Court Opinion

ID: 4198984
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-08-26 02:04:22.120037+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:23:51.992672
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/25/17

                             CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

                IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                              FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                      DIVISION THREE

In re Marriage of NOEMI M. MENDOZA
and ELIAS R. CUELLAR.

NOEMI M. MENDOZA,
                                                     G053820
    Appellant,
                                                     (Super. Ct. No. 14D004292)
        v.
                                                     OPINION
ELIAS R. CUELLAR,

    Respondent.

                  Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Sherri L.
Honer, Judge. Affirmed.
                  Law Office of Worth L. Nicholl and Worth L. Nicholl for Appellant.
                  No appearance for Respondent.

                                 *             *            *
               Noemi M. Mendoza appeals the denial of her request to make a permanent
spousal support order retroactive to the filing date of her petition for marriage dissolution.
The trial court based its denial on Mendoza’s failure to request temporary spousal
support. We agree such failure was fatal to Mendoza’s retroactivity request. Unlike with
temporary spousal support, a court’s discretion to make a permanent spousal support
order retroactive is limited by Family Code section 4333.1 The statute allows
retroactivity only to the date of filing of the notice of motion or order to show cause
regarding permanent support, not to the initiation of the action. We, therefore, affirm the
judgment.
                                           FACTS
               In May 2014, Mendoza filed a petition for dissolution, seeking to dissolve
her more than 22-year long marriage to Elias R. Cuellar. She used the relevant Judicial
Council form for the petition and checked the box indicating she was seeking spousal
support. Following a mandatory settlement conference, the parties came to an agreement
on certain issues. Spousal support was among the few issues left for trial.
               Prior to the dissolution hearing, Mendoza filed a trial brief and various
other documents, including some related to factors the court considers in determining
whether to award permanent spousal support and the appropriate amount. The trial brief
specified she was requesting “[t]he court make a permanent spousal support order,
ordering [Cuellar] to pay monthly spousal support to [her] in accordance with her
‘Proposed Needs.’” Nowhere in the trial brief or in the accompanying documents did
Mendoza request temporary spousal support.
               In mid-July 2015, the parties came to an agreement that resolved the
amount of permanent spousal support Cuellar would pay Mendoza without the need for a

       1   All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless specified
otherwise.

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trial. The signed stipulation and order indicated support would be in the amount of $800
per month, beginning July 1, 2015. It also stated “retroactivity of spousal support” was
an outstanding issue the court would decide at a hearing scheduled for the following
month.
              The trial court requested the parties file written briefs on the retroactivity
issue in advance of the hearing. In her brief, Mendoza argued section 4333 authorized
the court to make its spousal support order retroactive to the date she filed her petition for
dissolution, and that the court should exercise its discretion to do so. Cuellar opposed the
request, arguing the court could not make support retroactive to the filing date of the
petition because Mendoza never filed a request for temporary spousal support.
              Prior to the hearing, the trial court issued a tentative ruling denying
Mendoza’s request. After hearing from the parties, the court adopted its tentative as the
final ruling. In an oral statement of decision, the court explained that in the absence of a
separate request for temporary spousal support, it may not make a spousal support order
retroactive to the filing date of a petition for dissolution. Mendoza did not appeal that
decision.
              Ten months later, the court entered a final judgment of dissolution. It
incorporated the permanent spousal support order previously stipulated to by the parties,
which did not include any retroactivity. Mendoza appeals from that judgment.
                                       DISCUSSION
              California law provides for two distinct types of spousal support—
temporary and permanent. “Awards of temporary spousal support do not serve the same
purpose, nor are they governed by the same procedures, as awards for permanent spousal
support. ‘Pendente lite allowances and permanent allowances differ fundamentally in
nature [citation] and function [citation].’” (In re Marriage of Dick (1993) 15 Cal.App.4th
144, 166.) Whereas the latter is intended to make an equitable apportionment between
the parties, the former is meant to allow a spouse to continue to live in the manner to

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which he or she is accustomed during the time the dissolution action is pending. (Ibid.)
It is also used to provide a spouse “‘“with whatever is needed by [him or] her to litigate
properly [his or] her side of the controversy.”’” (Ibid.)
              Because Mendoza admits she never made a request for temporary spousal
support, we focus on permanent spousal support. Section 4333 controls the permissible
date on which a permanent spousal support order may begin. It authorizes a court to
make an order for permanent spousal support “retroactive to the date of filing the notice
of motion or order to show cause, or to any subsequent date.” (§ 4333.) This
retroactivity limitation is unique to permanent spousal support. In contrast, an order for
temporary spousal support may, at the court’s discretion, be made retroactive to the date
on which the petition for dissolution was filed. (In re Marriage of Dick, supra, 15
Cal.App.4th at pp. 165-166.)
              Here, after initially disagreeing on the issue of spousal support, the parties
eventually stipulated Cuellar would pay Mendoza monthly permanent spousal support
beginning on a specified date, and the court so ordered. The issue of whether the support
order would be retroactive to a date prior to the one they agreed upon was an issue
expressly reserved for the court to resolve. Because the support order stemmed from the
parties’ stipulation, there was no noticed motion or order to show cause concerning
permanent spousal support. Thus, there was no date to which the trial court could make
the support order retroactive in accordance with section 4333.
              Mendoza urges us to treat her petition for dissolution as a “notice of
motion” for purposes of section 4333. We decline to do so. To begin, the statute
expressly references a “notice of motion or order to show cause.” Had the Legislature
intended to include the filing date of a petition as a date to which a support order could be
made retroactive, it certainly would have used such language as it has done in other parts
of the dissolution statutes. (See In re Marriage of Dick, supra, 15 Cal.App.4th at p. 166
[“If the Legislature had wanted to limit the retroactivity of temporary spousal awards to

                                              4
the date on which the order to show cause was filed, as it had in Civil Code section 4801,
it could have expressly so provided, but since it did not, we will not imply such a
limitation”]; see, e.g., § 4009 [“An original order for child support may be made
retroactive to the date of filing the petition, complaint, or other initial pleading. . . .”].)
               Further, a dissolution petition is functionally different than a notice of
motion. Like a complaint in a civil action, a dissolution petition is a document that
simply initiates an action. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.60.) Thereafter, certain steps must
be taken before the court makes an order or grants any relief. For spousal support, the
required steps include, among others, filing and serving a request for order and an income
and expense declaration. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.92(b)(2).) And, it is that request for
order which acts as the noticed motion referenced in section 4333. (Cal. Rules of Court,
rule 5.92(a)(1)(A).)
               Were we to adopt Mendoza’s position, a permanent support order could be
made retroactive to the initiation of the action in every case. Doing so would largely
eviscerate the distinction between temporary and permanent spousal support and
confound their unique purposes. Had Mendoza felt the need for spousal support during
the pendency of the case, she should have made a request for temporary spousal support.
(See In re Marriage of Dick, supra, 15 Cal.App.4th at pp. 165-166 [court may make
temporary spousal support order retroactive to filing date of dissolution petition or any
date thereafter]; In re Marriage of MacManus (2010) 182 Cal.App.4th 330, 337 [court
has broad discretion concerning temporary spousal support].) Since she did not do so,
despite being represented by counsel, we find no error in the trial court’s decision.

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                               DISPOSITION
          The judgment is affirmed.

                                          THOMPSON, J.

WE CONCUR:

BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.

ARONSON, J.

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