Mooney v. Superior Court of Santa Cruz County

245 Cal. App. 4th 523
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 2016
DocketH041500
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 245 Cal. App. 4th 523 (Mooney v. Superior Court of Santa Cruz County) 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
Mooney v. Superior Court of Santa Cruz County, 245 Cal. App. 4th 523 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinions

Opinion

MIHARA, J.

— Petitioner Susan Mooney seeks writ relief from the order of respondent Santa Cruz County Superior Court (the court) requiring her to pay real party in interest Paul A. Mooney’s attorney’s fees in connection with her motion for a settled statement under California Rules of Court, rule 8.137.1 She asserts that the court violated rule 8.137 and abused its discretion in awarding attorney’s fees. We find that the court abused its discretion in failing to rule on Susan’s motion and in awarding attorney’s fees. We therefore issue a peremptory writ of mandate.

[526]*526I. Background

The dissolution action between Susan and Paul was tried to the court in a one-day trial on February 24, 2014. Paul was represented by his attorney at the trial; Susan was not represented by counsel at the trial. In April 2014, the court entered a judgment dissolving the marriage, declining to award spousal support to either party, and dividing the couple’s real and personal property. The judgment contained five pages of findings and a chart corresponding to those findings. It recounted that the court had denied Susan’s continuance request and admitted Paul’s 22 exhibits into evidence. The judgment also stated that Susan had waived any future spousal support and that the court would not have awarded spousal support in any event because “each party was self-supporting.” The court found that Paul was entitled to a credit of $2,500 for support payments he had made to Susan in 2012 and 2013. In connection with the credit, the court found that Susan “worked each month wherein spousal support was an issue.” It also made express findings regarding each item of real property at issue, each car, and each retirement account, and it determined each claim for reimbursement and found that Paul owed Susan an equalizing payment of $24,173.

In June 2014, Susan timely filed a notice of appeal from the judgment. She also filed a notice designating the record on appeal. Susan chose to proceed with a clerk’s transcript, and she designated that it would include all of Paul’s exhibits and his trial brief. She elected to proceed with a settled statement under rule 8.137 as to the oral proceedings before the superior court.2 At the same time, Susan filed a motion for a settled statement in the superior court under rule 8.137. In her motion, she asserted that the trial “was conducted without a use of a court reporter,” “was not tape recorded,” and therefore “the only way to provide to the appellate court a record of the trial would be for this court to allow submission of a settled statement on appeal.” Susan’s attorney declared that a proposed settled statement would be submitted to the court and Paul’s attorney. They could submit “[cjhanges and corrections” to the proposed settled statement, which would then be submitted with the proposed settled statement to the Court of Appeal. The motion was initially set for hearing on August 4, 2014.

[527]*527On July 22, 2014, Paul filed opposition to Susan’s motion. He claimed that Susan was not entitled to a settled statement because (1) she had not identified the issues that she intended to raise on appeal,3 (2) she could have retained a court reporter to report the oral proceedings, (3) she had not requested a statement of decision, (4) “it is highly dubious a settled statement could be agreed to without a significant burden” to Paul and the court, and (5) her appeal would be meritless.

At the August 4, 2014 hearing, Susan’s attorney acknowledged that he had encountered “great difficulty” in preparing a proposed settled statement because he had “to rely on the imperfect memory of my client.” Nonetheless, he had prepared a proposed settled statement. The court took the position that Susan had “the burden of persuading the court” that the settled statement could be produced “without significantly burdening opposing counsel or the court.” Responding to Paul’s attorney’s claim that Susan had not identified the issues she intended to raise on appeal, Susan’s attorney offered an oral explanation of the issues he intended to raise on appeal: “One, whether or not the court recognized an interspousal transfer deed, and giving credits appropriately to the parties; two, whether or not the motion to continue because of my client’s medicated condition should have been considered by the Court, whether she was denied access to the Court as a result of her inability to participate in the Court proceeding.” “Whether or not there was appropriate credits for my client’s claim on a credit card, . . . whether or not my client was given . . . credit for payment on credit cards or the assumption of those credit cards appropriately.” He also asserted that there was an issue on appeal about the court’s determination that “the house value went up and, as a result, my client’s interests were protected in that record.”4 Susan’s attorney asserted that these were the issues “addressed in this proposed statement on appeal.” The court decided to allow counsel to brief the issue of “this burden” and set another hearing for August 22, 2014.

Susan’s attorney submitted a brief in which he pointed out that there was no “burden” issue because rule 8.137 permitted a settled statement to be prepared where there was no record of the oral proceedings. Since no proposed statement could be submitted until after the motion was granted, he argued that a denial of the motion could not be premised on the content of the proposed statement. Paul’s attorney continued to insist that Susan was not entitled to a settled statement because she had failed to have the trial reported and failed to request a statement of decision. She also continued to argue that the burden on Paul was a justification for denying the motion.

[528]*528At the August 22, 2014 hearing, the court ruled that rule 8.137(a)(2)(A), which concerns the burden on the court and opposing counsel, did not apply since the trial had not been reported. Nevertheless, the court still believed that “[t]he issue is the work that Ms. Parry [Paul’s attorney] will have to do . . . because Mr. Hannon [Susan’s attorney] was not here for the trial.” The court pointed out that it had “retained my personal notes from the trial, so I’m prepared to add to, supplement, adjust, or edit the proposed statement once it comes to me.” However, the court considered it “not fair” that Paul’s attorney “should do all this work” to respond to the proposed settled statement, so “I’m going to award her attorney’s fees for the work that is necessary for her to time [sic] to create the settled statement. And I’m going to order that they be paid ahead of time. The reason I’m going to do that is because of the history of this case.” The court explained that Susan had a “history of failure of cooperation” and had previously “chosefn] not to follow” court orders. The court also found that Susan “can afford” to pay Paul’s attorney’s fees.

When Susan’s attorney inquired about the basis for the attorney’s fees award, the court stated that it was not awarding fees under Family Code section 271. It stated: “It just seemed fair, Mr. Hannon. If you want me to go get you a code section, I’ll do some research and get you a code section.” “[I]t seems to me, if I’m going to order Ms. Parry to participate in a settled statement on appeal, she should be compensated for her time and not by her client, but by the person who is asking for her assistance. That was my thought process.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 Cal. App. 4th 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mooney-v-superior-court-of-santa-cruz-county-calctapp-2016.