Michaely v. Michaely

59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 56, 150 Cal. App. 4th 802, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5225, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 709
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 16, 2007
DocketB186705
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 56 (Michaely v. Michaely) 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
Michaely v. Michaely, 59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 56, 150 Cal. App. 4th 802, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5225, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 709 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*804 Opinion

ARMSTRONG, J.

Joshua Michaely (Husband) appeals from the judgment entered in the dissolution proceeding filed by his former wife, Patti Michaely (Wife). We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Summary 1

This dissolution case has an extraordinarily long history. The petition was filed on January 5, 1995, after the parties had been married for 24 years. The judgment of dissolution was in August of 1998, but the judgment that is the subject of this appeal, the further judgment on reserved issues, was not entered until August of 2005. The reserved issues were financial issues, and the issues on appeal concern sanctions, in the form of factual findings, which were imposed on Husband as the result of his conduct during discovery, in particular his conduct at a 1999 deposition.

These are the relevant facts:

Wife first took Husband’s deposition in March of 1995. In May of 1996, she noticed another deposition. Husband objected, but the court (the case was then assigned to Judge Denner), found that Wife had “demonstrated good cause for the suspension of Code of Civil Procedure section 2025(t), the ‘one deposition rule,’ . . . in that the issues and facts involved ... are complicated,” and because “[Husband] moves monies from entity to entity and the information which [Wife] obtained from [Husband’s] prior depositions does not provide [Wife] with current information ... In addition, the parties have lived an extravagant lifestyle, little or no income has been ‘reported’ on the parties’ individual income tax returns or the income tax returns of [Husband] for the last several years. Therefore, [Wife] should be given an opportunity to complete discovery regarding the means by which [Husband] has been able sustain the marital standard of living without reporting substantial income.”

The deposition never took place, delayed by discovery disputes and Wife’s bankruptcy, which was filed in February 1998. The discovery disputes concerned Wife’s August 1996 interrogatories, which Husband did not fully answer until March 1998, after Wife brought a motion to compel (Nov. *805 1996), which resulted in a report (Aug. 1997) from Retired Judge Saeta, then the discovery referee, and a November 1997 court order adopting Judge Saeta’s recommendation that Husband be compelled to further respond to the vast majority of Wife’s 300 interrogatories and finding, inter alia, that “the volume of transactions and documents make this a complex tracing of assets case.”

In March of 1999, after Wife obtained relief from the bankruptcy stay, she moved for an order reopening discovery. Trial was then set for September 1, 1999. Judge Lachs (the case was assigned to any number of judges over the years) granted the motion. Wife was ordered to pay Husband’s airfare from Israel, where he then lived, and a $200-a-day per diem. The court also ruled that a discovery referee would preside over the deposition.

As Husband repeatedly points out, Wife’s earlier request for additional discovery was denied. In June 1998 Wife moved for an order to vacate the trial date and to extend discovery. Judge Denner stayed trial of economic issues until relief from the stay was granted in Wife’s bankruptcy, and denied the request to extend the discovery cutoff.

The deposition that Judge Lachs ordered took place in June 1999. Retired Judge Goldin presided as referee. In September, Wife moved for sanctions based on Husband’s predeposition document production and his performance at the deposition. Hearing on the motion was before Judge Goldin. It did not take place until February 2000, apparently delayed by Husband’s bankruptcy, which was filed in September 1999. (On Wife’s motion, relief from the stay was granted in Jan. 2000.)

Judge Goldin’s report was signed on October 2, 2000, and filed with the court on November 9 of that year. She found that at the deposition, Husband engaged in intentional, pervasive, and egregious evasiveness, was willfully untruthful, and gave inconsistent and contradictory testimony. His conduct at the deposition was the equivalent of refusing to sit for the deposition, in violation of court order. Husband failed to produce documents in response to the request for production, did not produce documents he claimed to have produced, claimed that he could not identify documents that he did produce, and intentionally produced voluminous documentation that was not responsive. He had in the past failed to comply with other discovery. His intentionally evasive and obstreperous conduct deprived Wife of meaningful discovery.

*806 Judge Goldin recommended that various facts be established as true: Husband had management and control over the community estate during the marriage and after the' separation; he owed a fiduciary duty to Wife in the management and control of community assets, 2 which he breached; and he willfully and maliciously engaged in acts to deprive Wife of her share of the community estate. Judge Goldin recommended that it be established as tme that the estate had a value of $21 million on the date of separation, and additionally made a separate finding to that effect, based on the evidence.

Judge Goldin also recommended that it be established as true that Wife needed at least $19,000 per month in support and that Husband could pay that amount, and that Husband be precluded from opposing many of Wife’s claims, specifically the claims that he misappropriated a long list of community properties, including real properties, businesses, and insurance policies.

In November 2001, the bankruptcy court hearing Husband’s bankruptcy found that his debts to Wife and her lawyers were not dischargeable. The bankruptcy court’s order, recites that that court reviewed Judge Goldin’s report, and while it did not give evidentiary effect to the report, it did give such support to the evidence cited therein. The bankruptcy court noted that it had read Husband’s deposition transcript and that of his former associate Maureen Sowell, and found “extensive and persuasive support” for Judge Goldin’s findings and recommendations.

In June 2002, the court (by now, Judge Sandoz) adopted Judge Goldin’s report as its own order, finding that the order was necessary to level the playing field and prevent Wife from being prejudiced by Husband’s willful and egregious misuse of discovery, and that the imposition of lesser sanctions would not be a sufficient remedy. The court found: “[Husband’s] consistent evasion,- coupled with [his] responses which were blatant untruths and not credible, amounted to an egregious abuse of the discovery process.”

At trial, Husband took, the position that sanctions precluded him from introducing evidence on the “vast majority” of the issues. Wife introduced evidence on income that should be imputed to Husband from the date of separation, her need for súpport, and fees.

*807

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 56, 150 Cal. App. 4th 802, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5225, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michaely-v-michaely-calctapp-2007.