Cal-Western
Reconveyance Corp. v. Reed (2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 1308, 62 Cal.Rptr.3d 244
[No.
B193014. Second Dist., Div. Eight. June 29, 2007.]
CAL-WESTERN
RECONVEYANCE CORPORATION, Plaintiff, v. BARRY REED, Defendant and Appellant; VALERIE D. REED et al., Defendants
and Respondents.
(Superior
Court of Los Angeles County, No. TS007925, William R. Chidsey, Jr., Judge.)
(Opinion
by Boland, J., with Rubin, Acting P. J., and Flier, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Walter
L. Gordon, III for Appellant Barry Reed.
Law
Offices of Errol Jay Gordon and Arnold Johnson for Respondent Valerie D. Reed.
Lori
A. Cruz, Chief Attorney, and Fesia A. Davenport, Staff Attorney, for Respondent County of Los Angeles Child
Support Services Department.
George
M. Halimi, in pro. per., for Respondent. [152 Cal.App.4th 1311]
OPINION
BOLAND,
J.-
SUMMARY
The
trial court ordered the distribution of surplus proceeds from a trustee's sale of residential property to
satisfy the debtor's obligations for child and spousal support arrearages, a community property equalization
payment to the debtor's former wife, attorney fees ordered in a dissolution proceeding, and a loan and attorney
fees owed to the debtor's former attorney in this lawsuit. We conclude that:
(1)
The distribution of surplus proceeds to satisfy child and spousal support arrearages was proper.
(2)
The trial court erred in distributing proceeds to the debtor's former wife to satisfy her claims for a community
property equalization payment and for [152 Cal.App.4th 1312] attorney fees ordered in the dissolution
proceeding, because no recorded lien or encumbrance secured those claims, which in any event were discharged in
the debtor's bankruptcy proceeding.
(3)
The court also erred in distributing proceeds to the debtor's former lawyer, who was retained to assist the
debtor in the collection of proceeds from the trustee's sale, because an attorney's lien on the prospective
recovery of a client must be enforced in a separate action.
(4)
The debtor failed to produce sufficient evidence to support his claim that he was entitled to a homestead
exemption applicable when a debtor is physically disabled and unable to engage in substantial gainful
employment.
FACTUAL
AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This
case involves the appropriate disposition of the surplus proceeds of a trustee's sale of real property.
Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation was the trustee under a deed of trust on the real property executed by
trustor Barry Reed. After the trustee's sale on May 25, 2004, and payment of costs and the obligations secured
by the deed of trust, surplus proceeds were available to satisfy "obligations secured by any junior liens or
encumbrances in the order of their priority." (Civ. Code, § 2924k, subd. (a)(3).) Cal-Western determined a
conflict existed among potential claimants to the surplus proceeds, and on February 25, 2005, filed a "Petition
and Declaration Regarding Unresolved Claims and Deposit of Undistributed Surplus Proceeds of Trustee's Sale"
under the provisions of Civil Code section 2924j. In accordance with the Code, Cal-Western provided written
notice of its intent to deposit the surplus proceeds ($175,619.76) with the court and that any claims for the
funds were required to be filed with the court. The claimants to the surplus proceeds were:
Barry
Reed, the trustor, who was represented by attorney George M. Halimi.
Valerie
Reed, the former spouse of Barry Reed. Valerie claimed she was entitled to:
An
equalization payment of $13,993.45 ($7,936.00 in principal plus $6,057.45 in accumulated interest), due from
Barry to Valerie as specified in the October 15, 1996 judgment of dissolution of their marriage. [152
Cal.App.4th 1313]
Attorney
fees of $3,886.03 ($2,000 principal and $1,886.03 in interest).
Los
Angeles County. The County's Department of Child Support Services claimed it was currently enforcing a judgment
for child support, as well as child and spousal support arrearages, against Barry. The County sought child
support arrearages of $31,006.76 and spousal support arrearages of $1061.05, as of March 31, 2005. The County,
as judgment creditor, had applied for an abstract of a support judgment on May 13, 1998, which the court issued
on May 21, 1998, and which was recorded on June 8, 1998.
On
April 14, 2005, the court issued an order allowing Cal-Western to deposit the surplus proceeds, and discharging
Cal-Western of further responsibility. At the hearing on April 14, Barry, who was then represented by attorney
Halimi, informed the court he wished to obtain new counsel, and the matter was continued. Four days later, on
April 18, 2005, Barry substituted attorney Halimi out of the case and proceeded to represent himself. On the
same day, attorney Halimi filed a notice of lien in the Cal-Western action. His notice stated that, by virtue of
a written fee agreement dated July 26, 2004, Halimi had claims ahead of all others to secure payment for legal
services, in an amount equal to 15 percent of the surplus proceeds, plus an advance Halimi made to Barry of
$5,000, plus costs and expenses advanced on Barry's behalf of $314.23.
A
hearing was held on December 15, 2005. The trial court concluded the County was entitled to recover amounts due
under prior orders of the family law court, consisting of $33,309.92 for child support through December 15,
2005, and $1,141.65 in spousal support plus accrued interest. The remaining claims were taken under submission,
and the claimants were given an opportunity to present evidence by way of written stipulation or declarations.
On
March 14, 2006, the court issued its final order, distributing the surplus proceeds as follows:
The
sum of $33,678.90, "for Claimant Valerie Reed's claim to satisfy child support arrearages through March 14, 2006
. . . ," payable to the Los Angeles County Court Trustee. [152 Cal.App.4th 1314]
The
sum of $1,162.84, "for Claimant Valerie Reed's claim to satisfy spousal support arrearages through March 14,
2006 . . . ," again payable to the County Court Trustee.
The
sum of $3,887.12, for Valerie's attorney fee claim, payable to the Law Offices of Errol J. Gordon.
The
sum of $15,424.11, for Valerie's equalization payment claim, payable to Valerie.
The
sum of $8,863.06, payable to George Halimi, for his $5,000 loan, interest on the loan, costs advanced, and
quantum meruit for services rendered ($2,725 of the total).
In
making its order, the court found that Valerie's claims for child support, spousal support, attorney fees and
the equalization payment were not discharged by Barry's bankruptcy, and that Barry was not disabled at the time
of the trustee's sale and was therefore not entitled to a $150,000 homestead exemption.
Barry
filed a timely notice of appeal from the trial court's order.
DISCUSSION
[1]
We conclude that the distribution of surplus proceeds to the County for the satisfaction of child and spousal
support arrearages was proper. The trial court erred, however, in distributing proceeds to Valerie to satisfy
her claims for the equalization payment and attorney fees, because no recorded lien or encumbrance secured those
claims, which in any event were discharged in Barry's bankruptcy proceeding. The court also erred in
distributing surplus proceeds to Halimi, because an attorney's lien on the prospective recovery of a client must
be enforced in a separate action. We discuss each point in turn.
A.
The distribution to the County to satisfy child and spousal support arrearages was proper.
Barry
argues that the County had no legal right to record the Abstract of Support Judgment, so that the lien is not
valid. According to Barry, because Valerie was not a welfare mother and did not assign her child support rights
to the County, and because no testimony in the record indicates that Valerie authorized the County to act on her
behalf, the district attorney acted without authority when it recorded the abstract in 1998. Barry thus asks us
to conclude the abstract did not satisfy the requirements of Code of Civil Procedure section 697.320,
subdivision (a), citing Lawyers Title Co. v. Bradbury (1981)
127 Cal.App.3d 41 (Lawyers
Title). We disagree. [152 Cal.App.4th 1315]
[2]
Code of Civil Procedure section 697.320 governs, among other liens, a judgment lien for installments under a
support judgment. It provides that a judgment lien on real property is created by recording an abstract, a
notice of support judgment, or a certified copy of a judgment for child, family, or spousal support payable in
installments, with the county recorder. (Code Civ. Proc., § 697.320, subd. (a).) That is exactly what the County
did: it recorded an abstract of the support judgment. Lawyers Title does not suggest any impropriety in
the district attorney's action.
In
Lawyers Title, the district attorney caused an order pendente lite, which required the husband to pay
child and spousal support, to be recorded as a lien against the husband's property under former Code of Civil
Procedure section 674.5, a predecessor statute. The order pendente lite provided that the order "'shall not be
served upon anyone not a party to this action'" (Lawyers Title, supra, 127 Cal.App.3d at p. 44), and was
succeeded by a later interlocutory decree which was never recorded. The court of appeal concluded the district
attorney's recording of the pendente lite order was a nullity. The reason, however, was because the pendente
lite order expressly stated it was not to be served upon anyone not a party to the action. The court observed
that recording is a form of service on or notice to third parties and, by the express terms of the order, was
not authorized. The court concluded the district attorney "had no greater authority to cause the order to be
recorded than the party whom he purports to represent, to wit, [the wife]." (Id. at p. 45.) In short,
nothing in Lawyers Title supports Barry's claim that the County's abstract of judgment was not validly
recorded.
Further,
Barry did not raise any objection with the court to the County's authority to file the abstract of judgment.
Instead, he objected to the County's accounting and argued he should have the opportunity to conduct discovery
to determine "the true balances of these arrears." Accordingly, we reject Barry's claim the County "did not
sustain its burden to prove it had authority [from Valerie] to record the lien." Because Barry made no objection
to the County's authority, it had no reason to produce evidence on the point. And, although she was not sworn as
a witness, the County's attorney represented to the court that the County was authorized to do so.
fn. 1 (See also Fam. Code, § 17304 ["local child support agency . . . shall be responsible for
promptly and effectively establishing, modifying, and enforcing child support obligations, . . . [and] enforcing
spousal support orders established by a court of [152 Cal.App.4th 1316] competent jurisdiction"; Cal. Code
Regs., tit. 22, § 116130, subds. (a) & (e) ["[a] local child support agency shall prepare and submit for
recording a real property lien within 45 days of the date a money judgment or order is received by the local child
support agency, a case is opened for enforcement of an existing order or judgment, or an existing order is
registered for enforcement"].) Accordingly, the County's abstract of judgment was properly recorded and the
distribution of proceeds to the County was likewise proper.
B.
The trial court erred in distributing proceeds to Valerie to satisfy her equalization payment and attorney
fee claims.
The
court erred in distributing surplus proceeds to satisfy Valerie's claims for the equalization payment and
attorney fees owed by Barry, because (1) no lien or encumbrance secured those claims, and (2) the claims in any
event were discharged in Barry's bankruptcy.
1.
No lien or encumbrance supported Valerie's claims.
Barry
argues that, even if the County's lien was valid, it was only effective "to collect the child support owed from
the surplus funds," not the spousal support, equalization payment or attorney fees. As to the equalization
payment and attorney fees, we agree.
The
County's abstract of support judgment created a lien on the judgment identified in the abstract, which was an
order dated December 4, 1997. In that order, the court required Barry to pay child support, additional support
for child care expenses, and child support arrearages, all in specified sums per month. The order also stated
the court received evidence from Valerie, unrefuted by Barry, that the total amount of child support and spousal
support arrears as of April 16, 1997 was approximately $13,000. fn.
2 The order, however, made no reference to attorney fees or to Valerie's equalization payment.
Consequently, the abstract of judgment filed by the County is effective as a lien for the collection of child
support and spousal support arrearages, but not for other debts not identified in the order.
fn. 3 Indeed, the [152 Cal.App.4th 1317] abstract of judgment does not purport to cover
anything but support. (See Ellrott v. Bliss (1983)
147 Cal.App.3d 901,
905 [exclusive method of establishing a lien on real property for child and spousal support payments is pursuant to
Code of Civil Procedure section 697.320; wife did not acquire a valid lien when she recorded an abstract of
judgment under different statutory provisions, and in any event abstract was inadequate and its recording a nullity
because the amount of the judgment could not be ascertained from the abstract recorded]; Keele v. Reich
(1985)
169 Cal.App.3d 1129,
1131 [omission of required information, known to the judgment creditor, in an abstract of judgment nullified the
abstract].)
[3]
Nor was Valerie's right to her equalization payment and attorney fees secured by any other lien or encumbrance
that would justify distributing surplus proceeds to her. Civil Code section 2924k requires that the proceeds of
a trustee's sale be distributed in the following order of priority:
"(1)
To the costs and expenses of exercising the power of sale and of sale, . . . .
"(2)
To the payment of the obligations secured by the deed of trust or mortgage which is the subject of the trustee's
sale.
"(3)
To satisfy the outstanding balance of obligations secured by any junior liens or encumbrances in the order of
their priority.
"(4)
To the trustor . . . ." (Civ. Code, § 2924k, subd. (a)(1)-(4).)
From
the face of the statute, it is apparent that it authorizes distribution of proceeds only to satisfy secured
obligations: first, the obligation secured by the trust deed or mortgage that is the subject of the sale, and
then the obligations "secured by any junior liens or encumbrances . . . ." (Civ. Code, § 2924k, subd. (a)(3).)
Valerie's right to receive her equalization payment and attorney fees was not secured by any recorded lien or
encumbrance on the real property or its proceeds. Consequently, Civil Code section 2924k did not authorize the
court to distribute proceeds to her, and indeed required the court to distribute proceeds to Barry, as trustor,
after all other liens and encumbrances had been satisfied. (Civ. Code, § 2924k, subds. (a)(3) & (a)(4).)
Valerie
tenders two arguments in her effort to avoid this result. [152 Cal.App.4th 1318]
First,
Valerie argues that Family Code section 290 authorized the trial court's award of surplus proceeds to her.
Family Code section 290 states:
"A
judgment or order made . . . pursuant to this code may be enforced by the court by execution, the appointment of
a receiver, or contempt, or by any other order as the court in its discretion determines from time to time to be
necessary." (Fam. Code, § 290.)
Valerie
argues section 290 gives the court broad discretion to fashion orders enforcing Family Code judgments -- in this
case, the pendente lite attorney fee order, and the judgment of dissolution which called for the equalization
payment -- and this broad discretion has been recognized in many cases, such as In re Marriage of
Schofield (1998)
62 Cal.App.4th 131 (Schofield).
While we do not disagree with the proposition that the trial court's discretion to fashion orders enforcing family
law judgments is broad, we cannot conclude its discretion extends to ignoring the express terms of Civil Code
section 2924k.
Statutory
requirements of various kinds exist for establishing and recording liens on real property, including filing
abstracts of support judgments, as the County did under Code of Civil Procedure section 697.320, and filing
abstracts of money judgments. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 674.) No authority suggests that Family Code section 290
gives the trial court discretion to bypass statutory requirements by, in effect, implying the existence of a
recorded lien or encumbrance when there is none. Schofield does not suggest otherwise. Indeed, the
decision shows that the court's order in that case -- which directed a federal office to pay a former wife
specified amounts, including arrearages, from her former husband's retirement fund (previously determined to be
a community asset) -- was "in compliance with applicable federal law and regulations, as well as community
property principles . . . ." (Schofield, supra, 62 Cal.App.4th at p. 133, 140 [federal statutes and
regulations "clearly allow[ed] the trial court to craft an order which will deal with the problem of collecting
arrearages that have been accrued pursuant to a valid judgment" and "[t]hat was done here in accordance with
established federal procedure"].) In short, section 290 does not supersede Civil Code section 2924k.
[4]
Second, Valerie argues that the December 14, 1994 notice of lis pendens, which she recorded two months before
the judgment of dissolution and which Barry never expunged, operates as an "encumbrance" allowing the trial
court to distribute proceeds to her. fn.
4 She offers no legal support for this proposition. As Barry points out, a notice of lis
pendens does not make the person who recorded it a secured creditor. (See Campbell v. Superior Court
(2005)
132 Cal.App.4th 904,
914 ["true purpose of the lis [152 Cal.App.4th 1319] pendens statute is to provide notice of pending
litigation and not to make plaintiffs secured creditors of defendants"].)
2.
In any event, Barry's obligation to pay Valerie the equalization amount and to pay the attorney fees ordered
in the dissolution proceeding were discharged in Barry's bankruptcy.
Even
if distribution of surplus proceeds to Valerie were authorized without a recorded lien or encumbrance, Barry's
obligations to make the equalization payment and to pay the attorney fees were discharged in his bankruptcy
proceeding. The trial court's contrary conclusion was erroneous. fn.
5
[5]
Obligations for child and spousal support are not discharged in bankruptcy. (11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5) [discharge
"does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt . . . for a domestic support obligation"].) Property
settlement payments, however, are dischargeable. (In re Marriage of Lynn (2002)
101 Cal.App.4th 120,
125 ["[p]roperty settlement payments ordered in dissolution proceedings to effect the equitable division of
community property, as opposed to payments for spousal or child support, are dischargeable in bankruptcy"].)
Barry's obligations to Valerie for the equalization payment and to attorney Gordon for attorney fees were both
listed as claims in Barry's bankruptcy proceeding, and Valerie and attorney Gordon appear on the certificate of
service for the discharge order. The order itself states that Barry was discharged from all debts provided for by
the plan,
"except
any debt . . . in the nature of alimony to, maintenance for, or support of a spouse, former spouse, or child of
the debtor in connection with a . . . divorce decree or other order of a court of record, or property settlement
agreement, as specified in 11 U.S.C. Section 523(a)(5) . . . ."
Valerie
argues that "the effect of the foregoing order was that the Family Law Court orders were not discharged," and
were "specifically excepted" from Barry's discharge. Valerie's assertion is erroneous. Debts "in the nature of .
. . support" were excepted, but Valerie's equalization payment had nothing to do with child or spousal support.
As for attorney Gordon's fees, Valerie contends that the attorney fee order "was established for purposes of
[152 Cal.App.4th 1320] obtaining a child support order," but cites to nothing in the appellate record to
support that claim. The order in question was filed October 26, 1994, a month after commencement of the
dissolution proceeding, and provided for custody and visitation, child support, spousal support, and attorney
fees of $2,000, payable at the rate of $200 per month and commencing two months later, on December 10, 1994. The
attorney fees ordered were not "payable as child support" or "payable as spousal support," as neither of those
boxes were checked in the order.
Valerie
contends In re Ratcliff (Bankr. C.D.Cal. 1996) 195 B.R. 466 supports her claim that the attorney fee
order "is deemed to be in the nature of child support." It does not. In re Ratcliff involved attorney
fees incurred during a child custody hearing, and the court held that "a child custody proceeding is always in
the nature of child support," so that "any award of attorneys' fees against the debtor becomes a
nondischargeable debt pursuant to [11 U.S.C.] Section 523(a)(5)." (In re Ratcliff, supra, 195 B.R. at p.
467.) The court explained that the purpose of the custody proceeding was to determine who could provide the best
home for the child, so that fees incurred for the custody hearing were in the nature of child support and
nondischargeable. (Id. at p. 468; see also In re Chang (9th Cir. 1998) 163 F.3d 1138, 1140-1141
[debts arising from custody proceeding, for guardian ad litem fees, neutral experts' fees and health
professionals' expenses, were "in the nature of . . . support"; California law permitted the compensation of
such persons in consideration of the child's best interests, and bankruptcy court correctly concluded the law
creating the debt created an obligation of support and was therefore nondischargeable].)
This
case did not involve debts arising from a custody proceeding. It involved a prospective order to pay attorney
fees that were not designated to be "payable as child support" or "payable as spousal support." Moreover,
neither Valerie nor attorney Gordon appeared in Barry's bankruptcy proceeding to contest the dischargeability of
the listed debts. (Cf. In re Marriage of Sprague & Spiegel-Sprague (2003)
105 Cal.App.4th 215,
220-221 [state court's order characterizing attorney fees as "in the nature of support" was void because attorney
failed to obtain relief from automatic stay; attorney never asked the bankruptcy court for a determination that
attorney fees were nondischargeable, and "[t]hus, the bankruptcy court's order granting [wife's] discharge in
bankruptcy discharged the . . .attorney fees"].) In short, Valerie's claim that the attorney fees were not
discharged in the bankruptcy proceeding is without merit. [152 Cal.App.4th 1321]
C.
The trial court erred when it distributed surplus proceeds to Barry's former attorney for the attorney's loan
to Barry, interest, costs and attorney fees.
In
the retainer agreement between Barry and Halimi, Halimi agreed to represent Barry in the collection of proceeds
from the trustee's sale. Specifically, Halimi undertook Barry's representation "with respect to his claims
against Bank of America and trustees of the deed of trust on [the real property], for collection of proceeds of
sale." Attorney fees were "contingent upon the recovery of damages and surplus funds from the sale . . . ," and
were set at 15 percent of the recovery. Barry also agreed to pay all costs, and the agreement gave Halimi a lien
for attorney fees and costs advanced, and for the $5,000 personal loan, "on all proceeds of any recovery and
surplus funds from the sale obtained (whether by settlement, arbitration award, or court judgment)."
[6]
While Halimi has a lien on Barry's recovery of surplus proceeds, Barry correctly asserts that the trial court
did not have jurisdiction to hear Halimi's lien claims. An attorney's lien on the prospective recovery of a
client must be enforced in a separate action, and "[a]ny order or judgment granting the attorney fees made in
the main action is in excess of the court's jurisdiction and is void." (Bandy v. Mt. Diablo Unified Sch.
Dist. (1976)
56 Cal.App.3d 230,
234 (Bandy).) The rule has been stated many times:
"'Appellate
courts have consistently held that the trial court in the underlying action has no jurisdiction to determine the
existence or validity of an attorney lien on the judgment. [Citations.] The trial court does have fundamental
jurisdiction over the subject matter and over the parties. Nevertheless, because the attorney is not a party to
the underlying action and has no right to intervene, the trial court acts in excess of its jurisdiction when it
purports to determine whether the attorney is entitled to foreclose a lien on the judgment. [Citations.] Nor can
the court entertain a motion to terminate the lien. [Citation.] After the client obtains a judgment, the
attorney must bring a separate, independent action against the client to establish the existence of the lien, to
determine the amount of the lien, and to enforce it. [Citations.] An order within the underlying action
purporting to affect an attorney's lien is void.'" (Brown v. Superior Court (2004)
116 Cal.App.4th 320,
328 (Brown), quoting Carroll v. Interstate Brands Corp. (2002)
99 Cal.App.4th 1168,
1173.)
Thus,
Brown explained, "while Brown was entitled to assert his lien claim against the proceeds of the
VMT judgment by filing a notice of lien in the VMT action, the trial court had no power to determine in that
action whether Brown's lien claim was valid or invalid." (Brown, supra, 116 Cal.App.4th at p. 329.)
This
case presents the precise circumstances described in Brown: Halimi was entitled to assert his claim --
against any surplus proceeds Barry might [152 Cal.App.4th 1322] receive in this action -- by filing a
notice of lien in the action, as he did, but the trial court had no authority to determine the validity of his
claim. As Brown explains, the rule that the trial court in the underlying action lacks jurisdiction to
affect an attorney lien "is founded on the fundamental principle 'that one who is not a party to a proceeding
may not make a motion therein.' [Citation.]" fn.
6 (Brown, supra, 116 Cal.App.4th at p. 329; see also, e.g., Bandy, supra, 56
Cal.App.3d at pp. 235, 234 [in the case of an attorney who has been granted a lien under a contingent fee
contract, but who has been discharged prior to the happening of the contingency, "all that remains to be done by
him, once the contingency has occurred . . . is to seek an adjudication in an independent action of the
reasonable amount of the attorney fees due him"; trial court's order granting lien in the underlying action "was
improper and premature as the contingency stated in the contract had not occurred"]; Hendricks v. Superior
Court (1961)
197 Cal.App.2d 586,
588-589 [because attorney "was not a party in the original action any order or judgment therein giving him
attorney's fees is in excess of jurisdiction," and "[s]uch an order or judgment, if made, is void"; "the
enforcement of [the attorney's] contractual lien necessarily requires that he obtain his relief through an
independent action in which petitioner may set up any defenses she may have"].) fn.
7
Halimi
does not attempt to distinguish the cited authorities, but merely argues that an interpleader procedure was
proper, where the trustee held surplus proceeds to which there were conflicting claims, and he was therefore
required to file his claim against the proceeds in the Cal-Western action. He also cites no authority for the
latter proposition, and it is erroneous. This was not an interpleader action, but was filed in accordance with
procedures [152 Cal.App.4th 1323] established in Civil Code section 2924j. fn.
8 Halimi was not and could not have been a claimant in Cal-Western's action, as he was not
among those persons "with recorded interests in the real property as of the date immediately prior to the
trustee's sale . . . ." (See Civ. Code, § 2924j, subd. (a).) Indeed, his claim had not yet arisen when
Cal-Western filed its petition. In short, we can see no basis upon which to conclude the trial court had any
authority to determine Halimi's claim in the Cal-Western action.
D.
The trial court correctly rejected Barry's claim of a homestead exemption of $150,000.
[7]
On January 31, 1995, Barry recorded a homestead declaration on the real property. He contends he was physically
disabled at the time of the trustee's sale. The exemption statutes provide that the amount of the homestead
exemption is $150,000, if the judgment debtor "is at the time of the attempted sale of the homestead . . . [a]
person physically or mentally disabled and as a result of that disability is unable to engage in substantial
gainful employment." (Code Civ. Proc., § 704.730, subd. (a)(3)(B).) The County's attorney told the court the
County received wage assignment payments, one at the end of April 2004, one in July 2004, and others since that
date, indicating that Barry was "in fact engaging in employment." When the trial court asked Barry if he was
employed at any time during 2004, Barry testified that: "I don't remember the exact date, Your Honor, that I
went out on disability but I know at the time my property sold, I was on disability. I have to check my
records." The court concluded there was a lack of evidence to substantiate Barry's claim that he was disabled
within the meaning of Code of Civil Procedure section 704.730, and limited the homestead exemption to $50,000.
(Code Civ. Proc., § 704.730, subd. (a)(1).)
Barry
contends that the homestead law is designed for the protection of the homeowner, not the creditor, and the trial
court was required, as stated in Title Trust Deed Service Co. v. Pearson (2005)
132 Cal.App.4th 168,
"'to adopt a liberal construction of the law and facts to promote the beneficial purposes of the homestead
legislation to benefit the debtor. [Citations.]'" (Id. at p. 174.) A "liberal construction of the law and
facts," however, does not mean the trial court is at liberty to apply an exemption in the absence of satisfactory
evidence that Barry was "unable to engage in substantial gainful employment." (Code Civ. Proc., § 704.730, subd.
(a)(3)(B).) We are similarly not at liberty to interfere with the trial court's conclusion on this point. [152
Cal.App.4th 1324]
DISPOSITION
The
order is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cause is remanded with directions to enter a new order
consistent with this opinion. The parties are to bear their own costs.
Rubin,
Acting P. J., and Flier, J., concurred.
FN 1. The
County's lawyer stated: "So she [Valerie] hasn't assigned any right to us but she has requested that we enforce on
her behalf so we step into her shoes as to enforcement services." When the court enquired, "And you are statutorily
authorized to do that?" the county's lawyer replied, "Absolutely."
FN 2. Valerie
and Barry waived their respective rights to receive spousal support from the other party in the October 15, 1996
judgment of dissolution of their marriage. The spousal support arrearages arose from an order of October 26, 1994,
entered a few weeks after the dissolution action was filed.
FN 3. Barry
also asserts that the abstract was not effective as a lien for the spousal support arrearages, because the judgment
shows the trial court continued the matter to November 25, 1997 for both parties to submit evidence on the issue of
any arrears. The judgment, however, was entered after the continuance date, on December 4, 1997, so it is obvious
that no evidence was submitted to change the conclusion in paragraph 6 of the judgment specifying the total amount
of child and spousal support arrears.
FN 4. Valerie's
notice of lis pendens referred to her dissolution action and stated the action was to determine the ownership of
the real property, although Valerie did not hold title to the property, having quit-claimed it to Barry in a deed
recorded on December 8, 1994.
FN 5. At
the hearing, the court stated: "[I]f an order is made in a family law court which in effect constitutes either
child support or spousal support . . . , whether it included an equal distribution of the property . . . or whether
or not it included attorneys' fees which were incurred with respect to the receipt of spousal or child support,
that they are deemed to be in the form of child and spousal support, and, therefore, pursuant to federal bankruptcy
statute, are not dischargeable. . . . [T]he court finds that the . . . [equalization payment and] attorney's fees
that were awarded to Mr. Gordon were in the form of child and spousal support. They were incurred at or about the
time that the initial child and spousal support orders were granted."
FN 6. Limited
circumstances exist under which an attorney might be entitled to intervene as a party in a client's action, but
such circumstances do not exist here. The Supreme Court has explained: "'"The right of an attorney to intervene for
the purpose of settling a dispute between him and his client as to attorney's fees for services rendered in the
same action is limited to those actions wherein, by virtue of the contract of employment between the attorney and
client, the former is given a specific present interest in the subject matter of the action, which interest
might be jeopardized by the client's discharge of his original attorney and the employment of another to prosecute
the action."' [Citation.]" (Isrin v. Superior Court (1965)
63 Cal.2d 153,
160.) The cases "uniformly hold that such an interest is not created by the execution of a contingent fee contract"
even where the client expressly grants the attorney a lien to secure his fee. (Id. at pp. 160-161.) "The
fact that [the attorney] has a right by contract to participate in the proceeds of any judgment that may be
obtained does not make him in any true sense of the word a party in interest." (Id. at p. 161.)
FN 7. During
the December 15, 2005 hearing, Barry indicated he had "no problem paying the $5,000" loan from Halimi, although he
observed that the agreement stated "I will pay him after I receive my proceeds," and that he "[hadn't] received
anything." Barry vehemently objected to the claim for attorney fees.
FN 8. The
procedures in Civil Code section 2924j, subdivisions (a) through (d), apply "[u]nless an interpleader action has
been filed . . . ." (Civ. Code, § 2924j, subds. (a) & (e).)
|