Mercado v. Superior Court

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 2024
DocketG063594
StatusPublished

This text of Mercado v. Superior Court (Mercado v. Superior Court) 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
Mercado v. Superior Court, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 11/21/24

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

PATRICIA MERCADO,

Petitioner,

v. G063594

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF (Super. Ct. No. 22P000196) ORANGE COUNTY, OPINION Respondent;

MICHAEL AUER WOLF,

Real Party in Interest.

Original proceedings; petition for a writ of mandate/prohibition/supersedeas to challenge orders of the Superior Court of Orange County, Claudia J. Silbar, Judge and Paul Minerich, Judge. Petition granted. Ester Adut for Petitioner. Minyard Morris, Alexander C. Payne and Scott Savage for Real Party in Interest. * * * Real party in interest Michael Auer Wolf (Wolf) filed a request for order for a vocational evaluation of petitioner Patricia Mercado (Mercado) in the underlying parentage action. The respondent court granted Wolf’s request and later granted his motion to compel Mercado to undergo the vocational evaluation. Mercado filed an amended petition for writ of mandate, prohibition, or other appropriate relief. She argued, among other things, the court lacked jurisdiction to order a vocational evaluation because it was not authorized by any statute. We issued an order to show cause why mandate or other appropriate relief should not issue and also issued a temporary stay of all proceedings. For the reasons below, we now grant Mercado’s petition. STATEMENT OF FACTS I. WOLF’S PETITION

In March 2022, Wolf filed a petition to determine him the father of Mercado’s two children and seeking, inter alia, joint legal and physical custody of the children. In response, Mercado checked a box on a Judicial Council form stating Wolf was “the parent of the children” and sought sole legal and physical custody of the children for herself with visitation for Wolf. II. THE DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES’ INVOLVEMENT In April 2022, the Department of Child Support Services (DCSS) filed a “Notice Regarding Payment of Support,” which stated DCSS was providing child and medical support and that Wolf was the “obligor.” 1

1 On our own motion, we augment the record to include the

following documents filed in the underlying action: (1) “Notice Regarding Payment of Support” filed on April 7, 2022; (2) DCSS’ notice of motion filed on

2 In May 2022, DCSS filed a declaration noting Mercado had opened a case with DCSS the day after Wolf filed the instant parentage action. DCSS requested a “guideline child support,” that child support issues be transferred to a child support commissioner, and that the parties exchange financial information 15 days before a hearing. DCSS noted Family Code section 4251, subdivision (a)2 provides that “a child support commissioner shall hear all actions in which enforcement services are being provided pursuant to . . . [s]ection 17400.” III. WOLF’S REQUEST FOR A VOCATIONAL EVALUATION AND THE COURT’S ORDER In October 2022, Wolf filed a request for order for a vocational evaluation of Mercado pursuant to section 3558 and identified a specific consultant who would conduct the evaluation. In a supporting declaration, Wolf claimed Mercado was a 44-year-old licensed dentist who had no intention of seeking employment. Wolf also submitted a proposed order indicating the focus of the evaluation was “an assessment of [Mercado’s] ability to obtain employment and her earning capacity for purposes of imputing income to [her] for use in determining child support.” The proposed order further noted Mercado had to provide the following documents if requested by the consultant: “a summary of educational history, transcripts, list of past employment, wage history, resume, licenses, certificates, pay stubs, Social Security statements . . . ., W-2 forms, other writings verifying

March 30, 2023; and (3) a May 4, 2023 order by the child support commissioner. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.155(a)(1)(A).)

2 All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless

otherwise stated.

3 past earnings, a job search log if looking for work[,]” and “any medical reports supporting any claim that there is a medical issue affecting her ability to work.” Finally, the proposed order said the consultant would provide any generated report to both parties no later than 10 days before a relevant hearing. In December 2022, Wolf filed a joint statement of disputed issues for trial. Among other things, the joint statement listed child support as an issue for trial and stated child support was “reliant” on the parenting time ordered by the court and the pending vocational evaluation request.

In February 2023, Mercado opposed Wolf’s request and addressed two different statutes – sections 4331 and 4058. Mercado argued a vocational evaluation was improper under section 4331 as the pending matter was not a marital dissolution case involving spousal support. She also argued a vocational evaluation was not warranted under section 4058 because the only issues before the court concerned custody and visitation. She claimed DCSS was handling child support obligations and noted DCSS had requested child support issues be sent to a commissioner. Finally, Mercado requested sanctions against Wolf for filing his request in bad faith. At the hearing in February 2023, Mercado’s counsel argued section 4311 provides for a vocational examination only in martial dissolution or legal separation matters, the instant matter was a paternity case, and DCSS had requested a commissioner decide child support issues. The court asked if child support was at issue, and Mercado’s counsel responded it was at issue in the “[DCSS] court with that commissioner over there.” The court responded: “I am not making child support orders. I am not being asked to make child support orders. Any child support orders will be made with a Title Four commissioner over at the Lamoreaux Justice Center. This is merely a

4 motion to require Dr. Mercado to undergo a vocational evaluation.” The court then granted Wolf’s request and ordered Mercado to undergo a vocational evaluation by Wolf’s chosen consultant. In its February 2023 order, the court omitted any reference to section 3558, which was the basis for Wolf’s request, but did not cite to any other statutory provision. It otherwise adopted Wolf’s proposed order with some minor modifications, including the deletion of language stating the report would be admitted into evidence. IV. DCSS’ NOTICE AND MERCADO’S INITIAL APPEAL

In March 2023, DCSS filed a notice of motion providing notice to Mercado and Wolf that it was requesting child support for the children at a hearing in May 2023. In an attached declaration, DCSS requested the court establish a child support order or a “guideline order” because Mercado received income from a need-based assistance program. DCSS also requested both parents maintain health insurance for the children and file income and expense declarations before the hearing. The child support commissioner continued the hearing once in May 2023 at Wolf’s request and again in June 2023 at Mercado’s request. In June and July 2023, Mercado and Wolf filed income and expense declarations. In June 2023, Mercado filed a notice of appeal from the court’s February 2023 order requiring she undergo a vocational evaluation. This court dismissed her appeal as untimely.

5 V. WOLF’S MOTION TO COMPEL

In August 2023, Wolf filed a motion to compel Mercado to submit to the vocational examination ordered in February 2023 and for sanctions.

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Mercado v. Superior Court, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercado-v-superior-court-calctapp-2024.