Court Opinion

ID: 9906596
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-04 18:03:01.361944+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:25:15.082603
License: Public Domain

Filed 12/4/23 Dornan v. Gonzalez CA4/1

                 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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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                COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION ONE

                                         STATE OF CALIFORNIA

LYNSY DORNAN et al.,                                                 D081096

         Plaintiffs and Appellants,

         v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No.
                                                                      37-2020-00015971-CU-FR-CTL)
ARMANDO GONZALEZ et al.,

         Defendants and Respondents.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
Joel R. Wohlfeil, Judge. Affirmed.
         Grant & Kessler, Alexander Kessler and Phillip A. Zunshine for
Plaintiffs and Appellants.
         Law Offices of Brandon M. Smith and Brandon Michael Smith for
Defendants and Respondents.
         Plaintiffs and appellants Lynsy Dornan and Tracy Wong filed a lawsuit
against defendants and respondents Armando Gonzalez and Marsha
Gonzalez to, among other claims, set aside transfers under the Uniform
Voidable Transactions Act (UVTA; Civ. Code,1 § 3439 et seq.), alleging
defendants participated in a fraudulent transfer of community and separate
property assets, including their residence, so as to prevent plaintiffs from
enforcing judgments against Armando. Following a bench trial, the court
ruled plaintiffs did not meet their burden to show it was more likely than not
that Armando and Marsha intended to convey the property to defraud
creditors generally or the plaintiffs specifically.
      Asking us to independently apply the law to what they say are
undisputed facts, plaintiffs contend the court erroneously evaluated “so-called
‘badges of fraud’ indicating such intent” (Aghaian v. Minassian, supra, 59
Cal.App.5th at p. 456) using a pure mathematical formula. According to
plaintiffs, they presented “overwhelming and undisputed evidence” (emphasis
omitted) supporting the applicable badges of fraud and the court improperly
focused on Marsha’s, rather than Armando’s, intent in reaching its decision.
We reject the contentions and affirm.
               FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
      We state the facts in part from the parties’ pretrial stipulation to facts,
and summarize other facts in the light most favorable to the judgment.
Armando and Marsha married in 1992, and as of late 2000 owned a residence
in El Cajon (the property).

1     We refer to the defendants by their first names to avoid confusion and
not out of disrespect. Undesignated statutory references are to the Civil Code
unless otherwise specified. The UVTA was formerly known as the Uniform
Fraudulent Transfer Act or UFTA. (Sturm v. Moyer (2019) 32 Cal.App.5th
299, 303 & fn. 1 [UFTA was renamed effective January 1, 2016]; see also
Aghaian v. Minassian (2020) 59 Cal.App.5th 447, 455, fn. 8.) The enactment
did not change the essential elements of a cause of action for a voidable
transfer. (Aghaian, at p. 455, fn. 8.)
                                         2
      In 2010, Armando, a Border Patrol Agent with the Department of
Homeland Security Customs and Border Patrol, was plaintiffs’ supervisor at
the Chula Vista Border Patrol Station. In 2015, a hidden camera was
discovered in the women’s restroom at that station. Armando admitted to
installing the camera, and in March 2015, he was arrested and charged with
multiple federal criminal counts.
      In mid-April 2015, Marsha, who was represented by counsel, petitioned

for divorce in San Diego Superior Court.2 Armando and Marsha thereafter
continued to live at the property. The following month, Armando pleaded
guilty to eight of the federal criminal counts.
      In early December 2015, Armando and Marsha entered into a marital
settlement agreement. Under it, Armando agreed to give Marsha one half of
his retirement plans, and Marsha was to receive title to the property, which
had debt against it owed to Marsha’s mother. Armando did not receive any
bank accounts, vehicles, or other personal possessions that were worth more
than a thousand dollars. Marsha agreed to waive her right to receive spousal
support. At the time, the total value of Armando and Marsha’s assets was
around $530,000.
      The day after they signed the marital settlement agreement, Marsha
recorded a quitclaim deed by which Armando quitclaimed his interest in the
property to her. They did not investigate the property’s value at that time,
hire an appraiser for an estimate of the home’s value, or have any
professional perform a market analysis or assess the home’s condition.
Marsha’s attorney explained to Armando that if he agreed to the settlement,

2      The court dismissed this dissolution proceeding after Marsha’s counsel
failed to appear at a three-year statute dismissal hearing. Marsha later
learned her counsel had passed away. She refiled her divorce petition in
2020, and a divorce judgment was issued in March 2021.
                                        3
Marsha would be responsible for all the accumulated debt, constituting
approximately $137,000 in loans from Marsha’s mother for the property’s
downpayment secured by a deed of trust, as well as approximately $100,000
to pay for Armando’s legal expenses. Armando believed the agreement was
fair, as Marsha wanted to keep the house and he wanted to eliminate his
debt. Armando and Marsha did not discuss the possibility he would be
exposed to civil damages related to his crimes, nor did he discuss that
possibility with Marsha’s lawyer. Armando told Marsha’s counsel that his
expectation was to be free of his debts, not to transfer the property so his
creditors could not get to it.
      Plaintiffs did not notify Armando that they were planning to file a civil
lawsuit against him at any point before he and Marsha executed the marital
settlement agreement, and Armando at the time of entering into that
agreement did not consider in any way the possibility of future civil lawsuits
being brought against him. He understood the quitclaim and transfer was
part of his and Marsha’s divorce settlement. After entering into the marital
settlement agreement, Armando did not believe he had any ownership rights
in the house or any right to live there if Marsha did not permit him; he knew
if he did not abide by Marsha’s conditions she would ask him to leave and he

had no right to refuse.3
      About a week after Armando and Marsha entered into the marital
settlement agreement, the court in the federal criminal action sentenced
Armando to 21 months in prison.

3     Only later did Armando become aware that Marsha’s divorce
proceeding had been dismissed for failure to prosecute it. He testified he and
Marsha did not reconcile after December 2015, and Armando did not pay for
any of the property’s taxes, insurance or significant maintenance and
improvements. Armando did not contest Marsha’s refiled divorce petition.
They remained legally separated until March 2021.
                                        4
      Over a year later in March 2016, plaintiffs filed a federal civil lawsuit
against Armando and others alleging privacy violations and intentional
infliction of emotional distress among other claims. Armando was released
from prison in February 2017. Plaintiffs settled their cases against the
federal government, and eventually obtained a default judgment against
Armando. In October 2018, the court in that action entered two separate
judgments awarding each plaintiff over $5.7 million in damages and attorney
fees. Armando never voluntarily made any payments on the judgments.
      In 2020, plaintiffs filed suit against Armando, Marsha and others
alleging causes of action under the UVTA to set aside voidable transactions,
as well as for fraud and declaratory relief. In their operative first amended
complaint, plaintiffs alleged in part that Armando’s transfer of the property
to Marsha, and other transfers of money, negotiable instruments and
other personal property, were “made with the actual intent to hinder,
delay, or defraud the creditors of Armando in violation of . . . [section]
3439.04[, subdivision] (a)(1).”
      The matter proceeded to a bench trial solely on plaintiffs’ causes of
action related to the property’s transfer. Plaintiffs’ counsel agreed the court’s
findings relating to the statutory UVTA cause of action would encompass
those findings needed for plaintiffs’ common law fraud and declaratory relief
claims. He also agreed it was plaintiffs’ burden to make a prima facie
showing of inadequate consideration and intent.
      The sole witnesses at trial were Armando and Marsha. In part,
Armando testified that about the time he and Marsha entered into the
marital settlement agreement he never considered that he might face civil
liability to the plaintiffs, because his attention was on going to prison and his
criminal case. After he pleaded guilty, he focused on going to therapy and his

                                        5
mental health, the idea that he was a prison-bound former law enforcement
officer, and how his actions had hurt others. He believed that in 2015 and
2016, he did not take steps to separate his assets from Marsha’s.
      In addition to the circumstances of her and Armando’s marital
settlement agreement, Marsha described her relationship problems with
Armando, which predated January 2015, and the reasons behind her
ultimate decision to file for divorce. She first contemplated divorce in mid-
2013, but finally made the decision in January 2015 after Armando was
detained, stating she felt she failed as a wife, failed in her efforts to get him
help, and failed in helping him maintain his faith, which she described as the
foundation for their marriage. She denied her decision was motivated by a
desire to protect their home from potential creditors. She told her divorce
attorney during her initial conversation with him that she just wanted the
house. Neither she nor Armando had the financial means to buy out the
other in the property and it had debts, so her lawyer arranged what he
believed was a fair way for her to obtain the house in the proceeding,
including by her waiving all spousal support for the rest of her life and taking
on Armando’s debt. The divorce attorney amended the agreement later to
give Marsha one half of Armando’s retirement pay. Marsha’s counsel
explained the terms of the marital settlement agreement to Armando. At the
time Marsha entered into it, she relied on her counsel’s advice and opinion
about the agreement’s fairness. She did not try to tell her attorney what she
thought was fair or valuable.
      Marsha also testified that before signing the marital settlement
agreement, she never discussed with either Armando or her lawyer the
possibility of Armando’s exposure to civil damages relating to his crimes, and
she was not aware of any threats by the plaintiffs or any other victims that

                                         6
they were going to sue Armando. She did not consider that possibility in any
way in entering into the agreement. When he was preparing the agreement,
Marsha’s lawyer did not tell her there might be consequences to Armando’s
criminal conviction or a potential civil action.
      Marsha confirmed that she accurately depicted her feelings about her
husband and her thought processes in seeking a divorce in a lengthy letter
that she had submitted to the court in Armando’s criminal matter. At the
time she decided she wanted to file for divorce, she had no knowledge of what
was going on with Armando’s criminal charges; he had not at that time
pleaded guilty to the offenses and she had not personally made up her mind
whether she believed the allegations against him. After she made her
decision to divorce Armando, they continued to live in the house, but ended
their intimate relations. They slept in separate locations, and Marsha
imposed conditions that he continue his faith and undergo therapy, as he had
previously contemplated suicide. Marsha permitted Armando to move back
into the house after he was released from prison under the same conditions.
Before and after his incarceration, Armando gave Marsha assistance with her
medical condition, administering medication, overseeing her, and taking her
to some doctor appointments. That assistance factored into Marsha’s
decision to allow him to reside in her house. She testified that since her and
Armando’s March 1, 2015 date of separation, they had never reconciled in a
marital way.
      As of the time of trial, Marsha, Armando and Armando’s brother
resided at the property. Armando did not pay rent, and Marsha paid for the
property’s upkeep as well as household expenses and bills. Armando
admitted he owed over $11.5 million on the judgments.

                                        7
      After the close of evidence, the court acknowledged the pleadings and
exhibits it had reviewed, including the parties’ trial briefs, the quitclaim
deed, the marital settlement agreement, and Marsha’s letter to the
sentencing court. It said: “I have read plenty going into this morning’s trial.
But I’ve got an awfully good idea of your respective theories and the evidence
that I suspect that you’re going to bring to my attention that supports your
theory. [¶] Now, ultimately, though, plaintiff[s] bear[ ] the burden of proof.
And what I’d like to suggest we do, is that let’s just go through each of the 11
factors or badges [of fraud]. I keep wanting to call them elements. They’re
not really elements, I understand. But, ultimately, depending upon how
many of those plaintiff[s] ha[ve] carried their burden will dictate whether or
not plaintiff[s] win or [don’t] win. But it really does come down, to from the
Court’s perspective, whether plaintiffs ha[ve] carried their burden. [¶] So
let’s just go through them, without playing favors one way or the other . . . .”

                                        8
      The court and counsel discussed the badges of fraud, and the court

made findings as to each.4 Thereafter, the court issued its ruling from the
bench. It acknowledged that the plaintiffs had done nothing wrong. It also
acknowledged circumstances of tragedy, in part reflected in Marsha’s letter to
the sentencing court in Armando’s criminal matter. The court explained it
was “not shy” about rendering plaintiff’s verdicts generally, but that the case
before it had unusual “nuances.” It said: “The fact that there was a lawyer
involved actually calls into question the soundness of plaintiffs’ theory, bodes
well for the defense.· . . . The court sees fraudulent conveyances, whether it’s
in context of a true fraudulent conveyance lawsuit or not, but I see those
transactions a lot. But I don’t often see lawyers who are memorializing, who
are giving it some level of propriety. It’s usually the parties themselves that
are creating these without counsel involved. [¶] I recognize that from
plaintiffs’ perspective, the fact that Mr. and Mrs. Gonzalez, although
divorced, have continued to live under the same roof, calls into question the

4     After allowing counsel to give input on each factor, the court found that
the evidence showed the property transfer to Marsha was to an insider;
plaintiffs did not prove Armando retained possession or control over the
property after the transfer; the property transfer was disclosed; plaintiffs
proved a reasonable person in Armando’s position would have understood he
was at risk of a civil lawsuit by one or more of the individuals who he
captured on hidden camera; plaintiffs did not show in light of Armando’s 20-
year federal pension that the transfer was of substantially all of his assets;
Armando did not abscond, or deceptively remove or conceal assets; plaintiffs
proved Armando did not receive reasonably equivalent consideration in the
transfer; Armando was not insolvent at the time of the transfer, but became
so shortly thereafter; and plaintiffs proved the transfer occurred shortly
before a substantial debt, meaning the contingent liability arising from
Armando’s criminal conduct. The court found the last badge—relating to
transfer of assets to a lienholder who then transferred to an insider—
inapplicable. The court then expressed that plaintiffs had carried their
burden on five of the badges, but failed “in whole or in part” on eight of them.

                                       9
genuineness of this transaction, that it suggests that Mr. Gonzalez really is
driving this ship. After having spent three years in the family department,
though, I can assure you that these arrangements are not as uncommon as
you might think they are. And I think that’s probably happened a lot more,
given what’s going on with the cost of housing. The alternative is that one or
both of them end up on the street. So the good news is that it appears, from
the court, that Mr. and Mrs. Gonzalez are civil, if not enjoy a cooperative
relationship. . . . [¶] So this isn’t as odd of an arrangement, as, say,
plaintiff[s] might suggest. Counsel’s argument . . . that the house had to go
to someone resonates with the court.”
      The court found in defendants’ favor, ruling “[g]iven the totality of the
record” that the plaintiffs did not meet their burden: “I know that’s
extremely disappointing from plaintiffs’ perspective. But I’m just not
persuaded that you’ve shown that it’s more likely true than not that the
Gonzalez’ intended to convey the subject property to defraud creditors
generally or the plaintiffs intentionally.”
      Plaintiffs filed this appeal from the ensuing judgment.
                                 DISCUSSION
                               I. Legal Principles
      The Legislature in the UVTA “permits defrauded creditors to reach
property in the hands of a transferee.” (Mejia v. Reed (2003) 31 Cal.4th 657,
663; see also Renda v. Nevarez (2014) 223 Cal.App.4th 1231, 1235; Aghaian v.
Minassian, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th at p. 455.) Under it, “[a] transfer made or
obligation incurred by a debtor is voidable as to a creditor, whether the
creditor’s claim arose before or after the transfer was made or the obligation
was incurred, if the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation,” as
relevant here, “with actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor of

                                        10
the debtor.” (§ 3439.04, subd. (a)(1); see also Filip v. Bucurenciu (2005) 129
Cal.App.4th 825, 829 (Filip) [fraudulent transfer involves “ ‘ “a transfer by
the debtor of property to a third person undertaken with the intent to prevent

a creditor from reaching that interest to satisfy its claim” ’ ”].)5 “In
furtherance of the state’s ‘general policy of protecting creditors from
fraudulent transfers, including transfers between spouses,’ the UVTA applies
to property transfers made pursuant to a marital settlement agreement
incorporated into a judgment of dissolution.” (Aghaian, at p. 455, quoting
Mejia v. Reed, at p. 668.) It can even apply to a premarital agreement
between prospective spouses designating as separate property each spouse’s
earnings, income and other property acquired during marriage. (Sturm v.
Moyer, supra, 32 Cal.App.5th at pp. 303, 315.)
      The UVTA “anticipates imaginative debtors will employ an array of
tactics to evade payment obligations.” (Nagel v. Westen (2021) 59
Cal.App.5th 740, 749-750.) “[T]o help the trier of fact discern when a debtor

5     “[S]ection 3439.04 provides two methods of establishing a fraudulent
transfer. Actual fraud, as defined in subdivision (a)(1), is a transfer made
with ‘actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor of the debtor.’
Constructive fraud, as defined in subdivision (a)(2), requires a showing that
the debtor did not receive ‘reasonably equivalent’ value for the transfer, and
the transfer was made when the debtor ‘(A) [w]as engaged or was about to
engage in a business or a transaction for which the remaining assets of the
debtor were unreasonably small in relation to the business or transaction’; or
(B) the debtor ‘[i]ntended to incur, or believed or reasonably should have
believed that he or she would incur, debts beyond his or her ability to pay as
they became due.’ Section 3439.04 is construed to mean a transfer is
fraudulent if the provisions of either subdivision (a)(1) or subdivision (a)(2)
are satisfied.” (Optional Capital, Inc. v. DAS Corp. (2014) 222 Cal.App.4th
1388, 1401-1402.) Plaintiffs in their trial brief argued only that the transfer
violated subdivision (a)(1) of section 3439.04, not that Armando engaged in
constructive fraud.

                                        11
has crossed the often blurry line between legitimate asset protection planning
and voidable maneuvering,” the law “enumerates eleven characteristics or
‘ “badges of fraud” ’. . . .” (Id. at p. 748.) The factors are “nonexclusive,” and
assist to determine the existence or nonexistence of actual intent to hinder,
delay or defraud creditors. (Legis. Com. com, Deering’s Ann. Civil Code,
§ 3439.04.) The factors are: “(1) Whether the transfer or obligation was to an
insider. [¶] (2) Whether the debtor retained possession or control of the
property transferred after the transfer. [¶] (3) Whether the transfer or
obligation was disclosed or concealed. [¶] (4) Whether before the transfer
was made or obligation was incurred, the debtor had been sued or threatened
with suit. [¶] (5) Whether the transfer was of substantially all the debtor’s
assets. [¶] (6) Whether the debtor absconded. [¶] (7) Whether the debtor
removed or concealed assets. [¶] (8) Whether the value of the consideration
received by the debtor was reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset
transferred or the amount of the obligation incurred. [¶] (9) Whether the
debtor was insolvent or became insolvent shortly after the transfer was made
or the obligation was incurred. [¶] (10) Whether the transfer occurred
shortly before or shortly after a substantial debt was incurred. [¶] [and] [¶]
(11) Whether the debtor transferred the essential assets of the business to a
lienor that transferred the assets to an insider of the debtor.” (§ 3439.04,
subd. (b).)
      “None of these factors is determinative, and no minimum or maximum
number of factors is required.” (Aghaian v. Minassian, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th
at p. 456; see also Filip, supra, 129 Cal.App.4th at p. 834.) In Filip, the court
explained the factors “do not create a mathematical formula to establish
actual intent. There is no minimum number of factors that must be present
before the scales tip in favor of finding of actual intent to defraud. This list of

                                        12
factors is meant to provide guidance to the trial court, not compel a finding
one way or the other.” (Id. at p. 834.) “The presence of one or more badges of
fraud does not create a presumption of fraud. Rather, it is merely evidence
from which an inference of fraudulent intent may be drawn.” (Legis. Com.
com., Deering’s Ann. Civil Code, § 3439.04.)
      Ultimately, “[w]hether a conveyance was made with fraudulent intent
is a question of fact, and proof often consists of inferences from the
circumstances surrounding the transfer.” (Filip, supra, 129 Cal.App.4th at p.
834; see also Aghaian v. Minassian, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th at p. 455 [whether
debtor had the actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor is a
question of fact]; Sturm v. Moyer, supra, 32 Cal.App.5th at p. 315 [“Whether
the UFTA applies in this (or any) case depends upon whether there was
actual or constructive fraud under . . . section 3439.04. That issue is a factual
one . . . .”]; Universal Home Improvement, Inc. v. Robertson (2020) 51
Cal.App.5th 116, 126 [“The issue of whether a transfer was made with
fraudulent intent is a question of fact”]; Nautilus, Inc. v. Yang (2017) 11
Cal.App.5th 33, 40; Annod Corp. v. Hamilton & Samuels (2002) 100
Cal.App.4th 1286, 1294.) A creditor seeking relief under section 3439.04,
subdivision (a) bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence.
(§ 3439.04, subd. (c).)
                            II. Standard of Review
      The parties dispute the relevant standard of review. Plaintiffs say
“[w]hether the trial court should have evaluated the badges of fraud using a
pure mathematical formula is a question of law that is reviewed de novo.”
They further argue the relevant facts at trial were undisputed, and that this
court must independently review the application of law to undisputed facts.
Citing Universal Home Improvement, Inc. v. Robertson, supra, 51 Cal.App.5th

                                       13
116, they maintain “a trial court’s conclusion of whether a transfer is voidable
under the UVTA is a question of law reviewed de novo.”
      For their part, defendants argue based on In re I.W. (2009) 180
Cal.App.4th 1517 (disapproved on another ground in Conservatorship of O.B.
(2020) 9 Cal.5th 989, 1003, fn. 7) that where the issues on appeal turn on a
failure of proof at trial, the question for the reviewing court is “whether the
evidence compels a finding in favor of the appellant as a matter of law.”
Quoting from that case (In re I.W., at p. 1528), they argue “the question
becomes whether the appellant’s evidence was (1) ‘uncontradicted and
unimpeached’ and (2) ‘of such a character and weight as to leave no room for
a judicial determination that it was insufficient to support a finding.’ ”
According to defendants, because plaintiffs disregarded this standard and an
appellate court must presume the appealed judgment is correct, they have

                                       14
waived review of the first two issues presented in their opening appellate

brief.6
      We agree independent review is appropriate to assess plaintiffs’
arguments challenging the court’s analysis of the UVTA fraudulent transfer
issue. Plaintiffs’ claims both that the court erred by performing a
“mathematical calculation” and by considering Marsha’s intent in
determining whether a fraudulent transfer took place sound in legal error.
      However, as set out above and confirmed by plaintiffs’ own cited
authority, the court’s assessment of the requisite intent to hinder, delay or
defraud creditors is a factual inquiry. This is so even where the underlying
facts are undisputed, as the matter requires drawing inferences from those
facts. “[I]t is settled that when conflicting inferences may be drawn from
undisputed facts, the reviewing court must accept the inference drawn by the
trier of fact so long as it is reasonable.” (Boling v. Public Employment

6      Defendants also contend that plaintiffs’ opening brief fails to set forth
all material evidence on the issues or set forth any prejudice standard,
likewise forfeiting their appeal. Plaintiffs respond that undisputed facts,
including Armando’s admissions, showed Armando transferred the property
to Marsha with intent to hinder delay or defraud creditors. They assert
defendants do not identify what material facts they supposedly withheld. It
is true that where an appellant does not fairly set forth all the evidence, but
states only facts favorable to it, this court may treat a sufficiency of the
evidence challenge as forfeited. (Estes v. Eaton Corp. (2020) 51 Cal.App.5th
636, 650-651; Pope v. Babick (2014) 229 Cal.App.4th 1238, 1246.) But
plaintiffs do not raise a sufficiency of the evidence challenge here, so we have
no basis to apply the principle. As for prejudice, plaintiffs argue they clearly
explained the harm caused by the court’s error in using a mathematical
formula. Specifically, they maintain they showed prejudice by arguing the
“undisputed facts so clearly demonstrate that the transfer of the . . . property
was a voidable transfer, no court should have ruled in [defendants’] favor.”
Because we hold below that the plaintiffs have not shown the court erred in
conducting its analysis of the UVTA, we need not decide whether plaintiffs
demonstrated prejudice.
                                       15
Relations Board (2018) 5 Cal.5th 898, 913; Universal Home Improvement,
Inc. v. Robertson, supra, 51 Cal.App.5th at p. 126.) Thus, even if the court’s
findings here were based on some undisputed facts, we may affirm them
“under the rule of conflicting inferences by which we must indulge all
reasonable inferences in favor of the . . . party that prevailed below.” (Husain
v. California Pacific Bank (2021) 61 Cal.App.5th 717, 732 [“where [plaintiff’s]
essential position is that the facts are undisputed, the conflicting inference
rule pertains even if the facts were undisputed”].) In Universal Home
Improvement, Inc. v. Robertson, supra, 51 Cal.App.5th 116, relied upon by
plaintiffs, the appellate court undertook de novo review of a trial court’s

conclusions of law. (Id. at pp. 126-127.)7 Universal Home Improvement does
not compel us to independently review the issue of fraudulent intent in this
case.
                     III. Trial Court’s Analysis of the UVTA
        Plaintiffs contend the court erred in its analysis of the UVTA and
whether plaintiffs met their burden of proof by (1) considering the badges of
fraud as a mathematical formula and (2) focusing on Marsha’s intent. As
stated, these contentions sound in legal error, so we assess them
independently as questions of law. Doing so, however, we reject them.
        In considering these claims, we apply the fundamental appellate review
standard by which we presume the correctness of the court’s judgment and

7     Some of those conclusions of law were that the defendant had a right
under a Civil Code provision to prefer one creditor (her sister) over other
creditors; that the existence of one or more badges of fraud was “not a
mathematical formula and [did] not compel a finding one way or another”;
that certain case authorities were not effectively overruled by 2004
amendments to the UFTA; a payment did not toll the statute of limitations
on one of the defendant’s debts to her sister; and other case authorities
“remain[ed] good law.” (Universal Home Improvement, Inc. v. Robertson,
supra, 51 Cal.App.5th at pp. 126-127.)
                                        16
indulge all presumptions to support it. (Universal Home Improvement, Inc. v.
Robertson, supra, 51 Cal.App.5th at p. 125; LNSU #1, LLC v. Alta Del Mar
Coastal Collection Community Association (2023) 94 Cal.App.5th 1050, 1070.)
Under Evidence Code section 664, we further presume the court’s official
duties are regularly performed; this presumption applies to all actions of trial
judges. Under this standard, “ ‘[i]f the invalidity does not appear on the face
of the record, it will be presumed that what ought to have been done was not
only done but rightly done.’ ” (Elena S. v. Kroutik (2016) 247 Cal.App.4th
570, 575.) The presumption may be dispelled when the record affirmatively
shows a failure to apply the requisite standards. (In re Hare (2010) 189
Cal.App.4th 1278, 1292 [presumption is rebutted when “ ‘irregularity is
clearly shown’ ”].)
A. Asserted Use of Mathematical Formula
      We cannot agree, viewing the entire record and the court’s remarks,
that they clearly show the court somehow used the badges of fraud as a strict
test to determine Armando’s fraudulent intent. Contrary to plaintiffs’
argument, the court did not “state[ ] that it would view the badges as a
mathematical formula.” Plaintiffs point to the court’s remarks that it wanted
to go through all of the 11 badges, and “ultimately, depending on how many

of those plaintiff has carried their burden [sic]8 will dictate whether or not
plaintiff wins or doesn’t win [sic].” (Emphasis and some capitalization
omitted.) They also point to the court’s statement, “So, right now, plaintiff is
[sic] ahead one to nothing.”

8       In recounting the court’s comment in their opening brief, plaintiffs
eliminate the words “their burden” and set out the court’s statement as:
“. . . ultimately, depending on how many of those plaintiff has carried [ ] will
dictate whether or not plaintiff wins or doesn’t win.” We think it significant
that the court referenced the plaintiffs’ burden, suggesting it was not
necessarily focusing strictly on the 11 factors.
                                       17
      But plaintiffs take these comments in isolation. Plaintiffs and
defendants in their respective trial briefs identified the 11 badges of fraud
with plaintiffs emphasizing they did not create a mathematical formula to
establish actual intent. After the close of evidence, plaintiffs’ counsel
reminded the court of that same principle, as well as law (In re Beverly
(Bankr. 9th Cir. 2007) 374 B.R. 221) stating that a court may find intent even
absent badges of fraud. The court acknowledged reviewing both trial briefs.
We must presume (Evid. Code, § 664) it was well aware of the correct use of
the section 3439.04 factors, and did properly use them as merely guidance in
determining fraudulent intent. The remarks highlighted by plaintiffs
constituted the court’s “suggest[ion]” that it and counsel go through each
factor, and in assessing them, it recognized that “some of them . . . are at
least from the court’s perspective, more important than others.”
Significantly, after the court’s statement about what would dictate whether
plaintiffs would or would not prevail, it said, “But it really does come down to,
from the court’s perspective, whether plaintiffs ha[ve] carried their burden.”
The court also emphasized that in assessing the 11 factors it would not “play
[ ] favors one way or the other.” After assessing the factors with counsel, it
then acknowledged those on which plaintiffs met their burden, and those on
which they did not: “So we’ve gone through the analysis, and plaintiff[s]
ha[ve] carried your burden either in whole or in part, by the court’s count, on
five of those badges, but ha[ve] failed to carry your burden in whole or in part
on eight. Now, I understand that totals more than 11, but in part, there were
a couple of badges that plaintiff[s] prevailed and part on a couple of those
same badges plaintiff[s] did not prevail. So the total number of that
accounted for either side exceeds 11.”

                                         18
       The parties then presented arguments, during which defendants’
counsel addressed “the overall situation.” In reaching its decision in
defendants’ favor, the court relied more broadly on evidence concerning
Marsha and Armando’s marital situation, the circumstances surrounding
their entry into the marital settlement agreement, and expressly, the
“totality of the record . . . .”
       A court does not err in conducting an analysis of the relevant factors by
addressed each as contemplated by the Legislature, as the trial court did
here. It is evident in this case that the court did not end its analysis there; it
weighed consideration of the factors with other evidence surrounding the
parties’ marital settlement agreement, and ultimately considered the entirety
of the record to determine whether plaintiffs met their burden to show a
fraudulent transfer. Under the circumstances, we do not view the isolated
remarks highlighted by plaintiffs as a showing of clear irregularity (In re
Hare, supra, 189 Cal.App.4th at p. 1292) so as to rebut the presumption that
the trial court correctly used the section 3439.04 factors not as a strict
formula dictating the outcome, but to simply assist it in drawing inferences
as to the existence or nonexistence of the requisite intent.
B. Court’s Reliance on Marsha’s Intent
       Plaintiffs contend the trial court improperly reached its decision by
“nearly exclusively” focusing on Marsha’s intent rather than Armando’s, as
well as other “irrelevant” factors such as Marsha’s use of her divorce attorney

                                        19
to effect the property’s transfer.9 They assert the court’s analysis was
contrary to section 3439.04, subdivision (a), which requires a showing of the
transferor’s, not the transferee’s, intent to hinder, delay or defraud a creditor,
as well as Mejia v. Reed, supra, 31 Cal.4th 657. Plaintiffs highlight the
California Supreme Court’s statement in Mejia that “it is unlikely that the
Legislature intended to grant married couples a one-time-only opportunity to
defraud creditors by including the fraudulent transfer in [a marital
settlement agreement].” (Mejia, at p. 668.) They argue, “While Marsha was
certainly free to divorce Armando, the law does not allow her to take all of the
community property in that divorce and leave Armando’s creditors with no
way to recover any portion of their debts. Doing so is a fraudulent transfer.”
      The merits of the plaintiffs’ claim of actual fraud so as to void a marital
settlement agreement under the former UFTA was not at issue in Mejia v.
Reed, supra, 31 Cal.4th 657. Mejia held generally the law applies to
transfers under marital settlement agreements. (Id. at pp. 661, 663.) Mejia
as well as Sturm v. Moyer, supra, 32 Cal.App.5th 299 do hold that the UVTA
can apply to marital settlement agreements or premarital agreements,
but that “does not mean that it necessarily will apply to invalidate the
agreement . . . .” (Sturm, at p. 315.) That question, as discussed above,
depends on proof of actual (or constructive) fraud under section 3439.04, a
factual issue for the court (ibid), which must reach its finding guided but not

9      In making these arguments, plaintiffs characterize Armando’s intent as
“plain and obvious given the circumstances of the transfer and the existence
of all relevant badges of fraud . . . .” As indicated below, the record contains
direct evidence of Armando’s intent. But even if that evidence must be
weighed against the badges of fraud, that issue was subject to the rule of
conflicting inferences, and here, the court drew a contrary inference
supporting defendants’ position that there was an absence of intent. We
conclude below that its decision in that respect was a reasonable one.
                                       20
compelled by any particular section 3439.04, subdivision (b) factor. (Aghaian
v. Minassian, supra, 59 Cal.App.5th at p. 456.)
      While it is true that the UVTA requires proof of the relevant intent on
the transferor’s part, that does not mean a court’s analysis is as narrow or
circumscribed as plaintiffs suggest. Intent is often proven by circumstantial
evidence (see Sosa v. Cashcall, Inc. (2020) 49 Cal.App.5th 42, 51), and in our
view, the transferor’s state of mind may be inferred from not only that
person’s statements or acts, but from other evidence including the
transferee’s statements and actions, particularly where the transfer at issue
is effected by a marital settlement agreement between spouses. We see no
reason why the trial court here could not draw inferences about Armando’s
intent from Marsha’s actions and decisions, combined with the other evidence
in the record before it.
      But here, we see no clear indication in the record that the court limited
its consideration to, or overly focused upon, Marsha’s intent. Indeed, the trial
court’s conclusion necessarily encompassed Armando’s intent: it ruled
plaintiffs had not proven by a preponderance of evidence that both parties
intended to convey the property to hinder or defraud them specifically or
creditors generally. In reaching its conclusion, the court considered the
entire record, which contains direct evidence of Armando’s intent in entering
into the marital settlement agreement. Armando’s testimony in that respect
was that the possibility of future civil damages against him was not a
consideration; by entering into the marital settlement agreement he sought
to eliminate his debt, not to transfer the property out of the reach of
creditors. In Armando’s view, the quitclaim and transfer was simply part of
his and Marsha’s divorce settlement. The court accounted for the reasons
why both parties entered into the marital settlement agreement, and the fact

                                       21
it was prompted not by Armando, but by Marsha’s decision to divorce him
after the deterioration of their marriage, which according to both parties
began before Armando’s March 2015 arrest. It found: “[I]t appears to me
that from [Marsha’s] perspective, the marriage was collapsing, if not had
collapsed, well before the criminal proceedings were instigated, looks to me,
like going back to at least [20]13.” The evidence showed that Marsha
initiated divorce proceedings and the parties signed the marital settlement
agreement before plaintiffs filed their civil suit and obtained their judgments
against Armando, permitting a reasonable inference that the marital
settlement agreement and quitclaim was not motivated by the possibility of a
civil judgment against Armando, or the intent to delay, hinder or defraud
potential creditors.
      In sum, the record does not clearly demonstrate any irregularity; the
court did not reach a decision based solely or mostly on Marsha’s intent to the
exclusion of evidence of Armando’s intent. We reject plaintiffs’ argument that
it erred as a matter of law in this respect.
                   IV. Ruling on Plaintiffs’ Burden of Proof
      Plaintiffs contend the court erred in its various rulings as to the badges
of fraud, as well as by concluding they did not meet their burden of proof.
Specifically, they maintain only seven of the 11 badges of fraud were relevant
and all seven were supported by the undisputed evidence. According to
plaintiffs, on those seven badges, either the trial court found in their favor or
it clearly erred by not finding in their favor. Plaintiffs further complain that
even though the trial court found they carried their burden to prove the
existence of five badges of fraud, it nevertheless ruled in defendants’ favor,
which they say is “unprecedented” and “makes no sense.” Plaintiffs suggest
that Armando’s uncontroverted admissions to certain circumstances about

                                        22
the property transfer’s timing and impact on him, the consideration given,
and his continued residence at the property, should have compelled the trial
court to find a “textbook” fraudulent transfer. They say “[t]he trial court’s
failure to find in [their] favor, even after finding that [they] carried their
burden on five badges of fraud, compels reversal of the judgment and entry of
judgment in [their] favor . . . .” (Capitalization omitted.)
      This latter argument seems to us to advocate the very mathematical
formulaic approach that plaintiffs assert is improper. The presence of one or
more badges of fraud, or even all of the badges of fraud, is not outcome
determinative; such evidence merely guides the court in reaching its ultimate
conclusion as to the requisite intent to delay, hinder or defraud creditors such
that a fraudulent transfer has taken place. They do not compel an outcome
one way or the other. We will not reverse the judgment based simply on the
fact the court found evidence demonstrating the existence of some or even
most of the applicable badges of fraud.
      We have already rejected plaintiffs’ position that our review of the
court’s decision is de novo because the relevant facts are assertedly
undisputed. As indicated above, the question of intent is typically reached by
drawing inferences from the evidence, even uncontroverted evidence.
(Universal Home Improvement, Inc. v. Robertson, supra, 51 Cal.App.5th at p.
126.) Where the evidence gives rise to conflicting inferences, we must defer
to the trial court’s choice as long as it is reasonable. (Ibid.; see Milton v.
Perceptual Develop. Corp. (1997) 53 Cal.App.4th 861, 867.) We also defer to
the court’s credibility determinations (Duran v. U.S. Bank National Assn.
(2014) 59 Cal.4th 1, 49) and must accept them unless the testimony is
incredible on its face, inherently improbable, or wholly unacceptable to

                                        23
reasonable minds. (Nevarez v. Tonna (2014) 227 Cal.App.4th 774, 786.)
None of Armando or Marsha’s testimony falls into that narrow exception.
      The trial court drew inferences and credited the parties’ testimony that
they were not motivated in reaching their marital settlement by the potential
for a civil judgment against Armando. Given the evidence outlined above,
particularly as to Armando’s intent in entering into the marital settlement
agreement and the circumstances surrounding his transfer of the property to
Marsha, the court’s ruling was a reasonable one. We decline to reweigh the
factors pertinent to a finding of fraudulent transfer or the witnesses’
credibility and reach a determination contrary to the court’s express and
implied credibility findings. Our inquiry ends with the determination that
Marsha’s and Armando’s testimony was not incredible on its face, inherently
improbable, or wholly unacceptable to reasonable minds.
                                DISPOSITION
      The judgment is affirmed.

                                                       O’ROURKE, Acting P. J.

WE CONCUR:

DO, J.

CASTILLO, J.

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