Turkanis v. Price

213 Cal. App. 4th 332
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 2013
DocketNo. B229482; No. B234011
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 213 Cal. App. 4th 332 (Turkanis v. Price) 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
Turkanis v. Price, 213 Cal. App. 4th 332 (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion

FLIER, J.

This is the third appeal we consider in this marital dissolution action between Richard Turkanis and Joan M. Price. In the first appeal, we considered the trial court’s order after the first of two phases of trial. The purpose of the first phase of trial was to set the value at the date of marriage of a closely held corporation (Radman) formed by Turkanis prior to marriage (the valuation trial). We permitted Price an interlocutory appeal from the valuation order and affirmed it in a nonpublished opinion. (In re Marriage of Price & Turkanis (May 11, 2011, B218753).) Price brought the second appeal [337]*337after the second phase of trial in which the trial court allocated assets between Price and Turkanis (the allocation trial). We affirmed the trial court’s judgment after the allocation trial in a nonpublished opinion. (In re Marriage of Price & Turkanis (July 19, 2012, B226221).)

In this third proceeding, former attorneys for Price, Brian J. Kramer and Daniel B. Spitzer, appeal from the trial court’s order granting Turkanis’s motion to expunge the attorneys’ “family law attorney’s real property liens” (FLARPL’s). (See Fam. Code, § 2033, subd. (a).)1 Kramer and Spitzer recorded these FLARPL’s to secure their fees and costs when they represented Price during the first phase of trial. They contend that the court erred in granting Turkanis’s motion to expunge their FLARPL’s because (1) the relevant sections of the Family Code do not permit the court to expunge duly noticed and recorded FLARPL’s, (2) the trial court should have joined them to the action before entering a judgment stripping their FLARPL’s, and (3) the court should have granted Kramer’s request for a statement of decision on the motion to expunge the FLARPL’s.

Kramer and Price also appeal from the court’s order on Kramer’s Borson2 motion for attorney fees, in which the court ordered Turkanis to pay $39,000 to Kramer for Price’s fees. They contend that the court erred in offsetting the fee award for unreasonable litigation conduct under section 271. We affirm both orders.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Turkanis and Price married on March 31, 1995. They have one child, a daughter, bom in 1997. They separated on December 19, 2003. Turkanis filed this dissolution action on February 10, 2004. The court entered a status-only judgment of dissolution on November 10, 2005.

The first phase of trial, the valuation trial, commenced on May 19, 2008. The valuation trial took place on various days in May and June of 2008 and January, February, March, June, and July of 2009. On August 3, 2009, the court issued its 25-page written mling valuing Radman as of the date of marriage.

The second phase of trial, the allocation trial, commenced on February 10, 2010, and continued on three more days that month. The court entered its amended judgment dividing the parties’ assets on June 1, 2010. The parties’ daughter was in Turkanis’s custody at the time of the court’s judgment but [338]*338was under the jurisdiction of the dependency court, so the trial court did not make any orders regarding child custody or visitation. At the allocation trial, Turkanis demonstrated that Price had received postseparation distributions in excess of $1.1 million during the pendency of the litigation. Turkanis himself had received approximately the same amount in distributions.

1. Kramer’s FLARPL

Spitzer and Kramer associated in as Price’s counsel during the pendency of the valuation trial, Spitzer in July 2008 and Kramer in December 2008. They were the 10th and 11th attorneys to enter appearances for Price. Price did not have funds available to pay Kramer’s retainer fee. Thus, as part of her retainer agreement with Kramer, she agreed that Kramer’s firm could seek to record a FLARPL pursuant to section 2033 against one of the two single-family residences the parties owned. She agreed the FLARPL would cover the retainer fee plus any unpaid fees and costs due at the time Kramer recorded the FLARPL.

Pursuant to section 2033, subdivision (b), on February 13, 2009, Price served and filed a notice of intent to record Kramer’s FLARPL in the amount of $140,000. Her supporting declaration stated that she and Turkanis owned two single-family residences in Los Angeles, one at 1234 N. Bundy Drive (1234 Bundy) and one at 1250 N. Bundy Drive (1250 Bundy). The notice said she intended to permit Kramer to record a FLARPL against 1234 Bundy, which had a fair market value, she believed, of over $1 million. Approximately one month prior, Turkanis had filed an income and expense declaration opining that the 1234 Bundy property had $1.75 million in equity value.

On February 26, 2009, Turkanis filed an ex parte application and objection to Price’s notice of intent. In it, he stated that he had no objection to Kramer recording a FLARPL against the 1234 Bundy property. Under the section for requested relief, he specifically stated: “That [Price’s] counsel be allowed a FLARPL on 1234 Bundy Avenue [sic] in the sum of $140,000.” But he objected to a FLARPL against the 1250 Bundy property. He believed the equity value of the 1250 Bundy property to be $2.6 to $2.9 million. He also believed the court should eventually award him all the proceeds from the sale of the 1250 Bundy residence as his separate property, given the value of Radman when he brought it to the marriage. Under these circumstances, he felt it would be prejudicial to his claims and unjust to permit Kramer to record a FLARPL against 1250 Bundy. As to 1234 Bundy, he stated: “[Price] has advised the Court of her desire to ultimately own the 1234 Bundy Avenue [sic] Property. If my valuation of Radman ultimately prevails, it is unlikely that [Price] could be awarded the 1234 Bundy Avenue [sz'c] property without owing me substantial funds. However, if she were able to secure these funds [339]*339and she was awarded the 1234 Bundy Avenue [sz'c] Property as she has indicated is her desire, then I believe it is appropriate that the [FLARPL] to secure [Price’s] payment of her attorneys’ fees be recorded against the property awarded to her.”

Price filed an amended notice of intent regarding Kramer’s FLARPL on or around April 2, 2009. She indicated in the notice that the court held a hearing on February 26, 2009, at which it had authorized Kramer to file a FLARPL against 1234 Bundy but denied without prejudice her request for a FLARPL against 1250 Bundy. The court had suggested that if Price wanted a FLARPL against 1250 Bundy, she needed to file a new notice because the initial one had identified only 1234 Bundy as the property against which she wanted a $140,000 FLARPL. Thus, she was filing the amended notice because she preferred the $140,000 FLARPL to be against 1250 Bundy.

Turkanis filed an ex parte application and objection to the amended notice on or around April 17, 2009. He objected to the recording of a FLARPL against 1250 Bundy but again stated he had no objection to a FLARPL for $140,000 against Price’s interest in 1234 Bundy. Under the section for requested relief, he specifically stated: “[Price] may record a FLARPL against [her] interest in 1234 Bundy Avenue [sic] in the sum of $140,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 Cal. App. 4th 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turkanis-v-price-calctapp-2013.