COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Beales, Alston and Senior Judge Haley
UNPUBLISHED
Argued at Richmond, Virginia
DARCI A. REILLY
MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
v. Record No. 1369-15-2 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES
DECEMBER 13, 2016
PATRICK L. REILLY
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY
Timothy J. Hauler, Judge
Amanda Padula-Wilson (Parental Rights Law Center, on briefs), for
appellant.
Sherry L. Gill (Jacobs, Caudill, & Gill, on briefs), Guardian ad litem
for the infant children.
No brief or argument for appellee Patrick L. Reilly.
Darci Reilly (“mother”) appeals the circuit court’s decision denying her a new trial and
instead entering a “Consent Order” that mother had not signed. Mother also argues that her due
process rights were violated when father’s attorney and the guardian ad litem made representations
to the court without giving mother an opportunity to cross-examine the attorneys, that the circuit
court erred when it improperly delegated visitation determinations to the guardian ad litem, and that
the circuit court erred by awarding Patrick Reilly (“father”) attorney’s fees as a punitive measure.
*
Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
I. BACKGROUND1
On April 2, 2014, mother, father, and Sherry Gill (the “guardian ad litem” or “GAL”)
appeared before Judge Frederick G. Rockwell, III in the circuit court for a de novo hearing after
an appeal from the juvenile and domestic relations district court. On July 28, 2014, Judge
Rockwell entered an order recusing himself from the matter. The order reads, “Came the above
[custody and visitation] matter before the Court on July 28, 2014 for presentation of a consent
order and for a hearing on support. At the commencement of the hearing the Respondent
[mother] motioned for recusal, and it appearing appropriate to do so it is hereby . . . granted.”
After Judge Rockwell’s recusal, Judge Hauler presided over the remainder of the proceedings in
this case.
At the first hearing with Judge Hauler on November 20, 2014, although no written and
signed consent order had been filed with the circuit court at the time Judge Rockwell recused
himself, the GAL presented to the circuit court a document titled “Final Consent Order –
Custody & Visitation” (“Consent Order”). This “Consent Order” was not signed by mother.
There was no transcript of the hearing on April 2, 2014 for Judge Hauler to review. The GAL,
along with father’s attorney, informed Judge Hauler that all parties had agreed to the “Consent
Order” while Judge Rockwell was presiding, and the only thing left for Judge Hauler to do was
to formally enter the order. Mother had not signed the proffered “Consent Order,” and mother’s
counsel argued that mother was actually entitled to receive a trial de novo in the circuit court
because she had not agreed to the “Consent Order” as drafted by the GAL.2
1
Procedurally, this case comes to a panel of this Court after the Court awarded rehearing
of the case.
2
Shannon Dillon was mother’s retained counsel until Amanda Padula-Wilson substituted
in as counsel after the November 20, 2014 hearing.
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The GAL said, “Judge Rockwell didn’t participate in any of the actual proceedings in
reaching an agreement. All counsel, including one of our expert witnesses that I had present, we
retired to the hearing room at the end of the hall and reached an agreement, came in and
presented that to the Court. It was accepted by the court.” The GAL further explained that the
parties were then to come back before the court to enter the order and to determine “support
issues.” The GAL continued, “And despite the fact that [Judge Rockwell] didn’t participate in
anything relative to our reaching an agreement, all he did was accept it. And when he accepted
it, he asked that I submit a copy of my notes that summarized the agreement into the court file,
which was done.” Mother, speaking on her own behalf to Judge Hauler, said,
[S]he [the GAL] again brought a consent order that again I was not
allowed to preview or read before coming to the courthouse,
despite our requests. And, again, it was not what I had agreed to.
And, actually, there was even more added to [the GAL’s] version
of that consent order of things I had never agreed to at all. Things
that we had never even discussed that day. And that’s why I
couldn’t sign it, I didn’t agree to those things.
Despite mother’s argument, Judge Hauler agreed with the GAL and father’s attorney and entered
the “Consent Order” over mother’s objections.
After various motions hearings in which mother petitioned the court to reconsider the
matter, Judge Hauler held a hearing in order to determine whether mother had actually agreed to
the terms in the “Consent Order” that the GAL had presented to him. At the March 23, 2015
hearing, Judge Hauler, on the GAL’s motion, determined that Amanda Padula-Wilson, counsel
for mother, had an actual conflict of interest and could not represent mother on the child custody
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and visitation matters.3 The matter was continued for mother to attempt to retain another
attorney. However, because mother could not afford to hire an attorney, she represented herself.
At the April 15, 2015 hearing, Judge Hauler noted, “All right. We are, I hope, gathering
for the last time on this matter. Purpose and sole scope of this hearing is to determine whether or
not there was a consent order that was properly entered in this matter by the circuit court, and
whether there was an agreement between the parties.”4 The parties each presented witnesses,
and the attorneys themselves made representations to the court about the hearing in front of
Judge Rockwell and even about the private settlement conference that occurred among the
parties. At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Hauler found:
[T]he Court finds from the evidence that has been presented by the
parties that there was clear and convincing evidence regarding a
settlement conference, and that it did occur on the second of April
of 2014, in the circuit court conference room outside of courtroom
five. The Court further finds by clear and convincing evidence that
the terms and conditions of that settlement conference were
ultimately related to the trial judge who was sitting at that time in
courtroom five. There is evidence that the trial judge indicated that
the guardian ad litem, from her notes, prepared an order to embody
the terms and conditions of that settlement conference. That the
parties were quizzed to some extent, full extent of which is
unknown to the court, but to some extent were quizzed by the
presiding judge as to whether or not that settlement agreement had
been reached. . . . [T]he Court believes that the order that was
entered by this Court on November the 20th of 2014 . . . is in fact
the agreement that the parties had reached, and that subsequent
thereto there obviously had been buyer’s remorse on the part of
Mrs. Reilly.
3
Mother’s counsel represented without correction that a complaint was filed with the
Virginia State Bar, and, after review, the Virginia State Bar issued an opinion finding that her
counsel, Padula-Wilson, did not have a conflict of interest in representing mother.
4
Judge Hauler had previously requested that “all individuals that were present and
involved in the negotiations be present to testify as to whether or not there was a settlement.”
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Ultimately, at a subsequent hearing for determining child support after the change in
custody and visitation, Judge Hauler awarded father his attorney’s fees throughout the circuit
court proceedings in the amount of $9,687.50.
On August 3, 2015, Judge Hauler entered a “Final Order” finding by clear and
convincing evidence that mother and father
entered into an agreement relative to all matters of Custody and
Visitation of the minor children that were before the Court on
April 2, 2014, and that said agreement was presented to, and
accepted by, the Court on that date. AND FURTHER, the “Final
Order – Custody and Visitation” entered by this Court on
November 20, 2014 accurately reflects the agreement reached by
[father] and [mother] on April 2, 2014.
The final order also incorporated the “Final Consent Order – Custody & Visitation,” and denied
mother’s motion to set aside the verdict.
On August 31, 2015, Amanda Padula-Wilson, on behalf of her client, mother, signed and
filed a timely notice of appeal in the circuit court.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Jurisdiction
At the outset, the GAL argues that mother’s notice of appeal was “defective” and that this
Court lacks jurisdiction to hear this case on appeal because the notice of appeal “was filed in the
circuit court and signed by Ms. Padula-Wilson after the circuit court removed her as counsel of
record due to an impermissible conflict.” GAL Supplemental Brief at 5. Thus, the GAL asserts
that Padula-Wilson could not sign the notice of appeal as counsel of record on appeal because
the circuit court removed her as counsel for the custody and visitation portion (not child support)
of the litigation in the circuit court. Because Padula-Wilson had a conflict and, as the GAL
argues, could not subsequently represent mother on appeal, the GAL asserts that
Padula-Wilson’s signature on the notice of appeal should be a nullity and the notice should be
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stricken. Padula-Wilson argues that mother properly retained Padula-Wilson’s services for
appeal.
[A]n appellate court will acquire jurisdiction over the case if a
party aggrieved of the judgment, who was properly before the
circuit court, notes an appeal of the judgment in the circuit court in
accord with the rules of the appellate court having jurisdiction over
the subject matter of the case.
Ghameshlouy v. Commonwealth, 279 Va. 379, 390, 689 S.E.2d 698, 703 (2010). Rule 5A:6,
titled “Notice of Appeal,” requires a litigant to file a notice of appeal in the circuit court in order
to perfect an appeal to the Court of Appeals. See Rule 5A:6 (“No appeal shall be allowed unless,
within 30 days after entry of final judgment or other appealable order or decree, . . . counsel files
with the clerk of the trial court a notice of appeal . . . .”); see also Rule 5A:16 (“In cases when an
appeal lies as a matter of right to the Court of Appeals, such appeal shall be perfected by a timely
filing of a notice of appeal pursuant to Rule 5A:6[.]”). It is true that “every pleading, written
motion, and other paper of a party represented by an attorney shall be signed by at least one
attorney of record . . . and . . . [a] party who is not represented by an attorney. . . shall sign his
pleading, motion, or other paper and state his address.” Code § 8.01-271.1. Moreover, “if a
pleading, written motion, or other paper is not signed, it shall be stricken.” Id.
However, Rule 5A:6 does not give the circuit court any new rights or abilities with regard
to the parties, but instead operates to alert the circuit court so that the circuit court can prepare its
documents and record for transmission to the Court of Appeals – i.e. it is not a filing that requires
anything more than a ministerial action from the circuit court. Mother, through counsel she
retained for the appeal, noted her appeal to this Court after the circuit court entered a judgment
against her. The GAL argues that, because Padula-Wilson was removed as counsel on the child
custody and visitation portion of the litigation (she remained counsel of record for the related
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child support proceeding), she could not represent mother on appeal to this Court on the issue of
child custody and visitation.
We find that a circuit court judge, by removing an attorney below, does not preclude an
appellant from retaining a particular attorney, in this case, Padula-Wilson, for the purpose of
appealing to this Court. Therefore, we find that mother’s notice of appeal, signed by
Padula-Wilson, was proper.5
B. Consent Order
Mother argues that the circuit court erred when it entered the “Consent Order” without
mother’s signature and over mother’s objection and request for a trial de novo.
1. Standard of Review
Whether the “Consent Order” was an enforceable agreement between the parties is a
question of law which this Court reviews de novo. Brown v. Commonwealth, 279 Va. 210, 217,
688 S.E.2d 185, 189 (2010).
2. Proposed “Consent Order”
“We have repeatedly held that an appeal to the circuit court from a court not of record
under Code § 16.1-136 annuls the judgment of the inferior tribunal as completely as if there had
been no previous trial . . . .” Walker v. Department of Public Welfare, 223 Va. 557, 563, 290
S.E.2d 887, 890 (1982). Thus, “an appeal from the juvenile court must be heard de novo by the
circuit court.” Fairfax County Dep’t of Family Servs. v. D.N., 29 Va. App. 400, 406, 512 S.E.2d
830, 832 (1999).
5
Of course, in this case the circuit court did not attempt to preclude Padula-Wilson from
noting an appeal on behalf of mother. In fact, the circuit court referenced several times the
possibility that Padula-Wilson could represent mother on appeal (“I’m not ordering that
Ms. Wilson file an appeal on her behalf. You may consult with her or any other attorney.”).
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In this case, over mother’s objection, the circuit court entered the GAL’s proffered
“Consent Order” in lieu of proceeding to a trial de novo. A circuit court certainly has authority
to allow the parties to enter into an agreement that disposes of a case instead of going to trial
pursuant to Code § 8.01-576.11, which states:
If the parties reach a settlement and execute a written agreement
disposing of the dispute, the agreement is enforceable in the same
manner as any other written contract. Upon request of all parties
and consistent with law and public policy, the court shall
incorporate the written agreement into the terms of its final decree
disposing of a case.
(Emphasis added). To “execute” a written agreement means to sign it. See Execute, Black’s
Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (“To make (a legal document) valid by signing; to bring (a legal
document) into its final, legally enforceable form”).
However, this “consent order” was not signed by mother or even presented in its written
form to Judge Rockwell. It is well settled that a court speaks through its written orders, see
Temple v. Mary Washington Hosp., Inc., 288 Va. 134, 141, 762 S.E.2d 751, 754 (2014) (holding
that “trial courts speak only through their written orders”), and Judge Rockwell’s July 28, 2014
written order shows that the case had been continued for the “presentation of a consent order.”
Thus, Judge Rockwell had not yet seen or entered a written consent order, according to his own
July 28, 2014 order. Consequently, the relevant inquiry before us is whether Judge Hauler could
accept the unsigned “Consent Order” as it was proffered to him by the GAL. The GAL, after
meeting with mother, mother’s attorney, father’s attorney, and several other persons involved
with the case, presented to Judge Hauler the GAL’s proposed consent order. At the time Judge
Hauler reviewed the “Consent Order,” mother had not signed it and had clearly indicated to the
judge that she did not want to sign it because it did not reflect her understanding of the parties’
private settlement agreement.
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In summary, mother’s timely appeal of the child custody and visitation order entered in
the juvenile and domestic relations district court entitled her to a trial de novo in the circuit court
on those issues, pursuant to Code § 16.1-296. When the GAL presented mother with the GAL’s
proposed “Consent Order,” it was mother’s prerogative to decline to sign the proposed consent
order when she was presented with it and to continue the pursuit of her de novo appeal in the
circuit court. Therefore, we find that the circuit court erred in entering as a “Consent Order” an
order to which all parties had not consented and then incorporating it into the final order. We
remand the case for a trial de novo in the circuit court on child custody and visitation matters, as
is the right of a party who requests it by timely appealing to the circuit court from a court not of
record. See Code § 16.1-296.
C. Attorney’s Fees
1. Standard of Review
An award of attorney’s fees and costs “is a matter for the trial court’s sound discretion
after considering the circumstances and equities of the entire case.” Artis v. Artis, 4 Va. App.
132, 138, 354 S.E.2d 812, 815 (1987); see Joynes v. Payne, 36 Va. App. 401, 429, 551 S.E.2d
10, 24 (2001) (“The key to a proper award of counsel fees is reasonableness under all the
circumstances.”).
2. The Punitive Awarding of Attorney’s Fees
At the conclusion of the hearing determining child support, the circuit court awarded
attorney’s fees and costs to father in the amount of $9,687.50. Mother asserts that the circuit
court awarded attorney’s fees to punish mother for disputing the validity of the “Consent Order.”
At the December 5, 2014 hearing, the circuit court said:
Since I was not privy to the prior interaction between the parties to
the prior representations that were made to the Court, I’m kind of
the new kid on the block, but I can also assure you this: If we are
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going through this exercise, and it proves to be an exercise in
futility that need not have been undertaken, Ms. Reilly’s going to
pay the attorney’s fees . . . .
Subsequently, at the May 7, 2015 hearing to determine child support based on the change in
custody and visitation, Judge Hauler awarded father attorney’s fees in the amount of $9,687.50
without further explanation.
The outcome here is controlled by Alexander v. Flowers, 51 Va. App. 404, 658 S.E.2d
355 (2008). In Flowers, the circuit court said:
If the evidence is going to be the same that was presented on May
18, you can bank on the fact that the decision is going to be the
same. Now, I don’t know what the evidence is going to be,
Mr. Kuchinsky [Mr. Flowers’s attorney]. But if we are going
through an appeal for purposes of going through the motions and
the evidence turns out to be exactly what it was on May 18, I can
tell you what, we are wasting a whole lot of time, and they are
going to get attorney’s fees for it.
Id. at 410, 658 S.E.2d at 357. Just as in Flowers, “it is clear from the record that rather than
assessing a fee based upon the financial ability of the parties and other relevant factors, the trial
court imposed the award as a punitive measure as it announced it would do.” Id. at 415, 658
S.E.2d at 360. It is clear from the circuit court’s statements to mother that the circuit court
awarded father attorney’s fees because mother disputed the “Consent Order” – an action which
she was entitled to do.
Therefore, we reverse the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees.
D. Due Process
Mother argues that the circuit court violated mother’s Fourteenth Amendment “due
process rights when it took evidence from attorneys in the form of testimony without allowing
cross examination” at its April 15, 2015 hearing to determine whether mother had agreed to the
“Consent Order” in lieu of exercising her right to a new trial. We find that this issue is moot
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because the case must be remanded for a trial de novo in the circuit court. See Va. Dep’t of State
Police v. Elliott, 48 Va. App. 551, 554, 633 S.E.2d 203, 204 (2006) (“We see it as our duty ‘not
to give opinions upon moot questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of
law which cannot affect the matter in issue in the case before it.’” (quoting Hankins v. Town of
Virginia Beach, 182 Va. 642, 644, 29 S.E.2d 831, 832 (1944))).
E. Third Party Authority to Alter Visitation6
Mother argues that the circuit court, in its final custody order, gave the GAL “sole
discretion over determining visitation” between mother and the children. Code § 20-124.2 gives
district and circuit court judges the authority to determine custody and visitation of minor
children.7 The Supreme Court has said before:
6
Although our decision to remand for a de novo trial necessitates the reversal of the
circuit court’s final order (and thus its custody and visitation arrangement as well as its support
arrangement), we address the assignment of error regarding the determination of visitation
because of the likelihood that the issue will arise again on remand. See Smith v. McLaughlin,
289 Va. 241, 259, 769 S.E.2d 7, 17 (2015).
7
Code § 20-124.2 states (in relevant part):
A. In any case in which custody or visitation of minor children is at
issue, whether in a circuit or district court, the court shall provide
prompt adjudication, upon due consideration of all the facts, of
custody and visitation arrangements, including support and
maintenance for the children, prior to other considerations arising
in the matter. The court may enter an order pending the suit as
provided in § 20-103. The procedures for determining custody and
visitation arrangements shall insofar as practical, and consistent
with the ends of justice, preserve the dignity and resources of
family members. Mediation shall be used as an alternative to
litigation where appropriate. When mediation is used in custody
and visitation matters, the goals may include development of a
proposal addressing the child’s residential schedule and care
arrangements, and how disputes between the parents will be
handled in the future.
B. In determining custody, the court shall give primary
consideration to the best interests of the child. The court shall
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A court of equity cannot abdicate its authority or powers, nor
confide nor surrender absolutely to anyone the performance of any
of its judicial functions. It may rightfully avail itself of the eyes
and arms of its assistants in the proper preparation for judicial
determination of the many complicated, difficult, and intricate
matters upon which its judgment is invoked, but in it resides the
authority, and to it solely belongs the responsibility, to adjudicate
them.
Raiford v. Raiford, 193 Va. 221, 230, 68 S.E.2d 888, 894 (1952) (quoting Shipman v. Fletcher,
91 Va. 473, 476, 22 S.E. 458, 460 (1895)). In this case, the final custody order reads:
Mother shall enjoy Supervised Visitation with the minor children.
At this time, there is to be no contact, directly or indirectly,
between Mother and either of the minor children other than those
contacts arranged via Commonwealth Catholic Charities, a
supervising agency. . . . It is the goal of Mother to earn additional
Supervised visits, expanded Supervised visits, Supervised Visits in
the community (via other supervising agencies if Commonwealth
Catholic Charities is unable to accommodate this request) and,
ultimately, Unsupervised Visitation. Supervision can be altered IN
WRITING by the Guardian ad Litem based upon Mother’s strict
compliance with the conditions and other provisions set forth in
this Order.
This order, by its plain language, gives the guardian ad litem authority to alter supervision
without a ruling from or any hearing in the circuit court. Therefore, we hold that it was error for
the circuit court to approve such language allowing a third party, even a guardian ad litem, total
assure minor children of frequent and continuing contact with both
parents, when appropriate, and encourage parents to share in the
responsibilities of rearing their children. As between the parents,
there shall be no presumption or inference of law in favor of either.
The court shall give due regard to the primacy of the parent-child
relationship but may upon a showing by clear and convincing
evidence that the best interest of the child would be served thereby
award custody or visitation to any other person with a legitimate
interest. The court may award joint custody or sole custody.
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discretion to decide mother’s visitation without providing judicial review because it is
inconsistent with the language and purpose of Code § 20-124.2.8
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we find that this Court has jurisdiction to hear mother’s
appeal. We reverse and vacate the circuit court’s ruling declining to reconsider its erroneous
incorporation of the “Consent Order,” and remand so that the circuit court can hold a de novo
trial on appeal from the JDR court’s order, as mother had purposely and timely requested such a
de novo hearing, which is her right. We also reverse the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees
to father because the fees were awarded as a punitive measure. We decline to address the merits
of mother’s claim that her due process rights were violated because the issue is mooted by our
reversal and remand. Finally, because the issue of visitation will arise again on remand, we hold
that the circuit court cannot delegate to a guardian ad litem the authority to unilaterally alter
visitation as it did here.
Reversed and remanded.
8
This interpretation is also consistent with our decision in the unpublished matter of
Padula-Wilson v. Wilson, No. 1203-14-2, 2015 Va. App. LEXIS 123 (Va. Ct. App. Apr. 14,
2015). In that case, the Court concluded,
Based upon the plain language of Code § 20-124.2 and the
established principle that the responsibility to adjudicate cases
resides with the judiciary, it was error for the circuit court to order
third parties to have complete discretion to decide the mother’s
visitation without providing for any judicial review of their
decisions.
Id. at *38.
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