ELIZABETH A. WHITE, APPELLEE, v. JAMES F. WHITE AND JAMES MCGOUGH, APPELLEES, AND DOUGLAS COUNTY, NEBRASKA, INTERVENOR-APPELLANT.
No. S-16-865
Nebraska Supreme Court
May 26, 2017
296 Neb. 772
Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
296 NEBRASKA REPORTS
WHITE v. WHITE
Cite as 296 Neb. 772
Statutes: Appeal and Error. Statutory interpretation presents a question of law. When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court has an obligation to resolve the questions independently of the conclusion reached by the trial court. - Attorney Fees: Appeal and Error. A party may recover attorney fees and expenses in a civil action only when a statute permits recovery or when the Nebraska Supreme Court has recognized and accepted a uniform course of procedure for allowing attorney fees.
- Courts: Attorney Fees. Courts have the inherent power to award attorney fees in certain unusual circumstances amounting to conduct during the course of litigation which is vexatious, unfounded, and dilatory, such that it amounts to bad faith.
- Judgments: Political Subdivisions. Special considerations apply to court-ordered expenditures of public funds.
- Political Subdivisions: Counties: Legislature. A county is a political subdivision of the state and has only that power delegated to it by the Legislature.
- Political Subdivisions: Counties. Any grant of power to a political subdivision is to be strictly construed, and any reasonable doubt of the existence of a power is to be resolved against the county.
- Public Purpose: Legislature: Words and Phrases. What constitutes a public purpose, as opposed to a private purpose, is primarily for the Legislature to determine.
- Divorce: Minors: Attorneys at Law: Parties: Public Purpose: Legislature. Through
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-358(1) (Reissue 2016), the Legislature has determined that the work of an attorney appointed torepresent the interests of the minor children in a dissolution action is for a public purpose only when a responsible party to the dissolution is indigent.
Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: W. MARK ASHFORD, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions.
Donald W. Kleine, Douglas County Attorney, Meghan M. Bothe, and Kristin M. Lynch for intervenor-appellant.
James McGough, of McGough Law, P.C., L.L.O., guardian ad litem.
HEAVICAN, C.J., WRIGHT, MILLER-LERMAN, CASSEL, STACY, KELCH, and FUNKE, JJ.
WRIGHT, J.
NATURE OF CASE
Intervenor-appellant, Douglas County, Nebraska, claimed the district court lacked the power to order Douglas County to reimburse an attorney for his time defending an appeal by Douglas County. In its appeal, Douglas County successfully challenged the district court‘s order that required it to pay the appointed attorney‘s costs in the underlying divorce. In that appeal, we concluded the district court abused its discretion in ordering payment pursuant to
BACKGROUND
In July 2012, Elizabeth A. White (White) filed a complaint against James F. White for dissolution of marriage. The district court appointed James McGough as an attorney for the couple‘s minor children. In a supplemental temporary order pending trial, the court discharged McGough.
In February 2014, the district court ordered that White and her husband each individually pay $2,073.12 in fees to McGough. In April 2014, the court entered the decree of dissolution. Not having been paid by White, McGough filed a motion for contempt, alleging that White had not paid any of the fees she owed to him under the February order.
White filed for bankruptcy, and McGough was notified and listed as a creditor in White‘s bankruptcy proceedings. McGough did not intervene in the bankruptcy proceedings. Instead, McGough filed another motion for attorney fees in the district court, this time requesting that the district court find White indigent and order Douglas County to pay the fees, pursuant to
The court stayed the hearing on McGough‘s motion until the conclusion of the bankruptcy proceedings. Eventually, White‘s debts, including the debt to McGough, were discharged. The district court resumed proceedings on McGough‘s motion for attorney fees. It found that White was indigent and ordered Douglas County to pay McGough‘s fees, which White had been ordered to pay in the divorce action.
Douglas County, as intervenor and appellant, appealed to this court the district court‘s order that it pay McGough‘s fees.1 No briefs were filed in the appeal by White, her husband, or the minor children. McGough filed a brief as appellee, arguing that the district court was correct in determining White was indigent.
Approximately 3 weeks after the mandate was received by the district court, McGough moved the court to require Douglas County to pay $1,719.87 in attorney fees for McGough‘s expenses and time spent defending Douglas County‘s appeal in White v. White.3 The court sustained the motion and ordered Douglas County to pay McGough $1,719.87 for the costs and fees incurred during the appeal.
The court reasoned that the fees incurred for the time spent defending the appeal were distinct from the fees subject to our opinion in White. Operating under the erroneous assumption that McGough had not yet been removed as a court-appointed attorney for the children at the time of the appeal in White, the district court reasoned that McGough‘s involvement as appellee was required under his appointment as an attorney for the children. The court concluded that reimbursement was sufficiently encompassed by the last sentence of § 2-109(F): “A court-appointed attorney in a criminal case, appealed to the Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals, may, after issuance of a mandate by the appellate court, apply to the appointing court for an attorney fee regarding services in the appeal.”
The court‘s order directing Douglas County to pay McGough‘s costs and fees for his appellate work in White is the subject of the current appeal.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Douglas County assigns that the district court erred in ordering it to pay McGough for his costs and fees incurred during the appeal in White because (1) McGough failed to file a timely motion for such fees with the Supreme Court
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1] Statutory interpretation presents a question of law. When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court has an obligation to resolve the questions independently of the conclusion reached by the trial court.4
ANALYSIS
The issue presented is whether the district court had the authority to order Douglas County to reimburse McGough for the time and expense in Douglas County‘s appeal in White.5
The husband, wife, and minor children in the underlying dissolution action had no interest in the appeal in White, and they likewise have no interest in the present appeal. In Brackhan v. Brackhan,6 we recognized that under
Douglas County asserts several arguments why the district court erred in ordering that it pay McGough‘s appellate fees. Arguably the most fundamental of these is its argument that when neither party to a dissolution action is indigent, there is no statute that permits a district court to order the county to expend public funds to reimburse an appointed attorney for his
[2,3] A party may recover attorney fees and expenses in a civil action only when a statute permits recovery or when the Nebraska Supreme Court has recognized and accepted a uniform course of procedure for allowing attorney fees.8 Courts additionally have the inherent power to award attorney fees in certain unusual circumstances amounting to conduct during the course of litigation which is vexatious, unfounded, and dilatory, such that it amounts to bad faith.9
[4-6] Special considerations apply to court-ordered expenditures of public funds. A county is a political subdivision of the state and has only that power delegated to it by the Legislature.11 Any grant of power to a political subdivision is to be strictly construed, and any reasonable doubt of the existence of a power is to be resolved against the county.12
The only exception to this rule is found in Kovarik v. County of Banner.15 In Kovarik, we held that the judiciary could, in its inherent authority, order the county to reimburse attorney fees in matters “so fundamental as the indigent‘s right to appointed counsel in criminal matters.”16 We explained that such fundamental matters included fees incurred in a misdemeanor prosecution by the county, if it could result in imprisonment.17 We reasoned that the county‘s authority to pay the fees in such cases derives from its duty to pay the expenses of the local administration of justice within the county, arising from the general system of county organization and by necessary implication from a statutory scheme that delegates criminal prosecution to the county level.18 We also noted that certain levies contributing to the county general fund are by statute authorized to be used for indigent persons.19
But Kovarik has no applicability here. The appointment of an attorney in a civil action does not present such fundamental matters as defending against a county‘s prosecution that could lead to imprisonment. Further, there are no indigent persons involved in this civil action.
The court may appoint an attorney to protect the interests of any minor children of the parties. Such attorney shall be empowered to make independent investigations and to cause witnesses to appear and testify on matters pertinent to the welfare of the children. The court shall by order fix the fee, including disbursements, for such attorney, which amount shall be taxed as costs and paid by the parties as ordered. If the court finds that the party responsible is indigent, the court may order the county to pay the costs.
(Emphasis supplied.)
We need not decide if the costs referred to in
[8] Through
But currently no statute allows for the payment with public funds of an appointed attorney‘s fees and expenses in a dissolution action when neither party is indigent. Any rules governing
We held in White22 that White was not indigent, and there was no finding by the district court that any party responsible for the fees and expenses incurred by McGough on appeal was indigent. Because there is no statute granting the district court the power to order Douglas County to pay fees in a dissolution action where neither party is indigent, we hold that the district court erred in ordering Douglas County to pay McGough for his appellate work in White. Having so concluded, we need not address Douglas County‘s remaining arguments that the district court erred.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the order of the district court and remand the cause with directions to vacate its order granting attorney fees and costs to McGough.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
