Court Opinion

ID: 9394541
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-05-15 18:02:42.912603+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:00.757646
License: Public Domain

Filed 5/15/23 Marriage of Hering CA6
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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                  IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

 In re the Marriage of HEATHER L. and                                H050515
 ELMER HERING.                                                      (Monterey County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. 16FL002167)
 HEATHER L. HERING,

             Appellant,

             v.

 ELMER HERING,

             Respondent.

         In this dissolution of marriage action, Heather Hering (Heather) appeals from a
postjudgment order concerning the marital settlement agreement between Heather and
her former husband Elmer Hering (Elmer).1 The trial court interpreted the agreement as
requiring Heather to refinance a loan on a 2018 Keystone Springdale camper (the
camper) owned by Heather and to remove Elmer as a cosigner to the loan.
         On appeal, Heather contends the trial court lacked jurisdiction to modify the
marital settlement agreement and erred in its interpretation. Heather asserts the court

         1
         For clarity we refer to the parties by their first names as they appear in the
briefing. (See Rubenstein v. Rubenstein (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 1131, 1136, fn. 1.)
effectively nullified the term of the marital settlement agreement awarding the camper to
her as her separate property.
       We affirm the order.
                  I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
       Heather and Elmer married in 2010 and separated in 2016. In October 2016,
Heather filed a petition for dissolution of the marriage. In December 2016, Elmer filed a
response and request for dissolution. Sometime after their separation, Heather bought the
2018 camper which is at issue in this appeal. Elmer cosigned the loan on the camper.
       In October 2019, Heather and Elmer entered into a marital settlement agreement
(agreement). Heather was represented by counsel, and Elmer was self-represented. In
January 2020, the trial court filed a judgment of dissolution (judgment). The judgment
expressly incorporates the agreement and reserves jurisdiction to the court “to make other
orders necessary to carry out this judgment.” The stated purpose of the agreement “is to
make a final and complete settlement of all rights and obligations” between Heather and
Elmer, including their “respective property rights, and [their] responsibility for debts.”
       The agreement describes the relevant details of Heather’s and Elmer’s marriage
and separation, child custody and visitation, child and spousal support, property division
and confirmation of separate property, the legal effect of the agreement, and provisions
for modification and enforcement. The “2018 Keystone Springdale camper, plus loan
therefor” is denoted as Heather’s “sole and separate property.” The agreement limits any
modification of the terms of the agreement, except by a writing signed by both parties, or
by the court with respect to child custody, visitation, and support.
       In May 2022, Elmer filed a request for order with the trial court, using the
standard judicial council form. Under “Other Orders Requested” (some capitalization
omitted), Elmer typed: “[Heather] refinance the 2018 Keystone Springdale Camper
obligation confirmed to her as her separate property and remove [Elmer] from the loan

                                                 2
and title.” Under “Facts to Support” (some capitalization omitted) the requested order,
Elmer referred to an attached declaration.2
       Heather opposed the request for order. In her declaration opposing the request,
Heather stated the camper “was and is [her] separate property,” as confirmed in the
dissolution judgment, and the debt “is [her] separate debt” on which she has “made
payments continuously through a direct withdrawal from [her] bank account.” Heather
explained that, after their separation, Elmer had volunteered to help her with the loan
through his credit union. She maintained that the judgment “confirmed the camper, and
the loan were [her] separate assets and obligation without reserving any jurisdiction over
these issues.” Heather further attested that even though she was under no legal obligation
to do so, she had “actually tried to refinance the loan in [her] name, and it was declined,
and [she] was unable to do so.” Heather requested that the court award her $2,500 in
attorney fees for the fees incurred in responding to the request for order. Heather’s
counsel also submitted written argument in opposition to the request for order. These
arguments centered on the finality of the judgment and the court’s lack of jurisdiction, in
the absence of an express reservation, to modify or alter the judgment.
       In his rebuttal declaration to Heather’s opposition, Elmer averred that Heather
made late payments on the account, which were affecting his credit. Elmer attached to
the declaration a printout of “screen shots showing that the account is delinquent.” Elmer
asserted that Heather acknowledges the camper and the debt on the camper are her
separate property, and thus “needs to get the debt out of [his] name to comply with the
terms of the judgment” and ensure he is not liable for the debt. Elmer also argued that if

       2
         Elmer’s declaration in support of the requested order appears to be missing from
the record on appeal (appellant’s appendix). According to appellant’s opening brief on
appeal, Elmer’s supporting declaration claimed that Heather made late payments which
damaged his credit rating, though he did not present any evidence of delinquency.
                                                 3
Heather could not refinance the loan and remove his name from the debt, then “the
camper should be sold and the debt should be paid off.”
       On September 14, 2022, the trial court issued findings and order after hearing,
granting Elmer’s request (order). The order indicated that a hearing was held the month
prior, with both parties present and represented by counsel. The order states in full: “1.
The court finds that there was an implied agreement in the Judgment filed January 28,
2020 that [Heather] owns the obligation on the 2018 Keystone Springdale Camper and
the court orders that the loan is to be refinanced by [Heather] and remove [Elmer] from
the obligation. [¶] 2. [Heather] has 60 days to refinance the obligation on the camper
and remove [Elmer] from that obligation. [¶] 3. The court denies [Heather]’s request for
attorney fees.”
       Heather timely appealed the trial court’s order.3
                                    II. DISCUSSION
       Heather contends the trial court’s order must be reversed for several reasons. She
argues that (1) the trial court lacked jurisdiction to modify the agreement, (2) the court’s
interpretation of the agreement based on an “implied term” contradicts the agreement
terms and deprives Heather of an express benefit, (3) the rules of contract interpretation
do not permit the court to add a term requiring her to get her own financing, and
(4) Elmer’s claim concerning late payments is unsupported by any evidence in the record
and is, in any event, irrelevant to deciding whether Heather must refinance the loan.
       Elmer has not filed a respondent’s brief. We thus decide the appeal based on the
record, opening brief, and oral argument by Heather. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
8.220(a)(2) & (c).) We first address the trial court’s jurisdiction to modify the judgment
before turning to the contractual interpretation of the agreement.

       3
        This order after judgment is appealable. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (a)(2),
(10); Fam. Code, § 3554.)
                                                 4
       The trial court’s interpretation of the marital settlement agreement and
jurisdiction, if any, to modify the judgment are questions of law subject to de novo
review. (In re Marriage of Rosenfeld & Gross (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 478, 485; In re
Marriage of Iberti (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 1434, 1439 (Marriage of Iberti).)
       A. Modification of the Judgment
       Heather contends that the trial court had no jurisdiction to order that she refinance
the loan on the camper. She relies on the general principle that, absent an express
reservation of jurisdiction, a court loses jurisdiction to modify or alter a judgment of
marital dissolution once the judgment has become final. (See In re Marriage of Thorne
& Raccina (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 492, 499 (Marriage of Thorne).) Heather’s argument
depends on an unstated presumption that the trial court’s order effected a modification of
the judgment.
       We disagree that the order to refinance the loan on the camper and remove Elmer
from the obligation constituted a modification. “Generally, once a marital dissolution
judgment has become final, the court loses jurisdiction to modify or alter it.” (Marriage
of Thorne, supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 499.) This rule extends to a settlement
agreement incorporated into the judgment. “Under the doctrine of res judicata, ‘ “[i]f a
property settlement is incorporated in the divorce decree, the settlement is merged with
the decree and becomes the final judicial determination of the property rights of the
parties.” ’ ” (Ibid.) Consequently, with limited exceptions, “marital property rights and
obligations adjudicated by a final judgment cannot be upset by subsequent efforts to
‘modify’ the judgment.” (Ibid.)
       One exception to the general rule is that a “judgment may contain an express
reservation of jurisdiction authorizing the court to subsequently modify it.” (Marriage of
Thorne, supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 500.) The judgment in this case, however, does not
contain an express reservation of jurisdiction over modifications. Under the stipulated
terms, any modification (apart from changes to child custody, visitation, or support) is
                                                 5
available only by a writing signed by the parties “that expressly refers” to the agreement.
However, the judgment does reserve jurisdiction of the court “to make other orders
necessary to carry out this judgment.”
       Heather argues that because the agreement does not contain a reservation of
jurisdiction and the parties did not elect to make a change, in writing, to the agreement,
the court “had no authority to modify the agreement.” This argument is correct as to
modification of the judgment but fails to address the court’s continuing jurisdiction to
make orders necessary to carry out the judgment. Based on our independent review of
the record, the trial court’s order concerning the camper loan does not modify the
judgment but was, in fact, necessary to carry out the judgment.
       The judgment, having incorporated the parties’ agreement, unequivocally
categorizes the “2018 Keystone Springdale camper, plus loan therefor” as Heather’s
separate property. (Italics added.) The entire provision states, “We agree that [Heather]
owns the property listed below as her sole and separate property, and [Elmer] disclaims
and waives all right and interest therein: . . . 2018 Keystone Springdale camper, plus loan
therefor; bank accounts in [Heather]’s name; [Heather]’s bonds, in her maiden name of
Schlough.” Elsewhere, the agreement provides that it constitutes the “entire agreement”
concerning the parties’ settlement of rights and obligations, including property rights and
liability, and that “there are no enforceable representations or warranties other than those
set forth in [the] Agreement.”
       As discussed post, we interpret the term as an unambiguous expression of intent
that both the camper property and the loan pertain exclusively to Heather. Heather does
not discuss the inclusion of “plus loan therefor” in the term designating the camper as her
separate property. Nor does she point to any language in the agreement that would
support requiring Elmer to remain liable for the loan on the camper despite their
designation of the camper “plus loan therefor” as Heather’s sole and separate property.

                                                 6
       The trial court’s order effectuates that intent by requiring Heather to remove Elmer
from the loan obligation. The order specifically finds “that there was an implied
agreement . . . that [Heather] owns the obligation on the 2018 Keystone Springdale
Camper and the court orders that the loan is to be refinanced by [Heather] and remove
[Elmer] from the obligation” and gives Heather 60 days to refinance the loan on the
camper and remove Elmer from the obligation on the loan. This order does not alter the
parties’ obligations under the judgment, but simply finds that to effectuate the intent of
the parties regarding the camper and loan, the loan must be refinanced to remove Elmer
from any obligation under it.
       The express intent to make the camper and associated loan Heather’s separate
property, and limited request for an order to carry that out, distinguishes the
circumstances of this case from cases that Heather cites involving modification of
judgments. For example, Marriage of Thorne involved a stipulated marital dissolution
judgment in which the wife agreed to accept 16 percent of the husband’s military retired
pay based on his rank and pay level at the time of the judgment, then later sought to set
aside the judgment because she learned that California courts typically apply a different
rule for apportioning the community share of military pay. (Marriage of Thorne, supra,
203 Cal.App.4th at p. 495, fn. 2.)
       In another example cited by Heather, the judgment provided for the payment of
spousal support to be “stepped down” annually until reduced to zero, unless the supported
spouse timely filed a motion showing good cause for support to be continued. (In re
Marriage of Khera & Sameer (2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 1467, 1471.) The supported
spouse instead filed a motion to set aside the judgment and sought modification of the
support provisions, including “an upward modification of spousal support” and payment
beyond the date set in the judgment for the support award to be zero. (Id. at p. 1472.)
       These cases involved requested changes to the judgment that would fundamentally
alter the nature of the obligation between the spouses that was initially agreed upon.
                                                 7
Here, by contrast, Elmer’s request that Heather “refinance the 2018 Keystone Springdale
Camper obligation[,] confirmed to her as her separate property[,] and remove [Elmer]
from the loan and title” did not alter the obligations imposed by the judgment but was
instead necessary to carry out those obligations.
       Given the express designation in the judgment of the camper and loan as
pertaining solely to Heather, we conclude the trial court’s order requiring Heather to
remove Elmer from the loan obligation was within the court’s jurisdiction—expressly
retained in the text of the judgment—“to make other orders necessary to carry out this
judgment.”
       B. Interpretation of the Marital Settlement Agreement
       Heather challenges the trial court’s interpretation of the judgment as inconsistent
with the terms of the agreement and contrary to the rules of contract interpretation. We
disagree and conclude that the trial court’s interpretation is consistent with the parties’
expressed intent and does not add new terms to the agreement.
       “Marital settlement agreements incorporated into a dissolution judgment are
construed under the statutory rules governing the interpretations of contracts generally.”
(Marriage of Iberti, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p. 1439; see Civ. Code, § 1635 et seq.) In
construing the agreement, we seek to give effect to the mutual intent of the parties as it
existed at the time of contracting based on the contract’s written provisions and
considering the circumstances when the parties signed the settlement agreement. (Civ.
Code, §§ 1636, 1638, 1639, 1647; In re Marriage of Hibbard (2013) 212 Cal.App.4th
1007, 1013.) We independently review the agreement in accordance with these rules.
(Marriage of Hibbard, at p. 1012.) “When the language of the judgment incorporating
the marital settlement agreement is clear, explicit, and unequivocal, and there is no
ambiguity, the court will enforce the express language.” (Marriage of Iberti, at p. 1440.)
       The language of the agreement forming the judgment in this case is clear and
unequivocal in explicitly specifying that the camper “plus loan therefor” are Heather’s
                                                    8
sole and separate property. Although a loan is not, strictly, property, we interpret the
terms used in an agreement according to their “ordinary and popular sense, rather than
according to their strict legal meaning[,] unless used by the parties in a technical sense.”
(Civ. Code, § 1644; AIU Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (1990) 51 Cal.3d 807, 822.)
       It is apparent from the inclusion of “loan therefor” in the designation of Heather’s
separate property that the parties intended to give Heather sole ownership over and legal
responsibility for the camper and the loan. This interpretation also finds support in the
agreement’s treatment of encumbrances on community and quasi-community assets. The
paragraph on encumbrances provides, as to “all property assigned under” the agreement,
except as otherwise specified, that “the assignee spouse assumes all encumbrances and
liens on the property and agrees to indemnify and hold the other party free and harmless
from any claim or liability that the other party may suffer or may be required to pay
because of those encumbrances or liens.” A cosigner is liable under a consumer loan and
obligated for any default. (See Civ. Code, § 1799.91 [requiring notice of liability for
cosigners to consumer credit contracts].) To construe the provision as intended to apply
only to the camper, leaving undisturbed Elmer’s status as cosigner to the loan, would
require that Elmer remain liable for the loan. This outcome is incompatible with the
express designation of “loan therefor” as Heather’s sole and separate “property” and with
the parties’ intent to hold the non-assignee spouse “free and harmless from any claim or
liability” on the assigned property.
       Requiring Elmer to remain liable for the camper loan also would contravene the
indemnity and hold harmless provision of the agreement, which provides that “[e]xcept
for the obligations contained in or expressly arising out of this Agreement, [each party]
warrant[s] . . . that he or she . . . shall not incur, any liability or obligation for which the
other party is, or may be liable.” Taken together, the absence of language in the
agreement providing for any continuing obligation of Elmer under the loan, and the
express designation of the loan as Heather’s separate property, lead us to conclude that
                                                    9
the parties’ intent was for Heather to assume the loan as her separate obligation. It is
implicit in the agreement’s language designating the camper and loan as Heather’s alone
that Elmer necessarily cannot remain a cosigner to the loan.
       Heather argues that implied terms in a contract are disfavored and should be read
into a contract only where necessary to effectuate the purpose of the contract. She
contends there is no justification in this case for adding a term requiring her to obtain
financing for the camper loan—an order she maintains effectively negates the benefit
assigned to her under the agreement and thwarts the parties’ intention to award the
camper to her.
       “Implied terms are not favored in the law, and should be read into contracts only
upon grounds of obvious necessity. [Citation.] A court may find an implied contract
provision only if: (1) the implication either arises from the contract’s express language or
is indispensable to effectuating the parties’ intentions; (2) it appears that the implied term
was so clearly within the parties’ contemplation when they drafted the contract that they
did not feel the need to express it; (3) legal necessity justifies the implication; (4) the
implication would have been expressed if the need to do so had been called to the parties’
attention; and (5) the contract does not already address completely the subject of the
implication.” (In re Marriage of Corona (2009) 172 Cal.App.4th 1205, 1222 (Marriage
of Corona), citing Civ. Code, §§ 1655, 1656.)
       The Court of Appeal in Marriage of Corona examined the circumstances in which
a court may imply a term in a marital settlement agreement. At issue in that case was a
provision to the marital settlement agreement requiring the husband to pay a portion of
the wife’s income taxes. (Marriage of Corona, supra, 172 Cal.App.4th at p. 1209.) The
husband argued on appeal from a family court order requiring him to pay more than
$36,000 as his share of the wife’s tax obligations that the wife had an implied duty not to
impose excess liability on him by her selection of tax filing status, and to mitigate and
minimize the amount of her tax liability. (Id. at pp. 1219–1220.) The appellate court
                                                  10
recognized the statutory rules of construction pertaining to implied terms but ultimately
declined to infer from the agreement an implied duty to minimize tax liability, since the
husband had not shown that such a provision was “ ‘necessary to make [the agreement]
reasonable’ ” (id. at p. 1223, citing Civ. Code, § 1655) or was “otherwise indispensable
or legally necessary to carry the [agreement] into effect” (ibid., citing Civ. Code, § 1656).
The court also questioned the effect of the proposed implied contract term on the
agreement provision requiring the husband to pay designated spousal support (including
one-half of the wife’s income taxes) irrespective of her remarriage, since that provision
“arguably express[ed] a “ ‘contrary intention’ ” that might be affected by an implied term
requiring the wife to file under a particular tax filing status. (Marriage of Corona, at
p. 1223.)
       This case is unlike Marriage of Corona. Whereas the husband’s proposed
interpretation of the tax provision in that case would have benefited him but was not
necessary to carry out the legal effect of his obligation to pay his ex-wife’s taxes
(Marriage of Corona, supra, 172 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1222–1223), removing Elmer from
the camper loan is necessary to carry out the parties’ intent that Heather “own” the loan.
Put differently, it would be unreasonable to require Elmer to remain legally obligated and
liable under a loan that the stipulated agreement unequivocally assigned to Heather.
“Stipulations which are necessary to make a contract reasonable, or conformable to
usage, are implied, in respect to matters concerning which the contract manifests no
contrary intention.” (Civ. Code, § 1655.)
       We are not persuaded by Heather’s claim that construing the agreement in this
manner nullifies the provision awarding the camper to Heather and thwarts the parties’
intention. Heather maintains that if any term were to be implied, it would be that the
“parties agree to maintain the status quo, namely, that Elmer remain a cosigner,” a term
she asserts is “indispensable to effectuating the parties’ intention, which was to award the
camper to Heather.” However, this assertion fails to address the express designation in
                                                 11
the agreement of the “loan therefor” to Heather or to reconcile Heather’s position that the
“debt is [her] separate debt.” While Heather is correct that the court may not revise or
alter the agreement, under the guise of interpretation, neither may the court ignore the
terms of the agreement that are expressly contained therein. (Civ. Code, § 1638; see
Code Civ. Proc., § 1856.) Having independently reviewed the agreement, we are unable
to derive from its express terms any suggestion that the parties intended for Elmer to
remain a cosigner notwithstanding their express allocation of the camper loan under the
provision for Heather’s separate property.
       We understand Heather’s frustration that, if she is unable to independently
refinance the loan on the camper, she will be deprived of the benefit of the property that
was specifically awarded to her. Nevertheless, we do not agree that construing the
agreement to require Elmer’s removal from the obligation on the camper equates to a
deprivation of that property.
       We decline to address Heather’s argument concerning the lack of evidence to
support Elmer’s claim that she had made late payments on the loan, as the status of loan
payments is immaterial to our review of the agreement and its construction.
                                   III. DISPOSITION
       The trial court’s September 14, 2022 order after hearing is affirmed.

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                           ______________________________________
                                      Danner, J.

WE CONCUR:

____________________________________
Bamattre-Manoukian, Acting P.J.

____________________________________
Bromberg, J.

H050515
Hering v. Hering