Marriage of Palacio and Ayala CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 15, 2020
DocketF075883
StatusUnpublished

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Opinion

Filed 9/15/20 Marriage of Palacio and Ayala CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re the Marriage of CENDY PALACIO and JUAN AYALA.

CENDY PALACIO, F075883

Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. VFL243178)

v. OPINION JUAN AYALA,

Appellant;

ALFREDO AYALA et al.,

Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Tulare County. Bret D. Hillman, Judge. Miller & Ayala and Mary E. Ayala for Appellant Juan Ayala. Wanger Jones Helsley, Scott D. Laird and Jay A. Christofferson for Appellant Alfredo Ayala. Tritt & Tritt and James F. Tritt for Appellants Ayala Orchards, Inc., and Western Orchard Harvest, Inc. Williams, Brodersen, Pritchett & Burke and Steve R. Williams for Respondent. -ooOoo- In a marital dissolution proceeding between Juan Ayala and Cendy Palacio, the family court granted Cendy’s motion to join to the proceeding two corporations owned by Juan and his brother, Alfredo Ayala, namely, Ayala Orchards, Inc. (Ayala Orchards) and Western Orchard Harvest, Inc. (Western Orchard) (collectively, the Corporations).1 Cendy claimed the shares Juan held in the Corporations were community property subject to distribution in the proceeding. On the eve of trial, Juan and Cendy entered into a settlement that required them to divide Juan’s shares in the Corporations in kind, and a stipulated judgment was entered. When Cendy could not effect the transfer of her interest in the shares in accordance with the judgment, she filed a motion to enforce the judgment against Juan and the Corporations. During the course of that proceeding, Cendy learned the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) had given notice of its intent to levy against the shares Juan held in Ayala Orchards for payment of taxes, and to satisfy the debt, Juan sold Alfredo the shares in both Corporations that were awarded to Cendy, without notice to her and without her consent. Cendy moved to join Alfredo to the enforcement proceeding on the ground he was a necessary party because he held the shares in the Corporations that Juan had been holding in trust for Cendy pending enforcement of the judgment, and Alfredo acquired the stock by fraudulent conveyance. The family court granted the motion. Juan, Alfredo, and the Corporations each separately appeal from the order granting the joinder motion. Juan and Alfredo contend the family court erred when it ordered Alfredo joined to the proceeding, as the criteria for joinder was not satisfied. The Corporations do not challenge Alfredo’s joinder; instead they argue there is no basis to

1 To avoid confusion, we refer to some individuals by their first names. No disrespect is intended.

2. enforce the stipulated judgment against them. Finding no merit to the appellants’ arguments, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Cendy and Juan married in March 1996. Cendy petitioned for legal separation in July 2011, almost nine months after she separated from Juan. Juan responded with a request to dissolve the marriage. In July 2014, the family court entered a judgment of dissolution as to status only nunc pro tunc to March 24, 2014. Jurisdiction was reserved over all other issues, including the division of marital assets. The Corporations are Joined as Parties In August 2014, Cendy moved to join the Corporations as parties to the proceeding on the ground they possessed, controlled, or claimed to own property subject to disposition by the family court. In her moving and reply papers, Cendy explained Juan and his brother Alfredo started Ayala Orchards in 2006, with each being a 50 percent shareholder. In February 2010, just prior to the parties’ separation, Juan transferred 20 percent of his interest in the company to Alfredo for no consideration. Since the separation, Juan received at least $80,000 from Ayala Orchards for his personal expenses. Despite claimed financial hardship, Ayala Orchards maintained at least $700,000 in cash and showed a cash account in excess of $7 million in 2012, yet hundreds of Ayala Orchards’ land remained fallow and unused. Throughout the litigation, Ayala Orchards, through Juan and Alfredo, downplayed Juan’s interest in the company, even firing him as an employee. Similarly, Juan and Alfredo started Western Orchard in 2007, with each owning half of the company. In 2011, Juan transferred 30 percent of his interest in Western Orchard to Alfredo for no consideration. Cendy argued joinder of the Corporations was necessary, not only to allow the case to come to a final judgment, but also to preserve the Corporations as community assets. Juan opposed the motion.

3. In October 2014, the family court granted Cendy’s request to join the Corporations, finding they possessed property subject to the family court’s jurisdiction and were necessary parties both to the litigation and to enforce the family law judgment that eventually would be issued. The family court authorized the issuance of a summons and complaint against the Corporations. The complaint contained a single cause of action for declaratory relief which alleged Juan acquired community property interests in the Corporations, the value of which he intentionally reduced during the marriage by transferring his ownership interest and assets without her consent, and an actual controversy existed between herself and the Corporations. Cendy requested a judicial determination of her and the community’s interests in the Corporations, and asked the court to find she and the community were entitled to Juan’s ownership interest in them. In January 2015, the Corporations filed an answer denying the allegations of the complaint and that Cendy had an ownership interest in the Corporations. The Stipulated Judgment A judgment on the reserved issues was filed on January 22, 2016 (the judgment), based on a stipulation reached in open court on July 31, 2015, just days prior to trial on the merits.2 As pertinent here, the judgment provided that Juan held 30 percent of the shares in Ayala Orchards and 20 percent of the shares in Western Orchard, which would “be divided in kind by the parties.” The parties were equally responsible for any liability associated with his or her ownership of shares in each company. The judgment also provided that Cendy and Juan were equally responsible for all recorded federal tax liens estimated at $4,243,992.33, and all recorded California tax liens estimated at $370,603.55. In addition, they were equally responsible for all later discovered federal and California tax obligations that were then unknown to them.

2 Cendy, who had been represented by counsel through most of the proceedings, represented herself at the July 31, 2015 settlement conference.

4. Cendy’s Motion to Enforce the Judgment On July 21, 2016, Cendy, through her attorney Steven Williams, filed a motion to enforce the judgment and transfer one-half of Juan’s shares to her. She personally served notice of the hearing on the Corporations. Cendy sought the actual stock certificates, the transfer agent’s identifying information, and an assignment of her one-half interest of the total number of community shares. Cendy asserted that in March 2016, her attorney wrote the Corporations’ counsel asking to inspect all records regarding the businesses in which Cendy had an interest. The Corporations’ counsel, William F.

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