Morgan, D. v. Morgan, S. , 193 A.3d 999 ( 2018 )


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  • J-A32019-17
    
    2018 Pa. Super. 212
    DANIEL T. MORGAN                       :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    :
    SHERI A. MORGAN                        :
    :
    Appellant            :   No. 1770 MDA 2016
    Appeal from the Order Entered September 27, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County Civil Division at No(s):
    2007-1502
    DANIEL T. MORGAN                       :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant            :
    :
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    :
    SHERI A. MORGAN                        :   No. 1841 MDA 2016
    Appeal from the Order Entered September 27, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County Civil Division at No(s):
    2007-1502
    DANIEL T. MORGAN                       :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant            :
    :
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    :
    SHERI A. MORGAN                        :   No. 128 MDA 2017
    Appeal from the Order Entered January 12, 2017
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County Civil Division at No(s):
    2007-1502
    BEFORE:   OTT, J., DUBOW, J., and STRASSBURGER*, J.
    ____________________________________
    * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A32019-17
    OPINION BY DUBOW, J.:                                 FILED JULY 20, 2018
    In these consolidated cross appeals, Sheri A. Morgan (“Wife”) and
    Daniel T. Morgan (“Husband”) both appeal from the September 27, 2016
    Order, which, inter alia, reduced Husband’s alimony obligation.      Husband
    also appeals the January 12, 2017 Order that denied his Motion to Strike the
    September 27, 2016 Order. After careful review, we vacate the September
    27, 2016 Order and remand this case with instructions.
    PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY
    Husband and Wife were married on May 18, 1984, and have three
    adult children; the youngest suffers from autism and requires supervision
    and care. During the marriage, Husband earned various advanced degrees,
    including a Law Degree, Masters in Business Administration, Masters of Laws
    in Taxation, and a Certified Public Accountant certification; Wife earned her
    Bachelors of Science in Nursing.    At the time of the parties’ separation,
    Husband earned a salary of $144,000.
    On March 18, 2003, the parties entered into a Marital Settlement
    Agreement (“Agreement”) on the record, which provided that Husband
    would pay Wife $5,000 per month in alimony until at least June 30, 2007.
    After July 1, 2007, either party could petition the Court to modify the
    amount of alimony, restricted only by the provision that the trial court could
    not reduce alimony below $1,000 until July 1, 2007 or later.
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    On March 20, 2003, the parties were divorced pursuant to a Judgment
    of Divorce entered in Montgomery County, Maryland, which incorporated,
    but did not merge, the parties’ Agreement.
    On May 3, 2007, Husband filed a certified copy of the Divorce Decree
    in Franklin County, PA. On May 4, 2007, Husband filed a Petition to Modify
    Alimony to $1000 per month. Wife filed a cross-petition to increase alimony
    above $5000 per month.
    On December 5, 2007, the trial court granted Husband’s Petition and
    reduced Husband’s alimony obligation to $1000 per month.         Wife timely
    appealed. On appeal, this Court vacated a portion of the Order, remanded
    the case, and instructed the trial court to require Husband to demonstrate “a
    substantial change in circumstances that justify reducing the award” and
    then analyze the requisite factors set forth at 23 Pa.C.S. § 3701(b)(1)-(17).
    Morgan v. Morgan, No. 50 MDA 2008, unpublished memorandum at 11
    (Pa. Super. filed November 13, 2008)(“MORGAN I”).
    On January 14, 2011, after a hearing, the trial court issued an Order
    again granting Husband’s Petition to Modify Alimony and reducing alimony to
    $1000 per month retroactive to July 1, 2007. (“January 2011 Hearing”).
    Wife timely appealed the trial court’s order.
    While Wife’s appeal was pending, Wife discovered that at the January
    2011 Hearing, Husband produced to the court false documentation and
    testimony regarding his income, including two sets of false tax returns. Wife
    filed in this Court a Motion to Supplement the Record and a Motion for
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    Immediate Interim Relief.            Superior Court denied these motions and
    affirmed the decision of the trial court. See Morgan v. Morgan, 
    40 A.3d 194
    (Pa. Super. 2011) (unpublished memorandum)(“MORGAN II”).
    On January 24, 2012, Wife filed with the trial court a Petition to Modify
    Alimony based on Husband’s fraud.              At the hearing, the parties stipulated
    that Husband’s income was, in fact, higher than Husband had presented at
    the January 2011 Hearing.1           The parties also stipulated that Wife’s 2015
    annual income was $43,200.
    The parties further stipulated that 1) the hourly rates that Wife’s
    attorneys charged were reasonable; 2) Husband would not challenge line-
    item charges from Wife’s attorneys; and 3) it was not necessary for Wife to
    call an expert witness to testify as to the services provided.
    Although the trial court acknowledged that Husband willfully presented
    false evidence of his income at the January 2011 Hearing and characterized
    Husband’s conduct as “despicable,” the trial court determined that it was
    bound by the factors listed in 23 Pa.C.S. § 3701 and issued the same Order
    that it had issued at the January 2011 Hearing. See Order, dated 9/27/16.
    Husband’s alimony obligation remained at $1000 per month from July 1,
    2011, through June 30, 2022.
    ____________________________________________
    1In particular, the parties stipulated that Husband’s income was as follows:
    $415,000 in 2007; $384,000 in 2008; $340,096 in 2009; $528,984 in 2010;
    $474,572 in 2011; $452,141 in 2012; $588,996 in 2013; $584,051 in 2014;
    and approximately $663,324 for 2015.
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    The parties had stipulated that attorney’s fees that Wife incurred were
    reasonable. The trial court, however, only required Husband to reimburse
    Wife for 75% of those fees. Moreover, the trial court only required Husband
    to reimburse Wife for those fees Wife incurred from the date she discovered
    Husband’s fraud, not from the date he committed the fraud.
    Wife filed a timely Notice of Appeal. Wife and the trial court complied
    with Pa.R.A.P 1925. Husband filed a timely cross appeal, but failed to serve
    the appeal on the trial court.        Consequently, the trial court did not order
    Husband to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) Statement.2
    On January 11, 2017, Husband filed a Motion to Strike the September
    27, 2016 Order.       On January 12, 2017, the trial court denied Husband’s
    Motion to Strike.      Husband timely appealed.      Both Husband and the trial
    court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925. Upon Motion from Husband, this Court
    consolidated the above-captioned appeals.
    ISSUES RAISED ON APPEAL
    ____________________________________________
    2 Pa.R.A.P. 902 states, in pertinent part, “[f]ailure of an appellant to take
    any step other than the timely filing of a notice of appeal does not affect the
    validity of the appeal, but it is subject to such action as the appellate court
    deems appropriate, which may include, but is not limited to, remand of the
    matter to the lower court so that the omitted procedural step may be
    taken.” We decline to remand the case due to Husband’s failure to serve a
    copy of the Notice of Appeal on the trial court.
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    Wife’s Issues
    Wife raises the following issues on appeal:
    I.     Did the trial court abuse its discretion and err as a matter
    of law in concluding that an inequitable result would occur
    if it applied the doctrine of unclean hands to preclude
    analysis of the alimony factors, despite the trial court
    finding that the doctrine was applicable to the case and
    that [Husband]’s fraudulent conduct was within the
    purview of the doctrine?
    II.    Did the trial court abuse its discretion and err as a matter
    of law in determining that the amount of counsel fees to be
    considered for reimbursement were only the fees
    accumulated subsequent to the discovery of [Husband]’s
    fraud, therefore denying any consideration of the counsel
    fees accumulated while [Husband] perpetrated his fraud,
    despite determining that [Husband] was not entitled to a
    reduction in his alimony for the same period due to his
    fraud, and in arbitrarily awarding only 75% of the counsel
    fees incurred subsequent to the discovery of [Husband]’s
    fraud?
    III.   Did the trial court abuse its discretion and err as a matter
    of law where it correctly recognized the applicability of the
    falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus doctrine where
    [Husband]’s fraud was material to the alimony modification
    determination, but declined to apply the doctrine to any of
    the likely and necessarily fraudulent testimony and
    production of [Husband], and in finding any of [Husband]’s
    testimony credible where in every instance where there
    was a way to check the veracity of [Husband]’s testimony,
    it was proven to be false?
    IV.    Did the trial court abuse its discretion and err as a matter
    of law in concluding that despite [Husband]’s fraud,
    [Husband] established a substantial and continuing change
    to meet the threshold requirement for alimony
    modification?
    V.     Did the trial court abuse its discretion and err as a matter
    of law in finding, after reanalysis of the alimony factors in
    light of [Husband]’s fraud, [Husband] to be entitled to any
    reduction to his alimony obligation, let alone a reduction in
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    his alimony obligation after July of 2011, where
    [Husband]’s fraud was committed from the outset of the
    case, [Husband] perpetuated his fraud through the
    proceedings well after July of 2011, and where the trial
    court’s Opinion of January 14, 2011 was premised upon
    findings of fact that were determined by the trial court
    based on fraudulent testimony and production from
    [Husband] which the trial court failed to fully recognize
    and address in its reanalysis of the factors in its Opinion
    and Order of September 27, 2016?
    VI.    Did the trial court abuse its discretion and err as a matter
    of law in determining that [Husband]’s fraudulent
    testimony and fraudulent production was not arbitrary,
    vexatious, or in bad faith?
    Wife’s Brief at 5-7 (reordered for ease of disposition; some capitalization
    omitted).
    Husband’s Issues
    1. A court cannot alter a contract, and a judgment without
    subject matter jurisdiction is void.     The trial court has
    determined, three times, that the parties contracted, in March
    2003, that alimony would end in July 2007; nonetheless, the
    trial court has altered the contract by adding four years of
    alimony. Could the court alter the contract?
    2. A judgment without subject matter jurisdiction is void. The
    trial court altered the parties’ alimony contract based on
    Domestic Relations Code section 3701(b), which applies when
    alimony is awarded by a court. Did such statute provide the
    trial court with subject matter jurisdiction?
    3. Relitigation of a final judgment is precluded, and a judgment
    without subject matter jurisdiction is void. The trial court
    allowed its final judgment to be relitigated, resulting in the
    judgment on appeal. Could the final judgment be relitigated?
    4. Jurisdiction of appeals from trial court orders lies with the
    Superior Court, exclusively, and a judgment without subject
    matter jurisdiction is void. After the Superior Court affirmed
    the trial court’s final order, the trial court altered the
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    affirmance. Did the trial court have jurisdiction to alter the
    affirmance?
    5. A trial court has a maximum of 30 days to modify an order,
    but cannot do so after the order has been appealed, and a
    judgment without subject matter jurisdiction is void. After
    appeal of the trial court’s (final) order, the trial court modified
    such order by entering the order on appeal. Was such
    modification permissible?
    6. Orders were entered based on a judgment without subject
    matter jurisdiction. Were such orders valid?
    Husband’s Brief at 4-5.
    LEGAL ANALYSIS – WIFE’S ISSUES
    The Trial Court Abused its Discretion When it Failed to Apply
    the Doctrine of Unclean Hands
    In her first issue, Wife avers that the trial court abused its discretion
    when it failed to apply the doctrine of unclean hands after determining that
    its   application   would   be   inequitable,   despite   finding   that   Husband’s
    fraudulent conduct was within the purview of the doctrine.           Wife’s Brief at
    21.    Wife asserts that Husband committed intentional and premeditated
    fraud upon the trial court for the last ten years and “in every instance where
    there was a way to check the truth or falsity of [Husband]’s testimony, it
    was proven to be false.” 
    Id. at 26,
    28. Wife argues that the application of
    the doctrine of unclean hands is the only equitable recourse, and the trial
    court abused its discretion when it failed to apply the doctrine, vacate its
    decision to grant Husband’s Petition to Modify, and determine that the
    doctrine completely bars Husband’s request for the reduction of his alimony
    obligation. 
    Id. at 23,
    27. We agree.
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    We review spousal support cases for an abuse of discretion. Dudas v.
    Pietrzykowski, 
    849 A.2d 582
    , 585 (Pa. 2004).          We must determine
    whether the trial court “has overridden or misapplied the law, or has
    exercised judgment which is manifestly unreasonable, or the product of
    partiality, prejudice, bias or ill will as demonstrated by the evidence of
    record.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    As an initial matter, we conclude that the trial court properly
    determined that Husband’s fraudulent production and testimony is “within
    the purview of the unclean hands doctrine.” Trial Court Opinion and Order,
    dated 9/27/16, at 11. The doctrine of unclean hands generally operates only
    to deny equitable, and not legal, remedies.   Universal Builders, Inc. v.
    Moon Motor Lodge, Inc., 
    244 A.2d 10
    , 14 (Pa. 1968).         This Court has
    concluded that “[a] marital support agreement incorporated but not merged
    into the divorce decree survives the decree and is enforceable at law or
    equity.” Stamerro v. Stamerro, 
    889 A.2d 1251
    , 1258 (Pa. Super. 2005).
    The Divorce Code specifically states that “[i]n all matrimonial
    causes, the court shall have full equity power and jurisdiction and
    may issue injunctions or other orders which are necessary to protect the
    interests of the parties or to effectuate the purposes of this part and
    may grant such other relief or remedy as equity and justice require.”
    23 Pa.C.S. § 3323(f) (emphasis added).
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    We first consider whether the trial court abused its discretion when it
    determined that application of the doctrine of unclean hands to this case
    would be inequitable and refused to apply it. It is well settled that a party
    “who comes into a court of equity must come with clean hands.                    The
    doctrine of unclean hands requires that one seeking equity act fairly and
    without fraud or deceit as to the controversy at issue.” Lee v. Lee,
    
    978 A.2d 380
    , 387 (Pa. Super. 2009) (internal citations omitted)(emphasis
    added).        The doctrine “is derived from the unwillingness of a court to give
    relief    to    a   suitor   who   has   so   conducted   himself   as   to shock the
    moral sensibilities of the judge[.]” In re Estate of Pedrick, 
    482 A.2d 215
    ,
    222 (Pa. 1984). “A court may deprive a party of equitable relief where, to
    the detriment of the other party, the party applying for such relief is guilty of
    bad conduct relating to the matter at issue.” Terraciano v. Com., Dep't of
    Transp., Bureau of Driver Licensing, 
    753 A.2d 233
    , 237 (Pa. 2000).
    Finally, the doctrine of unclean hands “gives wide range to the equity court’s
    use of discretion in refusing to aid the unclean litigant” and in exercising this
    discretion, the equity court is free to refuse to apply the doctrine if
    consideration of the record as a whole convinces the court that application of
    the doctrine will cause an inequitable result. Shapiro v. Shapiro, 
    204 A.2d 266
    , 268 (Pa. 1964) (citations omitted).
    The facts of this case fall squarely within the doctrine of unclean
    hands. Husband’s fraudulent conduct took place from the inception of this
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    alimony modification case in May 2007 and through the January 2011
    Hearing. Husband’s fraud included producing to the court two different sets
    of false tax returns, false financial documents, and a false mortgage
    application as well as testifying falsely to the court regarding his income,
    assets, and spending. The trial court specified Husband’s fraudulent conduct
    as follows:
    This Court has identified various instances in which Dan
    committed fraud in these alimony proceedings. Dan concedes
    that in discovery of these alimony proceedings in April 2010, he
    produced false tax returns for the years 2007-09. See Dan
    Morgan Dep. at 42, May 18, 2012. He failed to include any
    bonuses that he earned from 2007-09, any consulting fees
    earned in 2007-08, or stock proceeds from 2009. See 
    id. at 61-
          62. Dan falsely testified in 2010 that he received no bonuses,
    stock options or stock grants. See 
    id. at 46.
    Dan also testified
    that he is unsure whether he was aware of his July 2, 2007 grant
    of restricted stock units when he denied owning any stock or
    stock options on August 16, 2007. See T.P., Support Appeal
    Hearing, at 27-29, September 20, 2012.
    In December 2011, Dan produced a second set of false tax
    returns for the years 2007-10. See 
    id. at 47-51.
    While the
    2008 and 2009 returns were only slightly altered, Dan's 2007
    return reflected an adjusted gross income approximately
    $130,000 less than Dan's actual adjusted gross income. See 
    id. at 58-59.
    Dan initially testified that his significant other, Ms. Langbein,
    paid the down payment on the couple's home purchased in
    2008, but later testified that he "guesses" that the $75,000
    withdrawn from his bank account the day of settlement went
    towards the down payment. See T.P., Alimony Hearing, at 43,
    May 24, 2010; see also T.P., Support Appeal Hearing, at 38-39,
    163-65, July 2, 2012. Dan also produced a fraudulent mortgage
    application in connection with the 2008 home purchase, and
    continues to deny that he has ever had assets in the amount
    reflected in the subsequently produced and actual mortgage
    application.   See T.P., Support Appeal Hearing, at 11-14,
    September 20, 2012.
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    Dan testified in September 24, 2007 that his ING bank account
    always had zero balance, but later conceded that his ING
    account had an opening balance of $65,000 on September 20,
    2007. See T.P., Support Appeal Hearing, at 148, 156-57, July 2,
    2012. Dan further conceded that he had $82,000 to $88,000
    more from December 2007 through January 2008 than what he
    submitted in a financial statement. See 
    id. at 157.
    Additionally,
    Dan conceded that he provided untruthful testimony regarding
    international travel. See 
    id. at 165-69.
    Dan responded to interrogatories in April 2010 that he had no
    employment contract with Tyco. See T.P., Support Appeal
    Hearing, at 30-31, September 20, 2012. Dan acknowledges that
    he received an offer letter from Tyco, and signed said letter on
    December 27, 2006 under the terms "[p]lease sign below to
    signify your acceptance of our offer of employment and its
    terms.” 
    Id. at 31-33.
    Dan disputes that the offer letter is an
    employment contract. See 
    id. at 31-33,
    36. Dan also argues
    that the offer letter language "will receive an option grant and
    restricted stock grant in line with grant guidelines for your
    position and level" does not guarantee him either option grants
    or restricted stock grants. 
    Id. at 34.
    Dan did testify that he only
    received stock options in 2007, but has received restricted stock
    grants every year since becoming employed by Tyco. See 
    id. at 35-36.
    Trial Court Order and Opinion, dated 9/27/16, at 4-6 (footnotes omitted).
    Our review of the record supports the trial court’s findings.
    Despite the trial court characterizing Husband’s deceitful conduct over
    a period of more than five years as “despicable actions” and a “fraud upon
    the court,” the trial court declined to apply the doctrine of unclean hands.
    The trial court refused to assert its equitable powers and instead applied the
    alimony factors using Husband’s new evidence that he presented after his
    Wife discovered the fraud.     
    Id. at 11.
        We find this to be an abuse of
    discretion.
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    When Husband filed his Petition to Modify Alimony, he was requesting
    that the court use its equitable powers to modify his alimony obligation. In
    light of the fraud that Husband committed not only on the court, but also to
    the parties and judicial system itself, the trial court should have invoked the
    doctrine of unclean hands and denied Husband’s request to modify
    Husband’s     alimony   obligations.     Although     this   conclusion   involves
    disregarding the Section 3701(b) factors, Husband committed a fraud on
    Wife and the judicial system on the most important issue in the Petition to
    Modify. This fraud is particularly egregious because Husband, as an attorney,
    is an officer of the court and has a professional obligation to not “knowingly
    make a false statement of material fact or law to a tribunal.” Rules of
    Professional Conduct, Rule 3.3(a).
    While it is hard to quantify the far-reaching effects of Husband’s years
    of fraud upon the court and Wife, the fraud resulted in multiple lower court
    hearings and two appeals to this Court over the past ten years. This was
    unquestionably detrimental to Wife. See Terraciano, supra at 237.
    Husband’s misconduct was not limited to a small or unimportant portion of
    the case; rather, for five years, most of the evidence that Husband
    fraudulently produced and testified to dealt with his financial status, the
    most significant issue in the Petition to Modify.
    This Court finds Husband’s conduct to be appalling; it most certainly
    shocks the moral sensibilities of this Court.       We agree with Wife that the
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    only equitable result is to deny Husband’s Petition to Modify Alimony ab
    initio, i.e., from the beginning.   See 23 Pa.C.S. § 4352(e) (stating that a
    support obligation may be modified retroactively “if the petitioner was
    precluded from filing a petition for modification by reason of a . . .
    misrepresentation of another party or other compelling reason and if the
    petitioner, when no longer precluded, promptly filed a petition.”). The trial
    court abused its discretion when it failed to grant this relief.
    The Trial Court Abused its Discretion When it Failed to Award Wife
    the Full Amount of Attorneys’ Fees that Wife Incurred From the
    Inception of Husband’s Fraud
    In her next issue, Wife avers that she is entitled to a full award of
    attorneys’ fees from the inception of Husband’s fraud.        Wife’s Brief at 60.
    The trial court only awarded Wife attorneys’ fees from the date Wife
    discovered the fraud, not when Husband began perpetrating the fraud, and
    only awarded 75% of such fees.
    The parties stipulated that the hourly rates that Wife’s attorneys
    charged were reasonable, Husband had no objection to line items on the bills
    and there was no necessity for Wife to call an expert witness to testify as to
    the services provided.     In light of the stipulations, the trial court should
    have limited its analysis to whether Wife was entitled to the stipulated
    amount of attorneys’ fees. Once the trial court did so, it should not have
    overridden the parties’ stipulation and made a separate determination of the
    reasonableness of those fees.
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    We review a trial court’s decision to grant or deny attorney’s fees for
    an abuse of discretion. Brody v. Brody, 
    758 A.2d 1274
    , 1281 (Pa. Super.
    2000). If a party to a divorce action shows actual need, an award of counsel
    fees is appropriate to put the parties on par in maintaining or defending that
    action.    Verholek v. Verholek, 
    741 A.2d 792
    , 799 (Pa. Super. 1999).
    Further, “a party to an action may be awarded counsel fees when another
    party engages in dilatory, obdurate, or vexatious conduct during the
    pendency of a matter.” 
    Id. (citing 42
    Pa.C.S. § 2503(7)).
    Instantly, the trial court found Husband’s fraudulent conduct to be
    both obdurate and dilatory, and “squarely within the purview of [42 Pa.C.S.
    § 2503(7)] permitting an award of counsel fees to [Wife].”3         Trial Court
    Order and Opinion, dated 9/27/16, at 28. Despite this finding, the trial court
    awarded only 75% of the attorneys’ fees and only those fees that Wife
    incurred after she discovered Husband’s fraud. We conclude that this was
    an abuse of discretion.
    In an analogous case, Krebs v. Krebs, 
    975 A.2d 1178
    (Pa. Super.
    2009), when a husband fraudulently concealed increases to his income from
    2001 through 2006 in order to avoid paying additional child support, this
    ____________________________________________
    3  This Court has defined            “obdurate” as “stubbornly persistent in
    wrongdoing.” In re Estate           of Burger, 
    852 A.2d 385
    , 391 (Pa. Super.
    2004). “Conduct is ‘dilatory’       where the record demonstrates that counsel
    displayed a lack of diligence       that delayed proceedings unnecessarily and
    caused additional legal work.”      
    Id. - 15
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    Court found that Husband’s fraudulent conduct was the sole cause of the
    proceedings resulting in the attorneys’ fees in question.       
    Krebs, supra
    at
    1182. Accordingly, this court held that the trial court abused its discretion
    when it awarded only one-third of the attorneys’ fees that the wife incurred
    during the case instead of the full amount requested. 
    Id. Here, comparable
    to 
    Krebs, supra
    , Husband’s fraudulent conduct is
    the sole cause of the ten years of legal proceedings that resulted in Wife’s
    legal fees.    Moreover, the parties stipulated to the reasonableness of the
    attorneys’ fees. Accordingly, the trial court abused its discretion when it not
    only awarded only 75% attorneys’ fees, but also only awarded them from
    the time of discovery of Husband’s fraud.          Instead, the trial court should
    have awarded 100% of Wife’s attorneys’ fees and awarded them from the
    inception of Husband’s fraud, namely the filing of the 2007 Petition to Modify
    Alimony.
    Moreover, we conclude that Husband’s Application for Stay of Trial
    Court Order dated September 27, 2016 Pending Appeal was dilatory,
    obdurate, and vexatious, and grant Wife’s Re-Application for Counsel Fees
    and Costs Under Pa.R.A.P. 2744.4
    ____________________________________________
    4   Rule 2744 states:
    In addition to other costs allowable by general rule or Act of
    Assembly, an appellate court may award as further costs
    damages as may be just, including
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    CONCLUSION
    In conclusion, the trial court abused its discretion when it failed to
    apply the doctrine of unclean hands and to grant Wife’s request to deny
    Husband’s 2007 Petition to Modify Alimony ab initio.     The trial court also
    abused its discretion when it failed to award 100% of the attorneys’ fees
    incurred by Wife from the inception of the case. We remand and instruct the
    trial court to 1) deny Husband’s 2007 Petition to Modify Alimony ab initio; 2)
    reinstate the alimony award of $5000.00 per month to Wife retroactively; 3)
    award 100% of the attorney’s fees incurred by Wife from the inception of the
    case in 2007; and 4) calculate and award the attorney’s fees incurred by
    Wife in preparation of the Answer to Husband’s Application for Stay pursuant
    to Pa.R.A.P. 2744. In light of our disposition, we do not need to address the
    remainder of Wife’s issues and, likewise, do not need to address any of
    Husband’s issues. Consequently, we deny as moot Wife’s Re-Application for
    (Footnote Continued) _______________________
    (1) a reasonable counsel fee and
    (2) damages for delay at the rate of 6% per annum in addition
    to legal interest,
    if it determines that an appeal is frivolous or taken solely for
    delay or that the conduct of the participant against whom costs
    are to be imposed is dilatory, obdurate or vexatious. The
    appellate court may remand the case to the trial court to
    determine the amount of damages authorized by this rule.
    Pa.R.A.P. 2744
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    J-A32019-17
    Quashal of [Husband]’s Appeals Docketed at 1841 MDA 2016 and 128 MDA
    2017.
    Order vacated.     Case remanded with instructions.    Jurisdiction
    relinquished.
    Judge Ott joins the Opinion.
    Judge Strassburger files a Concurring Statement in which Judge Ott
    and Judge Dubow join.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 07/20/2018
    - 18 -