Marriage of Hill and McKinley CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 25, 2014
DocketC071744
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Hill and McKinley CA3 (Marriage of Hill and McKinley CA3) 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 Hill and McKinley CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/25/14 Marriage of Hill and McKinley CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

In re the Marriage of KATHRYN ANNE HILL and C071744 NED DANIEL McKINLEY.

KATHRYN ANNE HILL, (Super. Ct. No. 10FL03416)

Appellant,

v.

NED DANIEL McKINLEY,

Respondent.

This is a judgment roll appeal in a marital dissolution proceeding. Because the appellant, Kathryn Anne Hill, has failed to show any error on the face of the record, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Hill and respondent Ned Daniel McKinley were married in December 1997 and separated in 2010. They have six sons together, whose ages in 2012 ranged from 4 to 13. Hill filed her petition for dissolution of the marriage in May 2010. In June 2010, the court made temporary orders for McKinley to pay Hill $814 in child support and $1,018 in spousal support per month. The support orders were based on McKinley having the children approximately 85 percent of the time and on McKinley earning $9,487 per month and Hill earning nothing. The court ordered Hill to submit to a vocational evaluation and to seek full-time employment by submitting five job applications every two weeks. The court also ordered McKinley to pay Hill $10,000 in attorney fees at the rate of $200 per month, with an initial payment of $5,000 to be made from a money market account in McKinley’s name if the account contained that amount. In November 2010, Hill started working part-time in retail sales. The case was ultimately set for trial, but the parties reached an agreement at a settlement conference in April 2011. The parties agreed that McKinley would pay Hill $943 in child support and $592 in spousal support per month based on McKinley having the children approximately 73 percent of the time and on McKinley earning $9,487 per month and Hill earning $867 per month. The agreement noted the obligation of both parties “to be self-supporting,” continued in place the seek-work provision for Hill (five job applications every two weeks), and provided that Hill’s “efforts to secure full-time employment shall be reviewed in 90 days.” The review hearing was set for July 2011. In advance of the July 2011 hearing, McKinley filed papers requesting that the court impute $40,000 per year in income to Hill. For her part, Hill requested spousal support of no less than $800 per month and rescission of the seek-work order. The record on appeal does not reveal exactly what happened in July 2011, but the matter was set for trial again in October 2011. In October, however, the parties apparently reached another agreement.1 Child support was reduced to $491 per month

1 The only record we have of what (apparently) happened in October are two paragraphs and a third partial paragraph from a judgment on reserved issues that are quoted in a subsequent court ruling. 2 and temporary spousal support was increased to $892 per month.2 It was noted that the temporary spousal support figure did not reflect judicial consideration of the Family Code section 4320 factors (the 4320 factors). A further review hearing was set for April 3, 2012, and the court reserved jurisdiction to consider evidence bearing on the 4320 factors at that time. Judgment was entered in the case in November 2011, but the judgment itself is not contained in the record on appeal. Furthermore, it appears another judgment, this one on reserved issues, was entered in February 2012. This judgment on reserved issues appears to have incorporated the provisions of the parties’ agreement from October 2011. In advance of the April 2012 review hearing, Hill filed a declaration requesting a $300 increase in spousal support and a reduction of the amount of job applications she had to submit, if not relief from the seek-work order altogether. McKinley continued to argue for imputation of income to Hill. The review hearing was held on April 3 and 26, 2012. Both parties testified at the hearing. The certified vocational rehabilitation counselor who had performed Hill’s vocational evaluation also testified. There is no reporter’s transcript, agreed statement, or settled statement from the hearing. The day after the April hearing, Hill apparently filed a petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The trial court also apparently issued a tentative decision that is not included in the record on appeal. Hill filed objections to the tentative decision on May 17. At the time of the April hearing, a motion for attorney fees was apparently pending in which McKinley requested an award of fees from Hill. (The moving papers are not included in the record on appeal.) The court “bifurcated” that issue from the

2 Both amounts were based on the assumption that Hill was working 32 hours per week; alternate, lower figures were to apply if Hill worked 40 hours per week. 3 support issues and set the issue of attorney fees for hearing on May 29. Hill filed her opposition to the fee motion on May 22. An evidentiary hearing on the motion at which both parties apparently testified was held on May 29; again, however, there is no reporter’s transcript, agreed statement, or settled statement from the hearing. On May 31, the court issued a “TENTATIVE DECISION FOLLOWING TRIAL” (fn. omitted) on the motion for attorney fees.3 The court ordered Hill to pay McKinley $5,000 in attorney fees forthwith pursuant to Family Code sections 2030 and 2032. On June 1, the trial court issued an “AMENDED PROPOSED STATEMENT OF DECISION AND JUDGMENT FOLLOWING TRIAL” for the April support hearing. The court found (among many other things) that McKinley, 38 years old and in excellent health, was a former Navy SEAL employed by the United States Marine Corps earning $9,775 per month (the equivalent of $56.20 per hour for a 40-hour work week). Meanwhile, Hill, 41 years old and in moderate health, was working as a skin care consultant at Sephora 32 to 34 hours per week earning $11 per hour. During the course of the parties’ approximately 12-year marriage, Hill did not “engage[] in income producing employment” but “was fully engaged in pursuing her doctoral education.” (Hill apparently has a master’s degree and a doctoral degree in modern French studies.) The court found that McKinley was the primary custodial parent, with the parties “shar[ing] the children with a pattern that actively involves balancing employment, the children’s schools, daycare, and activities.”

3 The tentative decision provided that it would become the court’s statement of decision unless within 15 days either party filed a document specifying controverted issues or making proposals not covered in the tentative decision. It does not appear from the record that either party filed any such document. It does appear that Hill tried to file a motion for reconsideration within that time frame but was unable to do so because she failed to tender the filing fee. She subsequently filed that motion on June 22 but thereafter dropped the hearing on the matter.

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