The plaintiff, Michael Glick, appeals an order of the Superior Court (Coffey, J.) granting a motion of the defendant, Victoria Naess, for attorney’s fees. We affirm.
The facts leading up to the issue on appeal involve a post-divorce dispute between the parties. The parties divorced in 1992. Under their divorce decree, the plaintiff received primary physical custody of Ephraim and Henry Glick, two of their four childrеn. In February 1994, the defendant filed an ex parte petition to modify that custody arrangement. In her petition, she alleged that the plaintiff was refusing to send Ephraim and Henry to school due to a dispute with the school district as to wherе it would pick up Ephraim and Henry for school. The children, she explained, had already missed twenty days of school as of the date of her petition. She claimed that the children were in danger of being held back one grade because school policy required children who missed more than eighteen or twenty-five days of school, absent a waiver from the principal or the school board, respectively, tо lose credits. She requested that the court either award her physical custody of the children pending a temporary hearing, or order the plaintiff to send them to school. After holding a hearing without providing notice to the plaintiff, the Superior Court (O’Neill, J.) awarded the defendant physical custody.
Subsequently, the court held a temporary hearing for the same purpose as the ex parte hearing at which the plaintiff was present and argued on his own behalf. The court affirmed the ex pa,rte order after the temporary hearing. Prior to the final disposition of the custody dispute, however, the plaintiff filed suit against the defendant, alleging several claims based on his assertion that she “maliciously and falsely” represented to the court her need for ex parte relief, and obtained custody only through her misrepresentations. Her actions, he argued, constituted, inter alia, intentional
Before trial, the defendant moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s claims. The Superior Court (Fauver, J.) denied the motion concerning the parental rights and emotional distrеss claims and granted it on the remaining claims. With respect to the parental rights claim, the court concluded that although “New Hampshire has not recognized a cause of action for judicially interfering with a parent’s rights, . . . given the broad nature of equitable relief, [the plaintiff] is entitled to recover if he can prove that [the defendant] gained custody solely on the basis of misrepresentations to the Court.” Regarding the emotional distress claim, the court concluded that it was “unable to say as a matter of law that [lying to a court to obtain custody of children] could never constitute extreme or outrageous conduct.”
At trial, the plaintiff presented videotaped testimony from an expert family law attorney who reviewed the defendant’s motion for ex parte relief and a transcript from the hearing on that motion. The expert described what she beliеved were several misrepresentations made by the defendant in the motion and at the hearing. In particular, she testified that the children were not in danger of being held back a grade for their absences. She оpined that the superior court would not have granted the defendant custody of the children had she not made the “misrepresentations.” The court, however, found much of this testimony inadmissible, reasoning that her comment on the truth of the defendant’s statements was a determination solely within the province of the jury.
Michelle Miller, the principal at Henry’s elementary school, testified that there was no explicit policy at hеr school to hold children back a grade after a certain number of absences, and that Henry would not have been held back for his absences. She also testified, however, that at the school Ephraim attended, there was a policy of holding back a student after a certain number of absences without a waiver.
Following the plaintiff’s case-in-chief, the defendant moved to dismiss both claims, and alternatively for directed verdicts. The Superior Court (Coffey, J.) dismissed the parental rights claim and directed a verdict -on the emotional distress claim. The court construed Plante v. Engel,
Thereafter, the defendant sought attorney’s fees. The court granted the motion, concluding that there was no reasonable basis in facts provable by evidence for the plaintiff’s claims, see Keenan v. Fearon,
In reviewing a superior court award of attorney’s fees, we aрply an abuse of discretion standard, White v. Francoeur,
While the general rule in New Hampshire is that parties pay their own attorney’s fees, White,
The plaintiff misreads Keenan and the superior court’s order granting attorney’s fees. In Keenan, we stated that an award of attorney’s fees is appropriate when a party presents a claim that lacks á reasonable basis either in law or “in the facts provable by evidence.” Keenan,
It was the lack of a factual basis for his claims, and not a legal basis, that the superior court cited as its reason for awarding attorney’s fees. Even assuming that the plaintiff was not required to prove abduction, but only that the defendant gained custody solely on the basis of misrepresentations, the court explicitly found that the plaintiff produced no evidence of material misrepresentations. Indeed, when plaintiff’s counsel stated at the hearing on the motion for attorney’s fees that “[i]t was our position at trial, although you disagreed with it, that Victoria Naess intentionally lied to the Court and therefore intentionally caused him severe emotional distress,” the court responded, “I didn’t just disagree with it, there was simply no evidence of that.”
On the basis of the record before us, we cannot conclude that the superior court abused its disсretion by finding no factual basis for the plaintiff’s claims. Even if, as he asserts, the court erroneously found much of his expert’s testimony inadmissible, the evidence still fails to establish a factual basis for his claims. The evidence оffered on appeal to show that the defendant intentionally lied to gain custody of the children comprised little more than the conclusory assertions by the expert that the ex parte motion contained
The rationale justifying an award of attorney’s fees when a litigant’s position is patently unreasonable is “the unnecessary character of the judicial proceeding.” Daigle,
Accordingly, we affirm the superior court’s order awarding the defendant attorney’s fees.
Affirmed.
