Court Opinion

ID: 8482601
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-09 18:01:27.860049+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:49:40.177837
License: Public Domain

Filed 11/9/22 Marriage of Moreno CA3
                                           NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
                                      THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                                        (Placer)
                                                            ----

In re the Marriage of CHRISTINA DURAN MORENO                                                   C095252
and MIGUEL ANGEL MORENO.

CHRISTINA DURAN MORENO,                                                         (Super. Ct. No. SDR0051619)

                   Appellant,

         v.

MIGUEL ANGEL MORENO,

                   Respondent.

         In a January 2020 marital property settlement agreement, which was attached to a
subsequent judgment of dissolution, appellant Christina Duran Moreno (Christina)1 and
respondent Miguel Angel Moreno (Miguel) agreed regarding the division of most of their

1 As is customary in marital dissolution cases, we refer to the parties by their first names
for ease of reading and to avoid confusion. (In re Marriage of Campi (2013)
212 Cal.App.4th 1565, 1567, fn. 1.)

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property and assets, with the understanding that a subsequent expert report would
characterize and value the investment and retirement accounts as of a certain date.
Following trial on several reserved issues, the trial court confirmed to the parties their
respective retirement accounts and ordered Miguel to pay an equalizing payment to
Christina from his 401(k) account via a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO).2
The court also ordered the parties to equally pay the expert’s costs.
       On appeal, Christina contends the trial court erred in failing to include gains and
losses on the QDRO equalizing payment. She further contends the court erred in equally
allocating all of the expert’s fees in assessing the parties’ investment accounts, rather than
allocating only those expert fees incurred after Miguel belatedly disclosed various 401(k)
information, which required additional expert analysis.
       We conclude that Christina is entitled to the gains and losses on the equalizing
payment. We further conclude that the trial court did not allocate all of the expert’s fees
to the parties equally, but rather addressed only those additional fees incurred to prepare
his revised report. Accordingly, we shall modify the judgment to clarify that Miguel
shall pay Christina the equalizing payment as of December 31, 2019, plus any gains and
minus any losses, until the payment is divided pursuant to the QDRO, and that the parties
shall share equally the cost of the expert’s additional fees for revising his report. As so
modified, we shall affirm the judgment.

2  “Under provisions of the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.; hereafter ERISA), private retirement plans may, pursuant to a
state court’s domestic relations order, pay a portion of an employee participant’s
retirement benefits directly to the employee’s former spouse or dependents, if and only if
the state court order meets certain specifications. Such an order is a ‘qualified domestic
relations order’ . . . . (29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3).)” (In re Marriage of Oddino (1997)
16 Cal.4th 67, 71.)

                                              2
                         FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS
       Christina and Miguel married in September 2004, had two children together, and
separated in September 2016. Christina filed for divorce in January 2017, and the status
of the marriage was dissolved at Miguel’s request in November 2017.
       The parties resolved most of the marital property issues through private mediation.
In January 2020, the parties executed a Property and Spousal Support Settlement
Agreement, dividing the majority of their assets and permanently waiving spousal
support. The marital settlement agreement was “subject to [the] final determination of
values of the bank accounts at November 1, 2016 and the characterization of the
investment and retirement accounts as of December 31, 2019, as further determined by
[expert] Seth Kaplan.” The settlement agreement also required Miguel to pay Christina
an equalizing payment of $20,000 from his share of the bank accounts awarded to him
under the agreement. Each party was to bear his or her own attorney’s fees and costs.
       On March 13, 2020, the court entered a judgment of dissolution, which included
the parties’ marital settlement agreement. The dissolution judgment reserved jurisdiction
over all other issues.
       Trial on the reserved issues commenced on August 25, 2020. Although Kaplan
had prepared an expert tracing report on the parties’ various investment and retirement
accounts shortly before trial, Miguel apparently had failed to provide Kaplan with
documentation regarding Christina’s 401(k) account, which Miguel had received months
earlier at the house they formerly shared. The court therefore reserved its decision on the
retirement account issue to await Kaplan’s revised report incorporating the newly
disclosed information.
       Because Miguel belatedly disclosed the 401(k) information, Christina’s counsel
requested that the court order him to pay for any additional fees Kaplan incurred in
revising his tracing report. The court ordered Miguel to bear the cost of any updated

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Kaplan report based on the new information, but “reserve[d] jurisdiction to reallocate up
to 50 percent of that cost upon a showing that is reasonable under the circumstances.”
       On December 1, 2020, the trial court issued a Memorandum of Tentative
Decision. The court adopted the calculations in Kaplan’s revised report, which the
parties submitted by stipulation in September 2020. Based on Kaplan’s revised
calculations, the court awarded Christina $619,145 in her retirement and cash accounts,
and awarded Miguel $832,146 in his retirement and cash accounts. In order to equalize
the division of the pension, retirement, brokerage, and bank accounts, the court ordered
Miguel to pay Christina an equalizing payment of $126,501.3
       As to expert costs, the tentative decision found that under the prior marital
settlement agreement, the parties were responsible for their respective attorneys’ fees and
costs, “except for the costs incurred with Seth Kaplan.” The court found that both
Miguel and Christina had substantial, and essentially comparable, assets and income, and
exercised its discretion to order that the parties share Kaplan’s expert costs equally.
       Miguel objected to the court’s Memorandum of Tentative Decision on several
grounds and requested a Statement of Decision. In order to address an alleged
unintended tax windfall to Christina, Miguel requested that the court enter a QDRO to
distribute the $126,501 equalization payment to Christina from his 401(k) account. As
for Kaplan’s charges, Miguel argued that to avoid confusion, the court should state that
all of Kaplan’s charges during the dissolution litigation were to be shared equally, and
that the difference between the amounts paid to Kaplan should be equalized by adjusting
the $126,501 equalizing payment, either up if Christina paid him more, or down, if
Miguel paid him more.

3  The total equalizing payment included the initial $20,000 equalization payment
stipulated to in the marital settlement agreement plus $106,501.

                                              4
       Christina responded to Miguel’s objections, arguing that the only thing the
tentative decision determined regarding Kaplan’s fees was that the parties should pay
equally for the additional amounts incurred in revising his report because Miguel had
failed to timely provide Kaplan with the most recent 401(k) reports and summaries. She
asserted that the totality of Kaplan’s fees, and the payment thereof, were not presented to
the court for decision during the trial on reserved issues, and ordering her to pay any
portion of those fees violated the parties’ prior marital settlement agreement where they
each agreed to pay their own attorneys’ fees and costs.
       On April 22, 2021, the trial court issued an order denying the objections to the
Memorandum of Tentative Decision and proposals for a Statement of Decision, and
adopted its tentative decision as its Statement of Decision. The court filed a signed
judgment on reserved issues on August 27, 2021.
       An attachment to the judgment on reserved issues states the following:
“5. Equalization Payment:
       “a) Respondent, Miguel Moreno, owes to Petition[er], Christina Duran Moreno,
from the above the total of $126,501 as of December 31, 2019. Such shall be paid
through a division of the retirement plan as follows:
              “1) A Qualified Domestic Relations Order shall be prepared to equalize the
division of the retirement accounts which provides Petitioner, Christina Duran Moreno,
and interest, in the amount of $126,501 (which includes the $20,000 equalizing payment
from Section 4, above) from the Intel 401(k)/SERP plan as of December 31, 2019.”
       The attachment also provides that “Each party shall bear his/here [sic] own
attorneys’ fees and costs; except, however, the costs incurred with Seth Kaplan shall be
shared equally by the parties.” A typewritten notation at the bottom of the attachment
stating that the attachment was “approved as conforming to court order” by Christina’s
attorney was left blank with a handwritten line through it, crossing it out.

                                              5
       Notice of entry of judgment was filed and served on October 26, 2021. Christina
timely appealed.

                                        DISCUSSION

                                               I

        Gains and Losses on Equalization Payment from Miguel’s 401(k) Account

       Christina contends that she is entitled to the gains and losses on the $126,501
equalization payment as of December 31, 2019, to the date of the payment or distribution
under the QDRO. Miguel disagrees, arguing that Christina cannot seek gains and losses
on the equalization payment on appeal because she never raised the issue below, and that
awarding an equalization payment without accounting for gains or losses was proper. We
conclude Christina has the better argument.
       In a marital dissolution proceeding, the trial court must divide community property
equally. (Fam. Code, § 2550; In re Marriage of Campi, supra, 212 Cal.App.4th at
p. 1572.) This nondelegable judicial function generally requires that the court value the
assets and liabilities as near as practicable to the time of trial. (Fam. Code, § 2552; In re
Marriage of Campi, at p. 1572.)
       “ ‘ “[T]he [trial] court has broad discretion to determine the manner in which
community property is divided and the responsibility to fix the value of assets and
liabilities in order to accomplish an equal division. [Citations.]” ’ ” (In re Marriage of
Wozniak (2020) 59 Cal.App.5th 120, 130.) The trial court’s findings on the
characterization and valuation of assets in a dissolution proceeding are factual
determinations that we review for substantial evidence. (In re Marriage of Campi, supra,
212 Cal.App.4th at p. 1572.) “ ‘However, when the resolution of the issue “ ‘requires a
critical consideration, in a factual context, of legal principles and their underlying
values,’ ” the issue is a mixed question of law and fact in which legal issues predominate,
and de novo review applies.’ ” (In re Marriage of Wozniak, at p. 130.)

                                              6
          Here, the parties stipulated the expert would characterize and value their
retirement accounts as of December 31, 2019. Based on the expert’s analysis, the trial
court subsequently awarded Christina and Miguel their respective retirement accounts in
the judgment on reserved issues, and ordered Miguel to pay Christina $126,501 from his
401(k) retirement account as of December 31, 2019, via a QDRO to equalize the division
of the retirement accounts. The judgment on reserved issues did not specifically
reference the gains and losses on the $126,501 equalization payment from the date of
valuation to the date of division under the QDRO, however.
          Nevertheless, we agree with Christina that she is entitled to the gains and losses on
the equalization payment until it is distributed under the QDRO. On this point, we find
In re Marriage of Janes (2017) 11 Cal.App.5th 1043 instructive.
          In In re Marriage of Janes, the parties executed a marital settlement agreement,
which was attached to a judgment of dissolution, that awarded the wife approximately
$113,000 from the husband’s retirement account, but the judgment did not mention gains
or losses on that amount. (In re Marriage of Janes, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1045,
1050.) The money was not distributed immediately, and later the wife sought the
$113,000 plus the gains and losses resulting from that money in a request for a QDRO.
(Ibid.)
          In rejecting the husband’s argument that the court lacked jurisdiction to modify the
earlier judgment of dissolution by awarding the gains and losses to the wife (In re
Marriage of Janes, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at p. 1049), the court found that the $113,000
became the wife’s separate property when the parties delivered the signed marital
settlement agreement on the same date the court entered the dissolution judgment, and
that the husband had no legal right to the gains on the wife’s separate property. (Ibid.,
citing Fam. Code, § 770, subd. (a)(3) [rents, issues, and profits acquired on separate
property are separate property].) The court found that the judgment did not need to
explicitly reference the gains and losses since it included all the necessary information to

                                                7
make any necessary calculations--$113,000 of the 401(k) account was the wife’s separate
property as of the date of the marital settlement agreement and dissolution judgment. (Id.
at pp. 1049-1050.) “Whatever gains or losses occurred on that money after that date
belonged to [the] [w]ife--it was not necessary to include that information in the
judgment.” (Id. at p. 1050.)
       The court also rejected the husband’s argument that the wife was not entitled to
gains and losses on the $113,000 because it constituted an equalization payment rather
than part of the regular division of community property. (In re Marriage of Janes, supra,
11 Cal.App.5th at p. 1051.) In doing so, the court reasoned that “[t]he fact that [the]
[w]ife’s separate property equalization payment remained in the [husband’s] 401(k) does
not entitle Husband to the gains earned on [the] [w]ife’s separate property.” (Ibid.)
       We agree with the reasoning in In re Marriage of Janes.4 Applying that reasoning
here, at Miguel’s request, the trial court ordered him in the judgment on reserved issues
to pay Christina $126,501 from his 401(k) retirement account as of December 31, 2019,
via a QDRO to equalize the division of property. The parties had previously stipulated
that the retirement accounts would be characterized as of that date. Thus, Christina is
entitled to the amount of the equalization payment as of December 31, 2019, plus any
gains and less any losses until the $126,501 payment is actually divided pursuant to the
QDRO.

4 While the parties cite cases dealing with whether a trial court must consider future tax
consequences that may or may not arise after dividing community (see e.g., In re
Marriage of Fonstein (1976) 17 Cal.3d 738, 742 [trial court erred in taking into account
the tax consequences that might result to the husband in the event he subsequently
decided to convert his interest in his law firm into cash, and in reducing the current value
of that item accordingly]; Weinberg v. Weinberg (1967) 67 Cal.2d 557, 567 [trial court
did not abuse its discretion in awarding a money judgment to wife for half the value of
the community interest in the husband’s wholly owned corporations without considering
future tax consequences]), we find those decisions inapposite as neither party contends
the court erred in considering the tax consequences of the equalization payment.

                                             8
       To the extent Miguel argues that Christina never requested gains or losses during
trial and cannot raise this new issue for the first time on appeal, we disagree. Christina
repeatedly raised the issue of property characterization, allocation, and division below,
which implicitly raised the issue of gains and losses on any property allocated to her as
separate property. (In re Marriage of Janes, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1049-1051;
Fam. Code, § 770, subd. (a)(3) [as a matter of law, gains on separate property are
separate property].)
       We likewise reject Miguel’s contention that the court’s handwritten interlineation
striking the word “interest” with respect to the equalization payment in the judgment on
reserved issues shows that the court intended to award Christina only the lump sum of
$126,501 and nothing more. As Christina points out, it appears that Miguel’s counsel,
and not Christina’s, prepared the attachment with the “interest” language and her counsel
did not sign off on the suggested language eventually stricken by the court. In any event,
the fact that the court did not award Christina interest on the equalization payment, says
little, if anything, about whether Christina is entitled to the gains and losses on the
equalization payment the court ordered in the judgment on reserved issues.
       And finally, we disagree that awarding Christina the equalization payment plus
gains and losses required the trial court to engage in some sort of speculation as Miguel
argues. Rather, as Christina points out, the gains and losses easily will be determined at
the time the 401(k) account is segregated by the plan administrator pursuant to the
QDRO.
       While not necessarily required under In re Marriage of Janes (see In re Marriage
of Janes, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1050-1051), for purposes of clarity, we shall
modify the judgment to state that Miguel shall pay Christina the sum of $126,501 as of
December 31, 2019 from his 401(k) account, plus any gains thereon and less any losses
thereon, to the date of the payment or distribution under the QDRO.

                                              9
                                              II

                             Costs of Kaplan’s Expert Services

       Christina contends the trial court erred in ordering the parties to share the cost of
Kaplan’s fees equally, interpreting the judgment’s language to mean all of Kaplan’s fees.
According to her, the only issue before the court at trial was who should pay for the
additional fees Kaplan incurred to revise his report to incorporate the 401(k) information
that Miguel failed to timely disclose; as a result, ordering her to pay half of all of
Kaplan’s fees without notice and an opportunity to be heard deprived her of due process
and violated the parties’ previous marital settlement agreement wherein they stipulated to
pay their own attorneys’ fees and costs. Miguel, by contrast, argues the court properly
ordered them to split all of Kaplan’s costs equally. As explained below, we are not
persuaded by either party’s position.
       In this case, the judgment on reserved issues states: “Each party shall bear
his/here [sic] own attorneys’ fees and costs; except, however, the costs incurred with Seth
Kaplan shall be shared equally by the parties.” This language was based on the court’s
prior Statement of Decision, which provided in relevant part: “in its discretion, that the
costs incurred with Mr. Kaplan shall be shared equally.”
       On its face, the judgment and its underlying Statement of Decision are arguably
ambiguous regarding Kaplan’s costs. (Dore v. Arnold Worldwide, Inc. (2006) 39 Cal.4th
384, 391 [“An ambiguity arises when language is reasonably susceptible of more than
one application to material facts”].) It is not clear whether the court meant all of
Kaplan’s fees throughout the entire litigation, or only a portion of Kaplan’s fees (such as
those fees incurred for the additional work required to revise his report). Given this
ambiguity, we look to extrinsic evidence to decipher the court’s intended meaning.
(SLPR, L.L.C. v. San Diego Unified Port District (2020) 49 Cal.App.5th 284, 299 [if an
order or judgment is ambiguous, a reviewing court may examine the record for its scope

                                              10
and effect and may look at the circumstances of its making, and if the extrinsic evidence
is not in conflict, the order or judgment is reviewed de novo]; Postal Instant Press, Inc. v.
Sealy (1996) 43 Cal.App.4th 1704, 1708 [in construing terms of contract, an appellate
court must independently determine the meaning of the language used].)
       Based on the record before us, we disagree with the parties’ interpretation of the
language--that it encompasses all of Kaplan’s costs, and instead conclude that the
judgment’s language, although inartfully phrased, refers to splitting equally the
additional costs Kaplan incurred when revising his report. We thus resolve any
ambiguity in Christina’s favor.
       Contrary to the trial court’s finding in the Statement of Decision, the parties’
marital settlement agreement did not reference any stipulation regarding the payment of
Kaplan’s costs. Rather, the settlement agreement merely provides that each party shall
bear his or her own costs and attorneys’ fees.
       At trial, Christina’s counsel objected to paying for the cost for Kaplan to revise his
report based on the belatedly disclosed 401(k) information. Counsel argued: “Now if the
Court was inclined . . . that you go through and value on the new information as opposed
to what we have now, then I would request that that be entirely 100 percent at [Miguel’s]
charge because he’s the one who concealed this information from my client.” The court
agreed that it was reasonable to have Miguel advance the costs to Kaplan for any
additional work, and ordered as follows: “the cost for the updated report from [Kaplan]
based upon the new additional information shall be borne by [Miguel]. The Court
reserves jurisdiction to reallocate up to 50 percent of that cost upon a showing that is
reasonable under the circumstances.” (Italics added.)
       Miguel later requested that the trial court amend or modify its Memorandum of
Tentative Decision to include the word “all” in discussing Kaplan’s fees. In his
Objections to the court’s tentative decision, Miguel argued: “Page 8 at item 3 states that
Seth Kaplan’s charges should be shared equally. To avoid confusion, [Miguel] requests

                                             11
the court to state that ALL of Mr. Kaplan’s charges in this litigation are to be shared
equally . . . .” The court overruled Miguel’s objection, and expressly denied “[t]he
request for modifications, additions and/or exclusions . . . .” Thereafter, the court
adopted the Memorandum of Tentative Decision, which did not reference ALL of
Kaplan’s fees, as its Statement of Decision.
       Given the above, we do not interpret the court’s Statement of Decision and
subsequent judgment to have addressed whether the parties would share ALL of Kaplan’s
fees throughout the entire course of the litigation as that issue was not properly before the
court at trial. Instead, as the trial transcript makes clear, the only issue before the court
was allocating the cost of any additional fees Kaplan incurred to revise his report.
Indeed, the court specifically rejected Miguel’s request to include ALL of Kaplan fees in
the Statement of Decision upon which the judgment is based.
       We note further that in discussing the payment of Kaplan’s fees in the Statement
of Decision, the court did so in relation to Christina’s argument during trial that she
should not be responsible for any additional fees incurred with Kaplan since it was
Miguel who failed to provide the most recent 401(k) reports and summaries in a timely
manner. This juxtaposition further supports our interpretation that the court ordered the
parties to share equally the additional costs associated with Kaplan’s work to revise the
report, and not all of Kaplan’s costs throughout the entire dissolution proceeding.
       Interpreting the judgment in this manner also avoids a potential due process
problem. “ ‘The term “due process of law” asserts a fundamental principle of justice
which is not subject to any precise definition but deals essentially with the denial of
fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of justice.’ ” (In re Marriage of
Carlsson (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 281, 290.) Due process applies in marital dissolution
proceedings (id. at p. 284), and requires that parties be given notice and an opportunity to
be heard before a court decides an issue. (Id. at pp. 284, 290-291.) Because the only
issue before the court at trial regarding Kaplan’s costs were those costs associated with

                                               12
revising his report based on Miguel’s belated disclosure of the 401(k) information,
interpreting the judgment to refer to all of Kaplan’s costs, as the parties have, raises
serious due process concerns.
        To clarify any ambiguity, we shall modify the judgment to state that each party
shall equally pay for any additional costs Kaplan incurred to revise his report based on
the 401(k) information Miguel belatedly disclosed.

                                       DISPOSITION
        The judgment is modified to state that Miguel shall pay Christina the sum of
$126,501 as of December 31, 2019, from his 401(k) account, plus any gains thereon and
less any losses thereon, to the date of the payment or distribution under the QDRO. The
judgment is further modified to provide that Christina and Miguel shall equally pay for
any additional costs Kaplan incurred to revise his expert report based on the 401(k)
information Miguel belatedly disclosed. As so modified, the judgment is affirmed.
        Christina is awarded her costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1),
(3).)

                                                   HULL, J.

We concur:

ROBIE, Acting P. J.

BOULWARE EURIE, J.

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