Warner v. Warner

38 Cal. App. 3d 714, 113 Cal. Rptr. 556, 1974 Cal. App. LEXIS 1090
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 1974
DocketCiv. No. 41459
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 Cal. App. 3d 714 (Warner v. Warner) 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
Warner v. Warner, 38 Cal. App. 3d 714, 113 Cal. Rptr. 556, 1974 Cal. App. LEXIS 1090 (Cal. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Opinion

JEFFERSON, Acting P. J.

On November 12, 1971, the wife, Rosalind Sandra Warner, obtained an interlocutory default judgment of dissolution of her eight-year marriage to husband Gary Lew Warner. A final judgment of dissolution was entered, at the husband’s request, on March 8, 1972. On April 6, 1972, Rosalind filed a motion to vacate the interlocutory judgment, claiming that her attorney of record had failed to represent her properly and that she had been subjected by her husband to fraud and duress. On May 12, 1972, the trial court granted the wife’s motion to set aside the judgment. Husband Gary Warner appeals.

Both the wife’s motion to vacate, and the trial court’s order herein under review purported to relate to the interlocutory decree in its entirety. The breadth of the motion and order creates procedural problems which we deal with at the outset.

No motion to vacate the final decree of dissolution was ever made, nor did the order under review purport to affect the final decree. The interlocutory decree, in addition to the usual language providing for the dissolution of the marriage by a final decree,1 also contained provisions: (a) granting custody of the minor children to the wife;2 (b) providing for the support of those children;3 (c) providing for support of the [717]*717wife;4 and (d) dividing the community property.5 The final decree granted dissolution and purported to confirm the other provisions of the interlocutory decree. The result is that the order under review left standing, unrevoked, a final decree which, in part, rested on provisions which that order purported to vacate.

We are cited to no authority, and have found none, dealing with the procedural dilemma thus presented. We conclude: that, except as to the property division, child custody and child support portions of the interlocutory decree, the purported vacation of the interlocutory decree was an action that accomplished no significant legal result. In the only comparable situation which we can discover—namely, motions to vacate defaults—the law is well settled that an order which vacates only the entry of a default without also vacating a default judgment accomplishes nothing, since the judgment still remains in full force and effect. We think the same result follows here as to the provisions of the interlocutory decree which dealt with dissolution of the marriage and with spousal support. Both of these, under the present statutes, must be dealt with in the final decree;6 he interlocutory decree’s provisions in these respects are purely prognostic of what ultimately will be decreed. The statutes do provide, however, for orders governing property divisions,7 child custody and child support to be accomplished prior to the final decree;8 as to those matters the confirming language in the final decree added nothing and the order herein under re[718]*718view accomplished a total vacation of the provisions originally in the interlocutory decree.

As will appear below, the wife’s attack on the interlocutory decree was directed only to the provisions therein which related to the property division. We find no attack on the child custody order (which was in her favor) or on the provisions for child support. It follows that, although her motion was directed to the interlocutory decree in its entirety, and the order under review purports to vacate it in its entirety, the record does not support so much of the order as vacated the child custody and child support portions of the interlocutory decree. To that extent the order must be reversed.

We turn now to the portion of the order that vacated the property division portions of the interlocutory decree. From the affidavits filed by the parties with respect to the motion to vacate and the remainder of the record before us, we have gleaned the following facts:

In August 1971 Rosalind, having become interested in another man, informed Gary that she wanted to dissolve their marriage. Gary was upset and bitter about this development, but agreed. Both parties consulted attorney Slater and retained him in this matter. Attorney Slater drafted a property settlement agreement which was signed by the parties under date of August 30, 1971, and filed with the dissolution petition on September 7, 1971. Gary was served by Slater on September 8, 1971, and his default was entered the following month.

On November 12, 1971, the matter came up for default hearing. The wife’s affidavit and the husband’s counteraffidavit are in agreement that Rosalind was upset on this occasion and was hesitant about going forward with the action. Rosalind claims that when she expressed reluctance, Gary insisted she proceed and threatened her that, if she did not, she would get no support from him whatsoever. Rosalind further claimed that at that time she did not know the value of the community assets, nor was she aware that she was entitled to one-half of them. The husband claimed that Rosalind was insistent that her interest was nonmaterial and she only wanted an automobile and some furniture. In any event, she agreed to proceed.

The material provisions of the property settlement agreement, drawn up by attorney Slater and incorporated into the interlocutory decree, divided the community assets of the parties in the following manner: to the husband, Gary, was awarded the Gary Warner Agency, an insurance business, and the family home in Tarzana; to the wife, Rosalind, one Toyota automobile and some furniture. Rosalind was to receive spousal [719]*719support of $300 per month for six months; she was awarded custody of two daughters, ages 7 and AVz years, and child support of $100 per month per child. Provision was made for the maintenance by the husband of life insurance coverage, with the minors as beneficiaries, and he was further obligated to pay the children’s medical expenses.

Rosalind’s affidavit was uncontroverted with respect to her statement that she learned at a later time that the agency awarded to Gary was valued at $60,000 and the house at $54,500 when the property settlement agreement was made, and that Gary’s earnings were $50,000 per year. Her affidavit does not refer to the possibility that there were additional community assets, but the husband makes reference in his affidavit to a savings account of $3,295.27, which was in his possession in August 1971; the nature of that asset is not clear. Husband further claims that it was at his insistence that the provisions for the children involving life insurance coverage and medical expenses were included in the settlement.

At some point after the entry of the interlocutory decree, Rosalind consulted attorney High regarding this matter. On April 6, 1972, attorney High filed a noticed motion to set aside the interlocutory judgment. Actual substitution of attorney High for Rosalind’s attorney of record, Slater, was executed by counsel on April 20, 1972, and filed with the court on April 27, 1972, the date of the hearing on the motion. Attorney Satt, representing the respondent husband, objected that High was not Mrs. Warner’s attorney of record at the time the motion was filed. The trial court inferentially overruled the objection to High’s appearance as petitioner’s attorney, ruling in petitioner’s favor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Cal. App. 3d 714, 113 Cal. Rptr. 556, 1974 Cal. App. LEXIS 1090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-warner-calctapp-1974.