Marriage of Sanidad CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 18, 2014
DocketD063885
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Sanidad CA4/1 (Marriage of Sanidad CA4/1) 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 Sanidad CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 6/18/14 Marriage of Sanidad CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

In re the Marriage of ELVIRA and RENATO SANIDAD. D063885 ELVIRA SANIDAD,

Petitioner and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. D256058)

v.

RENATO SANIDAD,

Respondent and Appellant.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Edlene C.

McKenzie, Judge. Affirmed.

Renato Sanidad, in propria persona, for Appellant.

Elvira Sanidad, in propria persona, for Respondent.

Appellant Renato Sanidad appeals from a postjudgment order that established the

amount of arrearages owing on a 1989 child support order made in the dissolution action

between Appellant and his former wife, Elvira Sanidad, the Respondent. (Fam. Code,

§ 290 ["A judgment or order made or entered pursuant to this code may be enforced by the court by execution . . . , or by any other order as the court in its discretion determines

from time to time to be necessary"]; all further statutory references are to this code unless

noted.)

Representing himself on appeal, Appellant contends the family court erred as a

matter of law in granting Respondent's motion for such relief. He argues that the terms of

the underlying 1989 support order provided it should be payable out of a trust fund,

which was depleted, and that by implication, no further support obligation remained. He

also contends the support order failed to expressly name him as the obligor, and that since

he has no assets except for federal disability benefits, he should not owe anything for

child support. (In re S.M. (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th 21, 29-30 [purpose of the

supplemental security income (SSI) program is to assure a minimum level of income for

the indigent disabled, etc.]; Schweiker v. Wilson (1981) 450 U.S. 221, 223.)

The record does not show that Appellant ever filed a motion to modify or reduce

the amount of monthly support payable to Respondent, prospectively. (§ 3651, subd. (c)

[generally providing that a support order may not be modified or terminated as to an

amount that accrued before the date of filing of a notice of motion or order to show cause

to modify or terminate]; § 3653, subd. (a) [similar].) In the case of an existing child

support order, a court's equitable powers with respect to support cannot extend beyond

enforcement of judgment decisions, and such equitable powers may not be used to violate

otherwise applicable child support statutory provisions. (County of Santa Clara v. Wilson

(2003) 111 Cal.App.4th 1324, 1327 (Wilson).)

2 On the present record, Appellant can show no legal error or abuse of discretion in

the orders establishing arrearages. We affirm.

I

CONTENTS OF CURRENT RECORD

In support of her October 2012 motion to establish the amount of Appellant's child

support arrears, Respondent provided a copy of the underlying support minute order after

trial, dated February 10, 1989, and the formal order dated April 18, 1989 ("Findings and

Order After Trial on Reserved Issues"). Appellant was incarcerated at the time of the

February 1989 hearing, but his attorney was present at that time. Although Appellant

claims that while he was incarcerated, "they" never served me with the April 18, 1989

order, he was then represented by counsel, and we need not address that argument.

Together, the 1989 orders gave sole custody of the two children to Respondent,

and set child support at $125 per month, for each of the parties' then minor children,

effective March 1, 1989. The order divided certain funds that were being held in a trust

account, leaving a balance of $4,944.66 plus interest, and stated, "Said balance shall be

used as security for child support to be paid to [Respondent]," as ordered, until those

funds were exhausted. This trust fund was in the custody of Respondent's trial attorney,

who continued the payments until 1990.

In support of her motion for a judicial determination of Appellant's child support

arrearages and for an order setting monthly payments, Respondent provided calculations

of the amounts due. She attached to her declaration computer-generated papers that were

prepared using software licensed to the superior court, apparently from the court's family

3 law facilitator's office. Her declaration thus calculated that Appellant owed her

$85,547.11 in child support arrears, for the periods in which the children were under 19

or had not graduated from high school.

The hearing was initially scheduled on January 17, 2013, and was continued by

the court to February 21, 2013, to give the judge an opportunity to review all the court

orders in the dissolution file.

Appellant filed opposition to the motion, stating that he did not believe he owed

any arrears, and he requested a determination accordingly. His declaration attached

Department of Corrections records showing he was in prison from 1988 through 1993.

He also attached Social Security records showing that since 1994, he had been receiving

SSI due to his mental illness. His declaration stated that the trust account was exhausted

after 20 months, or by October 1990, while he was still incarcerated.

In his brief, Appellant states both parties testified by telephone at the continued

hearing. No reporter's transcript was designated as part of the appellate record.

According to Appellant's brief, the family court judge told him at the hearing that he

should have requested child support modification after he was released from prison, and

she questioned him about his source of income and personal expenses.

In the February 26, 2013 "Findings and Order After Hearing," the court ruled that

"the April 18, 1989 order for child support of $125 per month per child effective

March 1, 1989, paid by [Appellant as the respondent] was the order and that it doesn't

state the support would terminate once the funds were depleted from the trust account."

The arrearages were set at the principal amount of $32,500 and the interest amount at

4 $53,079.11. Appellant was ordered to pay Respondent $20 per month on the arrears,

with the court reserving jurisdiction over increasing the amount of the payments if it was

determined that Appellant could pay more per month. He appeals.

II

APPLICABLE STANDARDS

A. Rules of Review

" 'A judgment or order of a lower court is presumed to be correct on appeal, and

all intendments and presumptions are indulged in favor of its correctness.' " (In re

Marriage of LaMusga (2004) 32 Cal.4th 1072, 1093.) An appellant has the burden of

showing that error or a prejudicial abuse of discretion occurred. (See Maria P. v. Riles

(1987) 43 Cal.3d 1281, 1291.)

It is well established that "[i]n propria persona litigants are entitled to the same,

but no greater, rights than represented litigants and are presumed to know the [procedural

and court] rules." (Wantuch v.

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