gutierrez and Alberto Gutierrez. We refer to them as Mother and Father to be concise and respectful. The trial court’s encyclopedic 69-page statement of decision is a model of clarity and an emblem of judicial diligence. This ruling reports Mother and Father married in 2001, had two children, and separated in 2008. We add more facts as they become pertinent. II We treat the four issues in turn.

2 A The first issue concerns house valuation. The question is whether the court was right to subtract the outstanding balance of a loan on a house. This boils down to whether the court could reject two of Father’s witnesses as unreliable. We defer to the family court’s credibility call. The particular debate was whether Mother still owed money on a home equity line of credit. The family court said yes, in the sum of $171,099. The court therefore subtracted that sum from the value of the house the court had awarded to Mother. Father says this was error because the lender had written off the loan entirely and the court should not have used this reason to reduce the house value at all. This dispute is purely factual. Father agrees we must review for substantial evidence, which he rightly says is, “indeed, a heavily deferential standard of review . . . .” We recount some factual context. The house is the former family residence in Hacienda Heights. In 2006, the couple borrowed about $204,000 on this house from Washington Mutual. The lender recorded a deed of trust on this loan in 2006. When the couple separated in May 2008, Mother and the children stayed in the Hacienda Heights house. The value of the home dropped and Mother tried to modify the terms of the mortgage and the line of credit. Then Mother stopped all loan payments. Chase Bank took over both Washington Mutual and, with it, the Hacienda Heights loan. A collection agency then took over the loan and demanded Mother pay $170,000 to pay it off. Mother lacked the money. Late payments and penalties drove the balance up to $230,000.

3 Mother again negotiated with the bank, began monthly payments of $700 in 2011, and became current on both loans. Father called two trial witnesses to support his claim the loan had a zero balance because the lender had written it off. Father’s first witness was Richardra Winder, a mortgage bank research officer at Chase, who appeared as the person most knowledgeable to discuss the line of credit. Winder repeatedly claimed Chase had written off the home equity line of credit. Winder’s testimony had problems. She was unclear about when the loan was charged off, saying it was “approximately 2009.” She was “not quite familiar” with whether Mother still had been making loan payments. Winder could not explain why Mother would still be making payments in 2013 if the lender charged off the loan in 2009. Winder’s problems continued. During Winder’s cross- examination, counsel asked Winder about endorsements on Mother’s loan payment checks. These endorsements revealed the checks had been processed in Columbus, Ohio. Winder confirmed Chase’s payment department indeed was in Columbus, Ohio. Winder testified it was the bank’s policy to return any payments after charging off an account. Winder could not explain why this had not happened in Mother’s case. Winder could find no documentation verifying Mother’s agreement to pay Chase $700 a month on the line of credit. In sum, Mother trapped Winder in a simple contradiction. Winder persisted in claiming Chase had written off the loan. Yet Winder effectively admitted Mother was still paying on the Chase loan and Chase was still cashing her checks, which Chase would not do if it had written off the loan.

4 The second witness was Richard Mease, who was a tax preparer and paralegal. Mease testified Father gave him documents leading Mease to conclude the loan had been charged off. Mease had never seen a case, however, where a borrower continued making payments after a loan had been charged off. The court rejected Winder’s and Mease’s testimony. Winder could not explain why Mother continued to make payments and Chase continued to accept those payments and send her receipts for them. Mease’s testimony was speculative and lacked a foundation. While rejecting the testimony from Winder and Mease, the court accepted Mother’s testimony she had negotiated a deal with Chase to avoid foreclosure and she had continued to make payments according to this renegotiation. The court found “no doubt” the deed of trust securing the line of credit was still in place. The court reasoned Mother’s fully-documented payment history refuted Winder’s and Mease’s testimony. “[Father’s] argument that [Mother] is paying as a pure volunteer strains credulity. It makes no common sense that the bank would write off the balance of the [line of credit] and forgo foreclosure proceedings when there is an asset with sufficient [equity] that could be sold to satisfy the loan balance. Also, it makes no sense that [Mother] would continue to pay $700 a month on the obligation when allegedly no such obligation existed.” The court concluded a $171,099 obligation remained on the Hacienda Heights home, which sum it subtracted from the home’s value. Substantial evidence supports this ruling.

5 A court is entitled, of course, to reject testimony from witnesses who tell a contradictory story. If the lender truly had made a gift of $171,099 to Mother, moreover, Mother logically would want authoritative assurance from the entity holding a deed of trust on her home it was safe to stop paying. There was no evidence like that. The court thus had powerful reasons for rejecting Winder’s and Mease’s testimony. (See In re Marriage of Mix (1975) 14 Cal.3d 604, 614.) Father argues to us Winder repeated his assertion the loan had been charged off “at least twenty-six times . . . .” This mistakes quantity for quality. Father’s first argument fails. B The second issue concerns Father’s breach of his fiduciary duty to Mother. Father did not properly disclose a Rosemead house in his preliminary and final declarations of disclosure. The trial court sanctioned Father’s omission because it was “improper concealment” in violation of section 1101, subdivision (g) and section 271. Sanctions orders are committed to the trial court’s discretion, which we review with deference.

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In Re Marriage of Mix
536 P.2d 479 (California Supreme Court, 1975)
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194 Cal. App. 4th 1507 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)
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Bluebook (online)
Marriage of Gutierrez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-gutierrez-calctapp-2020.