Court Opinion

ID: 7797164
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-02 18:01:46.36989+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:28:35.006589
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/2/22 Marriage of Hu and Lin CA5

                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
                                     FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

    In re the Marriage of KATHERINE HU and
    PAUL LIN.

    KATHERINE HU,                                                                            F082832

           Respondent,                                                       (Super. Ct. No. R1502FL6395)

                    v.
                                                                                          OPINION
    PAUL LIN,

           Appellant.

                                                   THE COURT *
         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Kern County. Gloria J.
Cannon, Judge.
         Chung & Ignacio and Eric N. Chung, for Appellant.
         Wanger, Jones, Helsley and Jay A. Christofferson, for Respondent.
                                                        -ooOoo-

*        Before Franson, Acting P. J., Smith, J. and Snauffer, J.
       Appellant, Paul Lin, appeals the denial of his request for orders, seeking a division
of community assets he believes were not addressed in a judgment entered in April 2019.
Appellant believes he can pursue such an order under Family Code 1 section 2556, which
states courts have continuing jurisdiction over matters not addressed in a judgment
dividing marital assets. Following our review of the record provided by the parties to this
court, we affirm the judgment entered below denying appellant’s request for orders.
                    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
       Appellant and Katherine Hu were married in 2005 but separated just over
four years later in 2009. As of 2018, the couple had yet to formalize various aspects of
their divorce.2 Specifically, the parties were in limbo on how to divide their assets.
       In April 2016, the court designated an expert to complete a report pursuant to
Evidence Code section 730 (730 report), identifying the couple’s assets at the time of
separation. Both parties participated in this hearing. When the 730 report was ready in
November 2016, Hu contacted the expert in an email and asked if the total he listed as
community property would all eventually be designated community property by the trial
court. Hu noted that since the separation she had made mortgage payments on the family
home and had already made some payments to appellant. The expert responded:

       “My job was to determine the cash balances as of October 27, 2016. I do
       not have the information to determine who owes what. I assume the
       two attorney’s [sic] will determine this based on what you and Mr[.] Linn
       [sic] provide to them. There are a lot of variables such as net fair market
       value of house,[ ]how much more you have paid Mr. Lin, value of
       furnishings taken[,] etc.”

1      All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise specified.
2      While there is a trial brief in the clerk’s transcript from 2013, nothing else has
been provided to show much of the history of this case until 2018 when proceedings
relevant to this appeal occurred.

                                              2.
The 730 report was entered into evidence during a hearing held on April 2, 2018. 3 The
hearing also addressed the issue of spousal support, the right to possess specific assets,
and how a payment should be made to the expert for the 730 report. While noticed,
neither appellant nor his attorney appeared at the April 2018 hearing. 4
       After several versions of a judgment were issued following the April 2018
hearing, a final judgment was issued on April 12, 2019. 5 The judgment stated the
marriage between Hu and appellant was dissolved as of December 4, 2015, and that
neither party had a right to spousal support. The judgment also addressed the issue of
property, granting Hu the family home as her sole and separate property, and stating
property already in possession of the parties would be designated their property and that
debts obtained in their own names would remain their own debts. Finally, the judgment
addressed an outstanding payment owed to the expert, which would require appellant to
make an equalizing payment of $10,000 to a trust account. A notice of entry of this
judgment was filed on May 17, 2019.
       In October 2020, appellant sent Hu a notice for a hearing scheduled in
November 2020, seeking a request for orders. Appellant was now asking the court to
divide community property assets he believed had been omitted from the earlier
judgment. In response, Hu provided a memorandum of points and authorities with
accompanying declarations and exhibits, which referenced the judgment entered in 2019,
and the fact appellant had not appeared at the April 2018 hearing when community assets
were addressed.

3      The record provided to this court fails to provide any documented objections to the
730 report between 2016 when it was submitted to the parties and the 2018 hearing date.
4       Appellant claims the hearing started 15 minutes earlier than originally scheduled.
However, there is no evidence in the record showing he complained about not being able
to participate in the hearing until more than one and a half years later when he submitted
his request for orders.
5      This judgment is referred to as the “Second Corrected Judgment” in the record.

                                             3.
       During the March 2021 hearing, the court questioned why appellant had waited so
long to claim assets were omitted from the earlier judgment. Counsel for appellant cited
various accounts they believed had not been addressed in the prior judgment and stated
those still had to be divided. Counsel for Hu responded that all assets were meant to be
addressed in the prior 2019 judgment, and that if appellant disagreed, he had an
obligation to raise those concerns immediately after that judgment was entered.
       On March 23, 2021, the court issued a ruling denying appellant’s request for an
order dividing further assets. A notice of appeal was filed on May 21, 2021.
                                      DISCUSSION
       Again, appellant’s primary contention is that various assets were not resolved in
the April 2019 judgment. As a result, appellant believes he should not be barred by any
statute of limitations preventing challenges to these judgments found in the Family Code.
I.     The Availability of a Challenge Under Section 2556
       Despite California’s strong public policy favoring the finality of judgments, a
court may still have an opportunity to divide community property assets if certain
circumstances exist. Specifically, under section 2556, a trial court has continuing
jurisdiction to resolve disputes involving community assets or liabilities not resolved in
earlier judgments. The critical question is whether the community assets or liabilities
were litigated and divided in a previous proceeding, leading to a judgment. (In re
Marriage of Huntley (2017) 10 Cal.App.5th 1053, 1061.)
       Various concepts guide our review of this matter. Family courts are granted
“broad statutory powers to accomplish a just and equal division of marital property.” (In
re Marriage of Greaux & Mermin (2014) 223 Cal.App.4th 1242, 1250 [citing §§ 2550,
2553].) A court’s ruling dividing property is therefore reviewed under an abuse of
discretion standard. (In re Marriage of Dellaria & Blickman-Dellaria (2009) 172
Cal.App.4th 196, 201.) When seeking review, an appellant is required to provide a
record that adequately addresses the issues the court has been asked to review.

                                             4.
(Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.120; see Denham v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 557, 564
[An appellant has the burden to overcome the presumption of correctness and show
prejudicial error].) The record must support any allegations of claimed error and must
facilitate an appellate court’s review of those claims. (In re Marriage of Wilcox (2004)
124 Cal.App.4th 492, 498–499.) An abuse of discretion cannot be found when the record
is incomplete and fails to explain what occurred in the lower court before the ultimate
judgment was entered by the trial court. (Rhule v. WaveFront Technology, Inc. (2017) 8
Cal.App.5th 1223, 1228–1229.)
       A.     The April 2019 Second Corrected Judgment
       Appellant’s specific argument is that the April 2019 judgment fails to address the
accounts listed in the 730 report, which identified a total of $332,375 from those accounts
as community property. Appellant states the April 2019 judgment failed to address how
these funds should be dispersed. Unfortunately, the status of the record provided to this
court makes a review of this claim difficult.
       Our review suggests there were more proceedings and filings made in this case
that would have helped explain why the final judgment included some items and not
others. For instance, a May 2016 letter from counsel for Hu lists a $115,100 transfer
appellant apparently made from a joint account to an account that was in his name only,
close to the time when the parties separated. There is also an email exchange between
August and October 2016, submitted as an exhibit to Hu’s opposition to the request for
orders, in which the expert asks appellant’s attorney for information on a possible
second bank account that was apparently controlled by appellant. A second bank account
was not included in the 730 report. In October 2016, the expert asked appellant for
additional information on an additional savings account he needed to complete his
730 report. Hu apparently told the accountant appellant was the primary account holder
on the savings account and that he should be asked for the necessary documents. In yet
another communication with appellant’s attorney, the expert asked for a trial brief,

                                                5.
hoping it might help him understand appellant’s claim that separate property proceeds
from the sale of a house were placed in a community property account.
       When the 730 report was provided to the parties in November 2016, Hu emailed
the accountant and asked him if it explained “ ‘who gets what.’ ” Hu noted she had made
mortgage payments on the family home and that “early disbursements” were made to
appellant. The accountant explained the 730 report merely listed what was in each
account at the time of separation and that he did not have the information necessary to
determine “who owes what.”
       More than one year later, in April 2018, at the hearing scheduled to resolve the
property issues, Hu’s attorney stated testimony from both parties had already been taken
on the issue of spousal support. The attorney further noted that there was $84,000 in a
trust account. While no detailed explanation is provided as to the source of the funds in
the trust account, the fact he asks the court to order an equalizing payment from appellant
in the amount of $10,000 to be placed in that trust account, suggests those funds
represented what was remaining of the dispute between the parties. Finally, Hu’s
attorney stated that his client continued to make mortgage payments on the family home,
and that the home had “no real appreciable equity.”
       A review of the entire record provided to this court by both appellant and Hu leads
us to conclude that whatever was left of the funds listed in the 730 report in 2018 may
have been disbursed and/or paid toward maintaining the family home. There is even
some suggestion that accounts not listed in the 730 report contained funds listed in the
report. The trial court was likely satisfied the parties were already in possession of the
funds and properties that belonged to them individually when it stated in the judgment,
“Each party shall keep the furniture, furnishings, vehicles and personal property in their
possession.” If this assumption was incorrect, we question why appellant failed to
challenge the various versions of the judgment drafted following the April 2018 hearing,
before the second amended judgment was entered in April 2019.

                                             6.
       It appears appellant may be taking advantage of the passage of time and a selective
use of the record provided to this court to claim the April 2019 judgment failed to address
all the assets and liabilities owned by the parties at the time the marriage was dissolved.
Based on our review of the record on appeal, we are not confident that everything
considered by the trial court is now before this court. As a result, we cannot find there
was an abuse of discretion and cannot reverse the judgment.6 (Rhule v. WaveFront
Technology, Inc., supra, 8 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1228–1229.) Any award of attorneys’ fees,
costs, or sanctions made by the trial court in this matter will not be disturbed as a result of
this appeal.
                                       DISPOSITION
       The judgment is affirmed. Hu is entitled to recover her costs on appeal.
(Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278.)

6      We do not address the question of whether section 2122 could provide any relief
to appellant. First, this possibility was not specifically raised by appellant. Second, and
more importantly, any challenge he could have made under section 2122 would have
been time barred when he submitted his request for orders.

                                              7.