07/21/2020
DA 19-0701
Case Number: DA 19-0701
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2020 MT 185N
IN RE PARENTING OF: T.P.D.C.,
A Minor Child.
TAMI DISNEY,
Petitioner and Appellant,
v.
BRANDON STAAT,
Respondent and Appellee.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Fourth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Missoula, Cause No. DR-2015-0027
Honorable Robert L. Deschamps, III, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Kathleen A. Molsberry, Matthew B. Lowy, Lowy Law, PLLC, Missoula,
Montana
For Appellee:
André Gurr, Melissa Stones-Smith, Garden City Law, PLLC, Missoula,
Montana
Submitted on Briefs: June 10, 2020
Decided: July 21, 2020
Filed:
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__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating
Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not
serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this
Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana
Reports.
¶2 Tami Disney (Tami) appeals an order and judgment issued on November 12, 2019,
by the Fourth Judicial District Court, Missoula County, awarding Brandon Staat
(Brandon) attorney fees for costs incurred during previous litigation before this Court.
We affirm the decision of the District Court. We further order that Brandon be awarded
additional attorney fees for litigation expenses incurred during this appeal, and remand
this matter to the District Court with instructions to determine the appropriate quantity of
this additional award.
¶3 This appeal pertains to the parenting of T.P.D.C., the child of Brandon and Tami
who was born in October of 2014. This is the second time this Court has been asked to
review a District Court decision in this matter. See In re T.P.D.C., 2019 MT 107N,
396 Mont. 547, 440 P.3d 634.
¶4 On September 29, 2016, following extensive litigation and several mediations,
Tami and Brandon entered into a Final Stipulated Parenting Plan (Parenting Plan), with
Brandon parenting every other weekend and every other week. The Parenting Plan
indicates its purpose was to “[s]et forth the authority and responsibilities of the parents
with respect to the minor child,” and to “[h]elp the parents avoid expensive court
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battles.” The parties also stipulated that “the Parenting Plan is in the best interest of
their minor child.” Furthermore, while both parties were represented by counsel,
Tami and Brandon agreed to include an attorney fee provision (Provision 12) within the
Parenting Plan stating that “[i]f Court intervention is required to enforce this plan against
a party, the prevailing party shall be entitled to recover attorneys’ fees from the other
party.” The District Court adopted the Parenting Plan on October 5, 2016.
¶5 On January 11, 2018, Tami filed a petition to terminate Brandon’s parental rights
under § 40-6-1001(2)(b), MCA (2019) (previously § 41-3-801(2)(b), MCA), alleging that
T.P.D.C. was conceived through nonconsensual sexual intercourse. The petition
requested that the District Court terminate all of Brandon’s parental rights—which
necessarily included his rights under the Parenting Plan. Hearings on the petition were
held March 2, 9, and 28, 2018, and the District Court issued an order denying Tami’s
petition to terminate on April 6, 2018.
¶6 Following the District Court order, Brandon filed a motion on April 10, 2018,
requesting that he be awarded attorney fees in accordance with Provision 12 of the
Parenting Plan. Tami’s deadline to respond was April 27, 2018. On April 26, 2018,
Tami filed a motion to extend her time to respond, requesting an extension until
May 4, 2018. The District Court denied Tami’s motion for an extension of time, and
Tami missed the District Court’s April 27 response deadline. On May 8, 2018—four
days after Tami’s requested deadline—Tami submitted her response in opposition to
Brandon’s motion for attorney fees.
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¶7 On May 2, 2018, Tami also filed a notice of appeal with this Court alleging that
the District Court erred in denying her petition to terminate Brandon’s parental rights
under § 40-6-1001(2)(b), MCA. On June 11, 2018, the District Court stayed ruling on
Brandon’s motion for attorney fees, pending resolution of Tami’s appeal. The following
year, on May 7, 2019, this Court upheld the District Court’s denial of Tami’s petition to
terminate Brandon’s parental rights in In re T.P.D.C., 2019 MT 107N, 396 Mont. 547,
440 P.3d 634.
¶8 Thereafter, Brandon filed a notice of issue on May 21, 2019 requesting a
District Court ruling on his motion for attorney fees. The District Court scheduled a
hearing on Brandon’s motion for October 4, 2019. On October 2, 2019, Brandon filed a
disclosure indicating he had obtained an expert witness, along with an affidavit listing his
attorney fees incurred at the District Court level as $23,284. At the District Court hearing
on October 4, 2019, Brandon’s expert witness testified that the attorney fees outlined in
Brandon’s affidavit were reasonable under the relevant legal standard set forth by this
Court in Plath v. Schonrock, 2003 MT 21, 34 Mont. 101, 64 P.3d 984. At the close of
this October 4 hearing, Tami’s counsel requested an additional hearing to allow Tami
further time to obtain an expert to rebut Brandon’s expert’s testimony. The District Court
granted Tami’s request and an additional hearing was held November 4, 2019. At this
second hearing, Tami’s counsel did not obtain an expert. Instead, Tami’s counsel
admitted that she had no argument against the reasonableness of the amount proffered,
but disputed the legality of awarding fees in the matter; specifically, Tami’s counsel
argued that Tami’s parental termination petition under § 40-6-1001(2)(b), MCA,
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deserved to be considered as a distinct and separate matter from any Parenting Plan
enforcement action. Thus, Provision 12 of the Parenting Plan should not apply to Tami’s
parental termination petition. The District Court was not persuaded due to the express
language of Provision 12 and this Court’s dismissal of a similar argument by Tami in
In re T.P.D.C., 2019 MT 107N, ¶ 8, 396 Mont. 547, 440 P.3d 634.
¶9 On November 12, 2019, the District Court issued its order awarding Brandon
attorney fees. In awarding these fees, the District Court pointed to the clear language of
Provision 12 of the Parenting Plan. The District Court also found Brandon’s requested
amount of $23,284.00 to be reasonable under all seven of the factors stipulated in Plath,
¶ 36.
¶10 On December 13, 2019, Tami filed an appeal with this Court contesting the
District Court’s decision to award attorney fees. On appeal, Tami does not contest the
reasonableness of the amount of attorney fees awarded. Instead, Tami alleges three
District Court errors in awarding attorney fees to Brandon that: (1) her petition for
parental termination under § 40-6-1001(2)(a), MCA, should have been characterized as a
separate action rather than as part of a custody proceeding governed by the parties’
Parenting Plan; (2) § 40-6-1001(5), MCA (2019) (previously § 41-3-801(5), MCA),
provides that court-appointed counsel is available for a parental termination proceeding,
making an award of attorney fees unnecessary; and (3) the District Court committed
multiple procedural errors that were prejudicial to Tami by not considering the arguments
in her May 8, 2018 brief and “by not ruling on Appellee’s motion for attorneys’ fees prior
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to holding a hearing on the amount to be awarded or providing notice to [Tami] that
attorneys’ fees had been awarded.”1
¶11 On April 17, 2020, Brandon filed a motion with this Court to receive additional
attorney fees under the Parenting Plan. This new motion requested attorney fees for costs
incurred while defending against Tami’s previous appeal before this Court in
In re T.P.D.C., 2019 MT 107N, 396 Mont. 547, 440 P.3d 634. On May 12, 2020, we
held that Brandon’s motion for additional attorney fees would also be considered as part
of this appeal. We now turn to our review of the issues raised on appeal.
¶12 Montana precedent dictates that this Court reviews “for abuse of discretion a
decision on a request for an award of attorneys’ fees unless a contract requires an award
of fees, in which case a district court lacks discretion to deny the request.”
In re Marriage of Fossen, 2019 MT 119, ¶ 8, 395 Mont. 495, 443 P.3d 418. If the terms
of the parties’ agreement incorporate a provision for attorney fees, this Court is bound by
those terms if they are clear. In re Marriage of Damschen, 2011 MT 297, ¶ 42,
363 Mont. 19, 265 P.3d 1245. These same contractual terms also entitle successful
parties to recover additional attorney fees incurred on appeal. See Damschen, ¶ 42.
¶13 We hold that the District Court did not err in awarding Brandon attorney fees for
his successful defense against Tami’s § 40-6-1001(2)(b) motion to terminate his parental
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Tami’s appeal also alleges that the District Court committed a procedural error related to a
statement made by a Standing Master at a July 11, 2019 hearing. However, this July 11, 2019
hearing concerned a separate January 2018 motion for attorney fees filed by Brandon to recoup
the costs of enforcing his parenting rights in response to Tami unilaterally withholding
father-daughter contact during three separate periods in late 2018. This motion constitutes a
separate matter between the parties that is not presently before this Court. As a result, this Court
will not address it.
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rights. Provision 12 of the parties’ Parenting Plan clearly states “[i]f Court intervention is
required to enforce this plan against a party, the prevailing party shall be entitled to
recover attorneys’ fees from the other party.” In this case, the contractual language of
Tami and Brandon’s Parenting Plan governs. This same language also permits Brandon
to recover additional attorney fees incurred in his successful defense of Tami’s prior
appeal before this Court, and we remand this matter to the District Court to determine the
precise quantity of additional fees that is reasonable in this regard. The three arguments
set forth in Tami’s appeal are insufficient to overcome this contractual language.
Nevertheless, we will address each of Tami’s arguments in turn.
¶14 Tami’s first argument on appeal asserts that the Parenting Plan for T.P.D.C. and
Tami’s petition to terminate Brandon’s parental rights should have been classified as
separate matters; therefore, the attorneys’ fees provision of the final parenting plan
should not apply. This argument fails on two counts. First, Tami’s argument on appeal
that the Parenting Plan should have been considered as a separate action from her petition
to terminate is near-identical to a previous line of reasoning from Tami that this Court
rejected in her 2019 appeal of her petition to terminate. In response to this argument, this
Court provided:
Mother next argues that we should reverse the District Court’s denial of her
petition because the District Court should not have heard the petition as part
of the ongoing custody litigation, but rather as a separate proceeding.
Mother maintains that the District Court should not have relied on the
record from the parties’ ongoing custody proceedings. Mother . . . provides
no citation to any other legal authority to support this argument. Further,
Mother initiated both proceedings and chose to file the termination petition
in the parenting plan case.
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In re T.P.D.C., ¶ 8. As a result, this Court has already found that these proceedings were
lawfully part of the same matter in this case. Second, we note that Brandon’s defense
against Tami’s § 40-6-1001(2)(b) petition was necessarily an action to “enforce th[e] plan
against a party” under the plain language of Provision 12, as Tami’s § 40-6-1001(2)(b)
termination petition sought to vitiate the Parenting Plan in its entirety by stripping
Brandon of all parenting rights over T.P.D.C. In Fossen, ¶¶ 11-13, the language of an
attorney fee provision in a marital settlement agreement also awarded fees for litigation
involving the “enforcement” or “modification” of the agreement. In that case, this Court
awarded a husband attorney fees under the contract for successfully defending against his
wife’s third-party complaint, which, if successful, would have eliminated the husband’s
contracted rights while easing his wife’s obligations under the agreement. See Fossen,
¶ 13. In the case at hand, Tami’s § 40-6-1001(2)(b) petition, if successful, would have
eliminated all of Brandon’s parental rights under their contractual agreement, requiring
him to “enforce” the agreement in court. Thus, Fossen supplements this Court’s prior
decision that the District Court did not err by failing to consider Tami’s petition as a
separate matter from the Parenting Plan.
¶15 The second argument on appeal contends that the District Court’s award of
attorney fees should be overturned on the ground that the Montana statute permitting
Tami’s initial parental termination lawsuit, § 40-6-1001, MCA, also states that
“[t]he respondent to the petition has the right to counsel in all proceedings held pursuant
to the petition.” Section 40-6-1001(5), MCA. As a result, Tami argues that this
availability of state-funded court-appointed counsel to defend against a termination
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petition “mak[es] an award of fees for a private attorney unnecessary.” However, this
contention lacks merit. Section 40-6-1001(5), MCA, merely provides the right to free
counsel in parental termination proceedings for qualifying litigants. It in no way
mandates that Brandon resort to public representation over private counsel. We therefore
hold that the District Court did not err in its application of § 40-6-1001(5), MCA.
¶16 Tami’s third argument on appeal asserts that the District Court committed
reversible procedural error in two ways. First, Tami alleges that the District Court erred
when it failed to consider the arguments in Tami’s May 8, 2018 response to Brandon’s
motion for attorney fees. Second, Tami alleges that the District Court erred by failing to
definitively rule on whether Brandon should receive attorney fees before holding its
October 4, 2019 hearing to determine the reasonableness of Brandon’s requested fees.
However, this Court will not reverse a decision by a district court on procedural grounds
absent a showing of substantial prejudice by the complaining party.
See, e.g., Green v. Green, 181 Mont. 285, 293, 593 P.2d 446, 451 (1979). Conversely, a
failure to show that a procedural error violated a party’s substantial right constitutes
harmless error and is not grounds for reversal. See M. R. Civ. P. 61. Under this standard,
neither of Tami’s contentions constitute reversible procedural error.
¶17 First, Tami was not substantially prejudiced by the District Court declining to
consider the arguments made in Tami’s May 8, 2018 response to Brandon’s motion, as
this brief was submitted past the court’s mandated deadline.
See Mont. Unif. Dist. Ct. R. 2(b) (stating, with regards to Rule 2 motions, that the
“[f]ailure to file an answer brief by the opposing party within the time allowed shall be
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deemed an admission that the motion is well taken.”). Thus, as the District Court’s
judgment in this matter notes, “[a]mongst other reasons for granting Father’s motion for
attorneys’ fees, [Brandon’s] motion may be deemed well taken pursuant to Rule 2 of the
Uniform District Court Rules.” The District Court also provided Tami and her counsel
with two separate hearings to present their arguments against Brandon’s motion. The
record shows that these hearings took place in October and November of 2019—almost a
year and a half after Brandon’s initial motion was filed in April of 2018. Thus, Tami and
her counsel were provided more than adequate time to prepare and present their
arguments against this motion. Thus, there is no substantial prejudice against Tami
where she had both ample time and multiple opportunities to argue against Brandon’s
motion.
¶18 Next, there is no reversible procedural error in the District Court’s decision to
avoid ruling on whether Brandon should receive attorney fees before holding its
October 4, 2019 hearing. Brandon’s affidavit which contained his attorney fees
calculation was filed on October 2, 2019, two days before this hearing. Thus, Tami
argues that she was unjustly prejudiced by this procedure as her counsel was not provided
adequate notice of the fact that Tami would need to argue against the amount of fees
proffered, in addition to whether or not the fees should be awarded. However, no
substantial prejudice to Tami occurred as a result of this decision. Instead, the District
Court went out of its way to accommodate the alleged unpreparedness of Tami’s counsel
by granting Tami’s counsel’s request to hold a second hearing on November 4, 2019 for
the specific purpose of allowing Tami to obtain an expert witness to rebut Brandon’s
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reasonableness arguments from the October 2019 hearing. Although Tami’s counsel was
ultimately unable to obtain an expert witness, her counsel was still given a month’s time
to prepare a response to the specific amount of fees requested by Brandon. Thus, neither
of the allegations within Tami’s third argument on appeal constitute reversible procedural
error. Instead, the record shows that these two procedural decisions by the District Court
were largely accommodating to Tami and did not substantially prejudice her.
¶19 The District Court’s decision in this matter is upheld under the clear language
contained within the Parenting Plan. Furthermore, in accordance with Brandon’s
April 17, 2020 motion before this Court, we award Brandon additional attorney fees for
litigation costs incurred during Tami’s appeal of her termination petition, and we remand
to the District Court to determine the specific dollar amount of this award.
¶20 We have determined to decide this case pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c) of
our Internal Operating Rules, which provides for memorandum opinions. This appeal
presents no constitutional issues, no issues of first impression, and does not establish new
precedent or modify existing precedent.
¶21 Affirmed.
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
We concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ BETH BAKER
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
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