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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE
DISTRICT DIVISION SIX |
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2d Civil No. B166116 |
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115 CA4th 104, 8 CR3d 699 |
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January 22, 2004 |
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IN RE MARRIAGE OF JACOB AND ASHA CHAKKO.
JACOB CHAKKO, APPELLANT,
v.
ASHA CHAKKO, RESPONDENT. |
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Tari L. Cody, Judge Superior Court County of Ventura (Super.
Ct. No. D187866) (Ventura County) |
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Patrick G. Cherry; Taylor, McCord & Prayer. Donna C. Santo
and Patricia H. Lamas, Law Offices of Donna C. Santo, for Appellant. |
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Daniel E. Lungren, Attorney General, James M. Humes, Senior
Assistant Attorney General, Thomas M. Humes, Supervising Deputy
Attorney General, Barbara L. Sheldon, Deputy Attorney General,
for Plaintiff and Respondent. |
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The opinion of the court was delivered by: Yegan, J. |
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CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION |
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The first obligation of a parent is to support his or her children.
(In re Marriage of Hyon & Kirschner (1991) 231 Cal.App.3d
449, 452.) This rule is apparently lost on appellant who sees
the instant child support action only as a contest with his former
wife. In this situation, a spouse should set aside his or her
animosity for a former spouse and focus instead on the financial
well-being of his or her children. |
| [12] |
Jacob Chakko (Father) appeals from the trial court's post-judgment
child support "issue sanction" order declaring that his income
is $40,000 per month and precluding him from offering any evidence
to the contrary. The trial court entered this order because Father
failed to comply with an order compelling him to provide discovery
of his financial records to his ex-wife, Asha Chakko (Mother)
and the Ventura County District Attorney (District Attorney).
Father contends the order is punitive, an abuse of discretion,
and not supported by substantial evidence. He is partially correct.
The order is punitive because Father has interfered with the
truth-seeking function of the trial court by refusing to cooperate
in discovery. When the trial court has either expressly or impliedly
so found, it may, in the exercise of its sound discretion, do
justice between the parties by making a discovery "issue sanction" order.
We affirm. Facts and Procedural History |
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Father and Mother were married in December 1976 and separated
in February 1990. The eldest of their two daughters turned 18
in 1998. This appeal concerns the payment of child support arrearages
for their younger daughter, who turned 18 in September 2003.
In October 2000, Father filed a motion to modify the custody
order to grant him primary physical custody of the younger daughter.
The District Attorney intervened, requesting that guideline child
support be ordered and made payable through the District Attorney's
office. |
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At one of the several hearings on the child support issue conducted
by the trial court, the District Attorney introduced into evidence
a loan application that Father used to refinance the mortgage
on his house. This document states that Father's income is $40,000
per month and that his house is valued at $2,500,000. Father
did not object to its introduction into evidence. He did, however,
testify that the application was completed by a broker and that,
although he signed a large stack of documents in connection with
the refinancing, he believed the signature on the application
was not genuine. |
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The trial court ordered the parties to exchange income and
expense declarations, their most recent federal and state tax
returns, and all other relevant financial documents. Father did
not comply. He refused to answer the interrogatories propounded
to him and failed to produce the documents requested by the District
Attorney, including the income tax returns of the corporations
he controls. The trial court granted the District Attorney's
motion to compel, ordering Father to produce the financial records
requested. Father disobeyed the order. |
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The District Attorney filed a motion for sanctions, requesting
an issue sanction declaring Father's income to be "$40,000 per
month from January 1, 2000 through the present." After further
hearing, the trial court imposed an issue sanction order for
the years 2000 and 2001, but declined to impose a sanction for
the year 2002. As a result, Father was ordered to pay child support
of $3936 per month for the year 2000 and $3958 per month for
the year 2001. |
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Father sought reconsideration, insisting that he did not earn
$40,000 per month and that his prior counsel was solely responsible
for any failure to produce documents or comply with other discovery
requests. He claimed that he "never did understand what further
documents I was to produce until I hired my present counsel,
who explained the matter to me." |
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Evidence of Father's Income |
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Father is "employed" by J.C. Industries, Inc., a corporation
he owns with his current wife. The couple also own entities called
Nightsky LLC and Enigami, Inc. In an October 2000 income and
expense declaration, Father declared that J.C. Industries pays
him a salary of $5,291 per month. It also pays his monthly car
payment of $525. In addition, his current wife receives a "dividend" of
$8,900 each month. The corporation also pays their home mortgage.
All tolled, each month J.C. Industries pays at least $13,000
per month of Father's personal expenses. |
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In July 2001, Father re-financed the mortgage on his house.
The loan application stated that Father's monthly income was
$40,000 and estimated the present market value of the house at
$2,500,000. Father testified that a broker completed the loan
application for him. In connection with the re-financing, Father
signed a stack of documents four or five inches thick. He claims,
however, that he did not sign the loan application. According
to Father, the signature on that document is not genuine. Before
the refinancing, the mortgage payment on the house was about
$12,922 per month and was paid by J.C. Industries. After the
re-financing, his monthly payment was reduced to $8,685, also
paid by the corporation. |
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Julie Gaiser Levy, the loan officer responsible for the re-financing,
declared that she obtained for Father a " 'stated income' loan.
A 'stated income' loan is a loan where we use an average of 12
months deposits to verify income rather than paystubs or tax
returns. In the case of Mr. Chakko we supplied [the lender] with
12 months of business bank statements for J.C. Industries and
Enigami, Inc. as the basis by which to calculate and verify his
income, rather than personal bank statement[.]" Levy confirmed
that, in preparing the loan application, she "used an average
of 12 months deposits for Mr. Chakko to calculate his income
of $40,000 per month . . . ." She declared that Father signed
the loan documents, including the application containing the
income figure. |
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Standard of Review |
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We review the trial court's ruling on a discovery sanction
under the deferential abuse of discretion standard. (Vallbona
v. Springer (1996) 43 Cal.App.4th 1525, 1545.) We will affirm
the sanction order unless it is arbitrary, capricious, whimsical,
or demonstrate a " 'manifest abuse exceeding the bounds of reason.
. . .' " (Juarez v. Boy Scouts of America, Inc. (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th
377, 388 [discovery sanction], quoting Kuhns v. State of California
(1992) 8 Cal.App.4th 982, 988 [same]; see also Estate of Gilkison
(1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 1443.) |
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No Abuse of Discretion |
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First, Father contends that the trial court abused its discretion
because there is no substantial evidence that he earns $40,000
per month. He argues that the sole evidence of his income, the
loan application, does not constitute substantial evidence because
it was completed by a third party, contains only an estimate
of his actual earnings, and bears a forged signature. This argument
is premised on an impermissible reweighing of the evidence. The
loan application, standing alone, constitutes substantial evidence
that Father's income was $40,000 per month. (E.g., In re Marriage
of Martin (1991) 229 Cal.App.3d 1196, 1200.) A spouse who is
the owner of a successful business and who has control of his
or her income can structure income and the payment of expenses
to depress income. This is not fair if it inures to the detriment
of children. Here, the trial court drew the inference that Father's
structuring of income and expenses was an attempt to minimize
child support obligations. (See In re Marriage of Schulze (1997)
60 Cal.App.4th 519,529.) |
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Second, Father also argues that even if the loan application
is substantial evidence, the issue was an abuse of discretion
because it placed him in a worse position than he would have
been in had the documents been timely produced and interpreted
in favor of Mother. In exercising its broad discretion to sanction
discovery abuses, the trial court may impose any sanction authorized
by statute that will enable the party seeking discovery to obtain
the objects of the discovery sought. (Vallbona v. Springer, supra,
43 Cal.App.4th 1525, 1545.) "A discovery sanction may not place
the party seeking discovery in a better position than it would
have been in if the desired discovery had been provided and had
been favorable." (Rail Services of America v. State Comp. Ins.
Fund (2003) 110 Cal.App.4th 323, 332; see also Kuhns v. State
of California, supra, 8 Cal.App.4th 982, 988.) |
| [27] |
Code of Civil Procedure section 2023, subdivision (b)(2) permits
the trial court to impose an issue sanction "ordering that designated
facts shall be taken as established in the action . . . ." The
District Attorney attempted to obtain through discovery the tax
returns and other financial records required to determine Father's
income, a necessary step in determining the amount of child support
he was required to pay. For eight months father refused to produce
his most basic and readily available records: tax returns, general
ledgers, profit and loss statements, check registers and the
like. During this time, the best information available concerning
his actual income was the loan application Father used to refinance
the mortgage on his $2,500,000 house. According to his mortgage
broker, the application was prepared using the very documents
that Father refused to produce in discovery. The trial court's "issue
sanction" directly addressed the discovery violation because
it provided the district attorney with the very information that
Father refused to provide voluntarily: evidence of his income
or access to funds tantamount thereto. |
| [28] |
Father has not demonstrated that the sanction was excessive
because it "placed respondents in a better position than if the
evidence had been obtained and had been completely favorable
to respondents." (Kuhns v. State of California, supra, 8 Cal.App.4th
at p. 988.) The financial records that Father refused to produce
were likely to have supported the income stated in his loan application
because his loan broker testified that she completed the application
using at least some of those same documents. Father cannot have
it both ways. If these records were good enough to obtain financing
for a $2,500,000 house, they are good enough to support the "issue
sanction" order concerning child support. |
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Conclusion |
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Father fails to appreciate the rules on appeal concerning substantial
evidence and abuse of discretion. He fails to understand that
the trial court did not credit his testimony. Those who interfere
with the truth-seeking function of the trial court strike at
the very heart of the justice system. The courts will not tolerate
such interference. |
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The "issue sanction" order is affirmed. Costs to respondent. |
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CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION |
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We concur: |
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GILBERT, P.J. |
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PERREN, J. |
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