Appellant Jody Avren (Mother) and appellee Jay Garten (Father) were divorced in 2003. These appeals are from their most recent post-divorce litigation. In April 2010, the trial court found Mother in contempt of previous court orders, dismissed Mother’s petition for contempt against Father, dismissed Mother’s petition for modification of child support and visitation, denied and dismissed Mother’s petition for modification of child custody, ordered Mother to pay the outstanding balance due the guardian ad litem appointed to represent the parties’ minor son, and reserved the issue of Father’s request for an award of attorney fees. See Case No. S11A0064. After granting Father’s request for attorney fees in May 2010, the trial court denied Mother’s motion to set aside the award of attorney fees in October 2010. See Case No. S11A0688. 1
1. In Case No. S11A0064, Mother contends the trial court abused its discretion when it found her in contempt for taking the parties’ 11-year-old child to counseling. We will uphold the trial court’s finding of contempt if there is evidence to support the trial court’s determination that Mother wilfully
In the parties’ consent final modification order entered in 2006, Father, a physician, was given final decision-making authority for the minor child with respect to health and medical issues. The trial court found Mother in contempt for disregarding Father’s decision concerning the therapist to whom Mother took the child. 2 Mother acknowledged at the contempt hearing that she had taken the child to a therapist that Father disapproved and had sent the therapist’s bills to Father for payment. Since there is evidence to support the trial court’s determination that Mother wilfully disobeyed a prior court order, we do not disturb the trial court’s finding of contempt.
2. Mother contends the trial court erred when, without hearing evidence on three of the four subjects of her petition, it dismissed her petition to hold Father in contempt and for modification of custody, child support, and visitation. The trial court held a hearing on Mother’s petition and entered a written order which dismissed and denied Mother’s petition “pursuant to OCGA §§ 19-6-15,19-9-3, and 19-9-24 and all other applicable law. .. .” 3
Three of the four actions sought by Mother’s petition were dismissable pursuant to OCGA § 19-9-24 (b), which prohibits a legal guardian from bringing an action for modification of child custody or visitation rights or any application for contempt of court so long as visitation rights are withheld by the legal guardian in violation of the custody order. Counsel for Father submitted at the evidentiary hearing a calendar on which he had circled over 100 dates between March 21 and November 20, 2009, on which the scheduled visitation between Father and child had not taken place. Mother admitted there were times when she and the child left her home on scheduled visitation days prior to the closure of the two-hour window in which Father was to pick up the child, and there were occasions on which she did not overrule the child’s reluctance or refusal to leave the house and meet his waiting father. Mother testified the child did not wish to visit with Father and she did not insist that he do so. However, “[t]he desires of children under 14 years of age in not wanting to visit their noncustodial parent is not sufficient to deny the noncustodial parent his or her rights of visitation.”
Prater v. Wheeler,
OCGA § 19-9-24 (b) does not prohibit a legal guardian who withholds visitation from bringing an action for modification of child support. “Child support is the right of the child and not of its custodian;. . . The conduct of the custodian cannot deprive the child of this right to support, any more than the custodian can waive it for the child or contract it away. [Cits.] [OCGA § 19-9-24 (b)] does not provide otherwise.”
Stewart v. Stewart,
OCGA § 19-6-15 (k) (2) provides that “[n]o petition to modify child support may be filed by either parent within a period
3. Mother argues the trial court erred as a matter of law when it did not allow the guardian ad litem to interview the child’s therapist without Father’s consent. However, Mother endorsed a limitation on the guardian’s contact with the therapist when she and Father consented to the entry of the modified consent order appointing the guardian ad litem. The order, entered with the consent of counsel, provided that the guardian was not authorized to speak to the therapist to whom Mother had taken the child or any other therapist the child previously had seen without the permission of both parents or the entry of a court order. An order entered with the consent of counsel is binding on the client in the absence of fraud, accident, mistake, or collusion of counsel and, in the absence of such a showing, a party cannot complain of a consent order.
Rieffel v. Rieffel,
4. Mother complains the trial court abused its discretion when it ordered that she pay the remainder of the fees owed the guardian ad litem. In its 2010 order, the trial court noted that each party had paid $2,692 to the guardian and ordered Mother to pay the outstanding balance of $3,683.50. Mother asserts she was the prevailing party in the contempt action brought by Father, so she should be able to recoup the costs of litigation under OCGA § 9-11-54 (d), and sees error in the trial court’s failure to consider the financial circumstances of the parties. Assuming OCGA § 9-11-54 (d) is applicable (but see OCGA § 19-7-50 governing payment of fees to a guardian ad litem), it would not be applicable to this case as Mother was not the prevailing party since all three counts of Father’s petition alleging contumacious conduct of Mother were upheld by the trial court. Furthermore, there is no statutory requirement that the trial court consider the parties’ relative financial circumstances when apportioning each party’s share of the guardian’s fees pursuant to a consent order, and we decline to impose such a requirement. Compare OCGA § 19-6-2 (a) (1).
5. Lastly, Mother contends the trial court erred when it did not apply the rule of sequestration to an unidentified woman sitting in the courtroom. Father’s counsel stated he was not going to call the woman as a witness, Mother’s counsel said she “might” call her, and the trial court ascertained the woman was not under subpoena. The woman did not testify. OCGA § 24-9-61 gives to a party the right “to have the witnesses of the other party examined out of the hearing of each other[,]” subject to the trial court’s discretion to make exceptions to the rule.
Welch v.
State,
Case No. S11A0688
This appeal focuses on whether the trial court had jurisdiction to enter the award of attorney fees in May 2010 while an application for discretionary appeal was pending in this Court, and whether Mother had a right to appeal directly the trial court’s denial of her motion to set aside the attorney-fee award.
Following the entry of the trial court’s judgment in April 2010, Mother filed both a notice of appeal and an application for discretionary review on May 20. On May 25, the trial court ruled on Father’s pending request for an award of attorney fees and reasonable expenses and ordered Mother to pay $16,864.50 to Father’s attorney within 30 days. Mother filed a motion to set aside the attorney-fee award in July 2010, which the trial court denied on October 6, 2010. Mother then filed an application for discretionary review of the denial of her motion to set aside, which we granted.
6. Mother contends that the notice of appeal and application for discretionary review filed on May 20 deprived the trial court of jurisdiction to enter the attorney-fee award on May 25.
4
“The filing of an application for appeal shall act as a supersedeas to the extent that a notice of appeal acts as a supersedeas.” OCGA § 5-6-35 (h). See OCGA § 5-6-46 regarding a notice of appeal serving as a supersedeas. The supersedeas of a filed application or notice of appeal “deprives the trial court of the power to affect the judgment appealed, so that subsequent proceedings purporting to supplement, amend, alter or modify the judgment, whether pursuant to statutory or inherent power, are without effect. [Cit.]”
Upton v. Jones,
Citing
Davis v. Harpagon Co.,
supra,
7. Pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-35 (a) (8), which requires a litigant to file an application for discretionary review in order to appeal the denial of a motion to set aside, Mother filed an application for discretionary review of the denial of her motion to set aside the award of attorney fees. OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (11) authorizes a party to file a direct appeal from “[a]ll judgments or orders in child custody cases including, but not limited to, awarding or refusing to change child custody or holding or declining to hold persons in contempt of such child custody judgment or orders. . ..” In granting Mother’s application, we asked the parties to address whether the denial of a motion to set aside an award of attorney fees is directly appealable.
Assuming without deciding that the trial court’s denial of Mother’s motion to set aside the attorney-fee award falls within the coverage of OCGA § 5-6-35 (a) (11), Mother was required to file an application for discretionary appeal since OCGA § 5-6-35 (a) (8) requires that review of an order denying a motion to set aside be preceded by an application for discretionary review. Where both OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) and § 5-6-35 (a) are involved, an application for appeal is required when “the underlying subject matter” of the appeal is listed in OCGA § 5-6-35 (a), even though the party may be appealing a judgment or order that is procedurally subject to a direct appeal under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a).
Rebich v. Miles,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Mother filed an application for discretionary review of the trial court’s April 2010 order, which this Court granted under OCGA § 5-6-35 (j) inasmuch as Mother had a right to appeal directly from a judgment or order in a child custody case that refused to change custody and that held her in contempt of a child custody judgment or order. OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (11). While that application for discretionary review was pending, the trial court entered the order requiring Mother to pay Father’s attorney fees and reasonable expenses (May 2010), and an order denying Mother’s motion to set aside the award (October 2010). Acting pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-35 (a) (8), Mother filed a timely application seeking review of the denial of the motion to set aside, which application this Court granted.
The trial court also found Mother in contempt for failing to obey a court order to pay $1,500 in attorney fees to Father’s counsel for previous litigation, and in contempt of the visitation provisions of the parties’ judgment and decree of divorce, as modified by court order in October 2007.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court orally ruled that the requests for modification of child support and visitation were dismissed due to Mother’s violation of the two-year rule (see OCGA §§ 19-6-15 and 19-9-3 (b)), and the request for modification of child custody was denied on the ground that Mother had not proven the existence of a material change in condition. See OCGA § 19-6-15 (k). The trial court dismissed Mother’s petition for contempt on the ground that Mother withheld visitation (see OCGA § 19-9-24 (b)), and noted that it could dismiss the request for modification of child custody on the same ground.
According to the trial court’s order that Mother pay $16,864.50 to Father’s attorney, the amount awarded “represents the attorney’s fees attributable only to the modification action . . . where the Mother failed to prevail and Counts II and III of the contempt action [taking child to therapist not authorized by Father and failing to pay $1,500 attorney-fee award] ... where the Mother was found in willful contempt.”
Had we reversed
the
portions of the underlying judgment upon which the trial court relied in awarding the attorney fees, the trial court would have had to re-visit the award as it would have been made nugatory by the conflicting appellate decision.
Southeastern Wholesale Furniture Co. v. Atlanta &c. Co.,
supra,
In posing the question of whether Mother was entitled to a direct appeal, we directed the parties to
Norman v. Ault,
In
Norman v. Ault,
supra,
