In re the Marriage of CAROLYN S. and JOHN G. DANIELS. CAROLYN S. DANIELS, Appellant, v. JOHN G. DANIELS, Respondent.
No. A059833
First Dist., Div. Five
Oct. 27, 1993.
Patricia Lee Culley for Appellant.
Richard L. Howard for Respondent.
PETERSON, P. J.-Appellant Carolyn S. Daniels contends the trial court wrongly ordered, under
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The facts relevant to the underlying action for dissolution of the 22-year marriage between Carolyn and John G. Daniels are not directly relevant to the issue raised in this appeal. In the course of the dissolution action, the trial court concluded the recited conduct of Patricia Lee Culley, the attorney for Carolyn, justified the imposition of sanctions because this conduct unjustifiably increased the costs of the proceedings to John.
The attorney‘s conduct in question here included the following actions. First, contrary to the policy of encouraging cooperation and the reduction of costs in dissolution litigation, the attorney either failed or refused to return numerous phone calls from John‘s first counsel, who was seeking to resolve the litigation. No satisfaсtory explanation for this failure to cooperate was ever offered.
Carolyn‘s attorney mailed a settlement proposal to opposing counsel, but it contained the wrong address and was not received. Three months later, after John‘s first counsel finally reached Carolyn‘s counsel by telephone, the proposal was mailed again. It is unclear whether John‘s first counsel ever saw this settlement proposal; she died three months later, and her file does not reflect that she had reviewed the proposal.
In the meantime, Carolyn‘s counsel sought and obtained the entry of a default against John. John did not learn of this entry of default until some months later. Carolyn‘s attorney never told John or his new counsel about the entry of default or the date of a subsequent uncontested hearing she scheduled on a judgment pursuant to the default, although she spoke with or had ample оpportunity to speak with both of them after scheduling the hearing.
John and his new counsel learned of the default and sought to set it aside. Before doing so, John‘s counsel repeatedly sought to contact Carolyn‘s counsel by telephone, and addressed correspondence to her, stating that the entry and judgment were improper; he sought to have Carolyn‘s counsel stipulate to set aside the entry of default in order to save all pаrties time and money. He never received a specific response to his numerous phone calls; Carolyn‘s counsel did send him correspondence seeking to implement the default judgment and refusing to set it aside.
The marital dissolution action subsequently settled, with the exception of the issue of attorney fees; John sought attorney fees as sanctions based upon violation of
The trial court granted the motion for sanctions in the amount of $3,700, specifying as one basis for its ruling the failure or refusal of Carolyn‘s counsel to return numerous phone calls seeking to discuss and resolve the matter. The trial court also denied a motion for a new trial, and awarded John fees of $350 for opposing the motion. The briefs of both parties agree that Carolyn, and not her counsel, was the party ordered to pay these attorney fees, even though it was the conduct of Carolyn‘s counsel which was the basis for the award of fees as sanctions under
II. DISCUSSION
We agree that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in deciding to impose sanctions under
There is absolutely no showing here that the trial court‘s order was subject to reversal under the applicable standard. Viewed most favorably to the judgment below, and indeed objectivеly viewed, the record shows Carolyn‘s counsel engaged in obstreperous conduct which frustrated the policy of the law in favor of settlement, and caused the costs of the litigation to greatly increase. She did not return phone calls from John‘s first counsel; mailed correspondence to the wrong address; sought entry of default improperly; sought to unfairly capitalize on the untimely death of John‘s first counsel; did not inform John or his new counsel of hеr scheduling of an uncontested hearing seeking a judgment pursuant to the improper entry of
Carolyn‘s counsel‘s justification for her actiоns is that she was entitled to pursue Carolyn‘s interests by carrying out this course of conduct, seeking an apparently unfair advantage without regard to the policy of the law and the requirements imposed upon all counsel by
There is another issue here, however. The record is clear that it was counsel, not Carolyn, who failed to return phone calls to opposing counsel, that it was counsel who improperly sought the default judgment and improperly failed to stipulate to set aside it, and that it was these overt actions which were recited in the trial court‘s order to justify the imposition of sanctions. The record does not explicitly indicate Carolyn‘s complicity in, direction of, or ratification of these overt actions of her counsel. In such situations, of course, the court may not be able to compel counsel to divulge communications had with the client to ascertain the involvement of the client, if any, in the sanctionable conduct because of the attorney-client privilege. (
The trial court may, however, under
Generally, an entitlement to an award of attorney fees in a family law action is governed by
Prior to 1985, it had been held that the court lacked power to award fees as sanctions in family law actions; the courts could only shift fees in response to a showing of need. (See In re Marriage of Stephenson (1984) 162 Cal.App.3d 1057, 1091 [209 Cal.Rptr. 383] [“Such an award must be based solely on the respective abilities of the parties to pay.“].)
The Legislature quickly attempted to respond to this ruling. The following year, the Legislature enaсted
In 1987, Division Two of this district injected certain dicta into the case of In re Marriage of Melone (1987) 193 Cal.App.3d 757, 764-765 and footnote 6 [238 Cal.Rptr. 510] (Melone), implying that, under the law as it was then stated in
The Legislature did not act immediately on the deficiencies which the Melone court perceived. However, other courts did not find the same deficiencies. In 1988, the Second District, in the case of In re Marriage of Norton (1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 53, 57-59 [253 Cal.Rptr. 354] (Norton), affirmed an award of fees as sanctions, citing Melone, supra, but without any discussion of a requirement that a party show a need for such an award (in
After Norton created a seeming inconsistency with Melone, the Legislature again attempted to clarify the law, embodying the Norton interpretation by adding the following language to
This amendment was then examined by Division Two of this court in the subsequent case of In re Marriage of Joseph (1990) 217 Cal.App.3d 1277, 1289-1290 [266 Cal.Rptr. 548]. Division Two found the amendment was intended to endorse the Norton rationale by allowing an award of fees without regard to need, but the Joseph court found the latest amendment also unclear: “We cannot say the statutory amendment clearly resolves the question of whether need must be shown to get an award under section 4370.5: in some ways the addition of the new language, juxtaposed with the existing language . . . , adds to the confusion we discussed in Melone.” (217 Cal.App.3d at p. 1290.) The presently published opinion in Joseph is a decision made upon a granting of rehearing (p. 1289, fn. 11); the previous opinion in 1989 had adhered to the prior view stated in Melone, i.e., that a showing of need must still be made in every request for fees under
The Legislature again attempted to clarify the law. In 1990, it created
We have not rehearsed the tortured history of
In short,
In Quinlan, this court (Division Five) recognized that sanctions could be imposed against an attorney under
In the present case, the court was asked to award fees as a sanction against a party to the dissolution proceeding, under
III. DISPOSITION
The order awarding fees under
King, J., concurred.
HANING, J.-I respeсtfully dissent. Sanctions were imposed against the wife in this dissolution proceeding in spite of the fact there is no evidence in the record that she personally engaged in any conduct that would subject her to sanctions. The conduct for which the sanctions were imposed was that of the wife‘s attorney, and there is also no evidence that the wife was aware of, let alone that she authorized, ratified or otherwise condoned, the conduct of her attorney that gavе rise to the sanctions. The husband recognized this, since he did not seek sanctions based on the wife‘s conduct but grounded his
One of the statute‘s stated purposes is to “encourag[e] cooperation between the parties and attorneys.” (
Although we expect attorneys to understand the settlement and cooperative litigation process, how is the client expected to know what procedural steps or legal maneuvers “further or frustrate the policy of the law?” I cannot affirm personal sanctions against the client for conduct of her attorney of which she was not only unaware but over which she had no control.
I do not read
I would reverse for lack of substantial evidence of any wrongdoing by the client to support the sanction award.
