Williamson v. Williamson

226 Cal. App. 4th 1303
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 12, 2014
DocketB238067
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 226 Cal. App. 4th 1303 (Williamson v. Williamson) 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
Williamson v. Williamson, 226 Cal. App. 4th 1303 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

PERREN, J.

Frederick W. Williamson II is the son of a wealthy Los Angeles patrician family. Through his parents’ generosity, Frederick and his *1307 wife, Mary Kate Williamson, enjoyed a lavish high-society lifestyle during their 20-year marriage. 1 When the parties separated, their monthly expenses averaged $45,000, yet they had no employment income. Based on Frederick’s postseparation annual income of $99,000, the trial court ordered him to pay monthly permanent spousal support of $2,000 and child support of $1,235.

The principal issue before us is whether the trial court abused its discretion by declining to treat historical cash advances from Frederick’s parents as income in calculating child and spousal support. The trial court determined they were loans and therefore excludable as income under the child support statutes. Because the advances are to be deducted from Frederick’s expected inheritance, we conclude they were gifts in lieu of a devise or inheritance, rather than loans. This distinction is immaterial, however, because the advances ceased before trial and there was no evidence they would resume. Recognizing it could not order Frederick’s parents to make further cash advances, the court reasonably concluded it could not base an enforceable child or spousal support order on them.

Mary Kate also contends the trial court erred by retroactively modifying Frederick’s temporary support obligation, by failing to correct its statement of decision, by preventing certain discovery, by declining to impose sanctions for breaches of fiduciary duty and by limiting her attorney fees to $10,000. We agree the court exceeded its jurisdiction by charging temporary support payments to the community, rather than to Frederick. We reverse and modify the judgment to correct this error, and affirm in all other respects.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Frederick and Mary Kate were married in 1989 and have three children. They separated in 2009. Frederick petitioned for dissolution. At the time of trial, only their youngest child, Hughes, was a minor. Hughes will turn 18 in July 2014.

Preseparation Income and Lifestyle

Before marriage, Mary Kate worked as a salesperson at an Ann Taylor store. She did not complete college. After they married, the parties agreed Mary Kate would stay home and care for their children. With a few exceptions, the marital income came from three sources: Frederick’s employment income, his trust income and gifts or cash advances from his parents, Norman and Victoria Williamson.

*1308 Frederick’s paternal grandmother, Ruth Chandler von Platen, was the daughter of Harry Chandler, a real estate magnate and former publisher-owner of the Los Angeles Times. Frederick worked for that newspaper between 1990 and 2005, earning approximately $120,000 per year. He also received annual distributions of approximately $12,000 to $13,000 from the Ruth Chandler von Platen Trust No. 2 (von Platen Trust), his grandmother’s testamentary trust.

Frederick’s parents made annual tax-free gifts of $26,000 to Frederick, Mary Kate and each of their children, for a total of $130,000 per year. They also paid the children’s private school tuition. After selling one of their properties in 2000, they gifted Frederick and each of his siblings $900,000. Frederick and Mary Kate used that money, in part, to purchase stock, art and antiques.

Frederick’s parents also advanced money to purchase and remodel the parties’ homes. In 1991, Norman advanced them $395,000 to purchase a home on Old Mill Road in Pasadena. He forgave that “loan” because it was their first home. A few years later, Frederick and Mary Kate sold that property and purchased a “fixer” home on Huntington Circle in Pasadena for $899,000. Known as “Hartón Hall,” the historically significant, 7,000-square-foot residence was on the grounds of the Ritz Carlton Huntington Hotel, providing the family with access to the hotel’s tennis courts, swimming pool, gym, spa facilities and room service. Norman advanced the parties approximately $1,205,600 to purchase and renovate the property.

Frederick and Mary Kate drove luxury automobiles and had a full-time housekeeper. They belonged to several exclusive private clubs, including The California Club, The Valley Hunt Club and The Pasadena Athletic Club. They travelled frequently, both internationally and domestically, sometimes by private jet. During ski season, the family spent most weekends at Mammoth Mountain. Mary Kate shopped at high-end stores, purchasing designer jewelry, clothes, handbags and shoes. Frederick collected fine wine.

The parties regularly visited the family’s luxury beachfront home in Carpintería, known as “Sandyland.” Frederick inherited a 1/11 interest in the property, which is co-owned by his siblings and cousins. The interest was deeded to Frederick from Ruth Chandler von Platen’s estate, along with a 1/12 interest in an adjacent empty lot. The various owners, including Frederick, coordinate use of Sandyland, which is never rented and does not generate income. Frederick’s father and uncle pay the property’s expenses.

When they decided to relocate to Santa Barbara, Frederick and Mary Kate sold Hartón Hall for $3.43 million. They used the equity from that property, *1309 along with a $340,000 advance from Norman, to purchase a home on Featherhill Road in Montecito (Featherhill) for $2.75 million. They also purchased a vacation home in Mammoth for $575,000.

Featherhill had a main residence, guesthouse, pool and pool house, garage and studio, but required extensive repairs. The parties planned to tear down the structures and rebuild. When that proved infeasible, they embarked on a complicated renovation. As spending on the project spiraled, Frederick liquidated $470,000 in stock inherited from his maternal grandmother. He also quit his job at the Los Angeles Times to focus on the renovation.

During the final two years of the marriage, Frederick obtained large sums of money from his parents to help pay for the renovation. The parties’ monthly expenses ranged between $40,000 and $50,000. Frederick and his father had “many heated conversations about whether they would continue to lend [the couple] money.” Norman maintained a spreadsheet on which he kept track of the cash advances made to Frederick and his siblings. The advances to Frederick and Mary Kate totaled approximately $2,168,055, including interest. Mary Kate always thought the advances were gifts. She never heard them referred to as “loans” or “advancements] on inheritance” until the divorce. She said, “Everybody in the family just gets money when they need it.”

No portion of the cash advances has been repaid. Two weeks before trial, Norman and Victoria made a revocable amendment to their 1992 trust. According to Norman, it “was a clarification of [their] intent” that any loan balances and accmed interest due and owing by Frederick or his siblings at the time of distribution will be subtracted from that child’s portion of the inheritance.

Postseparation Income and Lifestyle

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 Cal. App. 4th 1303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-williamson-calctapp-2014.