Marriage of Restaino CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 16, 2013
DocketG045429
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

Filed 5/16/13 Marriage of Restaino 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 DEBORAH K. and JOHN M. RESTAINO, JR.

DEBORAH K. RESTAINO, G045429 Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 05D001004) v. OPINION JOHN M. RESTAINO, JR.,

Appellant.

Appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Nancy A. Pollard, Judge. Motion to dismiss appeal. Motion for sanctions. Motions denied. Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part. Law Offices of Marjorie G. Fuller, Marjorie G. Fuller and Lisa R. McCall for Appellant Deborah K. Restaino. Law Offices of Steven E. Briggs, Steven E. Briggs and Luis A. McKissick, for Appellant John M. Restaino, Jr. This is another appeal in the parties’ ongoing divorce. In a prior appeal Deborah K. Restaino (wife) challenged rulings contained in a December 2009 judgment that determined the couple’s marital standard of living, used to calculate permanent spousal support award, and the trial court’s characterization and division of John M. Restaino Jr.’s (husband) partnership interest in his dissolved law firm. We affirmed the finding on the marital standard of living, but reversed the ruling on the partnership interest. (In re Marriage of Restaino (Jan. 13, 2012, G043194) [nonpub. opn.].) While the earlier appeal was pending, the trial court conducted a hearing on several issues: (1) Accountings for both pretrial law firm distributions divided between the parties and spousal support arrearages; (2) motions for attorney fees; and (3) requests for sanctions. In May 2011, the court entered a judgment on these matters. Both parties appeal the latter judgment. Husband challenges the spousal support arrearages ruling. In response, wife moves to dismiss his appeal, arguing it seeks to reverse a now-final prior judgment and fails to present a meritorious basis to reverse the trial court’s decision. In her appeal, wife attacks the denial of her motion for attorney fees incurred during the trial on property division and spousal support, the award of sanctions against her, and the denial of attorney fee motions brought by two firms that previously represented her. (In re Marriage of Borson (1974) 37 Cal.App.3d 632; Borson motions.) Husband moves for sanctions, claiming wife’s briefs contain factual misstatements and omissions. At our request, the parties submitted letter briefs on whether the trial court had jurisdiction to rule on any of these issues during the pendency of the prior appeal. (Code Civ. Proc., § 916, subd. (a).) We shall deny both motions and reverse the May 2011 judgment as to the spousal support arrearages, including the requirement wife repay advance distributions

2 received from husband’s former law firm, plus its denial of her attorney fee request, and remand these matters for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Wife petitioned to dissolve the couple’s 21-year marriage shortly after they separated in November 2004. During the marriage, husband first worked as a podiatrist, then attended law school, and later became an attorney and partner in the law firm of Lopez, Hodes, Restaino, Milman & Sikos (Lopez Hodes). The firm handled mass tort lawsuits involving the pharmaceutical industry. In April 2005, the parties filed a stipulation, providing husband would pay wife temporary spousal support that consisted of a monthly base amount and a percentage “of any earned income received . . . in excess of his . . . salary” that “include[d], but [was] not limited to bonuses . . . .” The court entered the stipulation as an order. While the divorce action was pending, Lopez Hodes dissolved. Its partners agreed to arbitrate the winding down of the firm. The arbitration ultimately resulted in a confidential settlement where husband agreed to relinquish his partnership interest in return for payment of salary and benefits through 2006, monthly payments as an independent contractor for 2007, plus attorney fee distributions from uncompleted litigation he continued to handle for the firm. Husband later joined a Colorado law firm. Before the trial on property division and spousal support, Lopez Hodes made several fee distributions to husband from pending litigation. By agreement, husband divided some of these disbursements with wife without prejudice to a subsequent determination of the community’s interest in the funds. After trial, the court entered judgment in December 2009. It found the bulk of the Lopez Hodes’s fee distributions were husband’s separate property and the portion of the pretrial distributions wife received exceeded her share of the community’s interest.

3 The judgment also ordered husband to pay wife spousal support of $6,200 each month, plus 19 percent of his income over his base monthly salary. It directed the parties to conduct accountings on the amounts due to each party from the Lopez Hodes’s fee distributions and any spousal support arrearages husband owed wife. The judgment “reserve[d]” for later determination “each party’s request for attorney fees and costs and request for sanctions previously noticed and [a] Borson motion . . . .” (Underlining omitted.) By stipulation, the parties consolidated a second former attorney’s Borson motion with the other issues. Within weeks of the December 2009 judgment, husband filed an order to show cause to modify it concerning his spousal support obligation. In May 2010, husband filed a second order to show cause concerning the April 2005 stipulation’s applicability to his income “above the base income received . . . in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008,” and “in connection with each disbursement received by [wife] . . . whether earned or by way of distributions attributable to the firm of Lopez, Hodes . . . .” At a hearing in July, the court denied both orders to show cause. In August, the court commenced a hearing on the reserved issues. When it began, the parties submitted two written stipulations. The first was the accounting required by the December 2009 judgment concerning the pretrial division of the Lopez Hodes’s fee distributions. It determined, based on the findings in that judgment, wife had to repay husband $939,288 from the nearly $1.6 million she received. The second stipulation involved the accounting on spousal support arrears. It declared the accounting was prepared “in accordance with the rulings of the court (including those disputed by [husband]).” One disputed ruling was a finding, based on the April 2005 order’s “earned income received . . . in excess of . . . salary” requirement, that husband constructively received the pretrial overpayments of fee distributions transferred to wife. The accounting determined husband owed wife $1,207,075 in support arrears “from April 15, 2005 through December 31, 2009.”

4 After several days of trial, the court took the matter under submission. In November, the court issued a tentative ruling, later amended to cover two omitted issues. On May 26, the court entered a formal judgment on the further reserved issues. It denied both Borson motions, awarded wife over $19,000 in attorney fees plus $1,785 in sanctions for successfully defending against husband’s December 2009 and May 2010 orders to show cause. But the court denied her request for attorney fees incurred in the trial on property division and support issues and ordered her to pay husband’s attorney $75,000 in sanctions.

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