Marriage of Haynes CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 17, 2026
DocketA172255
StatusUnpublished

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Marriage of Haynes CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/17/26 Marriage of Haynes CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FIVE

In re the Marriage of DAVID and TELETHA HAYNES.

DAVID HAYNES, Respondent, A172255 v. TELETHA HAYNES, (Solano County Appellant. Super. Ct. No. FFL154019)

MEMORANDUM OPINION1 Teletha Haynes appeals two orders arising from a postjudgment hearing on the division of part of her federal employment retirement benefits: the first, a qualified domestic relations order; the second, the trial court’s findings and order after hearing. We dismiss the appeal of the first order because it is untimely, and we affirm the second order for failures to provide an adequate record for review and supported legal argument.2

1 Cal. Stds. Jud. Admin., § 8.1; Ct. App., First Dist., Local Rules of Ct.,

rule 19. 2 Concurrently, we issue a separate opinion in an appeal of another

qualified domestic relations order arising from a later hearing. (In re Marriage of Haynes (Mar. 17, 2026, A173440 [nonpub. opn.].)

1 BACKGROUND 1. Trial Court Proceedings In May 2023 the Solano Superior Court entered a judgment dissolving David and Teletha Haynes’s nearly 28-year marriage.3 Besides dissolving the marriage, the judgment says that part of Teletha’s benefits in the Federal Employees Retirement System is subject to equal division of the community estate by the standard mechanism: a qualified domestic relations order.4 On October 9, 2024, the court held the first of several hearings on David’s request for order to enforce the judgment’s division of retirement benefits. David had counsel; Teletha did not. David asked the court to enter his proposed qualified domestic relations order as to Teletha’s Federal Employees Retirement System benefits (FERS QDRO) while Teletha objected, arguing the FERS QDRO’s division differs from the judgment’s. Ultimately, the court granted David’s request over Teletha’s objection and directed David’s counsel to prepare a written findings and order after hearing (Order After Hearing; see Cal. Rules of Court, rules 5.125, 5.7(a), 1.31; Judicial Council Forms, form FL-340), which she did. The next day, on October 10, 2024, the court filed the first order, the FERS QDRO, which David’s counsel served on Teletha by mail on October 11. Also on October 11 the court filed the second order, the Order After Hearing, which David’s counsel served on Teletha by mail on October 14.

3 We use first names for ease of reference. (See In re Marriage of Smith (1990) 225 Cal.App.3d 469, 475–476, fn. 1.) 4 Based on what both Teletha and David’s counsel said in court on

October 9, 2024. Appended to the notice of appeal is a page purportedly extracted from the judgment that seems corroborative; however, the judgment itself is not part of the appellate record.

2 2. The Notice of Appeal In December 2024 Teletha appealed, still representing herself. The notice of appeal identifies only one appealed order: the “Order after Hearing held October 9, 2024,” entered on “October 11, 2024” (i.e., the Order After Hearing). The notice also includes 30 pages of attachments. Though the court filed the notice on December 20, it stamped some of the attachments received on December 11. Among those are the Order After Hearing and Teletha’s explanation of what she is appealing and why, in part: “Please accept my request to appeal the Judge order for the hearing held on October 9, 2024. [¶] . . . [¶] The FERS QDRO . . . includes multiple options and provisions that were not awarded in the DMJ [the judgment] . . . .” Though the FERS QDRO is also attached to the notice, it is not among the pages the court stamped received on December 11. 3. Appellate Court Proceedings In March 2025, before the appellate record was filed, this court requested briefing on whether the Order After Hearing is appealable. David answered yes, though without citation to any legal authority on that question: “[Both the FERS QDRO and the Order After Hearing] are the final judgments for disposition of [Teletha’s benefits] in the Federal Employees Retirement System”; thus, “appealable if timely appealed.”5 David then urged dismissal, arguing the appeal is untimely as to both the FERS QDRO and the Order After Hearing because the notice of appeal was filed on December 20, 2024—70 days after service of the FERS QDRO and 67 days after service of the Order After Hearing. This court asked Teletha to address

5 The appellate record, filed later, includes another order after hearing,

from December 9, 2024, which is consistent: “Issues regarding division of the parties’ interest in FERS were fully adjudicated during the hearing on October 9, 2024. The order for division was filed on October 10, 2024.”

3 timeliness in her appealability brief, granting the 30-day extension she requested, but she did not file one. Consequently, this court dismissed the appeal of the Order After Hearing as untimely while allowing the appeal of the FERS QDRO to proceed, “defer[ring] any decision on appealability, including the timeliness of the appeal with respect to this order, until it addresses the merits of the appeal. . . .” Teletha swiftly moved for reconsideration, emphasizing, “I filed my Notice of Appeal APP-002 on December 11, 2024,” and attaching a copy that “shows the complete and accurate document that with [sic] the correct filing date . . . .” (Boldface and underscoring omitted.) The attached copy was stamped filed on December 20 but received on December 11. Granting the motion, this court vacated the partial dismissal and wholly reinstated the appeal: “Based on appellant’s apparent attempt to file her notice of appeal on December 11, 2024 . . . , the court has decided to allow the appeal to proceed, and to defer any decision on appealability, including the timeliness of the appeal, until it addresses the merits of the appeal,” to which we now turn. DISCUSSION 1. Both the FERS QDRO and the Order After Hearing are appealable postjudgment orders. “A reviewing court has jurisdiction over a direct appeal only when there is (1) an appealable order or (2) an appealable judgment.” (Griset v. Fair Political Practices Com. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 688, 696.) Because the right to appeal is statutory, an order is appealable only when a statute makes it so. (Dana Point Safe Harbor Collective v. Superior Court (2010) 51 Cal.4th 1, 5; Griset v. Fair Political Practices Com., at p. 696; see Code Civ. Proc., § 901 et seq.; Fam. Code, § 210.) Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1 generally makes appealable an order that itself follows a final, appealable judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (a)(2).) But not every such order. “To be

4 appealable, a postjudgment order must satisfy two additional requirements”: (1) “the issues [in] the appeal from the order must [differ] from those [in] an appeal from the judgment”; and (2) “ ‘the order must either affect the judgment or relate to it by enforcing it or staying its execution.’ ” (Lakin v. Watkins Associated Industries (1993) 6 Cal.4th 644, 651–652 & fn. 3.)6 As the final dispositions of that part of Teletha’s Federal Employees Retirement System benefits,7 both the FERS QDRO and the Order After Hearing pass this test. (In re Marriage of Cooper (2008) 160 Cal.App.4th 574, 576, fn. 2.) 2. The notice of appeal is untimely as to the FERS QDRO but timely as to the Order After Hearing. Per the Appellate Rules (Cal.

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