Court Opinion

ID: 7802169
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-19 19:01:54.928232+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:29:25.059642
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/19/22 Chen v. Yang 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                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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

                                      SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

 JOHN G. CHEN,                                                       H047019
                                                                    (Santa Clara County
           Petitioner and Appellant,                                 Super. Ct. No. 2012-6-FL-009184)

           v.

 JANE J. YANG,

           Respondent.

         This appeal arises out of the dissolution of appellant John G. Chen and respondent
Jane J. Yang. In 2014, Chen moved to set aside the judgment of dissolution and marital
settlement agreement. Chen appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion. We affirm.
                                            I.        BACKGROUND
         Chen and Yang married in 1985. They effected a “physical separation in 2002,”
but it was not until 2012 that Chen filed for divorce. He filed his first petition for
dissolution of marriage in May 2012, withdrew the petition, and filed a new petition
again in October 2012.
         Following the separation, Yang founded a company, Culturelinks, Inc. In 2013,
Yang earned a salary of approximately $692,000 from Culturelinks. Chen also worked
for Culturelinks, earning roughly $2,000-3,000 per month. In May 2012, the parties
executed a “quitclaim deed agreement” in which Chen disclaimed any interest in
Culturelinks.
       In August 2012, the parties executed a marital settlement agreement. Attorney
Joseph Tse drafted the agreement. Tse also served as a mediator for Chen and Yang, who
were then both unrepresented. After Chen filed for divorce in October 2012, Attorney
Wendy Lun—although she was the owner of the law firm that employed Tse—agreed to
represent Yang in the proceedings. Chen remained self-represented.
       In December 2012, Lun drafted and the parties executed an addendum to the
marital settlement agreement. This December addendum incorporated but modified the
August agreement by providing that Yang would pay Chen an additional $100,000 and
also purchase real property for Chen, in exchange for Chen’s interest in the family
residence. In the December addendum, the parties represented that they had served each
other with preliminary declarations of disclosure, and that they mutually waived the
requirement of final declarations of disclosure.
       A year later, Lun initiated the entry of judgment as an uncontested matter, filing
the parties’ Appearance, Stipulations and Waivers (JCC form FL-130), a proposed
judgment attaching the August 2012 agreement and December 2012 addendum, each
party’s Declaration Regarding Service of Preliminary Declarations of Disclosure and
Income and Expense Declaration (JCC form FL-141), and their Stipulation and Waiver of
Final Declaration of Disclosure (JCC form FL-144). The court entered judgment on
December 2, 2013, incorporating the December 2012 agreement.
       Six months later, Chen moved to set aside the stipulated judgment and final
marital settlement agreement. The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion
over the course of three days in April, June, and July 2018. 1 At the conclusion of the

       1  The record does not fully explain the lapse of over four years. The trial court,
however, noted Chen’s earlier claim that his execution of the quitclaim was the product
of duress by one of the parties’ children on behalf of Yang and a related request to
continue the matter so that that adult child could testify. Neither party called either of
their children as witnesses.

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hearing, the court denied the motion to set aside the judgment. A written order denying
the motion was filed on April 12, 2019.
       Chen timely appealed.
                                    II.    DISCUSSION
       Chen contends the judgment should be set aside based on (1) the asserted failure to
exchange preliminary declarations of disclosure as required by Family Code
section 2104,2 and (2) the impropriety of Lun’s representation of Yang.3
A.     Legal Standard
       The grounds for setting aside a judgment of dissolution are set forth in
section 2122. (In re Marriage of Varner (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 128, 137 (Varner).) Of
the grounds for relief enumerated in section 2122, Chen asserts the failure to comply with
disclosure requirements (§ 2122, subd. (f); § 2107, subd. (d)), and mistake, “either mutual
or unilateral, whether mistake of law or mistake of fact” in connection with a stipulated
judgment (§ 2122, subd. (e)). The moving party bears the burden of proving entitlement
to relief under section 2122. (In re Marriage of Kieturakis (2006) 138 Cal.App.4th 56,
88-89.) One seeking relief on grounds of mistake must establish both the existence of
mistake and also that “ ‘the facts alleged as the grounds for relief materially affected the

       2   Unspecified statutory references are to the Family Code.
       3 In the trial court, Chen advanced a number of different additional grounds:
(1) he did not fully understand the terms of the marital settlement agreement; (2) he is not
fluent in English; (3) he was not represented by an attorney; (4) he was not advised of the
terms and legal effect of the terms of the agreement; (5) he was under a great deal of
pressure to sign; (6) he did not sign freely and voluntarily and with a full understanding
of the terms of the agreement; (7) he did not receive a property disclosure declaration;
(8) the terms of the agreement are unconscionable; and (9) Yang breached her fiduciary
duties. Chen also—at the hearing on his motion years after entry of judgment—asserted
grounds for relief under Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b), but he
appears to concede on appeal that any claim for relief available under this provision alone
was untimely.

                                              3
original outcome and that the moving party would materially benefit from the granting of
the relief.’ ” (In re Marriage of Brewer & Federici (2001) 93 Cal.App.4th 1334, 1345
(Brewer & Federici).)
       We may disturb a trial court’s refusal to set aside a judgment and marital
settlement agreement only for an abuse of discretion. (Varner, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at
p. 138; Brewer v. Federici, supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 1346.) We are not authorized to
substitute our “judgment of the proper decision for that of the trial judge. The trial
court’s exercise of discretion will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of a clear
showing of abuse, resulting in injury sufficiently grave as to amount to a manifest
miscarriage of justice.” (In re Marriage of Rosevear (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 673, 682.)
       To the extent the trial court’s exercise of discretion turned on the resolution,
express or implied, of disputed facts, we review the factual findings for substantial
evidence. (Haraguchi v. Superior Court (2008) 43 Cal.4th 706, 711.) We “presume
every fact in support of the judgment the trier of fact could have reasonably deduced
from the evidence. [Citation.] If the circumstances reasonably justify the trier of fact’s
findings, reversal of the judgment is not warranted simply because the circumstances
might also reasonably be reconciled with a contrary finding. [Citation.] ‘A reviewing
court neither reweighs evidence nor reevaluates a witness’s credibility.’ [Citation.]”
(People v. Albillar (2010) 51 Cal.4th 47, 60 (Albillar).)

B.     Set Aside of Judgment4

       4 Yang argues that the appeal should not be considered on the merits because the
record is inadequate. (Mountain Lion Coalition v. Fish & Game Com. (1989) 214
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          1.     Exchange of Disclosures
          In order to provide full and accurate disclosure of all assets and liabilities, each
party to a dissolution proceeding must serve declarations of disclosure on the other party.
(§ 2103.) If judgment is entered when the parties have failed to comply with the
disclosure requirements, “the court shall set aside the judgment.” (§ 2107, subd. (d);
§ 2122, subd. (f).) The trial court’s determination that Chen did not meet his burden of
establishing the failure to serve required disclosures is adequately supported by the
record.
          Although Chen testified in the trial court that he and Yang had not exchanged
disclosures at all, the trial court was not obliged to credit his testimony. The record
reflects that within 60 days of Chen’s filing his October 2012 dissolution petition, the
parties in the marital settlement agreement stated that they had “complied with Family
Code section 2104, and the preliminary declarations of disclosure [had] been completed
and exchanged.” A year later, both Chen and Yang—under penalty of perjury—
reaffirmed their exchange of preliminary declarations of disclosure in (1) their stipulation
and waiver of final declaration of disclosure submitted with their request for entry of a
stipulated judgment, and (2) their respective declarations regarding service of the
preliminary declarations of disclosure on the required JCC forms FL-141. Each party
separately averred that they personally served the other on October 29, 2012, with their
respective preliminary declarations of disclosure.

Cal.App.3d 1043, 1051, fn. 9; Gee v. American Realty & Construction, Inc. (2002) 99
Cal.App.4th 1412, 1416.) Although Yang is correct that Chen neglected to designate his
motion to set aside the judgment, she herself has requested on appeal that we take judicial
notice of the motion. We grant her request for judicial notice. (Evid. Code, § 452,
subd. (d).) To the extent she alludes to unspecified other missing documents, we have on
our own motion ordered the transmission of certain exhibits, which are deemed part of
the record on appeal whether or not a party requests their transmission. We accord ingly
address the merits of the appeal.

                                                 5
       On appeal, Chen argues “the disclosure requirements weren’t given the respect
that the Legislature intended. If they were actually ever exchanged, they were exchanged
after the significant agreements in the case were signed.” To the extent Chen continues
to dispute the fact of disclosure, he in essence invites us to reweigh the evidence and
disregard the parties’ sworn declarations regarding service, because Lun emailed him
blank disclosure forms shortly after October 29, 2012, and Yang at the 2018 hearing did
not offer into evidence her preliminary declaration of disclosure itself. Our deferential
review for substantial evidence would preclude our doing so, even if it were not Chen
who bore the burden of proof in the trial court. (Albillar, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 60.)
       Alternatively, Chen contends that service of preliminary declarations of disclosure
as documented was untimely because the parties effected service after executing the
May 2012 quitclaim deed agreement and the August 2012 marital settlement agreement
that he considers the “significant agreements” on which the judgment was based .5 Chen,
who filed the operative dissolution petition after executing the quitclaim and August 2012
settlement agreement, cites no authority for a requirement that disclosures be exchanged
prior to any “significant agreements,” nor could he. The statute prescribes the time for
service of preliminary declarations of disclosure: “The petitioner shall serve the other
party with the preliminary declaration of disclosure either concurrently with the petition
for dissolution . . . or within 60 days of filing the petition. . . . The respondent shall serve
the other party with the preliminary declaration of disclosure either concurrently with the
response to the petition, or within 60 days of filing the response.”6 (§ 2104, subd. (f).)
Moreover, the controlling agreement is the December 2012 marital settlement agreement,

       5The judgment actually incorporated the December marital settlement agreement,
which itself incorporated and modified the August agreement.
       6 Generally, the preliminary and final declarations of disclosure are not filed with
the court. (§ 2104, subd. (b); § 2105, subd. (a); Lappe v. Superior Court (2014) 232
Cal.App.4th 774,781.)

                                               6
which the parties executed after the documented date of their exchange of preliminary
declarations of disclosure. Although the parties in their December 2012 agreement
incorporated the August 2012 agreement as well, in doing so they modified it and
reaffirmed those terms that remained unmodified.
       In light of the record, the disclosure issue does not demonstrate any abuse of
discretion by the trial court.
       2.      Lun’s Conflict of Interest
       Chen argues that the judgment should be set aside because Lun, as the titular
shareholder of the same law firm that employed Tse, the parties’ former mediator and
scribe, was ethically prohibited from representing either party in the dissolution. We are
troubled by the apparent relationship between the parties’ one-time mediator and Yang’s
first attorney,7 but the asserted conflict does not provide a basis to reverse the trial court’s
denial of Chen’s request to set aside the judgment.
       Generally, a party who wants to challenge the propriety of an attorney
representing an adverse party must “proceed at the first reasonable opportunity by proper
motion to achieve that end and . . . failing to do so, it is an abuse of the trial court’s
discretion to thereafter entertain favorably a request for such relief.” (White v. Superior
Court (1979) 98 Cal.App.3d 51, 56.) Chen did not cite the representation and purported
conflict among the nine grounds on which he based his request for the judgment to be set
aside. He did not raise the issue at all until four years later, when his attorney briefly
alluded to the conflict on the final day of the hearing, without asking the court to take any
particular action on this basis and without purporting to connect the conflict to any

       7 By the 2018 hearing on Chen’s motion, Lun was no longer Yang’s counsel.
Yang on appeal does not dispute that Tse had at some point been the parties’ mediator.
Although Yang suggests that perhaps the professional connection between Tse and Lun
may have been an attenuated one, the parties in their August marital settlement agreement
identified Tse as “from the Law Office of Lun & Associate[s].”

                                                7
ground for setting aside the judgment. The trial court had no obligation to consider this
argument because “[n]ew issues cannot generally be raised for the first time in oral
argument.” (New Plumbing Contractors, Inc. v. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co. (1992) 7
Cal.App.4th 1088, 1098; In re I.C. (2018) 4 Cal.5th 869, 888, fn. 5 [an argument not
raised in a timely manner is forfeited]; Stevenson v. Baum (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 159,
167, fn. 8 [theory raised for first time at oral argument is waived].)
       Chen appears to contend that he should be excused from objecting to Lun’s
representation in the trial court because he was self-represented and had a limited
command of English. This argument too is unavailing. With the exception of a
two-month period in 2017, Chen was in fact represented by a series of attorneys from
December 2016 through the conclusion of the 2018 hearing. Furthermore, “[self-
represented] litigants are held to the same standards as attorneys.” (Kobayashi v.
Superior Court (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 536, 543; see also Burnete v. La Casa Dana
Apartments (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 1262, 1270 [“self-represented litigants are generally
entitled to no special treatment”].) With regard to Chen’s English skills, he testified that
he received a graduate degree in Biomedical Sciences from the University of Iowa and a
real estate broker’s license in California, with all instruction in English. Chen does not
explain how his purportedly limited English skills impacted his ability to understand the
circumstances surrounding the marital settlement agreements or prevented him from
timely objecting to Lun’s representation of Yang.
       Even if Chen had not forfeited any claim for Lun’s disqualification, he provides no
explanation for how Lun’s conflict of interest in representing Yang—standing alone—
would constitute a “mistake” that would support the set-aside of the dissolution
judgment. In fact, Chen makes no argument at all that a mistake of law or fact informed
his execution of the quitclaim, the August marital settlement agreement or the December
addendum, or his stipulations and waivers in furtherance of the uncontested judgment.
He only contends that Yang’s attorney had a conflict and that this mandates that the
                                              8
judgment be set aside. Chen cites no authority, however, for the proposition that an
attorney’s disqualifying conflict can be the basis for setting aside a judgment
independently of section 2122’s enumerated grounds. Because an attorney’s conflict of
interest is not a statutorily recognized basis for vacating a judgment, it was Chen’s
burden to establish that this conflict—in the specific factual context of the parties’
negotiation of their agreements and election to proceed by uncontested judgment—
satisfied one of the enumerated grounds in section 2122. Because he established no such
nexus here, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying his motion.
                                   III.   DISPOSITION
       The order denying Chen’s motion to set aside the judgment of dissolution is
affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to Yang.

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                      LIE, J.

WE CONCUR:

GROVER, ACTING P.J.

WILSON, J.

Chen v. Yang
H047019