Filed 2/11/16 Marriage of Sullivan CA2/4
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION FOUR
In re Marriage of REATTA and HOYT B261871
SULLIVAN.
(Los Angeles County
Super. Ct. No. GD040861)
REATTA SULLIVAN,
Respondent,
v.
HOYT SULLIVAN,
Appellant.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Bruce
Iwasaki, Judge. Dismissed.
Aaron Thomas Smith for Appellant.
Rodrigo Law Firm, Candice A. Garcia-Rodrigo for Respondent.
INTRODUCTION
Appellant Hoyt Sullivan1 appeals from the judgment entered in this dissolution
proceeding. Respondent Reatta Sullivan moved to dismiss the appeal under the
disentitlement doctrine. Based on Hoyt’s conduct during the proceedings in the trial
court, we agree that dismissal is warranted. We therefore grant the motion and dismiss
the appeal.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Reatta filed a petition for dissolution of marriage on March 29, 2007, after almost
thirty years of marriage. The couple has two adult children. During the marriage, the
couple owned and operated two “family businesses involved in the sale and distribution
of wire,” Alan Wire, a partnership, and Elcon Electronics, Inc. (the companies). Hoyt
“fired” Reatta and “exclud[ed] her from the premises” in April 2007; it is undisputed that
Hoyt maintained sole management and control over the companies thereafter. The
couple also owned the property on which the companies’ offices and warehouse were
located.
A. 2007 Stipulation and Order
On October 1, 2007, Reatta filed an application seeking “reasonable” spousal
support and attorney’s fees. She also requested the court order Hoyt to maintain her
health insurance through the companies and to provide monthly accountings for the
companies. The parties entered into a stipulation on October 31, 2007 that included the
following terms: (1) Hoyt would be paid $3,000 per week compensation for operating
the companies, commencing November 1, 2007 and “continuing until further order of the
court”; (2) Hoyt and Reatta would each receive $17,500 per month “in equal partner
draws,” commencing November 1, 2007 and “continuing until further order of the court”;
(3) Hoyt would collect rent for the business property, pay expenses, and provide equal,
quarterly distributions of the profits to the parties; (4) Hoyt would provide a quarterly
1
Because the parties share a surname, we refer to them by their first names for
clarity. No disrespect is intended.
2
accounting for the companies; (5) the companies would maintain health insurance
coverage for Reatta; (6) the companies would “be responsible for payment of any and all
taxes associated with the partnership draws”; and (7) neither party would pay “any
personal expenses from the business” other than medical and auto insurance. The
stipulation further provided that the “ability of the 2 companies to continue” the monthly
draws of $17,500 would be reviewed the following February,2 and the court could
appoint a “neutral CPA to make recommendations” in the event of a dispute. The
stipulation was entered as an order by the court pending judgment or further court order
that same date (October 2007 order).
B. Subsequent Proceedings and Court Orders
In February 2008, Reatta filed an ex parte application for an order to show cause,
alleging that Hoyt had begun selling assets from the companies without an inventory or
appraisal of the assets and had “threatened” to auction off other assets, including the
couple’s “extensive painting and gun collection.” At a hearing on February 6, 2008, the
court admonished Hoyt “not to sell or dispose of any assets of the marriage including the
businesses,” and “warned [Hoyt] that he could face possible jail time for violating” the
court’s orders.
Reatta later contended she stopped receiving her $17,500 monthly draws as of
May 2008. Hoyt admitted he stopped the payments, but claimed he did so because the
companies could not afford them and Reatta would not agree to modify the agreement.
At hearings in 2008 and 2010, the parties were “ordered to comply with all existing court
orders,” and the October 2007 order was continued “in full force and effect.” Similarly,
at a hearing on August 3, 2011,3 the court reiterated that the monthly payments to Reatta
2
In February 2008, the court ordered that the issue of the companies’ ability to
continue the monthly draws would be reviewed at a later hearing. Although Hoyt
contended that the agreed-upon distribution of $17,500 was “detrimental to the operation
of the business,” it does not appear from the record that the court reexamined the issue.
3
After the case was transferred, proceedings appear to have been largely dormant
during 2009 and part of 2010, due to a lengthy period in which the court file could not be
located.
3
were to continue pursuant to the October 2007 order, noting that Hoyt was “not relieved
of this order and . . . is to continue paying said amount” to Reatta.
At a hearing on October 24, 2012, the court reviewed the October 2007 order and
noted that Hoyt had not complied with the monthly payments and had never sought a
court order modifying the amount. Hoyt, appearing in propria persona, contended that
the company4 could not afford the payments. He admitted, however, that he was
receiving $6,000 per week in salary, without a court order permitting that increased
amount. The court then ordered Hoyt to pay $17,500 monthly to Reatta as spousal
support, as of August 1, 2012, superseding the payment under the October 2007 order.
Counsel for Reatta also noted that he was preparing a motion to compel based on
Hoyt’s prior refusal to answer any questions at his deposition. In response to the court’s
questions on this issue, Hoyt admitted to walking out of the deposition, stating “I most
certainly did. And I’ll do it again and again and again, under the circumstances.”5
Reatta also alleged that Hoyt, through the companies, reported $292,500 in
disbursements to partners, none of which she ever received, causing her to incur
substantial unwarranted tax liability. When questioned on this issue at the October 24,
2012 hearing, Hoyt first claimed Reatta was paid “every penny,” then changed his
statement to claim that the amounts reported were “accounted for” but not necessarily
paid. The court noted that “again, I’m not seeing good faith in terms of . . . compliance
with the prior order.” The court further found “obstructionist behavior” by Hoyt.
Accordingly, the court ordered Hoyt to pay $20,000 in attorney’s fees to counsel for
Reatta, pursuant to Family Code section 4320.
At a subsequent hearing, the court noted that Hoyt’s longstanding, continued
failure to pay was “the kind of thing that, frankly, this court, which does not like
contempt proceedings, would be happy to entertain as an issue.” In May 2013, the court
4
According to Hoyt, he closed Elcon Electronics in mid-2008 and was operating
only Alan Wire after that time.
5
Subsequently, in May 2013, the court granted a motion to compel Hoyt’s
appearance at his deposition and issued sanctions. During that hearing, Hoyt engaged in
several outbursts, resulting in reprimand first by his own counsel and then by the bailiff.
4
again cautioned Hoyt that the “problem has been that this court has made orders which
have been ignored. And the fact that you disagree with those orders is not a basis for not
complying with them.”
The assets and inventory of Alan Wire were sold in early 2014. On April 11,
2014, pursuant to an ex parte request by Reatta, the court ordered Hoyt to deposit the
proceeds from that sale, approximately $949,000, into a trust account held by Reatta’s
counsel.
The bench trial began on April 14, 2014. At a hearing on the morning of the third
day of trial, April 21, 2014, the court questioned Hoyt under oath regarding the sale
proceeds. Hoyt admitted he had control of the proceeds and that they were in “an escrow
account” held by him. The court stated that Hoyt was “currently in contempt of court . . .
because you have been ordered to pay that over to petitioner’s trust account,” and then
again ordered Hoyt to “do so now.” Hoyt repeatedly refused. After questioning Hoyt as
to whether he understood the order, the court found that Hoyt “underst[ood] completely
and [was] simply refusing to answer,” and that he was “evasive and contemptuous of the
court with respect to stating whether he understood the nature of the court’s order.” The
court concluded that Hoyt “has been in contempt of court. Is contemptuous of the court’s
orders. Has violated court orders.” The court further found that Hoyt had “complete
control” over the sale proceeds and “simply refused or ignored the court’s order to turn
the proceeds over.”
Hoyt then stated he was “done” with the court and left the proceedings. He fired
his attorneys later that afternoon and did not return for the remainder of the trial.6 Trial
proceeded and concluded the following day, April 22, 2014.
C. Judgment
The court entered the judgment of dissolution on December 9, 2014. In its written
findings in support of the judgment, the court found that “throughout this litigation and
6
It appears that Hoyt re-hired his trial counsel as of December 2014, as trial
counsel filed an objection to the proposed judgment on his behalf, and has continued to
represent him on appeal.
5
during much of the marriage, Respondent, Hoyt Sullivan, engaged in a consistent and
concerted pattern of fraudulent conduct calculated to cheat Petitioner, Reatta S. Sullivan,
from receiving her lawful share of the business they owned, the value of her share of the
other community property, and the receipt of court ordered spousal support. [Hoyt]
stands in an attitude of contempt to numerous orders made by the Court. . . . His hands
are unclean. The disentitlement doctrine should apply to preclude any appeal [he] might
seek.”
In support of its suggestion to apply disentitlement (as well as its imposition of
sanctions), the court made extensive findings regarding Hoyt’s violation of court orders
throughout the proceedings, including the following: (1) In violation of the October 2007
order, Hoyt overpaid himself $768,000 in unauthorized weekly compensation. He began
paying himself $5,500 per week in October 2008, raising the rate from $3,000 without
permission from Reatta or further order of the court. He again increased this amount to
$6,000 in October 2010. He also paid himself several unauthorized bonuses between
2008 and 2011, totaling $250,000. (2) Also in violation of the October 2007 order, Hoyt
ceased paying Reatta her monthly draws of $17,500 as of May 2008. In addition, Hoyt
failed to make any of the monthly payments of $17,500 in spousal support under the
October 24, 2012 order, which superseded the prior order. (3) Hoyt terminated Reatta’s
health insurance in 2008, in violation of the October 2007 order. (4) In violation of the
October 2007 order, Hoyt failed to pay taxes on the monthly draws received by Reatta.
Further, he falsely reported disbursements from the companies to Reatta that she never
actually received, causing her to incur substantial additional tax liabilities. (5) In
violation of the October 2007 order, Hoyt paid personal expenses with company funds,
including “virtually all of his attorney’s fees and costs for this litigation,” and “personal
auto expenses.” (6) Hoyt “refused and failed to provide an accurate and timely
accounting” of the financial activity for Alan Wire, also in violation of the October 2007
order. (7) Hoyt “refused” to make any payments toward Reatta’s attorney’s fees,
including the $20,000 ordered by the court on October 24, 2012. (8) Hoyt “deliberately”
6
refused to comply with the court’s 2014 orders to turn over the proceeds from the sale of
community assets (Alan Wire) into an attorney trust account.
Ultimately, the court awarded $3,412,038.64 to Reatta. This amount
encompassed, among other things, (1) Reatta’s share of the proceeds from the sale of
Alan Wire’s assets and real property, (2) an equalization amount from the division of
community property, (3) reimbursement based on Hoyt’s use of Alan Wire funds to pay
personal expenses, his cancellation of Reatta’s health insurance and the unwarranted tax
liability incurred by Reatta; (4) the unpaid monthly $17,500 draws to Reatta; and
(5) various attorney fee awards. The court additionally awarded $33,150 in “attorney’s
fees previously awarded in this action.”
D. Appeal
Hoyt timely appealed from the judgment. Prior to briefing, Reatta moved to
dismiss the appeal. We deferred ruling on the motion to dismiss until the matter was
fully briefed.
DISCUSSION
A. Disentitlement Doctrine
“An appellate court has the inherent power, under the ‘disentitlement doctrine,’ to
dismiss an appeal by a party that refuses to comply with a lower court order.’
[Citations.]” (Stoltenberg v. Ampton Investments (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1225, 1229-
1230.) “A party to an action cannot, with right or reason, ask the aid and assistance of a
court in hearing his demands while he stands in an attitude of contempt to legal orders
and processes of the courts of this state. [Citations.]” (MacPherson v. MacPherson
(1939) 13 Cal.2d 271, 277.) “Appellate disentitlement “is not a jurisdictional doctrine,
but a discretionary tool that may be applied when the balance of the equitable concerns
make it a proper sanction. . . .” [Citations.] No formal judgment of contempt is required;
an appellate court ‘may dismiss an appeal where there has been willful disobedience or
obstructive tactics. (Alioto Fish Co. v. Alioto (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 1669, 1683.)’
[Citation.] The doctrine ‘is based upon fundamental equity and is not to be frustrated by
7
technicalities.’ (Stone v. Bach (1978) 80 Cal.App.3d 442, 444.)” (Stoltenberg, supra,
215 Cal.App.4th at p. 1230.)
Courts have applied the disentitlement doctrine to dismiss an appeal “in a variety
of circumstances, including: where a parent had taken and kept children out of the state in
violation of a divorce decree [citations]; where a husband had failed to pay alimony as
ordered in an interlocutory judgment of divorce [citation]; . . . where defendants willfully
failed to comply with trial court orders regarding a receivership” (Alioto, supra, 27
Cal.App.4th at pp. 1682–1685), as well as “where a party failed or refused to appear for a
judgment debtor examination. [Citations.]” (Ironridge Global IV, Ltd. v. ScripsAmerica,
Inc. (2015) 238 Cal.App.4th 259, 265-266 (Ironridge).) In Ironridge, for example, the
parties entered a settlement under which defendant agreed to transfer shares of its stock to
plaintiff in satisfaction of a debt. Defendant failed to do so, and then repeatedly violated
the trial court’s order compelling defendant to transfer the stock to plaintiff and
prohibiting defendant from transferring shares to third parties. (Id. at p. 261.) The court
of appeal granted plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the appeal, based on “defendant’s flagrant
disregard for the order” of the trial court. (Id. at p. 262.) Similarly, in Alioto, supra, 27
Cal.App.4th at p. 1676, defendants repeatedly refused to comply with trial court orders to
deposit funds into a receiver’s bank account and to provide certain financial information.
The court of appeal first noted that formal contempt proceedings were not required,
finding that the trial court’s “successive orders to compel and imposing sanctions contain
judicial findings that the appellants have persisted in willfully disobeying the trial court’s
orders.” (Id. at p. 1683.) Accordingly, the court granted respondents’ motion. (Id. at p.
1691.)
B. Analysis
Reatta contends that we should apply the disentitlement doctrine to dismiss Hoyt’s
appeal, based on his repeated and express refusal to comply with numerous orders of the
trial court. We agree. As outlined above, throughout the dissolution proceedings, Hoyt
refused to comply with court orders and ignored multiple warnings by the court regarding
sanctions and possible contempt proceedings based on his conduct. His flagrant
8
misconduct includes outright refusal to obey the trial court’s 2014 order that he turn over
almost a million dollars in assets for safekeeping, as well as failure to make monthly
payments to Reatta for approximately six years, while continuing to pay himself and
using company assets for his personal expenses, in violation of court orders as well as the
original agreement to which he himself stipulated. As such, dismissal is appropriate.
Hoyt does not dispute any of the misconduct outlined herein and did not provide
any citations to evidence in his opposition to the motion to dismiss. Instead, he urges that
the disentitlement doctrine should apply only in instances where the appeal was taken
from an order “inherently related to the noncompliance or contempt.” First, while the
disentitlement doctrine “‘is particularly likely to be invoked where the appeal arises out
of the very order (or orders) the party has disobeyed’ [citation],” (Ironridge, supra, 238
Cal.App.4th at p. 265), Hoyt cites no authority requiring such a link, and we do not find
such a requirement to be consistent with past application of the doctrine or with the
purposes underlying it. Second, Hoyt’s appeal would satisfy this test. He asserts the
following arguments on appeal: (1) the court was required to dismiss this matter in 2012
under the “five-year rule” and lacked jurisdiction thereafter; (2) the court lacked the
authority to convert the October 2007 stipulation into a spousal support order; (3) the
court erred in awarding sanctions to Reatta based on a finding that he committed fraud
during the marriage; and (4) the final judgment was internally contradictory, inconsistent
with prior findings and not based on sufficient evidence. As such, Hoyt challenges on
appeal the validity of several of the very orders he disobeyed, as well as the findings and
imposition of sanctions in the final judgment, which are based in part on his misconduct.
Indeed, the trial court expressly found Hoyt to stand “in an attitude of contempt to
numerous orders made by the court.” Hoyt may not repeatedly and flagrantly violate the
orders of the trial court and then challenge the basis for those orders on appeal. (See
Stone, supra, 80 Cal.App.3d at p. 444 [“it would be a flagrant abuse of the principles of
equity and of the due administration of justice to consider the demands of a party who
becomes a voluntary actor before a court and seeks its aid while he stands in contempt of
its legal orders and processes”].)
9
Additionally, Hoyt contends that his conduct was not so disruptive of the
proceedings or prejudicial to Reatta as to make dismissal an equitable result. We
disagree. Hoyt attempts to distill his misconduct into the single incident mid-trial in
which he argued with the court and walked out, arguing that this conduct was admittedly
inappropriate but has already been sanctioned by admission of Reatta’s evidence without
objection. Hoyt ignores, however, his violation of multiple court orders over nearly the
entire course of this lengthy case, necessitating an enormous expenditure of resources by
both Reatta and the court. Thus, his contention that his conduct does not merit dismissal
is without support. Moreover, Hoyt’s attempt to equate his blatant disobedience with
“any resistance by a party to a discovery request,” and thereby suggest that dismissal
under the circumstances presented here would open the door to overly broad application
of the disentitlement doctrine, is absurd.
Finally, Hoyt cannot avoid dismissal by arguing that his noncompliance was
excused because the lower court’s orders were invalid. Courts uniformly reject such
arguments as “the worst kind of bootstrapping. A trial court’s judgment and orders, all of
them, are presumptively valid and must be obeyed and enforced. [Citation.] They are
not to be frustrated by litigants except by legally provided methods.” (Stone, supra, 80
Cal.App.3d at p. 448; see also Ironridge, supra, 238 Cal.App.4th at p. 265 [“the merits of
the appeal are irrelevant to the application of the doctrine”].)
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DISPOSITION
The appeal is dismissed. Reatta is awarded her costs on appeal.7
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
COLLINS, J.
We concur:
WILLHITE, Acting P. J.
MANELLA, J.
7
Reatta also seeks attorney’s fees from Hoyt as sanctions for filing a frivolous
appeal. In light of the dismissal of the appeal as a sanction for Hoyt’s misconduct, we
deny Reatta’s motion for further sanctions.
11