Marriage of Tascher & Aguilar CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 21, 2020
DocketD074727
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Tascher & Aguilar CA4/1 (Marriage of Tascher & Aguilar 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 Tascher & Aguilar CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 8/21/20 Marriage of Tascher & Aguilar CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 ROSA TASCHER and RICARDO PORTILLO AGUILAR. D074727 ROSA TASCHER,

Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. EFL17874)

v.

RICARDO PORTILLO AGUILAR,

Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Imperial County, Juan Ulloa, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of Francisco Javier Aldana and Francisco Javier Aldana for Appellant. Gonzalez & Garcia, Jorge C. Gonzalez and Francisco J. Garcia for Respondent. I. INTRODUCTION Appellant Ricardo Portillo Aguilar appeals from a judgment of the trial court dissolving Aguilar’s marriage to respondent Rosa Tascher. Aguilar challenges the trial court’s characterization of the family home as Tascher’s separate property, the court’s award of spousal support to Tascher, and the court’s division of certain of the parties’ assets. We conclude that Aguilar’s arguments with respect to the characterization of the family home as Tascher’s separate property are without merit. We further conclude that Aguilar has forfeited his contentions regarding spousal support and the division of assets, and that even if these contentions were not forfeited, they would fail on their merits. We therefore affirm the judgment. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Tascher filed a petition for dissolution of her marriage to Aguilar on October 23, 2015. The matter proceeded to a trial, which was held over a number of days between October 2017 and February 2018. Among the relevant matters testified to at trial, Tascher testified that the property in dispute between the parties is a residence located on West

Rocking Horse Lane in Heber, California (the Rocking Horse property).1 Although the Rocking Horse property was purchased during the parties’ marriage, Aguilar took title to the property in his name, solely, as his separate property. However, on two separate occasions, Aguilar executed

1 Because Aguilar has elected to provide a record of what occurred at trial through the submission of a settled statement, we refer to that document for purposes of reciting the testimony of the parties and other witnesses as offered at trial with respect to the issues in controversy. 2 deeds transferring the Rocking Horse property to Tascher as her separate

property.2 Tascher testified that in September 2013, Aguilar drove to the office of Notary Public Hilda Lopez Flores in Calexico, “for the sole purpose of signing the Deed” that reflected what Tascher understood to be Aguilar’s intent to transfer all of his interest in the property to her as her separate property. Tascher further testified that Aguilar told her that he was transferring the Rocking Horse property to her, and that “he was under no stress or duress.” The September 2013 deed was recorded on May 29, 2014. According to Tascher, “[i]t was discovered later[ ] that the [l]egal [d]escription was lost or not recorded with the Grant Deed.” Aguilar then agreed to execute a new deed “in order to ‘re-record this document to add the legal description.’ ” Tascher testified that Aguilar drove to her home in May 2015 to sign a new grant deed assigning the Rocking Horse property to her as her separate property. A different notary public and a third individual witnessed Aguilar sign the May 2015 deed. According to Tascher, after Aguilar executed the September 2013 deed, she made all of the mortgage payments on the property, and she, alone, paid the taxes on the property and covered all repairs and maintenance. Tascher’s aunt, R. Herrera, testified that she lives a few blocks from the Rocking Horse residence. She had known Aguilar for 10 years, and he regularly confided in her regarding his marriage to Tascher. At some point, Aguilar told Herrera that he wanted to give Tascher the Rocking Horse house, and he asked for Herrara’s assistance in obtaining the paperwork necessary to give Tascher the home. Herrera sought the assistance of Irene Canamar, who worked at

2 As we explain further, there was a need for a second deed because of a perceived failure to meet the requirements for recording in the first deed. 3 an escrow company, to prepare at least one of the grant deeds. Herrera obtained a grant deed from Canamar and mailed it to Aguilar. Tascher also testified that she was aware of the existence of a domestic violence restraining order that had been issued to restrain her from contacting Aguilar. However, according to Tascher, despite the restraining order, Aguilar “would freely visit her home and continued to use her address for bills and business correspondence, which he would pick up there.” A woman who rented a room at the Rocking Horse residence between May 2014 and May 2015 testified that she saw Aguilar’s vehicle parked in front of Tascher’s home “daily.” According to Tascher, Aguilar “wanted to reconcile their marriage,” and on May 8, 2015, Aguilar “signed a request to Terminate

the Domestic Violence Restraining Order.”3 Aguilar testified that his marital relationship with Tascher ended in July 2013, and he began moving things out of the family home in July 2014. Aguilar testified that Tascher abused him during the marriage, and that she violated a restraining order that was in place to protect him “on many occasions.” Aguilar denied ever having signed a document requesting the termination of a restraining order, and claimed at trial that his signature had been forged. On cross-examination, Aguilar admitted that he had handwritten “portions of the Request to terminate Restraining Order, dated May 8, 2015,” but still claimed that he did not recall signing the document. With respect to the Rocking Horse property, Aguilar testified that he signed two deeds, at Tascher’s request, in order “to ‘add her name to the property.’ ” Aguilar stated that he “relied on [Tascher’s] assertion and

3 While the summary of the testimony of both Tascher and Aguilar included in the Settled Statement suggests that this document was shown to both of them during the trial, no document with this title or a similar title was admitted in evidence. 4 intended only to add her name to the title,” and claimed that he had not read or understood the deeds or their effect. Aguilar further testified that he did not know the notary public, Hilda Lopez Flores, and claimed that he had never been inside of Flores’s office. However, during cross-examination, Aguilar admitted that he “voluntarily and knowingly signed the September 13, 2013 Grant Deed,” and admitted that he had picked up Tascher from the Rocking Horse property and driven them both to Flores’s office in Calexico. Aguilar indicated that the “sole purpose” of their drive to Calexico “was to execute the document.” Aguilar also admitted that Flores had, in fact, prepared his tax returns prior to 2013, at the same Calexico office where Aguilar and Tascher had gone to have the September 2013 deed executed, contradicting his earlier testimony that he did not know Flores. Aguilar testified that “a few days before May 5, 2015[, Tascher] called him and asked him to sign a second Deed.” He conceded that he “freely and voluntarily drove to [Tascher’s] home in Heber on May 8, 2015 to sign the Grant Deed.” According to Aguilar, he signed the May 2015 deed because “ ‘[a]ll [he] wanted [wa]s for it to be over.’ ” At that time, Aguilar signed the grant deed and another document.

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