Filed 9/28/16 Bennett v. Foss CA1/1
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
PETER BENNETT,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
A145656 & A147009
v.
CYNTHIA FOSS, (San Francisco County
Super. Ct. No. FPT09376032)
Defendant and Appellant.
In these consolidated appeals, Cynthia Foss appeals from the trial court’s family
law orders lowering respondent Peter Bennett’s monthly child support payments from
$4,500 per month to $835 per month (appeal No. A147009), and denying four requests
for attorney fees and costs (appeal No. A145656). Foss asserts the court erred in failing
to order Bennett to pay guideline child support at the level it would have been set in April
2010, when the parties stipulated to the $4,500 monthly amount. She also asserts the
court abused its discretion in declining to award her attorney fees. We conclude the court
did not err in modifying Bennett’s support obligation. We also conclude that we lack
jurisdiction as to Foss’s appeal from the denial of attorney fees because her notice of
appeal was untimely filed.1 Accordingly, we affirm.
1
We have consolidated the two appeals on our own motion.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
I. Background to Appeal No. A147009
“Bennett and Foss are the parents of two daughters, one born in September 2000
and the other born in July 2002. The parties were never married, but lived together for
over 10 years. Bennett is [or was] a marketing director for a debt buying and collection
agency business. He owns [or owned] the various business entities involved in this
venture through a holding company called Bennett Capital Management LLC (BCM).
Foss did not work outside of the home while the parties were together.
“In 2009, Bennett filed a parentage action.
“On October 9, 2009, the parties stipulated to have the matter heard by a private
judge, Eileen Preville, appointed as a judge pro tem.” (Bennett v. Foss (Apr. 29, 2014,
A137452, A138342, A138448) [nonpub. opn.], at pp. *2–*3 (Bennett I).)
“On April 21, 2010, after the parties engaged in settlement negotiations before
Judge Preville, Bennett signed an ‘Enforceable Settlement Memorandum’ (ESM). . . .
Under the ESM, Bennett agreed to pay child support of $8,500 per month through
August 31, 2010, at which time child support would reduce automatically to $4,500 per
month. He also agreed to pay ‘add-on child support’ for (1) private school tuition;
(2) medical insurance coverage and health care expenses; and (3) agreed-upon
discretionary expenses, such as summer camp and extracurricular classes.” (Bennett I,
supra, at pp. *2–*3, fn. omitted.)
“On October 14, 2010, Bennett served an order to show cause regarding child
custody, child visitation, child support, and attorney fees. . . . In an accompanying
declaration, Bennett . . . asserted his business interests had suffered losses, reducing his
income. He claimed his annual salary was set to fall to $35,000 per year. He noted he
had previously paid Foss $8,500 per month in child support, but claimed he was only able
to pay $3,650 for the current month.” (Bennett I, supra, at p. *3.)
2
“On July 27, 2011, Judge Preville filed a judgment. The judgment recites that
Bennett was to have paid Foss a total of $50,000 by April 30, 2011, to resolve any claims
for child support add-ons and attorney fees and costs incurred through February 1, 2010.
Consistent with the terms of the ESM, child support was set beginning March 1, 2010, in
the amount of $8,500 per month, to be reduced to $4,500 beginning September 1, 2010.
Bennett was also ordered to pay private tuition, medical expenses, up to $9,000 per year
for elective activity add-ons, and up to $5,000 per year toward travel expenses associated
with Foss’s vacation travel with the children. A nonguideline child support findings
attachment indicates that the parties disputed what guideline support would be, and also
disputed whether the amount ordered was above or below guideline support.” (Bennett I,
supra, at p. *4.)
“On August 22, 2011, Bennett filed a motion [in the superior court] to vacate
and/or set aside Judge Preville’s July 27, 2011 judgment.
“On October 28, 2011, the trial court conducted a hearing on Bennett’s motion.
The court denied the motion to set aside the judgment. The court agreed that Bennett
could maintain his October 2010 motion for modification of child support,
notwithstanding Foss’s attorney’s protest that Bennett had not provided requested
discovery concerning his finances.” (Bennett I, supra, at p. *5.)
On September 21, 2012, following a protracted and contentious proceeding, the
trial court granted Bennett’s motion to modify child support, reducing his support
obligation from $4,500 to $3,200 per month. (Bennett I, supra, at p. *19.) Foss appealed
this ruling, as well as several others.
In our opinion filed on April 29, 2014, we reversed the child support ruling.
(Bennett I, supra, at p. *29.) In our analysis, we concluded that because no findings had
been made as to whether the stipulated support order was either above or below guideline
level, Bennett had the burden to establish a change in circumstances. We observed he
had failed to establish that a change in circumstances occurred between the time he
3
entered into the ESM (April 2010) and the time he filed his motion to modify support
(October 2010). We found the trial court erred because it had instead based its finding of
changed circumstances on evidence pertaining to the period between October 2010 to
January 2011. (Bennett I, supra, at pp. *16–*17.) We also found error in the court’s
refusal to allow Foss to obtain certain documents that she had requested during the
discovery phase. (Id. at p. *17.) The matter was remanded. (Id. at p. *29.)
II. Bennett and Foss File New Motions to Modify Support
On August 12, 2014, Bennett’s attorney submitted a letter to the trial court seeking
to withdraw his October 2010 motion for modification of support.
On September 11, 2014, the trial court filed an order confirming the withdrawal of
Bennett’s October 2010 motion. The withdrawal was made without prejudice to any
pending motions filed by Foss for attorney fees and sanctions.
On October 31, 2014, Bennett filed a request to modify certain add-on child
support items.
On December 3, 2014, Foss filed a request for an order modifying child support
and for attorney fees and costs. Specifically, she sought to modify support as follows:
“Change child support of $4,500 per month to reflect the fact that Respondent now has
95% custody, as opposed to her prior 50% custody, since [Bennett] has moved to
London. The new monthly child support should be $5,983.00 . . . .”
On December 19, 2014, Foss filed an amended request for modification of child
custody and child support. In the memorandum of points and authorities accompanying
this request, she argued that the trial court was required to establish guideline support for
April 2010: “Respondent is requesting a modification of child support. Her request is
that the Court determine Guideline for April 2010. This determination will reveal
whether the current stipulated child support is below Guideline. If, as expected, that
determination indicates that the current stipulated child support is below Guideline for
April 2010, Respondent is requesting that it be adjusted to Guideline.”
4
On December 29, 2014, Bennett filed a response claiming that his financial
circumstances had changed drastically since 2010. He attached his own support
calculation, with a proposed guideline of $969 per month.
In a December 23, 2014 declaration submitted in opposition, Bennett declared that
he was “currently earning no income.”
On January 5, 2015, Foss filed a reply brief in support of her motion for
modification of child support, again requesting $5,983 per month. She also asked that
Bennett be ordered to pay one of their daughter’s private school tuition.
On January 12, 2015, the trial court continued the hearing on the parties’
respective motions to modify child support payments. The court advised the parties that
“because these are new motions, if any discovery is necessary, then the parties need to
get moving and get started on their discovery. There are no limitations at this point on
discovery of what is necessary for guideline, determination of guideline child support.
Should there be discovery problems, the Court expects to see motions, whether there are
quashing or motions to limit or anything else, to be set and heard in this department.”
On February 19, 2015, the trial court filed a child custody and visitation
stipulation and order. The order grants Foss approximately 75 percent custody.
On March 17, 2015, Foss filed yet another reply brief in support of her child
support modification motion. In this reply brief, she requested Bennett’s support
obligation be adjusted to $11,500 per month. Her calculation was based on a total of
$72,000 per year in child support, plus $65,000 per year to pay private school tuition for
both children.
III. Trial Court Proceedings
On March 24, 2015, the court conducted the first day of hearing on the parties’
motions. Foss’s counsel argued that if the amount of child support the parties stipulated
to in April 2010 was a below-guideline amount, “we can renege, so what happens is [the
child support] just reverts to guideline in April of 2010.” After a brief discussion, the
5
parties stipulated that the 2010 support amount represented a below-guideline order at the
time the ESM was executed. Foss then called Lisa Jolicoeur to testify as an expert
witness with respect to determining income available for support. When she indicated
Foss had retained her to determine income available in 2010, Bennett’s counsel
interposed a relevancy objection.
In response to the objection, the trial court noted the parties had just stipulated that
the 2010 award was below guideline. Citing to Family Code section 4065, subdivision
(d) (§ 4065(d)), the court instructed the parties to provide information to establish current
guideline child support. The court also advised Foss’s attorney, “[I]f I determine that, in
fact, you are simply going to establish what guideline was in 2010, which has no
relevancy to the Court any more in terms of a current guideline, I am going to stop you,
and/or I will make a ruling on the value of that evidence.” After it became apparent that
the parties had not previously exchanged their most recent respective tax returns, the
court continued the hearing to July 7, 2015.
On May 18, 2015, Bennett filed his own request for order modifying child support
after his ex parte request to lower support was denied. He offered two proposed support
calculations, one based on his current actual income, and another based on his 2013
income (showing monthly guideline support to be either $815 or $1,863, respectively).
Foss did not file an opposition brief. Her attorney, however, filed an opposing
declaration on June 23, 2015.
At the continued hearing on July 7, 2015, Foss’s counsel stated that unless the trial
court had reconsidered its decision regarding the relevancy of April 2010 guideline
support, “then basically we are stalled here and stopped. There is nothing else for us to
establish, and that doesn’t—so I am ready to take it up on appeal and see what I can do
there.” Bennett’s counsel then proceeded to present evidence in support of his own
motion to modify.
6
Bennett testified that he was currently employed and earning about $40,000 per
year. His wife was pregnant and the baby was due in about a month. On cross-
examination, he stated that his business known as Greenhill Global was no longer
operating, and a business called AIS Services had been sold for one dollar in November
2013. Another business called Applied Income Sciences was shut down in 2011.
Foss’s counsel began questioning Bennett about business interests he owned in
2011. The trial judge advised counsel that she was not interested in hearing about entities
that were no longer in existence, reiterating that evidence pertaining to 2010 guideline
support was not relevant. Foss’s counsel replied that he did not have current financial
information from Bennett, at which point the court noted “both sides have had ample
time for discovery in this case,” as discovery had been open since December 2014.
Shortly before the hearing was continued to yet another hearing date, Bennett was
questioned by an attorney for the Department of Child Support Services (DCSS).
Bennett testified that his current income was $3,221 per month, plus an average monthly
bonus of $1,000. On the following hearing day, July 14, the DCSS attorney indicated the
agency’s preliminary assessment placed guideline support at $658.
On October 5, 2015, the trial court filed its order after hearing. The court granted
Bennett’s request to modify add-on support.2 The court also granted both parties’
requests to modify support, setting guideline support at $835 per month and ordering the
parties to bear the cost of private school equally. Foss filed a timely notice of appeal.3
DISCUSSION
I. Standards of Review
As we noted in Bennett I, the standard of review for an order modifying a child
support order is well established: “ ‘ “[A] determination regarding a request for
2
Nothing in Foss’s brief contests this aspect of the trial court’s order.
3
We separately address Foss’s appeal from the denial of her attorney fee request
below.
7
modification of a child support order will be affirmed unless the trial court abused its
discretion, and it will be reversed only if prejudicial error is found from examining the
record below.” [Citations.] Thus, “[t]he ultimate determination of whether the individual
facts of the case warrant modification of support is within the discretion of the trial court.
[Citation.] The reviewing court will resolve any conflicts in the evidence in favor of the
trial court’s determination.” ’ ” (Bennett I, supra, at p. *13.)
“However, . . .‘the trial court has “a duty to exercise an informed and considered
discretion with respect to the [parent’s child] support obligation . . . .” [Citation.]
Furthermore, “in reviewing child support orders we must also recognize that
determination of a child support obligation is a highly regulated area of the law, and the
only discretion a trial court possesses is the discretion provided by statute or rule.
[Citations.]” [Citation.] In short, the trial court’s discretion is not so broad that it “may
ignore or contravene the purposes of the law regarding . . . child support.” ’ Put another
way, a trial court’s failure to follow the law in setting support constitutes an abuse of
discretion.” (Bennett I, supra, at p. *13.)4
II. Child Support Ruling
Foss first asserts that her appeal arises out of her “ ‘Request for Order,’ ” in which
she sought to “renege” on the child support that she agreed to in April 2010. She
contended below that the stipulated child support, which, with its various components,
totaled approximately $10,000 per month, was below a statutory guideline level of at
least $20,000 per month. She asserted that pursuant to section 4065(d), she was
permitted to “renege” on the stipulated child support, and that child support should then
be raised to the “Guideline” amount.” In reality, as the trial court noted, Foss filed a
4
To the extent an appellant challenges a trial court’s factual findings, we review
the findings for substantial evidence, considering the evidence in the light most favorable
to the party who prevailed in the trial court. (In re Marriage of Drake (1997)
53 Cal.App.4th 1139, 1151.) Here, Foss has explicitly waived any argument as to the
sufficiency of the evidence supporting the trial court’s income determinations.
8
motion to modify child support based on the fact that Bennett had relocated to London, a
circumstance had caused her timeshare to increase. She did not file a motion to “renege”
on the stipulated child support. She simply sought a different amount of support than that
which she was presently receiving.
Foss’s apparent purpose in filing her modification motion was to force Bennett to
pay child support from December 2014 onward on the basis of his April 2010 income.
She argues that she “merely had to establish Guideline for April 2010 and then, if it was
less than the stipulated child support, child support would change to the Guideline
amount.” She complains that “[i]nstead of allowing [her] to establish Guideline for April
2010, [the court] imposed the cumbersome and irrelevant process of requiring [her] to
establish ‘current’ Guideline.” As we understand her argument, she claims that under
section 4065(d), a below-guideline stipulated child support award must be modified to
whatever would have been guideline at the time the stipulation was made, regardless of
the parties’ present financial circumstances. This argument is untenable.
Foss’s position that child support must necessarily “ ‘revert to the applicable
guideline or higher,’ ” if a stipulated amount is determined to be below guideline finds no
support in the statute she relies on, section 4065(d). That section provides: “If the parties
to a stipulated agreement stipulate to a child support order below the amount established
by the statewide uniform guideline, no change of circumstances need be demonstrated to
obtain a modification of the child support order to the applicable guideline level or
above.” (Italics added.) Notably, the word “revert” does not appear in the statutory
language. Nor does Foss cite to any case law in support of her assertion that below-
guideline stipulated child support awards are subject to retroactive modification. Our
own research has disclosed no such case.
In our prior opinion, we summarized the established law as follows: “ ‘Since there
is no concomitant provision for stipulated child support orders above the amount
established by the statewide uniform guideline, the ineluctable inference is that a “change
9
of circumstances” must be demonstrated to obtain a downward modification of the child
support order to the applicable guideline level or below [under section 4065(d)]. In short,
the statute lets either party “ ‘renege’ on the stipulation at any time, and without
‘grounds,’ ” if the stipulated award is below the guideline amount [citation], but
otherwise adheres to pre-guideline law and requires proof of changed circumstances to
reduce a higher award. [Citations.] Each case stands or falls on its own facts, but the
overriding issue is whether a change has affected either party’s financial status.’
[Citation.] One may not obtain a reduction of a generous stipulated support order simply
because of a change of heart. [Citation.] ‘The burden of proof to establish that changed
circumstances warrant a downward adjustment in child support rests with the supporting
spouse.’ ” (Bennett I, supra, at pp. *15–*16.)
We did not depart from these principles in Bennett I. As the trial court noted in its
October 5, 2015 order, we reversed the lower court because the court had “erred in failing
to make a predicate determination of whether Bennett had shown a change in
circumstances to modify child support . . . [because] as the moving party [he] had to first
establish a change in circumstances before any modification could occur.” Our analysis
did not include any discussion as to how the court should proceed to calculate child
support after making this required predicate determination.
In the present matter, the parties resolved the “predicate determination” by
stipulating that the original judgment contained a “below-guideline order,” relieving
Foss, as the moving party, of the need to prove a change in circumstances in order to seek
a higher support order. On the other hand, Bennett, with respect to his own motion to
modify child support, was required to demonstrate a substantial change in circumstances
because he was seeking to lower his support obligation. The trial court found he did
make such a showing, and Foss does not challenge that factual determination in her
opening brief on appeal. Instead, she mistakenly asserts that Bennett “was required to
establish both Guideline for April 2010 and Guideline for May 2015 before a material
10
change in circumstance could be determined.” (Italics added.) This assertion reflects a
fundamental misunderstanding of the relevant statute, a misunderstanding that permeates
her briefing.
Foss mistakenly understands section 4065(d) to require child support to
automatically “ ‘revert to the applicable guideline or higher’ ” if it is below-guideline.
The statute says no such thing. The most probable reason the Legislature did not specify
any procedures for determining post-stipulation support in section 4065(d) is because
there are already provisions in place to make such determinations. (See Fam. Code,
§ 4050 et seq.) Those are the provisions that the trial court followed in this case.5
Foss also asserts that “[r]equiring the payee parent to establish Guideline for some
unknown point in the future imposes a more onerous burden, one that is not indicated in
the language of section 4065(d).” But the trial court here was not considering an
“unknown point in the future”; the court was considering the present point in time and the
current financial circumstances of both parties.
III. The Disentitlement Doctrine Does Not Apply
Alternatively, Foss claims a June 23, 2015 order of contempt—issued in a separate
civil case in response to Bennett’s failure to appear at a continuation of a prior debtor
exam and his failure to provide certain financial documents—required the trial court to
stay his motion to modify child support. She relies on the “disentitlement doctrine” as set
forth in Stoltenberg v. Ampton Investments, Inc. (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1225
5
Foss also insists that this appeal is a case of “ ‘déjà vu all over again’ ” because
the trial court here, as in Bennett I, did not establish the guideline support amount for
April 2010. However, the reason we faulted the trial court in Bennett I was because the
court should have made findings as to what Bennett’s financial circumstances were in
April 2010 in order to determine whether these circumstances had changed in October
2010, the month in which he filed his motion to modify. A similar scenario is not at play
here.
11
(Stoltenberg), as well as Code of Civil Procedure section 2023.030, subdivision (d)(2).
Her reliance is misplaced.
“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.’ ”
(Stoltenberg, supra, 215 Cal.App.4th at p. 1229, italics added.) 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,” as well as “where a party failed
or refused to appear for a judgment debtor examination.” (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 the
defendant agreed to transfer shares of its stock to the plaintiff in satisfaction of a debt.
The defendant failed to do so, and then repeatedly violated the trial court’s order
compelling it to transfer the stock to the plaintiff and prohibiting it from transferring
shares to third parties. (Ironridge, supra, 238 Cal.App.4th at p. 261.) The Court of
Appeal granted the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the appeal, based on “[the] defendant’s
flagrant disregard for the order” of the trial court. (Id. at p. 262.)
Similarly, in Alioto Fish Co. v. Alioto (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 1669, 1676, the
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 noted that formal contempt proceedings were not required to sustain a dismissal,
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.)
12
As the above summary suggests, the disentitlement doctrine does not apply to trial
court proceedings. Foss herself concedes there are no cases that have applied the
doctrine in a trial court setting. We conclude the trial court did not err in refusing to
grant Foss’s request for a stay of Bennett’s motion for modification of child support.
While Foss also relies on the authorization of Code of Civil Procedure section
2023.030, subdivision (d) for terminating sanctions for failure to comply with discovery,
the record she provides to this court does not show that she ever requested the trial court
to impose terminating sanctions.6 We therefore deem the argument to be forfeited. (See
People v. Muehe (1931) 114 Cal.App. 739, 741 [“An appellate court will not decide
matters which are not within the issues as presented below.”].)7 As none of Foss’s
arguments have merit, the order modifying child support is affirmed.
IV. Attorney Fees
Appeal No. A145656 arises out of the trial court’s denial of Foss’s requests for
attorney fees. We normally review the attorney fee rulings for abuse of discretion. (In re
Marriage of Drake, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th 1139, 1166.) However, we dismiss this appeal
on our own motion because we lack jurisdiction as Foss’s notice of appeal was untimely
filed.
A. Background
In Bennett I, we elected not to address Foss’s appeal from the trial court’s order
denying her four separate requests for attorney fees and costs because she relied on an
6
Indeed, the trial court notes in its order after hearing that after it granted the
continuance on March 24, 2015, neither party filed any discovery motions, either to
compel or quash discovery.
7
In her reply brief, Foss also challenges the trial court’s decision to allow Bennett
to appear by telephone. She did not raise this argument in her opening brief and we deem
it to be forfeited. Generally, the raising of a new ground for the first time in a reply brief
is not proper appellate practice. (Taylor v. Roseville Toyota, Inc. (2006) 138 Cal.App.4th
994, 1001, fn. 2.)
13
inapplicable statute in her appellate briefing. (Bennett, supra, at p. *21.) We also
explicitly declined to express an opinion as to whether attorney fees might be recoverable
under any other provision of law. (Ibid.)
After the matter was remanded, Foss filed a request for various attorney fees
and/or sanctions on October 8, 2014.
On December 11, 2014, the trial court filed its order denying all of Foss’s requests
for attorney fees and/or sanctions. No appeal was taken from this ruling.
On January 13, 2015, Foss filed another request for order regarding attorney fees.
Foss appeared to construe the December 11, 2014 order denying her motion as an
invitation for her to refile it.
On February 18, 2015, a hearing was held and the matter was submitted on the
pleadings.
On April 6, 2015, the trial court filed its order denying Foss’s request for attorney
fees. The court indicated the January 13, 2015 request was both untimely and
unwarranted, noting that all pending attorney fee and/or sanctions motions had been
addressed in its December 11, 2014 ruling, from which no appeal had been taken.
On May 1, 2015, Foss filed a motion for new trial on the April 6, 2015 ruling.
On June 10, 2015, the trial court filed its order denying the motion for new trial.
On July 9, 2015, Foss filed a notice of appeal from the April 6, 2015 ruling, noting
the date on which her motion for new trial had been denied.
B. Discussion
Rule 8.104(a) of the California Rules of Court specifies that a notice of appeal
must be filed on or before the earliest of (1) 60 days after the superior court clerk serves a
“Notice of Entry” of judgment or a file-endorsed copy of the judgment, showing the date
either was served; (2) 60 days after a party serves a “Notice of Entry” of judgment or a
file-endorsed copy of the judgment with a proof of service; or (3) 180 days after entry of
14
judgment.8 The clerk’s certificate of service by mail shows that on April 6, 2015, the
clerk mailed to Foss’s counsel a copy of the order issued that same day denying the
requests for attorney fees.
A valid motion for a new trial will extend the time for taking an appeal: “If the
motion for a new trial is denied, the time to appeal from the judgment is extended for all
parties until the earliest of: [¶] (A) 30 days after the superior court clerk, or a party
serves an order denying the motion or a notice of entry of that order; [¶] (B) 30 days after
denial of the motion by operation of law; or [¶] (C) 180 days after entry of judgment.”
(Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.108(b)(1).) If the motion is not a valid motion for a new trial
(e.g., it is not timely, is made in a proceeding in which the motion does not lie, or is not
made on cognizable grounds), the applicable time period will not be extended. (In re
Marriage of Patscheck (1986) 180 Cal.App.3d 800, 802; Lamb v. Holy Cross Hospital
(1978) 83 Cal.App.3d 1007, 1010; Eisenberg et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Appeals
and Writs (The Rutter Group 2014) ¶ 3:70, p. 3-36.) We conclude here that Foss’s new
trial motion was not authorized, and therefore not valid, because the order issued April 6,
2015 did not emanate from a trial.
It has been generally stated that “[a] motion for new trial may be used to
challenge an appealable order on a motion as well as a decision or verdict in a
conventional civil action (In re Marriage of Beilock (1978) 81 Cal.App.3d 713, 719–721
[(Beilock)] and a motion for new trial may be based on a number of different grounds,
including errors of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 657, subd. 7.)” (Blue Mountain
Development Co. v. Carville (1982) 132 Cal.App.3d 1005, 1014.) As grounds for her
new trial motion, Foss relied on insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision
(Code Civ. Proc., § 657, par. 6), and error in law (Code Civ. Proc., § 657, par. 7.)
8
Under California Rules of Court, rule 8.104(e), the word “judgment” includes an
appealable order.
15
After this case was fully briefed, we sent out a request for additional briefing on
“whether a motion for new trial lies to secure review in the trial court of the decision on a
postjudgment motion for attorney fees.” We asked the parties to include a discussion of
Mann v. Superior Court (1942) 53 Cal.App.2d 272, 285 (Mann). Before we discuss
Mann, we note Foss first contends that our characterization of her attorney fee motion as
a “post-judgment” motion “would appear to be inappropriately narrow” and “somewhat
misleading” since the fees being sought “had nothing to do with the underlying [July 27,
2011] judgment.”9 Yet all of her attorney fee motions were filed after the July 2011
judgment, in response to Bennett’s 2011 modification motion.
Additionally, in family law proceedings, an order that is a final appealable order is
a judgment for purposes of appealability. Her prior appeal, wherein we reversed the
lower court’s modification order, was based on such a final order, and the order that she
appeals from here was issued subsequent to that final appealable order. The attorney fees
she sought on remand were the same fees that arose out of the prior proceeding. We also
note she was alerted below to the questionable status of her new trial motion when the
trial judge expressed skepticism as to whether that court had jurisdiction to consider a
motion for new trial in the instant circumstances. Accordingly, there is nothing
“inappropriate” or “misleading” in our construction of the order appealed from here as
indeed constituting a postjudgment motion for attorney fees.
Foss next argues that Mann was substantively overruled by the Supreme Court in
Carney v. Simmonds (1957) 49 Cal.2d 84 (Carney). In Mann, the appellate court
considered “whether the motion for new trial lies to an order allowing attorney fees,
9
We note in her opening brief, Foss explicitly acknowledged as a “fact” that the
April 6, 2011 order was a “post-judgment ruling.” She also admitted that her motion for
new trial “requested that Commissioner Wightman reconsider her April 6, 2015 FOAH”
(italics added), reinforcing the impression that her motion for new trial was really a
disguised motion for reconsideration under Code of Civil Procedure section 1008.
16
granted as an incident to a recovery in a stockholder’s derivative suit and not upon an
issue joined by the pleadings.” (Mann, supra, 53 Cal.App.2d at p. 275.)
In Mann, the plaintiff had instituted a stockholder’s derivative suit in equity. Over
time, various represented parties intervened in the lawsuit. The trial itself was conducted
by counsel for Mann. (Mann, supra, 53 Cal.App.2d at pp. 275–276.) Following the trial,
Mann and several other plaintiffs filed motions for attorney fees. (Id. at p. 276.) After a
decision on the attorney fees was rendered, one of the intervenors filed a motion for new
trial, asserting that the total fees allowed had not been properly apportioned between the
respective counsel. (Id. at pp. 277–278.) The appellate court concluded that a motion for
new trial was not appropriate because the fact at issue arose out of a motion, and not upon
a material allegation in the complaint. (Id. p. 285.) The court relied, in part, on the
proposition that “there may be no new trial upon an issue of fact brought forward by a
motion in the case.” (Ibid.) As Foss correctly notes, since the time Mann was decided
case law has established a broad definition of the term “trial” and held that motions for
new trial can be used to address some matters brought forward by motions.
In Carney, the Supreme Court noted that appellate courts had found new trial
motions to be inappropriate following rulings on motions for: (1) judgments of dismissal,
(2) judgments on the pleadings, (3) judgments on an agreed statement of ultimate facts
and (4) default judgments. (Carney, supra, 49 Cal.2d at pp. 88–89.) The court then
further stated, “[T]here is no less reason why the trial court should have a second chance
to reexamine its judgment where issues of fact are involved than where issues of law or
law and fact are decided.” (Id. at p. 90.) The court concluded that a motion for new trial
was appropriate in the four situations mentioned above, as well as after judgments of
nonsuit and judgments on directed verdicts. (Id. at pp. 90–91.) However, the case did
not specifically address postjudgment attorney fee motions.
Notwithstanding Carney, no recent case expressly holds that a motion for new trial
can be utilized to secure review in the trial court of the decision on a postjudgment
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motion for attorney fees. For example, the view that petitions for writ of execution at
issue in cases such as Beilock, supra, 81 Cal.App.3d 713, are analogous to pleadings
presenting an issue for “trial” does not necessarily require a determination that the
hearing on a motion for attorney fees is so analogous.10 On the other hand, as stated
above, Mann’s bald statement that a new trial motion can never be used to challenge the
order on a motion in the trial court is clearly too broad. However, we agree with Mann to
the extent it concludes that a motion for new trial is not available to challenge a
postjudgment attorney fees motion. Carney did not overrule that aspect of the Mann
decision.
Finally, Foss contends that even if her motion for new trial was not procedurally
proper, she actually had 180 days within which to file her appeal because the trial court
did not issue its April 6, 2015 order on the “required” FL-190 form. We disagree.
California Rules of Court, rule 8.104(a)(1)(A) provides that the time within which
to appeal is “60 days after the superior court clerk serves on the party filing the notice of
appeal a document entitled “Notice of Entry” of judgment or a file-endorsed copy of the
judgment, showing the date either was served.” (Italics added.) Here, the clerk satisfied
this rule on April 6, 2015 by transmitting a file-endorsed copy of the judgment
accompanied by proof of service. The rules of court require Form FL-190 to be used in
10
In Beilock, supra, 81 Cal.App.3d 713, the appellate court stated: “Wife’s
petition for the writ of execution can be analogized to the complaint because, therein, she
states a claim for relief. Husband’s motion to quash the execution may be viewed as his
‘answer’ to the claim for relief. A decision on the merits of the opposing claims was
reached after presentation of evidence and legal argument.” (Id. at p. 721.) Thus, in light
of the broad definition of “trial” set forth in Adams v. Superior Court (1959) 52 Cal.2d
867, 870, “ ‘ “trial” is the examination before a competent tribunal, according to the law
of the land, of questions of fact or of law put in issue by pleadings, for the purpose of
determining the rights of the parties,’ [¶] . . . [¶] the hearing in the case here . . . was
clearly a trial. Those proceedings were held under the law of the land, the court
considered issues of fact and law raised by ‘pleadings,’ and, as to those issues, it
determined certain rights of the parties.” (Beilock, at p. 721.)
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certain specific instances only, not including postjudgment attorney fee orders.
Specifically, California Rules of Court, rule 5.413(a) provides that “the clerk must give
notice of entry of judgment, using Notice of Entry of Judgment (form FL-190), to the
attorney for each party or to the party if self-represented, of the following: [¶] (1) A
judgment of legal separation; [¶] (2) A judgment of dissolution; [¶] (3) A judgment of
nullity; [¶] (4) A judgment establishing parental relationship (on form FL-190); or [¶]
(5) A judgment regarding custody or support.” Because the trial court was not required
to use form FL-190, the time within which to file an appeal remained 60 days from
April 6, 2015. Foss did not file her notice of appeal within this time. Accordingly, we
lack jurisdiction and the appeal must be dismissed.
DISPOSITION
As to appeal No. A147009, the order is affirmed. Appeal No. A145656 is
dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
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_________________________
DONDERO, J.
We concur:
_________________________
HUMES, P. J.
_________________________
BANKE, J.
A145656/A147009
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