S.S. v. T.B. CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 2023
DocketE077296
StatusUnpublished

This text of S.S. v. T.B. CA4/2 (S.S. v. T.B. CA4/2) 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
S.S. v. T.B. CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 4/18/23 S.S. v. T.B. CA4/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

S.S.,

Appellant, E077296

v. (Super. Ct. No. FLIN1801137)

T.B., OPINION

Respondent.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Dale R. Wells, Judge.

Mickie Elaine Reed, Temporary Judge. (Pursuant to Cal. Const., art. VI, § 21.)

Affirmed.

S.S. in pro. per., for Appellant.

La Quinta Law Group and Timothy L. Ewanyshyn, for Respondent.

I.

INTRODUCTION

S.S., proceeding in pro. per., appeals the family court’s orders (1) denying her

request to contest T.B.’s registration of a Montana court child custody order and (2)

1 denying her request to set aside a five-year domestic violence restraining order against

her. We affirm.

II.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

S.S. and T.B. had a child, A.B.S., in Montana in 2011. In May 2018, S.S. filed a

request in Riverside Superior Court to register a Montana court’s 2016 custody and

visitation orders concerning A.B.S. About six months later, S.S. petitioned for an order

establishing her as A.B.S.’s mother. Shortly afterward, T.B. filed a response to S.S.’s

petition, as well as an emergency request to register a Montana court’s recent order

granting him sole legal and physical custody over A.B.S. The family court (Hon. Dale

Wells) granted T.B.’s request on November 21, 2018, and temporarily adopted the

Montana court’s recent order as the court’s order until further notice. The matter was set

for a hearing in January 2019.

At a January 2019 hearing, T.B. asked Judge Wells to adopt the Montana court’s

custody orders as the final custody orders. Judge Wells asked S.S. why the court should

not do so. S.S. said that she was “fine with that.” Judge Wells then found that the family

court had jurisdiction under the Uniform Child-Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement

Act (UCCJEA) because S.S. and T.B. live in California. Judge Wells asked S.S. if she

objected to him assuming jurisdiction under the UCCJEA or adopting the Montana court

orders granting T.B. sole legal and physical custody. S.S. confirmed that she did not.

2 Judge Wells therefore found the court had jurisdiction under UCCJEA, adopted the

Montana court’s orders, and granted T.B. sole legal and physical custody of A.B.S.

In May 2020, Judge Wells granted T.B.’s request for a domestic violence

restraining order (DVRO) against S.S., which ordered her not to contact T.B. or A.B.S.

for five years. Almost six months later, on November 12, 2020, S.S. moved to set aside

the DVRO on the ground that the “facts & evidence that warrant the necessity of a

restraining order . . . were not provided to the court.” (Capitalization omitted.) S.S. also

requested modification of the child custody, visitation, and support orders.

On December 15, 2020, the superior court entered an order nunc pro tunc stating

that the T.B.’s November 2018 registration of the Montana court’s orders had an

incorrect case number and the clerk’s certificate of mailing the order was incomplete.

The court therefore corrected the document to reflect the correct file number and the

completion of the clerk’s certificate of mailing the document on December 15, 2020.

Two days later, S.S. filed a request for a hearing to contest T.B.’s November 2018

registration of the Montana court’s orders.

Commissioner Mickie Reed heard S.S.’s requests to vacate the DVRO and to

contest T.B.’s registration of the Montana court’s orders. Commissioner Reed denied

both requests on February 3, 2021, finding that the deadlines to challenge the DVRO and

the registration had passed. S.S. moved for reconsideration, which Commissioner Reed

denied. S.S. timely appealed.

3 III.

DISCUSSION

S.S. contends Commissioner Reed erroneously denied her request to vacate Judge

Wells’s order registering the Montana court’s orders under the UCCJEA and his order

granting T.B. a five-year DVRO against her. We find no prejudicial error.

S.S. argues Judge Wells’s November 2018 order temporarily registering the

Montana court’s order was void because she did not receive notice of it by mail, as

shown by the court’s December 2020 nunc pro tunc order. In her view, the family court

violated UCCJEA’s notice provision, codified in Family Code section 3445, which

required the family court to notify her of T.B.’s registration of the Montana court orders

and allow her 20 days to contest it. (See Fam. Code, § 3445, subds. (b)(2), (c).)

We assume without deciding that S.S. is correct that the family court failed to

properly mail her notice of T.B.’s registration of the Montana court orders under Family

Code section 3445. We also assume without deciding that S.S. did not forfeit the

argument. The error, if any, was harmless because S.S. received notice of and expressly

consented to the registration of the Montana court’s orders and the family court’s

adoption of them. (See In re A.C. (2017) 13 Cal.App.5th 661, 673 [failure to follow

UCCJEA’s procedural requirements reviewed for prejudice]; In re R.L. (2016) 4

Cal.App.5th 125, 143 [same].)

4 A day after T.B. filed the registration, he served S.S. (as the family court directed)

a copy of several documents, including his UCCJEA declaration stating that the Montana

court had recently awarded him sole legal and physical custody of A.B.S. Two days

later, T.B. filed a proof of service with the family court stating that he had served S.S.

with a copy of his request for an emergency order to register the Montana custody orders.

At the beginning of the January 2019 hearing, Judge Wells told S.S. that the hearing was

being held in part to decide T.B.’s November 2018 request under that UCCJEA that the

family court adopt the Montana court’s orders, including that T.B. receive sole legal and

physical custody over A.B.S. When asked whether she objected to the family court

assuming jurisdiction under UCCJEA or adopting the Montana court’s orders, S.S.

confirmed that she did not object. The family court then found it had jurisdiction under

UCCJEA and adopted the Montana court’s orders.

In other words, S.S. not only had actual notice of T.B.’s request to register the

Montana court’s orders, she expressly consented to the family court adopting them. As a

result, we conclude any deficiency in the family court’s failure to mail S.S. notice of

T.B.’s November 2018 registration of the Montana court’s orders was harmless.

Commissioner Reed therefore properly denied S.S.’s request to vacate Judge Wells’s

order adopting the Montana court’s orders and properly denied S.S.’s subsequent motion

for reconsideration.

5 S.S. also argues Commissioner Reed erroneously denied her November 2020

request to vacate Judge Wells’s five-year DVRO issued against her in May 2020. We

disagree. As Commissioner Reed correctly observed, S.S.’s motion to vacate the DVRO

was essentially a motion for reconsideration given that the basis for the motion was that

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S.S. v. T.B. CA4/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ss-v-tb-ca42-calctapp-2023.