Mark Winchell v. Natalie Moore Winchell ( 2019 )


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  •                            FIFTH DIVISION
    MCFADDEN, C. J.,
    MCMILLIAN, P. J., and SENIOR APPELLATE JUDGE PHIPPS
    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 16, 2019
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A19A1531, A19A2119. WINCHELL v. WINCHELL.
    MCMILLIAN, Judge.
    Following a divorce between Mark Winchell (“Father”) and Natalie Winchell
    (“Mother”), the Father appeals the child support order and award of attorney fees in
    Case No. A19A1531.1 After the trial court ordered him to post an appeal bond, the
    Father also appealed that order in Case No. A19A2119. For the reasons that follow,
    we affirm in Case No. A19A1531 and dismiss as moot the appeal in Case No.
    A19A2119.
    The Father and Mother married on November 3, 2013, and they had a child in
    2015. In 2016, the parties separated and the Mother filed for divorce. Following a
    three day bench trial, a Final Judgment and Decree of Divorce was entered on
    1
    We granted the Father’s application for discretionary appeal under Court of
    Appeals Rule 31 (b) (4), which provides that the Court will grant any “application for
    leave to appeal a judgment and decree of divorce” that is final, timely, and
    “determined to have possible merit.” Court of Appeals Rule 31 (b) (4).
    December 15, 2017.2 The Final Judgment included a Child Support Addendum and
    attached Child Support Worksheet, which under OCGA § 19-6-15,3 calculated the
    Mother’s income as $3,394.77 per month and the Father’s income as $28,197 per
    month. The Final Judgment ordered the Father to pay $1,973 per month in child
    support. Although the Child Support Addendum stated that none of the deviations
    from the presumptive child support amount as set out in OCGA § 19-6-15 applied in
    this case, the trial court ordered under a section entitled “Additional Provisions”:
    (A) The Father shall be responsible for all costs associated with
    the child’s full time attendance at The Sanctuary Child Learning Center.
    (B) The Father shall be responsible for all expenses incurred by
    the child to obtain a private[] school education from first through twelfth
    grade. The costs he shall be responsible for include tuition, books,
    matriculation fees, and other incidental expenses billed by the school.
    His liability under this paragraph shall not exceed the cost required for
    a day student to attend Savannah Christian Preparatory School in
    Savannah, Georgia.
    2
    About a month later, the trial court amended the order to restore the Mother
    to her prior last name and to allow the parties to file motions for attorney fees.
    3
    We note that OCGA § 19-6-15 was amended both in 2017 and 2018, effective
    July 1 of each of the amendment years. Ga. L. 2017, p. 646, §§ 1-3 – 1-8; Ga. L.
    2018, p. 937, §§ 1-1, 1-1A – 1-1C, 1-2 – 1-4, 1-4A. However, our analysis would be
    the same under either version of the statute.
    2
    Prior to the entry of judgment, the Father, through counsel, and in his testimony
    objected generally to the payment of private school expenses. Regarding the
    Sanctuary Learning Center expenses, the Father agreed he would continue paying for
    the child to go to the daycare center, but requested a “nominal parenting time
    deviation to get the child support figure to fifteen hundred” to account for paying the
    costs. After entry of Final Judgment, both parties filed timely motions for
    reconsideration, and the Mother filed a request for attorney fees under OCGA § 19-6-
    2.4 The trial court never ruled on the parties’ motions for reconsideration, but a
    hearing was held on the attorney fees’ request, and the trial court subsequently
    awarded the Mother $38,971 in fees under OCGA § 19-6-2.
    The Father filed an application for discretionary appeal to this Court, arguing
    that the trial court erred by failing to include his obligation to pay daycare expenses
    and private school tuition in the child support worksheet and by failing to make the
    findings required under OCGA § 19-6-15 (c) (2) (E) to determine that a deviation
    from the presumptive amount of child support should apply, and that the trial court
    erred by failing to sufficiently consider the financial circumstances of the parties in
    4
    The Father apparently served a motion for new trial on the Mother’s attorney,
    but never filed the motion in the trial court. Nevertheless, the Mother filed a response
    to the unfiled motion for new trial.
    3
    awarding the Mother attorney fees under OCGA § 19-6-2. After we granted the
    Father’s application, he filed a timely notice of appeal and his appeal was docketed
    in this Court as Case No. A19A1531.
    The Mother then filed a motion to set an appeal bond in the trial court, which
    the trial court granted, ordering the Father to deposit $97,809 in the registry of the
    court. The Father filed a notice of appeal from the trial court’s order, and that appeal
    was docketed in this Court as A19A2119. We consolidated these appeals for our
    review.
    Case No. A19A1531.
    1. We first address the Mother’s contention that the Father waived his right to
    appeal any issues related to calculation of child support and the failure to make
    required written findings under OCGA § 19-6-15. In McCarthy v. Ashment-
    McCarthy, 
    295 Ga. 231
     (758 SE2d 306) (2014), our Supreme Court considered
    whether the trial court’s failure to comply with the requirement to make written
    findings under OCGA § 19-6-15 can be waived by failing to first raise the issue of
    compliance in the trial court. The Court answered that question in the affirmative,
    noting that the appellant in McCarthy had filed two post judgment motions in which
    the issue of compliance could have been raised – a motion for new trial and a motion
    4
    for reconsideration from the trial court’s denial of his motion for new trial. Id. at 233
    (2).5 In so holding, the Supreme Court specifically disapproved of several of its
    previous cases to the extent those cases could be read for the proposition that the
    issue of a trial court’s compliance with OCGA § 19-6-15 is never subject to waiver.6
    Further, the Court “contrasted” its finding of waiver with previous cases in which the
    trial court’s noncompliance with OCGA § 19-6-15 had been brought to the trial
    court’s attention in a proper motion prior to filing the notice of appeal, citing
    Holloway v. Holloway, 
    288 Ga. 147
    , 148-49 (702 SE2d 132) (2010) (failure to make
    factual findings raised in motion for new trial); Brogdon v. Brogdon, 
    290 Ga. 618
    ,
    624-25 (5) (b) (723 SE2d 421) (2012) (issue of compliance raised in motion for
    reconsideration/modification); and Demmons v. Wilson-Demmons, 
    293 Ga. 349
    , 349
    5
    The Court noted that the appellant had also filed a motion to set aside, but
    specifically held that the appellant could not have properly raised the issue of the trial
    court’s compliance with OCGA § 19-6-15 in that motion, “even if he had chosen to
    do so.” See Kuriatnyk v. Kuriatnyk, 
    286 Ga. 589
    , 591 (2) (690 SE2d 397) (2010)
    (“[A] motion for new trial, but not a motion to set aside, is a proper means by which
    the movant can complain of the trial court’s failure to comply with the child support
    guidelines contained in OCGA § 19-6-15, including the failure to make findings
    required thereby.”); see also OCGA § 9-11-60 (d) (setting out attacks on judgments
    that may be made in a motion to set aside).
    6
    Specific cases mentioned by the Court include Eldridge v. Eldridge, 
    291 Ga. 762
     (732 SE2d 411) (2012); Walls v. Walls, 
    291 Ga. 757
     (732 SE2d 407) (2012); and
    Turner v. Turner, 
    285 Ga. 866
     (684 SE2d 596) (2009).
    5
    (745 SE2d 645) (2013) (motion to amend/make additional findings/partial motion for
    new trial). McCarthy, 295 Ga. at 233 (2).
    We note that several months after McCarthy was decided, our Supreme Court
    refused to find waiver in Wallace v. Wallace, 
    296 Ga. 307
     (766 SE2d 452) (2014),
    stating that “unlike the appellant in McCarthy, the [appellant in Wallace] did not file
    in the trial court a motion for new trial that did not raise the trial court’s failure to
    comply with the findings requirement, and then attempt to raise the issue for this first
    time [on appeal].” 
    Id. at 310
     (1), n.2. However, about a year later, the Supreme Court
    followed McCarthy and found appellant had waived appellate review of the issue of
    compliance with OCGA § 19-6-15 by failing to raise it in her motion for new
    trial/motion for reconsideration or at the hearing on the motion. McLendon v.
    McLendon, 
    297 Ga. 779
    , 780 (2) (778 SE2d 213) (2015).
    Thus, reading these cases together, it appears that when the appellant has
    chosen to file a motion in the trial court in which the issue of compliance with the fact
    finding requirements of OCGA § 19-6-15 could properly have been raised and
    brought to the trial court’s attention and fails to do so, that issue is waived on appeal.
    But the issue of compliance may be properly raised on appeal for the first time if the
    appellant chooses not to file a post-judgment motion in the trial court or files a
    6
    motion in which the issue could not properly be raised, such as a motion to set aside.
    See also OCGA § 5-6-36 (a) (“A motion for new trial need not be filed as a condition
    precedent to appeal or consideration of any judgment, ruling, or order in any case;
    but, in all cases where a motion for new trial is an available remedy, the party entitled
    thereto may elect to file the motion first or appeal directly.”).
    The question then is whether the issue of compliance was waived under the
    facts of this case. Although at one point the Father’s attorney purported to file a
    motion for new trial and attached a copy of the motion to correspondence with the
    Mother’s attorney, prompting the Mother to file a response to the motion, the Father
    never actually filed the motion in the trial court.7 However, the Father subsequently
    file a “consolidated” motion for reconsideration, but did not raise the issue of
    compliance with OCGA § 19-6-15, and the trial court never ruled on the motion. As
    our Supreme Court recognized in McCarthy,8 a motion for reconsideration is a proper
    7
    We can glean from the Mother’s response that the Father did not raise the
    compliance issue in the unfiled motion for new trial.
    8
    As stated above, in finding waiver, our Supreme Court cited the appellant’s
    failure to raise the issue of compliance in either his motion for new trial or motion for
    reconsideration, and cited Brogdon, a case in which a motion for
    reconsideration/modification had been filed, as an example of when the issue had
    been preserved for appellate review by first raising it in the trial court.
    7
    means by which to raise the trial court’s failure to make the findings required by
    OCGA § 19-6-15. Because, the Father has waived appellate review of the issue of the
    trial court’s compliance with OCGA § 19-6-15 by raising this failure for the first time
    on appeal instead of in his post-trial motion filed in the trial court, we will not address
    the issue of whether the trial court complied with OCGA § 19-6-15 in ordering the
    Father to pay the child’s private school tuition and the Sanctuary Learning Center
    Expenses.
    2. The Father also challenges the trial court’s award of attorney fees to the
    Mother under OCGA § 19-6-2, arguing that the trial court improperly relied on
    outdated financial information and failed to make sufficient factual findings to
    support the award.9
    9
    The Mother also argues that the Father waived his challenge to the attorney
    fees award by failing to raise it in the trial court. We will not parse that issue, other
    than to note that the Father’s argument, at least in part, challenges the sufficiency of
    the evidence to support the award, and this Court has previously recognized that such
    a challenge may be properly made for the first time on appeal. See Ford v. Ford, 
    349 Ga. App. 45
    , 47 (2) (a) (825 SE2d 449) (2019) (physical precedent only) (citation and
    punctuation omitted) (noting generally “issues which have not yet been ruled on by
    the trial court may not be raised on appeal” but then finding consideration of the
    issues raised on appeal proper after majority characterized appellant’s challenge as
    one to sufficiency of the evidence, which may be raised at any time).
    8
    “Generally, an award of attorney fees is not available in Georgia unless
    authorized by statute or contract.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Ward v. Ward,
    
    289 Ga. 250
    , 251 (2) (710 SE2d 555) (2011). Here, the attorney fees were requested
    only under OCGA § 19-6-2, and the trial court’s order clearly reflected that the award
    was pursuant to that statute. “OCGA § 19-6-2 authorizes a trial court in a divorce
    action to exercise its sound discretion and, after considering the financial
    circumstances of the parties, to award attorney fees as necessary to ensure the
    effective representation of both parties.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Ward,
    
    289 Ga. at 251
     (2).
    The Father complains, however, that the trial court improperly considered only
    the disparity in the parties’ income, which the trial court noted was “substantial,” and
    did not take into account the parties’ overall financial circumstances, as is required
    when making an award under OCGA § 19-6-2.
    OCGA § 19-6-2 (a) (1) requires a trial court to consider the
    parties’ ‘financial circumstances’ when awarding attorney fees under
    that statute. While the gross income of the parties is only one of many
    factors that may be considered in evaluating the parties’ respective
    financial resources or circumstances, it is an important one and should
    be based on accurate information.
    9
    Lutz v. Lutz, 
    302 Ga. 500
    , 503 (2) (807 SE2d 336) (2017). The term “financial
    circumstances” is not defined in the statute, and there is no statutory limitation on the
    type of evidence the trial court may consider when deciding whether to award fees
    and in what amount under OCGA § 19-6-2. Jarvis v. Jarvis, 
    291 Ga. 818
    , 820 (2)
    (733 SE2d 747) (2012).
    Here, the transcript from the hearing shows that neither party presented new
    evidence at the hearing, and both parties’ attorneys made arguments based on the
    evidence that had been admitted during the divorce proceedings regarding their
    clients’ relative financial positions, including their living expenses, real estate, and
    other holdings, to bring the trial court up to date on the parties’ current financial
    status. That information along with the information concerning the parties’ incomes
    was available to the trial court in making the award. The trial court also made a
    specific finding concerning how the Father’s conduct had increased the time
    necessary to complete discovery and try the issues, which the Mother’s attorney
    argued at the hearing required her to fight against a financial “elephant,” negatively
    impacting her otherwise limited financial resources. The trial court also made
    findings concerning the Father’s ability to resolve his substantial debt.
    10
    These findings went to the ultimate purpose of an attorney fee award under
    OCGA § 19-6-2, which is to level the financial playing field so that both parties can
    afford effective representation based on their relative financial circumstances. See,
    e.g., Walton v. Walton, 
    285 Ga. 706
    , 708 (3) (681 SE2d 165) (2009) (“The purpose
    of allowing attorney fees is to ensure effective representation of both spouses so that
    all issues can be fully and fairly resolved.”) (citation and punctuation omitted). Thus,
    based on the transcript and the findings made by the trial court in the order awarding
    fees, the attorney fee award in this case was not based solely on the parties’ gross
    income, and both the financial circumstances and the purpose of the award were
    properly considered in making the award. Hoard v. Beveridge, 
    298 Ga. 728
    , 731 (2)
    (783 SE2d 629) (2016) (award under OCGA § 19-6-2 upheld where record and fee
    hearing transcript show that the trial court considered parties’ relative financial
    positions); Reid v. Reid, 
    348 Ga. App. 550
    , 552-53 (1) (823 SE2d 860) (2019)
    (attorney fee award under OCGA § 19-6-2 affirmed where trial court’s order contains
    sufficient findings to show that it considered the relative finances of each party); cf.
    Amoakuh v. Issaka, 
    299 Ga. 132
    , 134 (3) (786 SE2d 678) (2016) (attorney fees order
    awarding fees under OCGA § 19-6-2 vacated and remanded where court did not
    consider parties’ relative financial circumstances); Moon v. Moon, 
    277 Ga. 375
    , 378
    11
    (6) (589 SE2d 76) (2003) (Supreme Court vacated fee award to the extent it might
    have been made under OCGA § 19-6-2 because the only evidence of the parties’
    financial circumstances was the gross monthly income of the parties).
    The Father also complains that the information upon which the trial court based
    its award was outdated and stale. As to this issue, the record shows that both parties
    relied primarily on evidence that had been presented during the divorce proceedings,
    and both sides were also allowed to argue the current status of their financial
    situation. Further, Thedieck v. Thedieck, 
    220 Ga. App. 764
    , 767-68 (3) (470 SE2d
    265) (1996) upon which the Father relies, was a contempt case in which the
    information concerning the parties’ financial circumstances was over two years old,
    and there was no information available to the trial court concerning the father’s
    current financial circumstances. Here, the hearing on the attorney fees motion was
    held less than eight months after the divorce decree was entered, and, as stated above,
    both parties made arguments at the hearing concerning their current financial
    circumstances. Accordingly, we find no merit to the argument that the attorney fees
    award was improperly based on stale information since both sides appear to recognize
    that the evidence had not materially changed.
    12
    Lastly, the Father argues that the trial court improperly considered his alleged
    conduct in making the award. It is true that “the misconduct of a party in a divorce
    proceeding does not provide a basis for awarding attorney fees pursuant to OCGA §
    19-6-2. See Johnson v. Johnson, 
    284 Ga. 366
    , 368 (3) (667 SE2d 350) (2008).”
    Vakharwala v. Vakharwala, 
    301 Ga. 251
    , 254 (1) (b) (799 SE2d 797) (2017). But the
    trial court’s findings were pertinent to the amount of fees that were incurred, the
    financial impact of the litigation, and the ability of the parties to afford effective
    representation. Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in the attorney fees
    award. Hoard, 298 Ga. at 732 (2) (reversal not required even though trial court
    discussed procedural history of the litigation and concludes one party unnecessarily
    expanded the litigation when nothing suggested these factors played a role in decision
    to award fees under OCGA § 19-6-2). The judgment in Case No. A19A1531 is
    affirmed.
    CASE NO. A19A2119.
    3. In light of the foregoing, the Father’s challenge to the trial court’s order
    imposing an appeal bond is moot, and the appeal in Case No. A19A2119 is dismissed
    13
    for this reason.10 McCann v. McCraine, 
    228 Ga. 817
     (188 SE2d 487) (1972); GOM
    Builders, LLC v. Renasant Bank, 
    328 Ga. App. 796
     ( 762 SE2d 622) (2014).
    Judgment affirmed in Case No. A19A1531. Appeal dismissed in Case No.
    A19A2119. McFadden, C. J., and Senior Appellate Judge Herbert E. Phipps concur.
    10
    Citing Pruett v. Commercial Bank of Ga., 
    211 Ga. App. 692
     (440 SE2d 85
    (1994), the Mother has moved to dismiss the Father’s direct appeal from the order
    requiring him to post an appeal bond, arguing that a supersedeas bond is not a final
    order which is directly appealable pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-34. However, the Mother
    overstates our holding in Pruett, which was to the effect that in that particular case,
    matters remained pending in the trial court. Id. at 694. In contrast, our review of the
    record in this case shows that a final judgment was entered and that the only matters
    that remain pending below are motions for reconsideration which were never ruled
    on. “While it is true that a notice of appeal filed during the pendency of a motion for
    new trial confers no jurisdiction on this Court, the same rule does not apply to
    motions for reconsideration.” (Citation omitted.) Threatt v. Forsyth County, 
    250 Ga. App. 838
    , 844 (2) (552 SE2d 123) (2001). Thus, this appeal is not subject to dismissal
    for the reasons urged by the Mother in her motion.
    14