Pangilinan v. Palisoc

227 Cal. App. 4th 765, 174 Cal. Rptr. 3d 114, 2014 WL 2937896, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 586
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 2014
DocketH038737
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 227 Cal. App. 4th 765 (Pangilinan v. Palisoc) 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
Pangilinan v. Palisoc, 227 Cal. App. 4th 765, 174 Cal. Rptr. 3d 114, 2014 WL 2937896, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 586 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

MIHARA, J.

Plaintiff Mitzie Pangilinan appeals from the denial of her petition to establish a parental relationship between her son H. and respondent Hector Palisoc and obtain child support from Palisoc. She claims that the *768 trial court erred in finding her petition untimely and in declaring that her husband, a nonparty, was H.’s presumed father. We find that the trial court prejudicially erred in finding Pangilinan’s petition to be untimely and in failing to entertain her request for genetic testing. Accordingly, we reverse the order.

I. Background

Pangilinan separated from her husband, who lives in the Philippines, in 2006 when she moved to the United States. She began a relationship with Palisoc, who was also married, in February 2008. H. was bom in November 2008. Pangilinan’s husband’s name was listed on H.’s birth certificate as H.’s father. When H. was baptized in December 2008, Pangilinan’s husband’s name was listed as H.’s father on the invitations to the baptism. Pangilinan’s relationship with Palisoc lasted until July 2011. Palisoc established and maintained a relationship with H. from the time of his birth until the end of Palisoc’s relationship with Pangilinan. However, Palisoc never openly or publicly acknowledged that H. was his son.

In August 2011, Pangilinan filed a petition to establish a parental relationship between H. and Palisoc. She sought a declaration that Palisoc was H.’s father and sought child support from him. Pangilinan asked the court to order genetic testing. Palisoc denied that he was H.’s father and asked the court to declare that Pangilinan’s husband was H.’s presumed father. He claimed that Pangilinan had waited too long to file her petition because her petition amounted to a challenge to the presumption that her husband was H.’s father. Palisoc also asserted that even if Pangilinan’s petition was timely, she had failed to present clear and convincing evidence that Palisoc was H.’s father. Pangilinan’s husband was not made a party to the action.

The case was tried to the court on July 3, 2012, and the court issued a statement of decision on July 6, 2012. The court found that Family Code section 7540’s conclusive presumption did not apply because Pangilinan and her husband were not cohabiting when H. was conceived or bom. Nevertheless, the court premised its refusal to order genetic testing on Family Code section 7541, 1 which applies only where section 7540 applies. The court then found that Pangilinan’s husband qualified for presumed father status under former section 7611 because Pangilinan and her husband were married when H. was bom. Reasoning that Pangilinan’s action was an action to establish the nonexistence of a parent-child relationship between her husband and H. under former section 7630, subdivision (a)(2), the court concluded that her action was untimely because it had not been brought within a *769 “reasonable time.” The trial court rejected Pangilinan’s claim that Palisoc too qualified for presumed father status and instead found that Palisoc “did not openly and publicly receive H[.j into his home at any time” and that “there is not persuasive evidence that [Palisoc] ever held the child out as his own.” The statement of decision ended: “ORDER [f] 1. Husband of Petitioner is the presumed father of H[.] [f] 2. Petitioner’s OSC requesting Child Support from Respondent is denied.” On Wednesday, September 5, 2012, Pangilinan filed a notice of appeal from the statement of decision.

II. Discussion

A. Appealability and Timeliness of Appeal

The first question is whether the statement of decision was an appealable order. “The general rule is that a statement or memorandum of decision is not appealable. [Citations.] The rule’s practical justification is that courts typically embody their final rulings not in statements of decision but in orders or judgments. Reviewing courts have discretion to treat statements of decision as appealable when they must, as when a statement of decision is signed and filed and does, in fact, constitute the court’s final decision on the merits.” (Alan v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc. (2007) 40 Cal.4th 894, 901 [55 Cal.Rptr.3d 534, 152 P.3d 1109].) The statement of decision in this case is signed and filed and, given its wording, was clearly intended to constitute the court’s final decision on the merits. Hence, we treat it as an appealable order.

The next question is whether Pangilinan’s notice of appeal was timely filed. “[A] notice of appeal must be filed on or before the earliest of: [][] (A) 60 days after the superior court clerk serves on the party filing the notice of appeal a document entitled ‘Notice of Entry’ of judgment or a file-stamped copy of the judgment, showing the date either was served . . . .” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.104(a)(1)(A), italics added.) On July 6, 2012, the superior court clerk served on both parties a file-stamped copy of the statement of decision. Pangilinan’s notice of appeal was filed on September 5, 2012, which was 61 days after the service of the statement of decision.

We requested supplemental briefing on this issue since the parties’ briefs had not addressed the timeliness of the notice of appeal. Pangilinan’s attorney, Richard Wilson, submitted a declaration of Rosemary Janis, who was his employee at the time the notice of appeal was prepared. Janis declared that the notice of appeal had been prepared by Wilson on August 27, 2012, and Janis had mailed it to Palisoc’s attorney on August 29. That same day, August 29, Janis personally took the original notice of appeal and copies to “the clerk’s office” where she left them “with a courier slip to have a filed copy of the notice returned to the office.” The following week, Janis and *770 Wilson learned that the “Clerk rejected the filing because of a problem with a filing fee,” apparently related to the notice of appeal bearing the wrong case number. The error was “corrected . . . immediately.”

Pangilinan argues that her notice of appeal must be deemed filed on August 29, 2012, rather than September 5, 2012, because Janis presented it to the clerk’s office for filing at that time. In Rapp v. Golden Eagle Ins. Co. (1994) 24 Cal.App.4th 1167 [30 Cal.Rptr.2d 126] (Rapp), the notice of appeal was presented to the clerk for filing but rejected because the filing fee proffered was not the correct amount, resulting in a delay in the filing of the notice. The Court of Appeal held that the presentation of the notice of appeal to the clerk within the requisite period rendered it timely despite the error regarding the filing fee. “The act of delivering the document to the deputy clerk at the court during office hours constituted the act of filing.” (Rapp, at p. 1172.) Here, as in Rapp, the notice of appeal was delivered to the clerk’s office well within the requisite period and rejected by the clerk for reasons having nothing to do with timeliness. As in Rapp,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 Cal. App. 4th 765, 174 Cal. Rptr. 3d 114, 2014 WL 2937896, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pangilinan-v-palisoc-calctapp-2014.