Marriage of Sabrdaran and Roshannai CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2013
DocketG047182
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Sabrdaran and Roshannai CA4/3 (Marriage of Sabrdaran and Roshannai 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 Sabrdaran and Roshannai CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 6/27/13 Marriage of Sabrdaran and Roshannai 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 SHARAREH SABRDARAN and MOHAMMAD ROSHANNAI. G047182 (consol. with G046838) SHARAREH SABRDARAN, (Super. Ct. No. 01D002924) Respondent, OPINION v.

MOHAMMAD ROSHANNAI,

Appellant.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Daniel J. Didier, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of Christopher K. Jafari and Christopher K. Jafari for Appellant. Hughes and Hughes and Lisa Hughes for Respondent. * * * Mohammad Roshannai appeals from the trial court’s postdissolution order modifying child support, determining child support arrears, and ordering that he pay $50,000 towards the attorney fees of his former wife, Sharareh Sabrdaran. He argues the trial court erred by failing to offset his child support arrears by unspecified expenses he incurred in providing a home for his family when he and Sabrdaran reconciled and had

another child. He complains the trial record does not include his most recent income declaration, and concludes the trial court therefore based its child support calculation on outdated data. He also contends the trial court erroneously failed to prospectively reduce

his support obligation because his disability income supplement would terminate within the year. He challenges the attorney fee order on numerous grounds and, finally, he argues the evaluator the trial court appointed to assess his flight risk was biased against

Persian men, although he does not challenge the trial court’s order requiring monitored visitation to mitigate concerns Roshannai would abscond with the children to Iran. As we explain, the challenges Roshannai asserts are without merit, and we therefore affirm the trial court’s ruling. I FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The parties married in March 1999, Sabrdaran filed for divorce in 2001, the year their son was born, and in March 2003 the trial court entered the couple’s marital settlement agreement as a court judgment. The judgment reserved jurisdiction on some

issues, including marital status, but resolved child custody and visitation, child and spousal support, and property division according to the terms of the parties’ agreement. The judgment omitted spousal support based on Sabrdaran’s voluntary waiver, set

Roshannai’s child support obligation at $1,050 a month, and recognized that while “the

2 parties may attempt a reconciliation in the future,” successful reunification would “not in any manner cancel, terminate or modify this agreement unless the parties agree in writing to the contrary.” The parties designated a sparse record on appeal and provide few details or record citations in their briefing, but it appears they reconciled within a few months of the

2003 judgment. They purchased a home in Newport Coast in 2005, where they apparently resided together, and they celebrated the birth of their daughter in 2006. But the marriage continued to unravel, they returned to court, and the trial court entered a

divorce judgment in June 2010. Because the appellate record does not include the moving papers, the chronology and other details are uncertain, but Sabrdaran eventually sought child support

for the couple’s daughter, who was born after the 2003 support order based on the couple’s marital settlement agreement. Sabrdaran also sought child support arrears for the couple’s firstborn child. Sabrdaran became concerned Roshannai, a dual citizen, would flee to Iran with the children. She obtained an order in March 2011 requiring the parties to submit their passports to the court and preventing either parent from traveling outside Orange

County with the children. The trial court ordered an evaluation under Evidence Code section 730 (§ 730 evaluation) to assess Roshannai’s flight risk. The court specified it entered its interim “No Travel With Children” order “w/o [without] prejudice based on

[the] evidence so far and to preserve [the] status quo pending [the] § 730 evaluation.” The court’s interim order required Roshannai to post a $25,000 bond as a flight deterrent “prior to exercise of [his] timeshare” with the children, but he had

difficulty obtaining a bond for this purpose. According to Sabrdaran, she nevertheless

3 “continued to provide regular and continuing supervised visitation [for Roshannai] even though this was no[t] required.” According to Sabrdaran, Roshannai “insisted on having the children at his house without supervision,” even “offer[ing] to pay me $100,000 to have [unsupervised] visitation,” but she refused on grounds “that no amount of money would convince me to put the kids [at] risk of being abducted to Iran.”

The § 730 evaluator, a clinical psychologist who conducted extensive interviews with the parties and the children, concluded Roshannai posed a high flight risk. Indeed, the psychologist stated in his August 2011 written report, “I would label

Mr. Roshannai as the highest flight risk I have ever evaluated. He is a manipulative, calculating, and highly skilled adult with a masters degree who has thought out his plan and has obviously taken some steps towards it.” (Underlining omitted.) Roshannai did

not disclose to the evaluator that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer more than a year earlier. This omission troubled Sabrdaran because Roshannai informed her of his plans to seek in Iran medical treatment not available in the United States, and she feared he would take the children with him. At a hearing in mid-January 2012, the trial court found Sabrdaran and the § 730 evaluator presented “very compelling evidence” that Roshannai posed a flight risk,

which Roshannai does not challenge on appeal. Nor does he challenge the court’s remedy, which dispensed with any need “for a bail bond,” and instead required monitored visitation to mitigate the flight risk.

After further proceedings including the parties’ sworn testimony, admission of financial exhibits, and argument of counsel, the trial court increased Roshannai’s child support obligation from $1050 monthly for his son to $2,186 total for both of his

children, based on his earnings and earning capacity. Specifically, the trial court found

4 his monthly income included $2,250 in Social Security, $1,367 in disability payments, “recurring and regular monetary gifts from his parents/relatives of at least $1,500 per month for the last two years,” and investment income from nearly a half million dollars in retirement and liquid assets. Roshannai, a longtime software engineer with an MBA from Chapman University, had founded several successful companies in the computing

industry, sold one in 2007 or 2008 for $1.4 million, and continued working in the field. Noting Roshannai received unreported commission income in 2010 and 2011 of $3,500 per month,” the trial court imputed self-employed income to Roshannai “conservatively

at $3,500 per month.” (Original italics.) The court acknowledged Roshannai “reportedly has terminal stage IV prostate cancer,” but observed “he currently appears relatively fit, is seeking employment, and is able to travel out-of-state.” The court recognized

Roshannai’s medical condition required “continuing” supervision.

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