Marriage of Haile CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 2025
DocketA171590
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Haile CA1/1 (Marriage of Haile CA1/1) 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 Haile CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/22/25 Marriage of Haile CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

In re the Marriage of EDEN and TSEGAI HAILE EDEN HAILE, Respondent, A171590, A171891, & A171979 v. TSEGAI HAILE, (Sonoma County Super. Ct. No. SFL-090902) Appellant.

In these consolidated appeals, appellant Tsegai Haile challenges three separate orders entered in the dissolution proceedings initiated by his wife, respondent Eden Haile.1 Because he raises no reasoned factual or legal arguments of how the trial court erred, we affirm all three orders. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Tsegai and Eden were married in January 1996 and have three children. Eden filed a divorce petition in April 2022. Around a year later, in April 2023, Tsegai purported to appeal from several orders entered in the action. In an unpublished opinion, this court concluded that Tsegai had

1 We refer to the parties by their first names in the interest of clarity.

1 mostly appealed from nonappealable orders, and that to the extent one of the orders was appealable, Tsegai offered no reasoned argument why it should be reversed. (Haile v. Haile (Oct. 26, 2023, A167562) (Haile I).) Litigation continued in the trial court. Among the many things the parties disputed was their date of separation. Tsegai claimed that the parties separated in March 2002 (i.e., around 20 years before Eden filed a divorce petition), when Eden was pregnant with the couple’s third child. Eden, by contrast, contended the separation date was in April 2022. Tsegai’s legal representation has changed several times. He is currently unrepresented. He challenges the following three orders issued by the trial court. A. Denial of Claim of Exemption. In May 2022, the court ordered Tsegai to pay $5,000 in attorney fees and $500 in other payments. Apparently he did not pay. Tsegai also was directed to pay Eden money in orders filed in August 2022, December 2022, and March 2023. Eden ultimately obtained a writ of execution for the enforcement of a money judgment totaling $8,987.50. In January 2024, $5,570.24 was withdrawn from Tsegai’s account with Redwood Credit Union to pay a “Sheriff’s Department levy.” Tsegai filed a claim of exemption under title 42 United States Code section 407(a), which exempts Social Security income from garnishment. Eden opposed the claim. She contended that Tsegai’s equity was greater than what he had listed on a financial statement. In response to Eden’s opposition to his claim of exemption, Tsegai first filed a declaration complaining about almost every aspect of the proceedings. As for his claim of exemption, he characterized Eden’s opposition as “frivolous” and asserted that he was “not a judgment debtor in this case, I

2 won every issue raised legally and factually!” And he provided an estimate for proposed dental work and a statement regarding his Social Security benefits. Two days later, Tsegai filed a supplemental declaration. He characterized the documentation presented by Eden as “illegally gathered” and “irrelevant,” and claimed that the order supporting the writ of execution against him was “VOID.” At a hearing in February 2024, the court ordered further briefing on whether a court order that has not been reduced to a judgment can be subject to a writ of execution. Following briefing, the court concluded that Eden could enforce the orders against Tsegai as money judgments. But the court characterized the evidence submitted as “unclear and disjointed,” and it therefore ordered an evidentiary hearing on the claim of exemption. At a hearing on August 9, 2024, Tsegai appeared by Zoom despite having been ordered to appear in person to provide testimony. The trial court continued the hearing and ordered Tsegai to be present in court. Tsegai did not appear at the continued hearing. A representative from Tsegai’s credit union was present to authenticate bank statements showing that the levy on Tsegai’s account was taken from a savings account that did not contain Social-Security payments, and Eden’s attorney made an offer of proof that the representative would testify to that effect. The attorney also provided evidence of the equity Tsegai had in the home held in his name. The trial court denied Tsegai’s claim of exemption based on the offer of proof and the fact there was sufficient equity in Tsegai’s home for him to satisfy the judgment against him. Tsegai appealed. (No. A171590.) B. Award of Attorney Fees. Meanwhile, Eden sought $105,000 in attorney fees and costs under Family Code, section 271. The form request stated that Tsegai retained sole

3 access to several financial accounts and that his “behavior ha[d] increased [her] attorney fees and costs substantially by having to defend [her]self against frivolous motions and pleadings.” Eden reported she was working two entry-level jobs (one as a caregiver in a senior home and the other as a housekeeper for a hospital) to support herself and the Hailes’ youngest daughter, an adult who “has special circumstances.” She represented that, given her age and the cost of living, she was “unsure [she would] ever be able to earn enough to sustain the standard of living [she] enjoyed during the marriage.” Tsegai did not appear at the hearing on the request for attorney fees. Eden’s attorney provided an offer of proof about the amount of fees Eden would testify she had incurred. The attorney also provided proof of Tsegai’s ability to pay the attorney fees. The court ordered that Tsegai pay Eden $105,000 in attorney fees. Tsegai appealed. (No. A171891.) C. Declaration of Tsegai as a Vexatious Litigant. Eden also sought to have Tsegai declared a vexatious litigant under Code of Civil Procedure section 391 et sequitur. She asked that he be required to furnish security and that the court issue an order preventing him from filing any further petitions, applications, or motions without first obtaining leave of the court. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 391.1, subd. (a), 391.7, subd. (a).) Tsegai filed a seven-page declaration in opposition to the request. He attested that there was “irrefutable documentary evidence” showing that the trial judge was “a personal enemy of mine.” Tsegai accused the judge, in his words, of refusing and failing “to follow simple guidelines of a judicial post, on ongoing and repeated basis. His acts are not judicial acts. These retaliatory acts are his own, representing his own prejudices, and gaols [sic].” Tsegai

4 contended that the judge had denied him his constitutional and civil rights and that the judge’s orders were “void [and] of no force or effect” since the judge had “lost subject matter jurisdiction.” And he devoted most of his declaration to listing all the ways the judge supposedly had “conspired, supervised, abetted, & aided” wrongful acts against him. The declaration concluded: “with him [the trial judge] being the litigant on false/fraudulent basis; with him being the accuser w/o standing, and him being the decision maker in his kangaroo court, declared me vexatious litigant, grossly falsifying the facts of the records in the proceedings w/o any supporting evidence but his words. It’s illegal, null, and void!” Tsegai also submitted a two-page memorandum of points and authorities. He contended that his appeal from the denial of his claim of exemption automatically stayed the case. Finally, Tsegai submitted printouts of anonymous reviews that the trial judge had received on a website for rating judges.

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Bluebook (online)
Marriage of Haile CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-haile-ca11-calctapp-2025.