Case Information
*1 FOURTH DIVISION
ELLINGTON, P. J.,
BRANCH and MERCIER, JJ. NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
October 28, 2016 In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A16A1001. RUSSELL v. SPARMER.
B RANCH , Judge.
In an effort to dissolve both her domestic and business partnerships with Todd M. Sparmer, Vickey Lynn Russell filed suit against Sparmer in Hall County Superior Court, asserting claims for divorce, breach of contract, fraud, unjust enrichment, and conversion of partnership assets. The trial court granted summary judgment to Sparmer on Russell’s claim for divorce, finding that the parties were not legally married. The remainder of Russell’s claims proceeded to a bench trial, following which the trial court entered an order finding that a business partnership existed between the parties and providing for an equitable division of the parties’ joint assets. Sparmer thereafter filed a motion under OCGA § 9-15-14 seeking to recover the attorney fees he allegedly expended in defending Russell’s claim for divorce. *2 Following a hearing, the trial court granted that motion and awarded Sparmer $39,000.65 in attorney fees. This Court subsequently granted Russell’s application for a discretionary appeal.
On appeal, Russell challenges the attorney fee award, arguing that the trial court erred in finding that her divorce claim could serve as the basis of such an award under OCGA § 9-15-14. Additionally, Russell contends that the trial court’s order awarding fees is deficient in that it fails to designate the statutory subsection under which the award was made; does not contain the requisite findings of fact and conclusions of law necessary to support such an award; and awards a lump sum without explaining how the court calculated the amount of fees awarded. For reasons explained more fully below, we find that the trial court erred in awarding Sparmer attorney fees, and we therefore reverse the trial court’s order.
The relevant facts are undisputed and show that Russell filed her complaint in March 2013 and that approximately nine months later, in November 2014, Sparmer filed a motion for partial summary judgment. Sparmer sought summary judgment on Russell’s claim for divorce on the grounds that the two were not legally married. In opposing Sparmer’s motion for partial summary judgment, Russell made clear that she was not contending that the parties had a common law marriage. Rather, her *3 position was that the parties had an unlicensed ceremonial and self-solemnized marriage. To support her position, Russell submitted an affidavit in which she attested to the following undisputed facts. The parties began an intimate relationship in the mid-1990s and began living together in Georgia in 1997. While traveling in Greece in 1998, they decided to marry in an “informal ceremony,” bought matching rings, and exchanged vows in front of a church. [1] In relevant part, Sparmer’s vow provided, “I want to share the rest of my life with you and you alone,” and Russell’s vow provided, “I am proud to spend the remaining days of my life with you. To be your woman, loving you and no other.” That night, the couple told a waitress that they had just been married, and when they returned to the United States, they told others that they had been married and introduced each other as husband and wife. Since then, Sparmer has given Russell several greeting cards identifying her as his wife. Russell also submitted the affidavits of several of the parties’ acquaintances, each of whom attested that the parties held themselves out as husband and wife after they returned from Greece.
*4 The trial court granted Sparmer’s motion, finding that pursuant to OCGA § 19- 3-1.1, Georgia law did not recognize common law marriages entered into after January 1, 1997; that the parties had not obtained a marriage license; and that the parties were not married by an officiant. Following entry of that order, Sparmer filed a motion under OCGA § 9-15-14, seeking attorney fees related to his defense of Russell’s divorce claim. The trial court did not rule on the attorney fee motion prior to the bench trial on Russell’s remaining claims, which took place in February 2015. After entry of final judgment, Sparmer filed an amended motion for attorney fees, seeking to recover amounts expended in his defense of all claims.
Following a hearing on the attorney fees motion, the trial court stated that it was awarding fees to Sparmer based on Russell’s “heavily litigated yet unsuccessful claim” for divorce. Referencing its order granting Sparmer partial summary judgment, the trial court stated that the divorce claim “had no basis in law or fact” and that Russell had admitted at trial that the parties were not legally married. The court then found that the claim for divorce “was made to unnecessarily expand the proceedings and was totally groundless, totally frivolous, and vexatious. As a result, and pursuant to OCGA § 9-15-14, the court awards [Sparmer] attorney[] fees in the amount of $39,000.65.” Russell now appeals from that order.
1. Russell argues that the trial court erred in finding that her claim for divorce could serve as the basis of an attorney fee award because that claim was neither frivolous nor interposed for delay. We agree.
Under OCGA § 9-15-14 (a), a trial court shall award reasonable and necessary
attorney fees and expenses of litigation when a party has asserted a position that
lacked any justiciable issue of law or fact such that it could not reasonably be
believed that the court would accept the claim in question. Under OCGA § 9-15-14
(b), a trial court may award attorney fees and expenses if it finds that a party brought
an action or raised a defense that lacked substantial justification,
[2]
brought an action
for delay or harassment, or unnecessarily expanded the proceeding by other improper
conduct. We review an award under subsection (a) under the “any evidence” standard,
and we review an award under subsection (b) for an abuse of discretion.
Reynolds v.
Clark
,
A court making an award of attorney fees under OCGA § 9-15-14 must make
express findings of fact as to the conduct of the party on which the award is based.
Williams v. Becker
,
The mere fact that Sparmer received summary judgment on the divorce claim,
without more, will not support an attorney fees award. See
Brown v. Kinser
, 218 Ga.
App. 385, 387 (1) (
Here, the trial court’s conclusion that Russell’s claim for divorce “had no basis in law or fact” appears to be based on the abolition of common-law marriage in Georgia, the parties’ lack of a marriage license, and the fact that the parties’ ceremony lacked an officiant. However, Russell has never claimed that she and Sparmer were *9 parties to a common-law marriage. [4] Rather, as noted above, she has consistently maintained that she and Sparmer were parties to an unlicensed, ceremonial marriage, which they self-solemnized. Russell therefore asserted her claim for divorce in an effort to ensure that all aspects of her relationship with Sparmer were legally dissolved. In other words, given that Russell was terminating her business relationship with Sparmer, she did not want to leave open the possibility that she and Sparmer might be legally married. Thus, in her lawsuit seeking a division of the couple’s assets, Russell asserted, among other things, her claim for divorce. We find that given relevant Georgia law, Russell’s divorce claim cannot be classified under OCGA § 9-15-14 as frivolous or as a claim that was interposed for delay.
A valid marriage in Georgia requires: “(1) Parties able to contract; (2) An
actual contract; and (3) Consummation according to law.” OCGA § 19-3-1;
In re
*10
Estate of Love
,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Askew v. Dupree
,
Furthermore, the validity of a marriage in Georgia is not affected by an
officiant’s want of authority. See OCGA § 19-3-42.
[6]
Thus, Russell’s claim that the
parties’ Greek ceremony constituted a marriage ceremony even though it was not
performed by an officiant did not entirely lack a legal or factual basis. See
Adams
,
With respect to the question of whether the lack of a license rendered the
parties’ marriage invalid, we note that neither the trial court nor the parties have
identified any binding authority conclusively establishing that the failure to procure
a marriage license renders a ceremonial marriage void, and we are aware of no such
*12
authority.
[7]
We agree that, as a practical matter, a license would be the best evidence
of the existence of a marriage. See
Lefkoff v. Sicro
,
*13
Moreover, the trial court’s assertion that Russell testified that she “knew full
well the parties were not married” is not supported by the record. Russell’s testimony
on this issue occurred during the trial on the merits of her remaining claims, after the
trial court had ruled that the parties did not have a valid marriage. When read in its
entirety, Russell’s testimony in this respect is largely equivocal, evincing a
layperson’s struggle to articulate her understanding of the distinctions between
ceremonial, common-law, and “legal” marriage, which, as the above-referenced
authorities show, arguably may be open to interpretation. Furthermore, it is axiomatic
that, standing alone, a party’s purported “knowledge” of the resolution of an arguably
debatable question of law has little, if any, bearing on the proper resolution of that
question. See, e.g.,
Everett v. Norfolk Southern Ry. Co.
,
Finally, we note that the trial court’s observation that Russell’s divorce claim was “heavily litigated” also serves to demonstrate that the claim was not frivolous. In support of his attorney fee claim, Sparmer presented the testimony of Keisha Chambless, the attorney who had primary responsibility for defending Sparmer with respect to Russell’s claim for divorce. Chambless testified that it was not “an easy matter to determine whether the asserted marriage was, in fact, a [legal] marriage.” *14 Chambless explained that the divorce claim presented a number of “interesting issues” that had “multiple layers.” And on cross-examination, Chambless reiterated that the question of whether the parties were married “wasn’t an easy matter to determine,” and that had it been easy, she would not have been required to spend so much time on the issue.
In light of the foregoing, we conclude that given the particular facts of this case, Russell’s claim for divorce was not frivolous under OCGA § 9-15-14 – i.e., it did not lack a justiciable issue of law or fact and it did not lack substantial justification. Nor does the record show that Russell asserted her divorce claim in bad faith. In other words, no evidence suggests that Russell asserted the claim solely for harassment or to delay the proceedings. Consequently, we reverse the trial court’s § 9-15-14 fee award insofar as the award was based on Russell’s divorce claim. In reaching this conclusion, we emphasize that we express no opinion on the merits of Russell’s substantive claim that the parties were married. That claim is not before us, and the trial court’s ruling on that issue thus remains binding on the parties. We hold only that, under the facts presented, Russell’s divorce claim could not serve as the basis for an award of attorney fees under § 9-15-14.
2. Given our ruling in Division 1, supra, it is unnecessary to address Russell’s remaining claims.
For the reasons set forth above, the order of the trial court awarding Sparmer attorney fees is reversed, and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed. Mercier, J., concurs. Ellington, P. J., concurs in judgment only.
Notes
[1] Sparmer does not refute Russell’s factual allegation that the two exchanged vows in Greece, although he challenges the legal implications thereof, denying that they “participate[d] in a marriage ceremony” or “entered into an agreement or contract to be married.” On appeal, Sparmer characterizes the parties’ vows as “words of ‘Commitment.’”
[2] Subsection (b) defines the term “lacked substantial justification” as meaning “substantially frivolous, substantially groundless, or substantially vexatious.”
[3] As a general rule, an order awarding attorney fees under OCGA § 9-15-14
must specify “whether the award is made under subsection (a) or (b) or both.”
Williams
,
[4] Prior to 1997, Georgia defined a common law marriage as a marriage that was
both “unlicensed and non-ceremonial.”
In re Estate of Smith
,
[5] We note that Askew has never been overruled or otherwise called into question, and Georgia still has no statute expressly providing that “marriages not celebrated in a prescribed form” are considered void. Moreover, given that Askew did not address common law marriage, Georgia’s abolition of common-law marriage, without more, did not obviously and necessarily negate the holding of that case.
[6] That statute provides: “A marriage which is valid in other respects and supposed by the parties to be valid shall not be affected by want of authority in the minister, Governor or any former Governor of this state, judge, city recorder, magistrate, or other person to solemnize the same; nor shall such objection be heard from one party who has fraudulently induced the other to believe that the marriage was legal.”
[7] Various statutes set forth the requirements for obtaining and issuing marriage licenses, see OCGA §§ 19-3-30; 19-3-30.1; 19-3-31; 19-3-33; 19-3-34; 19-3-35; 19- 3-35.1; 19-3-36; 19-3-37; 19-3-40; 19-3-41; 19-3-44, and the penalties to be imposed upon an issuing authority or officiant failing to comply with these requirements, see id. §§ 19-3-32; 19-3-45; 19-3-46; 19-3-48. None of these statutes, however, expressly renders void an unlicensed ceremonial marriage between persons able and willing to contract. Cf. id. § 19-3-5 (a) (“Marriages of persons unable to contract, unwilling to contract, or fraudulently induced to contract shall be void.”).
[8] The Supreme Court’s holding in
Lefkoff
was disapproved in
Drewry v. State
,
[9] In its order granting Sparmer’s motion for partial summary judgment, the trial court summarily stated that “the formality of a marriage license and/or ceremony are absolutely required” in Georgia. In support of this conclusory statement, the trial court cited only OCGA §§ 19-3-1 and 19-3-1.1. Neither statute on which the trial court relied, however, expressly requires that to be valid, a marriage must be evidenced by a license and/or performed by an officiant.
