Filed 3/8/16 Marriage of Vasquez and O’Callahan CA4/1
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                    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION ONE

                                           STATE OF CALIFORNIA



In re the Marriage of SEBASTIAN
VASQUEZ and KATHERINE
O'CALLAHAN.
                                                                 D068565
SEBASTIAN VASQUEZ,

         Respondent,                                             (Super. Ct. No. DN177331)

         v.

KATHERIN O'CALLAHAN,

         Appellant.


         APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, David G.

Brown, Judge. Affirmed.



         Katherine O'Callahan, in pro. per., for Appellant.

         No appearance for Respondent.

         In this case, the appellant, Katherine O'Callahan, appeals from an order dismissing

her petition for a domestic violence restraining order against respondent, Sebastian
Vasquez, and making a temporary custody order. At the hearing on her petition,

O'Callahan testified and was being cross-examined when proceedings were recessed.

When the hearing resumed, O'Callahan, though represented by counsel, did not appear,

and her cross-examination was not completed. In light of her failure to appear to

complete her cross-examination, her previous testimony was stricken. In its findings

denying her petition, the trial court stated that, even before it struck her testimony, it

found that O'Callahan was not credible. As we explain, given this record we are required

to affirm the trial court's order.

                     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

         The record in this case indicates that it was initiated as a dissolution proceeding in

Humboldt County. After the dissolution proceeding was initiated, on September 25,

2013, O'Callahan filed a petition for a domestic violence restraining order (DVRO)

against Vasquez in San Diego County. O'Callahan's petition alleged that Vasquez had

committed a number of acts of violence against her during the course of their

relationship. The record also shows that while O'Callahan's petition was pending,

Vasquez was prevented from having contact with either O'Callahan or their minor son,

Kelen.

         Because it became apparent O'Callahan and Kelen resided in Humboldt County,

and after consultation with the trial court in Humboldt County, the trial court ordered the

parties' dissolution action remain in Humboldt County; however, the trial court kept

jurisdiction over O'Callahan's DVRO petition. The petition was heard over the course of

several days. On May 6, 2014, while O'Callahan was being cross-examined, the trial

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court indicated that, although the hearing would have to be continued to May 28, 2014, in

the interim the court was going to permit contact between Vasquez and Kelen. The trial

court stated that it did not find that Vasquez posed any threat to Kelen, and, further, the

trial court stated it found that O'Callahan was not a credible witness and that she had been

caught in a number of outright lies while on the stand. Proceedings were then recessed,

and the parties were instructed that the hearing would resume on May 28, 2014.

       Prior to resumption of the hearing, O'Callahan contacted the trial court and

inquired whether she could appear telephonically because she indicated it was difficult to

travel from Humboldt County. The trial court advised O'Callahan that she could not

make a telephonic appearance and that she would have to appear in person at the hearing

when it resumed.

       On May 28, 2014, when the hearing on O'Callahan's petition resumed, Vasquez

appeared with his counsel, and counsel for O'Callahan appeared. O'Callahan did not

appear, and her counsel moved to continue the hearing; his motion was denied. In the

absence of O'Callahan, whose cross-examination was not complete, the trial court struck

her prior testimony and denied her petition, with prejudice. The trial court's order

denying the petition stated in pertinent part: "The court found that [O'Callahan's]

testimony lacked credibility and found her to be untruthful. The court having considered

her testimony and the testimony of the Family Court Services Mediator believed she filed

a domestic violence restraining order in an effort to keep [Vasquez] from having custody

of the parties' minor child. After considering the testimony presented to the Court and

the fact that [O'Callahan] failed to show while she was still subject to cross examination

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on the witness stand, the court dismissed her request for a restraining order with

prejudice. The court would consider any subsequent filing of restraining order

alleging the same facts as res judicata, as the court does not want her filing a

restraining order on these facts and circumstances to further interfere with

[Vasquez's] right to see the child." (Emphasis in original.) In addition to denying

O'Callahan's petition for a DVRO, the trial court ordered that the parties share joint legal

custody of Kelen, that O'Callahan have physical custody, and that Vasquez have weekend

visitation. The trial court expressly found that both parties were given notice of the

custody issue and an opportunity to be heard. The trial court's custody order was made

subject to modification by the Humboldt County Superior Court. Some months after the

trial court's order, O'Callahan moved for a new trial. The trial court did not reach the

merits of the motion for a new trial, and O'Callahan filed a timely notice of appeal.1

                                        DISCUSSION

       On appeal, O'Callahan, acting in propria persona, challenges the trial court's

factual findings with respect to her right to a restraining order, the trial court's power to

make a custody order, and her contention that Vasquez interfered, in various ways, with

her ability to present her case.




1      The trial court declined to make a ruling on O'Callahan's motion for a new trial
because it believed that the DVRO had been transferred to Humboldt County and that it
did not have jurisdiction to rule on the motion. The motion was therefore denied by
operation of law. (See ECC Construction, Inc. v. Oak Park Calabasas Homeowners
Assn. (2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 1031, 1036.)
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                                   I. Factual Contentions

       Although O'Callahan fashions her factual challenge as both a claim the trial court

employed an erroneous legal standard, as well as a contention that its order is not

supported by substantial evidence, her contentions on appeal suffer from the same defect:

there is no evidence in the record that supports her request for relief.

       As we have indicated, in light of O'Callahan's failure to complete her cross-

examination, the trial court struck her direct testimony. In doing so, the trial court acted

well within its discretion. (See Fost v. Superior Court (2000) 80 Cal.App.4th 735-736.)

The trial court's predicate orders, denying her request to appear telephonically and her

counsel's later motion to continue the hearing, were also well within the trial court's

discretion. In this regard, we note that, as the petitioner seeking a restraining order,

O'Callahan bore the burden of establishing her right to relief, and, in light of that burden

and her previous less than credible testimony, the trial court acted well within the bounds

of reason and fairness in requiring her personal appearance on the witness stand to

complete her cross-examination; moreover, in light of the fact that the matter had been

pending for a number of months, the trial court also acted reasonably in denying counsel's

request for a continuance.

       Because O'Callahan's direct testimony in support of her petition was stricken,

there was no evidence in the record to support her petition. However, even in the absence

of the order striking her testimony, we are bound by the trial court's determination of her

credibility, unless its determination was beyond reason. (Craig v. Brown & Root, Inc.

(2000) 84 Cal.App.4th 416, 421.). Nothing in the record undermines the trial court's

                                              5
determination that O'Callahan was not credible, and her failure to complete her cross-

examination supports the trial court's credibility judgment. Thus, under no set of

circumstances did O'Callahan establish her right to a protective order. Accordingly, we

must reject her contentions that the record does not support the trial court's order denying

her petition.

                                        II. Custody Order

       The Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (Fam. Code,

§ 3400 et seq.) gave the trial court the power to make child custody orders, upon notice

and an opportunity to be heard on custody issues. (See Fam. Code, § 3402, subd. (d).)

The trial court's finding that both parties had notice and an opportunity to be heard is

supported by the record and, in particular, by O'Callahan's own vigorous opposition to

Vasquez's request for custody. Thus, the finding is not subject to review based on

O'Callahan's contention that she did not receive notice of Vasquez's custody contentions

or service of the dissolution action.

                                        III. Interference

       Without any citation to the record, O'Callahan makes a number of factual

contentions in support of her argument Vasquez interfered with her ability to present

evidence on her own behalf and from third party witnesses.2 Some of these events

allegedly occurred after the trial court ordered that Vasquez be given visitation, but



2      O'Callahan contends that Vasquez and an unnamed friend slashed the tires of her
car, burglarized her home, stole money and a firearm, and harassed two witnesses she
planned to call.
                                               6
before the DVRO hearing was complete. Without appropriate citations to the record, we

are not required to search the record and determine the validity of these contentions. (See

People v. Dougherty (1982) 138 Cal.App.3d 278, 282-283.) Our unwillingness to search

the record more thoroughly in an effort to substantiate O'Callahan's factual allegations is

of course informed by our fairly fundamental, although only intermittently discussed,

duty to interpret the record in favor of the trial court's order. "A judgment or order of a

lower court is presumed to be correct on appeal, and all intendments and presumptions

are indulged in favor of its correctness." (In re Marriage of Arceneaux (1990) 51 Cal.3d

1130, 1133.) "A fundamental principle of appellate practice is that an appellant ' "must

affirmatively show error by an adequate record. . . . Error is never presumed. . . . 'A

judgment or order of the lower court is presumed correct. All intendments and

presumptions are indulged to support it on matters as to which the record is

silent . . . .' " ' " (Null v. City of Los Angeles (1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 1528, 1532, italics

omitted.) Thus, it is the appellant's responsibility to include in the appellate record the

portions of the record relevant to the issues on appeal. (Bianco v. California Highway

Patrol (1994) 24 Cal.App.4th 1113, 1125.)

       The fact that O'Callahan is acting in propria persona here does not relieve her of

the obligation to provide us with appropriate record citations. (Burnete v. La Casa Dana

Apartments (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 1262, 1267.) Moreover, in the context of this case,

for two related reasons we are unwilling to relieve O'Callahan of her procedural

obligations: first, the record here is fairly clear that with respect to her relationship with

Vasquez and his conduct, the court found O'Callahan is not a credible witness and, on

                                               7
any remand, the trial court would not be likely to credit the factual claims she asserts in

her briefs; second, although represented in the trial court, Vasquez has not appeared in

this appeal. Thus, were we to depart from application of the rules of procedure, we

would be doing so without the benefit of any argument on his behalf.

                                      DISPOSITION

       The order is affirmed.3



                                                                       BENKE, Acting P. J.

WE CONCUR:


HALLER, J.


O'ROURKE, J.




3    Because Vasquez has not appeared in this appeal, we make no award of costs to
him.
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