Marriage of Mesbah CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 2013
DocketG046361
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Mesbah CA4/3 (Marriage of Mesbah CA4/3) 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 Mesbah CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 6/25/13 Marriage of Mesbah CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re Marriage of SOUZAN and SHAWN MESBAH.

SOUZAN MESBAH, G046361 Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 01D007391) v. OPINION SHAWN MESBAH,

Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Robert H. Gallivan, Judge. (Retired judge of the Orange Super. Ct. assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to art. VI, § 6 of the Cal. Const.) Affirmed. Shawn Mesbah, in pro. per., for Appellant. Farah F. Azar for Respondent. * * * This is a child and spousal support arrearages case. Substantial evidence supports the trial court’s determination appellant Shawn Mesbah owes his ex-wife Souzan Mesbah1 $107,315 in unpaid support, so we affirm the court’s order.2 BACKGROUND We emphasize at the outset that the record provided this court by appellant Shawn is incomplete. In particular, the clerk’s transcript, which usually contains the documents in the file which bore on the decision of the trial court being appealed, contains almost nothing. It does not include, for example, the marital settlement agreement which was the underlying basis for the order to show cause (OSC) brought by Souzan in this case, nor does it contain the OSC itself. In fact, the only item of substance it does contain is the minute order, entered August 3, 2011, from which Shawn has appealed.3 We therefore take judicial notice of two documents from the trial court’s file

1 At trial Souzan Mesbah went by the name of Souzan Azar. In this opinion we will refer to the parties by their first names, in part because that is now the custom in family law appellate jurisprudence, and in part to avoid confusion with Souzan’s trial (and also appellate) counsel, who is also named Azar. (In fact, at one point in the proceedings, Souzan’s own trial attorney called Souzan “Ms. Mesbah” instead of “Ms. Azar” because she was “so used to calling” Souzan Ms. Mesbah.) (In re Marriage of Balcof (2006) 141 Cal.App.4th 1509, 1513, fn. 2.) 2 About $40,000 of the $107,315 is interest. The disparity between the legal interest rate of 10 percent and general market interest rates (which have been much lower over the course of the last decade) creates its own potential for “harsh,” and arguably inequitable results, a point noted by this court in In re Marriage of Cordero (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 653, 658 [“in the area of spousal support collection, the disparity creates the potential for harsh inequity”].) But even given the “harsh” effects of 10 percent legal interest, it is still the law and it is up to the Legislature to make any changes. One thing the high rate of legal interest does do, of course, is create a big incentive for payor ex-spouses (like Shawn) to stay on top of their support obligations. (See id. at p. 658 [“After all, the law wants to encourage judgment debtors to satisfy judgments . . . .”].) 3 The notice of appeal doesn’t even specify that order. Rather, the notice of appeal only specifies a “judgment after court trial” without a date. Normally, any such “judgment” would be the one ending the marriage of the parties, in this case the one entered in 2002, and we would be forced to summarily dismiss Shawn’s appeal as taken from the wrong decision of the trial court. Rules of liberal construction of notices of appeal cannot save challenges to orders and judgments not specified in the notice of appeal. (See Conservatorship of Edde (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 883, 889; Morton v. Wagner (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 963, 967.) However – to the great credit of the clerks involved – a deputy appellate clerk at the superior court noticed that Shawn’s notice of appeal was incomplete (no date was specified) and asked Shawn for the information. Shawn telephoned her later from out of the country to tell her it was the minute order of August 30, 2011, which he meant to appeal from. That clerk then relayed the information to a clerk of this court. There is, strictly speaking, no minute order dated August 30, 2011 in the superior court file at all. But the numerical transposition is obvious: 30 should be 03. Therefore, under the rule of liberal construction of notices of appeal, we deem the appeal to be from the August 3, 2011 minute order, which does indeed contain the order requiring Shawn to pay $107,315. We note in this regard that Souzan has not been prejudiced in any way. Her brief shows she always understood the appeal to be from that minute order.

2 (the couple’s marital settlement agreement filed in 2002, and Souzan’s motion to determine arrearages filed in 2010), plus two documents from our own file (the civil case information statement filed by Shawn which contains the “Xspouse” printout used by the trial court to calculate the arrearages, plus our clerk’s docket entries) to begin to make sense of Shawn’s appeal. That said, in broad overview, the facts are as follows: Souzan and Shawn were divorced in May 2002. Their marital settlement agreement provided Shawn would pay Souzan $2,000 a month, consisting of $646 times two for each of the couple’s two children (Kourosh, then about 11 and Shahrzad, then about 9), plus another $708 a month in spousal support to Souzan. Shawn got the family house in Mission Viejo as his separate property. But it was not a conventional divorce. By the beginning of 2003 Souzan had moved back in to the Mission Viejo house that was now Shawn’s separate property. The parties told different stories to the trial court as to the reason for Souzan’s moving back. According to Souzan, the move back was in hope of a possible reconciliation. According to Shawn, it was because Souzan and the kids “begged” him to come back. (Souzan had been paying $1,700 a month to rent elsewhere.) In any event, there is no dispute that Souzan and the two children did, in fact, return to the house around January 2003. Nor is there any dispute that, in the period January 2003 through August 2008, Shawn was out of the country “most” of the time. Souzan testified that Shawn was in Iran “most of the time,” while Shawn himself acknowledged he was out of the United States about 10 months a year in the 2003-2008. At the beginning of the move-back period, Shawn and Souzan signed a written document, entitled “promissory note,” the nature of which is one of the key points in Shawn’s appeal. The occasion was a loan of money from Souzan to Shawn, hence the “promissory note” denomination. The document consists of two sentences of type- written material, followed by handwritten material following the second sentence.

3 The typewritten material is: “I, Shawn Mesbah have received $10,000 from Souzan Azar in February of 2002 and would repay the principle amount plus simple interest with the rate of 5% [¶] Additionally, it is agreed that Souzan Azar will pay $1,000 per month for rent.” There is a handwritten interlineation changing the year 2002 to 2003. This interlineation tallies with the idea that Souzan moved back into the house in January 2003. But there is another handwritten interlineation of more substance. After the typed words “for rent,” there is this handwritten material: “& food, etc. and live with the kids in the house in lieu of spousal & child support & I pay for all expenses.” (Italics added.) There was no dispute before the trial court that the document was signed by both Shawn and Souzan, but there was a big dispute as to whether Souzan signed off on the handwritten “in lieu of spousal & child support” language.

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