Marriage of Schleich

8 Cal. App. 5th 267, 213 Cal. Rptr. 3d 665
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 2017
DocketH039870, H041234
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 8 Cal. App. 5th 267 (Marriage of Schleich) 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 Schleich, 8 Cal. App. 5th 267, 213 Cal. Rptr. 3d 665 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

GROVER, J.

—Charles Schleich (Husband) appeals from a judgment dissolving his marriage to Lori Holek (Wife), following a lengthy trial addressing several disputed issues. He challenges the trial court’s imposition of the “value of the asset” remedy under Family Code section 1101, subdivisions (g) and (h) for failing to make financial disclosures in the dissolution proceedings *273 he viewed as having no impact on Wife’s interest in the community estate. He also challenges the award of certain assets in the division of the community estate as duplicative of the remedy imposed under section 1101, 1 and the award of permanent spousal support. In a related appeal, Husband challenges the trial court’s postjudgment award to Wife of need-based attorney’s fees ($412,485) and attorney’s fees as sanctions for the fiduciary duty breaches ($318,510).

As we will explain, the trial court erred by making duplicative awards of community assets. The award to Wife of 50 percent of a community asset (or 50 percent of the value of the asset) as a remedy under subdivision (g) is an award of the same interest in the asset awarded in the division of community property, and can be awarded only once. Similarly, the trial court erred by awarding Wife the full value of certain community assets as a remedy under subdivision (h) in addition to 50 percent of the same asset in the division of property. Once Wife received the entire asset under subdivision (h), there was no longer a community interest in that asset subject to property division.

The trial court also erred by finding breaches of fiduciary duty under section 1101 for dissolution disclosure violations involving Husband’s separate property and community income earned and spent before separation. Postseparation disclosure violations involving separate property or community income spent before the date of separation do not support breach of fiduciary duty claims under section 1101 because they have no impact on the community estate. The breaches, however, are sanctionable under section 2107.

We cannot tell from the record before us whether the award to Wife of sanctions-based fees and costs depended on the relative number of breach of duty issues on which she prevailed. Therefore, we will reverse and remand the attorney’s fees judgment to give the trial court the opportunity to reexamine the amount of fees and costs awarded under sections 1101 and 2107, in light of our determinations on the breach of fiduciary duty claims. In all other respects, we will uphold the two judgments in their entirety.

I. BACKGROUND

In February 2009 Husband filed a petition to divorce Wife. The parties enjoyed a high standard of living during the nearly 10-year marriage. They built a house, a barn, and stables on an undeveloped ranch in Lemon Cove, Tulare County, that Husband had purchased before the marriage. They purchased horses and equipment to operate the ranch, which supported Wife’s *274 hobby/vocation of raising and training horses. Wife maintained the ranch, and Husband, who lived and worked in the Silicon Valley during the week, flew home to the ranch on weekends. The parties purchased a second ranch with a small guest cottage in Exeter, also in Tulare County, during the marriage. At the time Husband filed for divorce, the parties owned the two ranches, 15 horses, nine vehicles, six motorcycles, two Airstream travel trailers, an airplane, a boat, three horse trailers, and three tractors.

Husband earned over $200,000 annually throughout the marriage, employed by a semiconductor manufacturer in San Jose. He also ran two side businesses that generated substantial income selling parts to his employer. Wife was not involved in Husband’s business activities and she only became aware of the side businesses after the parties separated.

Husband served Wife with the dissolution petition and a $75,000 marital settlement agreement, warning her that “it could get very ugly” if she did not sign the agreement. Wife rejected the offer and retained counsel who sought temporary spousal support ($7,100 monthly) and $150,000 in pendente lite need-based attorney’s fees under section 2030, in part to discover hidden assets. In April 2009, the court set temporary spousal support at $6,233 monthly and ordered Husband to pay Wife $75,000 in need-based attorney’s fees.

In July 2009 Wife moved for evidentiary and monetary sanctions, including $122,531 in attorney’s fees and costs as a sanction under section 271 and section 2107, subdivision (c), because Husband had not complied with dissolution financial disclosure requirements and was preventing Wife from discovering “the true extent of his income and financial condition.” Wife also sought $150,900 in need-based attorney’s fees under section 2030, and $25,386 in monthly spousal support. In a declaration supporting that motion, Wife stated that Husband told her he “refused to settle this case unless I ‘got rid of’ my attorneys,” and that “he will litigate this case until there is nothing—money or assets—left to be divided.”

After a long-cause hearing, in February 2010 the court ordered Husband to pay Wife $7,600 in monthly support retroactive to March 2009, and $6,800 in monthly support for 2010. The court ordered Husband to pay Wife an additional $30,000 in need-based attorney’s fees, and reserved ruling on Wife’s sanctions motion. The court commented that Husband had “shown an unwillingness or inability to completely self-report income” so that it could not “trust that [Husband] was reinvesting in good faith rather than attempting to avoid additional support obligations.” This court issued an unpublished opinion in In re Marriage of Schleich (May 10, 2011, H035513) affirming the long-cause order against Wife’s claims of error, including her claim that the *275 trial court abused its discretion by reserving judgment on the request for sanctions rather than ruling on the motion.

In July 2011, Wife again moved for attorney’s fees and sanctions, seeking $200,000 in need-based attorney’s fees and $200,000 in sanctions for Husband’s breaches of fiduciary duty and his misconduct throughout the case. She also sought an increase in temporary spousal support. Opposing Wife’s motion, Husband requested $100,000 in attorney’s fees as a sanction for increasing his litigation costs. Wife opposed Husband’s request to continue the hearing date. She later agreed to Husband’s request that the motion be heard with the trial set for January 2012 to avoid a double setting after Husband indicated the hearing would require at least a full day and no full-day setting was available until January.

In the parties’ respective trial briefs, Husband restated his request for $100,000 in attorney’s fees and costs as a sanction, and Wife asked for $950,000 in need-based attorney’s fees and costs and $300,000 in attorney’s fees as a sanction. Her trial brief identified several alleged fiduciary duty breaches by Husband, and she argued for an award of 100 percent of any undisclosed or transferred assets as a penalty under section 1101, subdivision (h).

After an eight-day trial in January 2012, the parties submitted a joint list of disputed issues for decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Cal. App. 5th 267, 213 Cal. Rptr. 3d 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-schleich-calctapp-2017.