Marriage of Hibbert CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 2020
DocketB291518
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Hibbert CA2/7 (Marriage of Hibbert CA2/7) 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 Hibbert CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 12/8/20 Marriage of Hibbert CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 SEVEN

In re Marriage of SHARON B291518 and WINSTON HIBBERT. (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. LD073762) WINSTON HIBBERT,

Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

SHARON WINSTON,

Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Shirley K. Watkins, Judge. Affirmed as modified. Charles O. Agege for Petitioner and Appellant. No appearance for Respondent.

___________________ INTRODUCTION Winston Hibbert appeals from a family law judgment adjudicating the parties’ date of separation, characterizing real property as Sharon Hibbert’s separate property, and denying Winston’s reimbursement claims. Winston contends that substantial evidence does not support the trial court’s rulings and that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting certain evidence. We modify the judgment to correct two errors and affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY A. Background Winston and Sharon were married on October 6, 1987.1 They have two daughters, Princessa and Melissa, both adults. On April 27, 2016, Winston filed a petition for dissolution of marriage listing September 15, 2015 as the date of separation. Sharon contended the date of separation was December 17, 2006. Winston represented himself at the trial. Counsel represented Sharon. The trial occurred on May 23, 2017, August 15, 2017, December 26, 2017, and March 21, 2018. Sharon worked for a trucking company driving a “big rig” truck all over the United States. She was gone from home for months at a time. Although Melissa and Sharon testified that Winston earned money from illegal drug sales, Winston testified that he worked as a handyman.

1 To avoid confusion, we refer to the parties by their first names.

2 B. In Early 2007, Sharon and Melissa Move Across the Street Sharon, Winston, and Melissa resided in an apartment on Vanowen Street in Van Nuys. Sharon testified that, on December 17, 2006, Winston hit her in the face during an argument, injuring her nose. Sharon testified that there was blood “all over.” Melissa, who at the time was 11 years old, testified that she heard her parents argue, saw Winston “chase [Sharon] down the hallway,” and observed Sharon with “blood all over her clothes and her face.” According to Sharon, because Winston pointed a gun at her, telling her that “if you call the police, you know, [he was] not going back to prison,” Sharon was afraid to tell the police that she had an altercation with Winston. Melissa went to the hospital with Sharon. Winston did not deny that he struck Sharon. According to Sharon, the domestic violence severed the marriage. After the incident, she and Winston did not have sexual relations, use the same bathroom, or have a meal together. Further, according to Sharon, after the incident, she and Winston did not celebrate Christmas together or go out as a couple. In early January 2007, because of Sharon’s intent to end the marriage, Melissa and Sharon vacated the apartment and moved across the street to a house on the property of Mary Behmer, a family friend. According to Melissa, Behmer permitted her and Sharon to live rent-free in the back house on Behmer’s property because Behmer was a family friend. Behmer lived in the front house on the same property. C. Winston Also Moves Across the Street Sharon testified that Winston did not move with her and Melissa to the back house on the Vanowen property. However,

3 Winston did live on the Vanowen property. Melissa and Sharon testified that Winston “lived in the shed,” a separate structure on the Vanowen property. Later in her testimony, when asked why Winston was living in the front house with Behmer, Sharon replied: “Because he didn’t have anywhere else to go. I didn’t give him any permission to live in the front house. He just moved in the front house.” Melissa testified that Sharon and Winston never lived together in the same structure on the Vanowen property. Sharon testified, there were “two reasons why [Winston] came over [to her home], he was supposed [to] take care of Melissa because I was going to be working . . . and the next reason was he was on parole, and [he] needed . . . an address so his parole officer could come and visit him.” According to Melissa, although Winston was supposed to take care of her when Sharon was gone, “he wouldn’t really. I stayed with my friends at the time.” Sharon also testified that Winston “didn’t” take care of Melissa when she was gone, stating: “[Melissa] had to move and go across the street . . . to her friend’s house.” According to Winston, although he and Sharon planned to move into the back house together, because “it was so small” and “my daughter started to turn [into a] teenager,” he gave Sharon and Melissa “the space” and he lived with Behmer in her house. According to Winston, “we still go from back [house] to front [house] and eat and drink from back to front just the same way. And she came over and sleep [in the front house] sometimes also.” Winston testified that he and Sharon celebrated Christmas together, stating that “we [were] home and we cook[ed] and [ate] and all that.” Winston also testified that he and Sharon did things together and people knew them as a couple. Winston

4 testified that, until September 2015, he and Sharon had a “loving relationship” and a “marital relationship.” D. Behmer Gifts the Vanowen Property to Sharon On July 16, 2008, Ms. Behmer gifted the Vanowen property to Sharon by quitclaim deed. The deed was recorded on December 18, 2008. Prior to 2010, Sharon obtained a loan and entered into a promissory note using the Vanowen property as collateral. Sharon testified that she made the note payments and that “[Winston] didn’t make payments on the [note] . . . because [at] that time we weren’t together.” Sharon testified that Winston “never worked . . . never paid a bill.” Winston testified that he contributed to the promissory note payments from the funds he earned working as a handyman. Winston further testified that he worked as a caregiver for Behmer “and that’s how Sharon’s name got on the house.” Winston testified that his name was not on the title to the property “because [he] didn’t have proper [immigration] documents” to reside in the United States. Behmer died in 2010. E. Sharon Sells the Vanowen Property and Purchases the Woodcock Property On August 5, 2015, Sharon sold the Vanowen property to Deal Buys Corp. The deed was recorded on October 2, 2015. She used the sale proceeds to repay the promissory note and to fund the purchase of a new home at 11656 Woodcock Avenue in San Fernando. Sharon also made a $2,000 down payment on the Woodcock property. Sharon took title to the Woodcock property as a single woman and financed the balance of the purchase price with a loan evidenced by as promissory note and secured by a deed of trust on the property in her name alone. Sharon moved to the

5 Woodcock property in September 2015. Winston did not move to the Woodcock property. F. The $2,000 Down Payment for the Woodcock Property The parties dispute the source of the $2,000 down payment for the Woodcock property. However, they agreed that, at the time Sharon sold the Vanowen property and contracted to purchase the Woodcock property, Sharon obtained a loan of $2,500 using a vehicle as collateral.

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