Opinion
In consolidated appeals Nos. C040840 and C042384 in this ongoing child custody proceeding, Michael A. Newdow (father), in propria persona, 1 appeals from trial court orders requiring him to pay a portion of the attorney’s fees of the child’s mother, Sandra L. Banning (mother), pursuant to Family Code section 7640. 2 Father contends section *443 7640 (a part of the Uniform Parentage Act) is unconstitutional on its face and as applied. We shall conclude the statute is constitutional on its face, and father has waived his “as applied” challenge by failing to present a factual analysis supported by citation to the record.
Father also seeks review of other orders, but they are nonappealable interim orders.
Pursuant to an order to show cause issued by this court, directing father to show cause why sanctions should not be imposed against him for filing in this court a confidential child custody evaluation report, we shall deny mother’s request for sanctions which is unsupported in this appeal by any citation to legal authority. 3
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 1994, mother and father, who never married, had a baby girl. Mother and father had no formal custody arrangement, and mother was the primary caregiver.
In 1999, mother and father ended their relationship, and mother initiated custody proceedings. The trial court ordered joint legal custody, with mother having sole physical custody.
In April 2001, father moved to modify the parenting plan, arguing he is entitled to a “50-50” joint physical custody arrangement. That matter is still pending in the trial court.
During the course of these proceedings, the trial court has made various orders for father to pay a portion of mother’s attorney’s fees.
On April 4, 2002, father filed a notice of appeal (case No. C040840) from trial court orders dated February 6 and March 13, 2002. The record on appeal contains only minute orders for those dates. The February 6, 2002, minute order bore illegible handwritten notes. Father indicates the order of February 6, 2002, directed the transmission to mother’s attorney of $4,756.25 (of a *444 $6,500 “advance!]” he previously deposited pursuant to a July 9, 2001, court order which is not the subject of this appeal). 4
The March 13, 2002, minute order stated the court ordered father to pay $500 in attorney’s fees to mother.
On October 9, 2002, father filed a second notice of appeal (case No. C042384) purporting to appeal from orders entered by the trial court on four dates in 2002—August 21, August 22, September 17, and September 25. The minute orders from those dates bore some illegible handwritten notations. It appears father is challenging orders requiring him to pay mother’s attorney’s fees, as follows: (1) An August 22, 2002, order in the amount of $24,000; and (2) a September 25, 2002, order in the amount of $12,000. However, the September 25, 2002, minute order called for preparation of a formal order, which apparently was not done. Consequently, there is no appealable order for September 25, 2002, as we conclude post.
Father is also challenging the trial court’s determination that father must remove the child as an unnamed plaintiff in a federal lawsuit filed by plaintiff to challenge the Pledge of Allegiance as violative of the establishment clause. We shall explain father fails to show an appealable order. Other orders challenged by father are also nonappealable interim orders.
We consolidated the two appeals, Nos. C040840 and C042384.
DISCUSSION
I. Attorney’s Fees
A. Standard of Review and Appealability
The orders directing father to pay mother’s attorney’s fees are appealable orders.
(In re Marriage of Weiss
(1996)
Father presents questions of law, which are subject to de novo review.
(Trinkle v. California State Lottery
(2003)
B. Father’s Appeals of the Attorney’s Fees Orders are not Barred
We first consider—and reject—mother’s argument that father is barred from challenging the constitutionality of the attorney’s fee awards by his *445 failure to appeal from three prior awards of attorney’s fees in this case (entered on or before July 21, 1999, in amounts of $4,000, $6,500, and $900), which are now final. Mother’s argument is not well taken.
She cites case law for the proposition that final orders are conclusive and bar further litigation of all factual or legal issues that were litigated or might have been litigated, including constitutionality of statutes giving the court jurisdiction to award attorney’s fees.
(Chicot Co. Drainage Dist. v. Baxter State Bank
(1940)
The principle described by mother (barring claims that “might have been” litigated) is res judicata, pursuant to which a former judgment operates as a bar against a second action
upon the same cause. (Bank of America, supra,
Mother fails to discuss any of the cases she cites. None assists her case. The cited cases are distinguishable, e.g., they involved attempts to reopen matters already decided and final, whereas here father is challenging new orders awarding new amounts of attorney’s fees. Thus,
Chicot, supra,
Rescue Army, supra,
Mason, supra,
Peery, supra,
Bank of America, supra,
Mother fails to show how any of these cases apply here to bar father from challenging the new awards of attorney’s fees.
C. Section 7640 is Constitutional
Father contends section 7640 is unconstitutional on its face because it forces him to pay his adversary’s attorney’s fees irrespective of the merits of his case and even if he prevails, solely because he has more money than mother.
We shall conclude section 7640 is constitutional because, even if it implicates fundamental rights, it serves a compelling state interest of promoting the best interests of the child.
We shall also reject father’s contention that the statute was unconstitutionally applied in this case.
1. Facial Challenge
In considering a facial constitutional challenge to a statute, we uphold the statute unless its unconstitutionality plainly and unmistakably appears; all presumptions favor its validity.
(City of Los Angeles
v.
Superior Court
(2002)
*447
It has been said that a facial challenge can succeed only if the statute inevitably poses a present total and fatal conflict with applicable constitutional prohibitions.
(People v. Gallegos
(1997)
We shall conclude that, even under the standard announced in
American Academy of Pediatrics v. Lungren, supra,
Here, section 7640 is part of the Uniform Parentage Act (§ 7600 et seq.), and its application is limited to cases involving matters of parenting and child custody. The statute does not apply to marital dissolution or any other matter unrelated to children. Section 7640 requires the trial court to determine what amount of fees is “reasonable,” (see fn. 2, ante) and section 270 requires the court to determine that the party being ordered to pay “has or is reasonably likely to have the ability to pay.”
By fathering a child, father has assumed responsibilities for that child even where those responsibilities may conflict with father’s own needs or desires.
(American Academy of Pediatrics
v.
Lungren, supra,
The principle of the best interests of the child is the sine qua non of the family law process governing custody disputes. “Although a parent’s interest
*448
in the care, custody and companionship of a child is a liberty interest that may not be interfered with in the absence of a compelling state interest, the welfare of a child is a compelling state interest that a state has not only a right, but a duty, to protect. [Citations.]”
(In re Marilyn H.
(1993)
The importance of the policy protecting the children’s welfare was expressed in a different context in
In re Marriage of Joseph
(1990)
Father asserts section 7640 violates the following constitutional rights: (1) the right of parenthood; (2) freedom of association; (3) freedom of speech; (4) the right to petition government for redress of grievances; (5) the rights against self-incrimination, cruel and unusual punishment, and excessive fines; and (6) the right to be protected against unconstitutional takings.
Even assuming these matters have been preserved for appeal (a point disputed by mother), some of the asserted rights are not shown to have any bearing on the question of the constitutionality of section 7640. Thus, father’s argument about the right of association relates to the nonappealable interim custody orders. Orders to pay an opposing party’s attorney’s fees do not constitute interference with free speech or compelled subsidization of an opponent’s speech.
(Board of Regents v. Southworth
(2000)
Despite the overreaching of father’s position, we shall assume for purposes of this appeal that section 7640 imposes significant encroachment upon fundamental constitutional rights. Father acknowledges such infringement may be permissible if the law is narrowly tailored and justified by a compelling state interest.
(Bates v. Little Rock
(1960)
As indicated, section 7640 says the trial court may order reasonable attorney’s fees to be paid by the parties in proportions determined by the court.
Father claims the statute violates the due process guarantee of the Fourteenth Amendment, which requires a state to treat individuals with “fundamental fairness” when its actions infringe on their protected liberty or property interests. Father also claims section 7640 violates equal protection. Father attempts to bolster his claims of unconstitutionality by ignoring the fact that there are constraints on the trial court in awarding attorney’s fees. Thus, he argues mother’s attorney can “run[] up her charges in revenge,” and due process is violated because section 7640 gives the trial court “unbridled discretion.”
However, as indicated, section 7640 requires the trial court to determine what amount of fees is “reasonable.” This would exclude attorney’s fees incurred for the purpose of revenge. Additionally, section 270 provides; “If a court orders a party to pay attorney’s fees or costs under this code, the court shall first determine that the party has or is reasonably likely to have the ability to pay.” In his reply brief, father argues the “reasonable” standard is too vague to defeat his argument about unbridled discretion. Yet father’s opening brief, under the heading “Unbridled Discretion,” did not even acknowledge the statute imposed a standard of reasonableness. We may disregard arguments made for the first time in a reply brief.
(Garcia
v.
McCutchen
(1997)
Father claims section 7640 violates the public policy against protracted litigation by giving financial incentive to prolong litigation. We disagree. Fees incurred simply to prolong litigation would not be “reasonable” and would be excluded by section 7640. Additionally, section 271 allows the court to impose an order to pay attorney’s fees as a sanction on a party who engages in conduct to prolong litigation.
Cases cited by father involved contexts other than child custody; thus, they are distinguishable and not controlling. Father quotes a dissenting (hence not authoritative) opinion from
Troxel
v.
Granville
(2000)
Father says the United States Supreme Court has already spoken on this issue by explicitly stating the wealth of litigants is an impermissible factor to use in awarding attorney’s fees. He cites
Gulf, C. & S. F. R. Co. v. Ellis
(1897)
In the case before us, there is a reasonable and just (indeed, compelling) reason to impose attorney’s fees on the wealthier party—to ensure that both sides of the custody dispute are represented and are able to present evidence bearing on the best interests of the child—in proceedings where a court is determining who gets custody of a child.
Other cases cited by father are similarly distinguishable because they did not involve payment of attorney’s fees to ensure that opposing viewpoints are presented to the family court in making determinations implicating the best interests of a child in custody proceedings.
The state may legitimately impose a requirement that one parent pay the attorney’s fees of the other parent in order to assure that the best interests of the child are vindicated in the legal proceedings.
(In re Marilyn H., supra,
We recognize father in the case before us thinks he represents the child’s best interests and mother’s position does not. However, reasonable minds *452 could differ on that point. The statute in this case, section 7640, requiring father to pay fees even though he prevails, is the best way of making sure that opposing points of view may be heard, so that the best interests of the child are vindicated, regardless of which parent wins or loses.
In his reply brief, father develops an argument that the “best interests of the child” cannot overcome a due process challenge to section 7640, because the “best interests of the child” standard is itself unconstitutionally vague. We decline to consider this argument, which was not presented in father’s opening brief under the headings devoted to challenging section 7640.
(Garcia
v.
McCutchen, supra,
Father argues that, even if there is a compelling state interest supporting section 7640, the law is not narrowly tailored to serve that interest. However, in this portion of his argument, father misdefines the compelling state interest as merely “levelling] the playing field” between him and mother. He says there is no compelling interest in providing mother with attorney’s fees to fund her exercise of her personal liberties. He cites
Lassiter v. Department of Social Services
(1981)
Father contends the “best interests of the child” is a pretense, because the money is going to an attorney who represents mother, not the child. However, the statutory scheme, by allowing the trial court the discretion whether to order fees and by allowing only “reasonable” attorney’s fees, allows a parent to argue, and the trial court to find, that fees should not be awarded in a particular case if the attorney’s services were not for the benefit of the child.
(In re Marriage of Behrens
(1982)
Father argues the law is not narrowly tailored because it allowed mother to spend 20 times more on attorneys than father. However, we need not consider *453 this argument, because father cites no evidence in the record on these matters. He merely cites his own argument to the trial court, not any evidence supporting his argument. 6
Father argues there are less burdensome ways of satisfying the state’s compelling interest in children’s welfare, such as paying for mother’s attorney with general tax funds, encouraging more pro bono work, giving tax credits, and funding family law legal clinics. None of these suggestions renders the statute unconstitutional. The state may properly require the parent of a child to bear attorney’s fees caused by a custody dispute between father and mother.
Father claims a statute similar to section 7640 was invalidated in
California Teachers Association v. State of California
(1999)
Father claims section 7640 “chill[s]” his decision to proceed to trial or appeal. He cites the trial court’s comment at a hearing on February 6, 2002, in which the court indicated it had previously (at a time when a long cause hearing was contemplated) ordered father to deposit an advance of $6,500 to be applied to mother’s attorney’s fees, and it was the court’s intention that if there was no long cause hearing any balance not ordered paid to mother’s attorney would be returned to father. However, this case is distinguishable from the
CTA, supra,
We conclude section 7640 is constitutional on its face.
2. “As Applied” Challenge
Father purports to challenge the statute “as applied.” However, whereas a facial challenge does not depend on the particular facts of an
*454
individual case
(Proposition 103 Enforcement Project v. Quackenbush
(1998)
Here, although father makes many factual assertions about this case in his appellate brief, he has failed to present a factual analysis supported by citation to the record to demonstrate an unconstitutional application of the statute in this case. We may disregard constitutional claims unsupported by adequate analysis.
(People v. Gordon
(1990)
Father fails to provide adequate analysis with appropriate citations. He also fails to separate the notions of a constitutional “as applied” challenge and a simple challenge to sufficiency of the evidence. He opts instead for a scattershot approach that in any event fails to demonstrate grounds for reversal.
Father suggests he is not allowed to challenge the amount of mother’s attorney’s fees, but he provides no citation to evidence in the record supporting this point. He merely cites from the reporter’s transcript that the court told mother’s attorney to provide a billing statement to father, redacted to protect work product or attorney-client privilege.
In a footnote, father says he was forced to pay for a second case review when mother’s first attorney left. However, he merely cites the reporter’s transcript where he argued he should not have to pay twice. He fails to show he was forced to pay twice.
On appeal, father fails to show the redacted bills left him unable to challenge the reasonableness of the fees, or that he made any such argument to the trial court. Similarly, father complains of the hourly rate of mother’s attorney, but he gives no citation to the record. He merely claims a county fee schedule reflects the county pays a lot less for court-appointed lawyers. Father attempted to attach as an appendix to his appellate brief the written arguments he submitted in the trial court. However, father was required to
*455
remove the 17-page reproduction, which exceeded the 10-page limit for appendices. In any event, such incorporation of trial court arguments in an appellate brief is inappropriate.
(Garrick Dev. Co.
v.
Hayward Unified School Dist.
(1992)
Father argues it violates fundamental fairness to assign responsibility for attorney’s fees based upon financial status of the litigants, without considering how the parties arrived at their economic status. However, he fails to cite evidence in the record to support his factual assertions that he is a hard worker and mother is an unmotivated spendthrift, and he fails to show he presented this argument to the trial court and that the trial court rejected it. Father merely cites the trial court’s comment that “awards of attorney’s fees in this court are not done based upon the prevailing party or based upon who did—who’s the—in the right or who’s the person who had the—the better argument. It’s based upon the ability to pay and the needs of the party.”
Father complains of application of section 7640 to the incident wherein he had to obtain court permission to take his daughter to hear him argue his Pledge of Allegiance case in the federal court of appeals. He asserts it is “absurd” that he had to pay $500 to mother’s attorney just to take his child to San Francisco for a day. His characterization does not demonstrate an unconstitutional application of the statute.
Nor is an adequate “as applied” challenge made by father’s citations to the trial court’s comments that (1) if mother’s attorney wanted to forgive the portion of fees payable by mother, that was beyond the province of the court, and (2) the court would probably decline to award attorney’s fees if father got close to bankruptcy. Father gives no citation to the record to support his assertion that he has been told that every action he takes will come with a huge surcharge.
Father argues that imposing tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorney’s fees on a prevailing party cannot be permissible under
In re Marriage of Flaherty
(1982)
We conclude father has failed to develop any viable “as applied” challenge or other grounds for reversal.
In his prayer for relief, father asks that, if we do not declare section 7640 unconstitutional, we should order (1) that attorney’s fees awards under section 7640 must be limited to the amount spent by the paying party for his own attorney, and (2) the paying party has the right to review billing records and challenge inappropriate activities of the attorney. However, father fails to show he was denied the right to review billing records or challenge inappropriate activities, and we reject father’s proposal to limit the award to the amount spent for the paying party’s attorney.
II. Legal Custody
Father contends the trial court wrongfully deprived him of the legal custody of his child. However, the custody orders are interim and not appealable, and we therefore need not consider father’s arguments.
7
(Lester v. Lennane
(2000)
In his statement of appealability, father quotes from
Sharon v. Sharon
(1885)
Father asks that this court treat as a writ petition his challenge to nonappealable orders. We decline to do so.
*457 III. Statement of Reasons
Father contends the trial court violated his right to receive a “Statement of Reason[s]” under section 3082, which provides: “When a request for joint custody is granted or denied, the court, upon the request of any party, shall state in its decision the reasons for granting or denying the request. A statement that joint physical custody is, or is not, in the best interest of the child is not sufficient to satisfy the requirements of this section.”
Father says he asked the court to explain why a “50-50” custody arrangement would not be in the child’s best interests. However, as we have seen, the custody order was a nonappealable interim order.
(Lester
v.
Lennane, supra,
IV. Phone Calls
Father next contends his “fundamental constitutional right of parenthood” was unjustifiably abridged when the trial court limited his phone calls to his child. Again, interim orders are not appealable.
(Lester
v.
Lennane, supra,
V. Child as Unnamed Party in Federal Case
Father next contends his fundamental constitutional right of parenthood was unjustifiably abridged when the trial court ordered him to remove his child as an unnamed plaintiff from his federal court case challenging the Pledge of Allegiance.
However, we see no court order to this effect. Father cites the reporter’s transcript of a hearing on September 17, 2002, in which the court stated: “Right now I’m making the determination that the child isn’t to' be part of the . . . actual named or unnamed suit
[sic]
because that wasn’t part of the agreement of the parties.” However, the court went on to indicate the ruling may be subject to refining, and the court would review a cited case
(Palmore
v.
Sidoti
(1984)
VI. Order to Show Cause
On April 8, 2003, father filed a motion asking this court to take judicial notice of a March 3, 2003, Evidence Code section 730 evaluation and report by Benjamin Kaufman, M.D.
On April 9, 2003, mother filed a motion to seal the Evidence Code section 730 evaluation report because it was confidential. In the motion, mother asked that we impose sanctions on father, because custody evaluation reports are strictly confidential and may not be disclosed except to the parties and the trial court. (§ 3111; 8 Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.220(h)(2) [evaluator must protect confidentiality and not release information to any individual except as authorized by the court or statute]; Super. Ct. Sacramento County, Local Rules, rule 14.12, Rep. of Custody Expert.) Mother noted father is an attorney and has a duty to familiarize himself with the relevant law. Mother also noted this was the second time father had filed the confidential report with this court with no attempt to preserve its confidentiality. The first time was April 3, 2003, when father submitted a copy of the report with a petition for writ of prohibition.
However, mother’s request for sanctions did not cite any statutory basis or other legal authority for an award of sanctions. She did refer to a motion to seal the report that she filed in response to father’s submission of the report with a petition for writ of prohibition. However, she did not present any legal authority in this appeal.
Accordingly, we deny mother’s request for sanctions with respect to father’s submission of the confidential report.
VII. Attorney’s Fees on Appeal
In the last sentence of her brief in this appeal, mother says she “should recover her costs and attorney fees on appeal.” We shall award her costs on *459 appeal, to which she is entitled pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 27. However, we deny her request for attorney’s fees on appeal, because she has not developed any argument or analysis on the subject. This denial is without prejudice to mother to seek such fees in the trial court.
CONCLUSION
In summary, section 7640 is constitutional on its face, and father fails to show any grounds for reversal.
DISPOSITION
The attorney’s fees awards reflected in orders of February 6, 2002, March 13, 2002, August 21, 2002, August 22, 2002, and September 17, 2002, are affirmed. The appeal from the September 25, 2002, minute order (which directed preparation of a formal order) is dismissed because the minute order was not appealable. The interim custody orders reflected in orders of February 6, 2002, and August 22, 2002, are not appealable, and the purported appeals from those orders are all dismissed. Mother’s request for sanctions as reflected in the order to show cause is denied. Mother shall recover her costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 27(a).)
Morrison, 1, and Butz, J., concurred.
Notes
Newdow was admitted to the California State Bar in July 2002.
Undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code.
Section 7640 provides: “The court may order reasonable fees of counsel, experts, and the child’s guardian ad litem, and other costs of the action and pretrial proceedings, including blood tests, to be paid by the parties, excluding any governmental entity, in proportions and at times determined by the court.”
We deny father’s July 30, 2003, motion to append the record with a one-page letter from mother’s attorney relative to her motion for sanctions.
There is no court order in the record for July 9, 2001, just a minute order which directs mother’s counsel to prepare a formal order.
We reject mother’s argument that, since father himself invoked the “best interests of the child” principle in the custody dispute, he is estopped from asserting that the “best interests of the child” standard is unconstitutional as a justification for a section 7640 fee award.
We disregard factual assertions that father attributes to sources outside the record.
The orders at issue here are a February 6, 2002, minute order and the trial court’s subsequent denial of father’s attempt to modify that order. It appears the parties believe the denial of modification is reflected in the minute order of August 22, 2002, and/or September 25, 2002. Both orders bear illegible handwritten notes. The September 25, 2002, minute order is nonappealable on its face for the independent reason that on its face it requires the preparation of a formal order.
Section 3111 provides: “(a) ... If directed by the court, the court-appointed child custody evaluator shall ... file a written confidential report .... [T]he report shall be filed with the clerk of the court in which the custody hearing will be conducted and served on the parties or their attorneys .... The report may be considered by the court. Q] (b) The report shall not be made available other than as provided in subdivision (a). QQ (c) The report may be received in evidence on stipulation of all interested parties . . . .”
