Marriage of Mirza CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 1, 2021
DocketG057613
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Mirza CA4/3 (Marriage of Mirza 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 Mirza CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/1/21 Marriage of Mirza 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 HASEENA BANO MIRZA and IRFAN MUHAMMAD MIRZA.

HASEENA BANO MIRZA, G057613, G057943, Appellant, G058199, G058217 v. (Super. Ct. No. 16D002426) IRFAN MUHAMMAD MIRZA, OPINION Appellant.

Appeals from four postjudgment orders of the Superior Court of Orange County, Andre De La Cruz, Judge. Affirmed. Law Office of Herb Fox, Herb Fox; Law Office of Adam N. Schanz and Adam N. Schanz for Appellant Irfan Muhammad Mirza. Minyard Morris LLP, Mathew S. Buttacavoli; Snell & Wilmer, Todd E. Lundell, Jing (Jenny) Hua; Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton and Todd E. Lundell for Appellant Haseena Bano Mirza. * * * In this consolidated appeal, Irfan Muhammad Mirza challenges both a family court pretrial evidentiary ruling and, after a three-day bench trial, the court’s subsequent order denying his motion to set aside the stipulated divorce decree he entered 1 into with Haseena Bano Mirza. The family court entered the decree based on the marital settlement agreement (MSA) that Irfan and Haseena both signed. On appeal, in addition to denial of his set aside motion, Irfan also challenges the court’s partial award of sanctions and attorney fees against him, but only as a protective appeal in the event we reverse on the substantive issues he raises. Haseena appeals the court’s denial of attorney fees she incurred in defending against the set aside motion. We find no basis to overturn the court’s posttrial order denying his attempt to set aside the stipulated divorce decree on grounds of mental incapacity. The family court also did not apply an incorrect standard regarding his mental state in finding against him on his claim that duress vitiated the MSA. Similarly, the court acted within its discretion in issuing its pretrial order which limited Irfan’s attempt to argue claims of fraud, perjury, and disclosure omissions, given that the primary factual basis for Irfan’s alleged “delayed discovery” of those claims was his failure to read the MSA he signed. The agreement spelled out in detail the terms of the couple’s division of property and, as such, gave Irfan notice of the allegedly unequal and “unfair” allocation of assets that he alleged as the basis of his fraud, perjury,

1 Because the parties share the same last name, we use their first names for clarity and ease of reference and intend no disrespect. (Pont v. Pont (2018) 31 Cal.App.5th 428, 431, fn. 1.)

2 and disclosure claims. Irfan signed the agreement, and the court entered it as the judgment, more than a year before Irfan filed his set aside motion. The court’s finding that Irfan’s new fraud claims were precluded because they fell outside the applicable statute of limitations was therefore correct as a matter of law. Finally, as to fees, the court reasonably distinguished between Irfan’s set aside motion based on his alleged lack of capacity due to depression, along with a related claim of duress, and fees for Haseena’s subsequent motion to enforce the divorce decree, after Irfan failed to have it vacated. We therefore affirm in their entirety the court’s orders.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Irfan, a cardiologist, and Haseena, a physician’s assistant, married in 1997 before they began their careers; the couple lived in New York until Irfan completed his residency three years later. They then moved to the Laughlin-Bullhead City area, where Irfan set up his cardiology practice. The Mirzas had two sons over the next five years while Irfan expanded into a larger practice with four partners and offices in Arizona, Nevada, and California. In 2012, Irfan left the partnership and returned to his own practice. This preceded his former partners filing complaints against him in 2013 with the Arizona Medical Board, alleging he performed unnecessary procedures. In 2013, one of the partners also filed a lawsuit against him in Nevada, with claims that are not specified in our record. In reviewing his practice records around this time, Irfan discovered he had made an error in treating a patient, which concerned him because of his position as chief of cardiology. Irfan became depressed in the wake of these events in 2012 and 2013, but his testimony was inconsistent on the timeline with respect to his mental state. He testified that his depression did not manifest itself—on a self-assessed scale of 1 to 10—

3 above “1” until December 2014; he also testified that his “recovery started in 2014.” According to Irfan, this recovery allowed him to function well enough to provide “answers to the [medical] board and [engage in unspecified] communications start[ing] in 2014.” Irfan nevertheless described his condition into late 2014 as feeling “really, really 2 low.” In the summer of 2015, Irfan admitted to Haseena that he had an extramarital affair in 2009. Haseena was furious and told Irfan she wanted a divorce. She moved with their two boys in August 2015 to California. Irfan initially objected, but then helped her pack for the move; this included their financial records related to property and bank accounts. Before she left, Haseena and Irfan discussed his “anxiety and stress,” and she told him he needed help. She arranged for Irfan to meet with several therapists and a life coach. She also arranged for him to obtain a prescription for Prozac. Irfan visited his sons “every week” in California; on a visit in March 2016, he learned Haseena remained intent on divorce. According to Irfan, she had “made up her mind. . . . She [then] gave me [unspecified] papers” pertaining to divorce, which he signed. He did not read the papers. Irfan claimed that “[e]ven though the papers were not filed,” he was then “asked to leave” because Haseena viewed the marriage as over, stating, “You’re not married to me anymore.” Haseena filed for dissolution of marriage on March 17, 2016.

2 The evidentiary record from the three-day trial on Irfan’s set-aside motion is largely from his perspective because, after his case-in-chief, the court granted Haseena’s oral motion for judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., § 631.8.) As we discuss, the court eventually found Irfan, on the evidence he presented, “unable to meet his burden of persuasion even by [the] preponderance standard.” The court in particular noted that Irfan did not read the legal agreement he was attempting to set aside (the divorce decree). Irfan testified instead that, regardless of his mental condition, he “hadn’t read a single one [that he signed] in [his] entire life.”

4 Irfan admitted he and Haseena talked that day in her home about dividing their assets, and he characterized their communication over the next seven or eight months about matters related to their divorce as nearly “every day” occurrences. These frequent discussions continued into November 2016 when Irfan signed a stipulated divorce decree. During those interim months, the parties discussed in detail the division of their properties, though they did not attempt to assign a market value to each. Irfan acknowledged he knew of the proposed allocation of assets, but testified, “I did not discuss what she said I agree to it. Because she was telling me ‘I want this, I want this, I want this.’” According to Irfan, after the divorce proceedings began in March 2016, his depression deepened and he “lost interest in everything.” The parties disputed how much Irfan continued to work throughout the year, in spite of his allegedly debilitating depression.

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