Marriage of Wang & Zhou

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 2021
DocketH046250
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Wang & Zhou (Marriage of Wang & Zhou) 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 Wang & Zhou, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 4/9/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re the Marriage of SEAN WANG and H046250 JIAOJIAO ZHOU. (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. 2015-6-FL-015520)

SEAN WANG,

Respondent,

v.

JIAOJIAO ZHOU,

Appellant. In 2016, the Superior Court of Santa Clara County (the trial court) exercised its temporary jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA) (Fam. Code, § 3400 et seq.1), and issued custody orders regarding appellant Jiaojiao Zhou’s (Zhou) and respondent Sean Wang’s (Wang) child, who lived primarily in China. Zhou and Wang incorporated the custody orders into their stipulated dissolution judgment in 2017, reiterating that the trial court made the orders pursuant to its emergency jurisdiction under the UCCJEA. In 2018, a court in China issued a custody order as part of a judgment (the Chinese judgment), awarding sole custody of the child to Zhou, who registered the custody order in the trial court. Wang opposed the registration. The trial court first issued temporary emergency orders vacating service of the registration. Following a hearing, it denied registration of the Chinese judgment. Zhou contends the trial court erred by vacating the

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code. registration because China had exclusive jurisdiction to make custody orders under the relevant provisions of the UCCJEA. Finding no error in the trial court’s decision to deny registration of the Chinese judgment, we affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Zhou and Wang married in 2010 and separated in 2016; the trial court entered a judgment of dissolution in September 2017. Wang initiated the dissolution proceedings and the trial court acquired jurisdiction over Zhou in February 2016 when she appeared in the proceedings. The parties have one child of the marriage, a daughter, born in 2013 in China.2 Daughter lived primarily in China with Zhou, but made frequent, extended trips to the United States to visit Wang, who worked in California. Daughter had a United States passport, although it was expired at the time it was referenced in the record. Prior to the trial court’s first hearing in the matter, each party filed requests for various orders, including a request by Zhou to “return to domicile,” and a request by Wang for a domestic violence restraining order against Zhou.3 The court held hearings on these requests in March 2016. Wang asked the trial court to take emergency jurisdiction over custody, as it did not appear that California had “regular” jurisdiction; Wang asserted the “emergency” was Zhou’s desire to take Daughter back to China.4 Zhou stated she would file an action in China “right away” if she was allowed to return to

2 To protect the child’s privacy, we will refer to her as “Daughter.” 3 The parties did not designate any of these requests, or any pleadings related to the requests, as part of the record on appeal. Zhou attached portions of the reporter’s transcript from the trial court’s hearings in March 2016 to a memorandum of points and authorities she filed in August 2018, which is part of the record. Additionally, the clerk’s transcript contains a complete copy of the reporter’s transcript from the March 25, 2016 hearing. 4 From the context of the hearing, it is clear the parties were discussing the trial court’s jurisdiction to issue custody orders under the UCCJEA The provisions of the UCCJEA specify when a California court has jurisdiction to issue initial custody orders, and when a California court without such jurisdiction can make emergency orders. (§§ 3421, 3424.) 2 China. Based on this representation, the trial court stated that any exercise of its emergency jurisdiction would not be “long term.” Wang did not dispute that Daughter lived in China in the six months prior to the case being filed, such that California would only have jurisdiction to make custody orders under section 3424. Wang contended that under subdivision (b) of that statute, such jurisdiction could become a final determination if California became Daughter’s home state. The record on appeal does not include the minute order from the hearing, or the portion of the transcript indicating what findings or orders, if any, the court made during this first hearing. The court held a second hearing the following day. The parties conceded that jurisdiction over custody rested with China, unless the trial court exercised emergency jurisdiction. The court held an off-the-record discussion with the parties about custody and visitation issues. Thereafter the parties agreed that California would assume emergency jurisdiction, despite the fact that China was Daughter’s country of habitual residence. The parties agreed they would “either register the order from [California] or create an identical order in China so that there will be a fully enforceable order in both jurisdictions.” At the end of the hearing, the trial court indicated that it would “include in its orders the language of Family Code section 3048 that California has jurisdiction to make the custody order especially having made the finding that China is the country of habitual residence; United States had emergency jurisdiction and makes these orders within that context recognizing that China will now be the custodial jurisdiction state.” The parties reached additional agreements regarding their visitation with Daughter, which the court memorialized in a written order filed in July 2016. The written order confirmed that the court “assumed emergency child custody jurisdiction,” and ordered that a copy of the written order either be registered in China, or that an order be filed in China reflecting the same terms and conditions as set forth in the California order. Under the terms of the order, Daughter would return to China with Zhou, and then return to California, with 3 Zhou, for several extended periods during the year, at which time Daughter would have regular visitation with Wang. In August 2016, the parties entered into an agreement concerning property and support issues and agreed that the July 2016 custody order would remain in full force and effect. Thereafter the parties signed a stipulation for judgment in September 2017, agreeing that the “emergency child custody jurisdiction order filed . . . on July 21, 2016, shall remain in full force and effect until further order of a court of competent jurisdiction. . . . Based on the July 21, 2016 emergency child custody jurisdiction order, it is further acknowledged that the minor child’s country of habitual residence is the People’s Republic of China (China), and that this court only assumes emergency child custody jurisdiction in this matter.” Neither party appealed that judgment. In June 2018, Zhou filed the Judicial Council form to register the Chinese judgment, issued by the Beijing Xingcheng District People’s Court in China in May 2018. The English translation of the Chinese judgment states that the Chinese court conducted a trial, at which Zhou and her “designated agent,” and Wang and his designated agents appeared to participate in the lawsuit. The Chinese judgment indicates Zhou informed the Chinese court of the dissolution proceedings in California, referencing a “provisional hearing” in the United States regarding custody, wherein the California court issued a “temporary order.” The Chinese judgment also indicates Zhou alleged to the Chinese court that she was “tricked” or “forced” by Wang into the California dissolution. Zhou asked the Chinese court to award her custody of Daughter, with Wang to have visitation in China one weekend per month. According to the Chinese judgment, Wang denied tricking or forcing Zhou into the California dissolution.

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Marriage of Wang & Zhou, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-wang-zhou-calctapp-2021.