Eric Chastain v. Stephanie Chastain (Childress) ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                                   Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    February 13, 2019
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    ERIC CHASTAIN,                                                     No. 50456-1-II
    Appellant,
    v.
    STEPHANIE CHASTAIN, n.k.a.                                  UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    STEPHANIE CHILDRESS,
    Respondent.
    Eric Chastain appeals the superior court’s order awarding attorney fees to Stephanie
    Childress (formerly Chastain) several months after a final order dismissing a relocation action was
    entered.        Chastain argues that the superior court improperly applied the manifest injustice
    exception to the general rule that the court loses jurisdiction after an order of dismissal is entered.1
    We agree that the trial court improperly applied the manifest injustice exception and lacked
    jurisdiction to enter the order granting attorney fees to Childress.2 Accordingly, we reverse.
    1
    After repeated notices and sanctions, Childress has still failed to file a Respondent’s brief or
    participate in this appeal. Accordingly, no Respondent’s brief has been filed in this case.
    2
    Chastain also argues that the superior court erred by (1) finding that Childress had financial need,
    (2) Chastain had the ability to pay, and (3) excluding a letter written by Childress’s mother as
    hearsay. Because the superior court did not have jurisdiction to enter the order awarding attorney
    fees and we reverse on that ground, we do not address Chastain’s additional arguments.
    No. 50456-1-II
    FACTS
    Chastain and Childress have a child in common. They parent under a parenting plan
    entered in January 2011. In August 2016, Chastain served Childress with a notice of intent to
    relocate. Childress objected to the relocation. In November, Childress filed her brief in opposition
    and included a CR 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. Childress’s brief also contained a request for
    attorney fees.
    The superior court granted Childress’s motion to dismiss. The final order dismissing the
    relocation action was entered in December 2016. The order of dismissal, drafted by Childress, did
    not reserve the issue of attorney fees.
    In March 2017, Childress filed a motion requesting attorney fees based on RCW 26.09.140.
    Chastain opposed attorney fees and argued that the superior court no longer had jurisdiction over
    the action because a final order of dismissal had been entered. The superior court recognized that
    it would generally lose jurisdiction upon entering an order of dismissal but relied on the manifest
    injustice exception in In re Marriage of Low3 to justify entering an order awarding Childress
    attorney fees. The superior court interpreted the manifest injustice exception as based on the
    comparative financial positions of the parties and, because Childress had financial need, it would
    be a manifest injustice not to entertain her motion for attorney fees.
    The superior court compared the parties’ incomes, determined that Childress had financial
    need and Chastain had the ability to pay, and awarded Childress attorney fees. The superior court
    specifically found that Chastain was not intransigent or acting in bad faith.
    3
    
    44 Wn. App. 6
    , 
    720 P.2d 850
    , review denied, 
    106 Wn.2d 1015
     (1986).
    2
    No. 50456-1-II
    Chastain appeals the order awarding Childress attorney fees.
    ANALYSIS
    Chastain argues that the superior court improperly applied the manifest injustice exception
    to the rule that an order of dismissal terminates the court’s jurisdiction over a matter. Generally,
    we review a superior court’s order awarding attorney fees for an abuse of discretion. In re
    Marriage of Zeigler, 
    69 Wn. App. 602
    , 609, 
    849 P.2d 695
     (1993). However, we review issues of
    law, such as jurisdiction, de novo. City of Spokane v. County of Spokane, 
    158 Wn.2d 661
    , 681,
    
    146 P.3d 893
     (2006).
    As the superior court correctly recognized, “the general rule is that a court loses jurisdiction
    of a case after an order of dismissal has been entered.” In re Marriage of Low, 
    44 Wn. App. 6
    , 9,
    
    720 P.2d 850
    , review denied, 
    106 Wn.2d 1015
     (1986). However, “this rule is not absolute and is
    not followed when to do so would be manifestly unjust.” 
    Id. at 10
    . “Invocation of this exception
    is even more imperative where statutory rights exist that were intended to protect a financially
    weaker party from the expense of costly litigation or vexatious custody disputes.” 
    Id.
    Here, the superior court interpreted the language in Low to mean that, if the party moving
    for attorney fees has financial need, the manifest injustice exception allows the court to enter an
    order it otherwise would not have jurisdiction to enter. We disagree with this overly broad
    interpretation of Low. The manifest injustice exception should be invoked only when necessary
    “to protect a financially weaker party,” not simply because there is a financially weaker party.4 
    Id.
    (emphasis added).
    4
    We also note that CR 54(d)(2) requires a motion for attorney fees to be brought no later than 10
    days after entry of judgment.
    3
    No. 50456-1-II
    Here, Childress was not in need of the superior court’s protection. Childress was primarily
    responsible for incurring her attorney fees by waiting months, until immediately before trial, to
    move to dismiss the relocation action. Childress was responsible for failing to ask the superior
    court to rule on her original motion for attorney fees. And Childress was responsible for failing to
    reserve the issue of attorney fees in the order of dismissal, which she drafted. Moreover, the
    superior court specifically found that Chastain did not act intransigently or bring the relocation
    action in bad faith. Accordingly, there is no manifest injustice in enforcing the rule that the
    superior court lost jurisdiction over the matter when the order of dismissal was entered.
    Our analysis is supported by the three cases which applied the manifest injustice exception.
    As Chastain correctly points out, these cases all invoke the manifest injustice exception because
    the party responsible for attorney fees acted in bad faith or used dismissal to improperly attempt
    to avoid an award of attorney fees against him. In Low, the husband petitioned for modification
    of a parenting plan, and after several months, voluntarily dismissed the petition. 44 Wn. App. at
    7. The superior court originally reserved the issue of attorney fees but, after a motion for
    reconsideration, dismissed the case without considering the wife’s request for attorney fees. Id. at
    7-8. Division I of this court invoked the manifest injustice exception because “[t]o enable a party
    to avoid the import of [the attorney fees statutes] by voluntarily dismissing his case would defeat
    their intent and potentially result in injustice.” Id. at 10. But the reasoning in Low does not apply
    here because Childress brought the motion to dismiss, not Chastain.
    Similarly, in Seals v. Seals, 
    22 Wn. App. 652
    , 655, 657-58, 
    590 P.2d 1301
     (1979), the court
    invoked the manifest injustice exception in a case where the wife brought a partition action against
    4
    No. 50456-1-II
    property her husband had concealed in bad faith during their dissolution. Here, however, the
    superior court specifically found that Chastain did not act in bad faith.
    And in In re Marriage of Firchau, 
    88 Wn.2d 109
    , 113, 
    558 P.2d 194
     (1977), our Supreme
    Court invoked the manifest injustice exception when a husband and wife reconciled during their
    dissolution and used another attorney to dismiss the action in order to avoid paying attorney fees
    to the wife’s original attorney. Here, there was no collusion or scheme to avoid paying attorney
    fees.
    Read together, Low, Seals, and Firchau demonstrate that the manifest injustice exception
    is invoked only when dismissal operates to harm an innocent party and reward a party acting in
    bad faith to manipulate a dismissal in order to avoid his or her legal obligations. As Low stated,
    the manifest injustice exception is used when necessary to protect a party. 44 Wn. App. at 10.
    Here, it was Childress’s own actions that resulted in dismissal of the case without consideration of
    her request for attorney fees.     Therefore, invocation of the manifest injustice exception is
    inappropriate and unnecessary. Accordingly, the superior court did not have jurisdiction to
    consider Childress’s motion for attorney fees or enter an order awarding Childress her attorney
    fees. We reverse the superior court’s order awarding Childress attorney fees.
    ATTORNEY FEES ON APPEAL
    Chastain also requests attorney fees on appeal. Chastain asserts, “Given the significant
    errors that the trial court made, Appellant requests that the Court of Appeals grant him an award
    of attorney fees against Respondent pursuant to Rule of Appellate Procedure 18.1.” Br. of App.
    at 21.
    5
    No. 50456-1-II
    RAP 18.1 allows a party to request attorney fees on appeal if allowed by applicable law.
    However, Chastain has not identified any legal basis for an award of attorney fees. Accordingly,
    we deny his request for attorney fees on appeal.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2.06.040,
    it is so ordered.
    Lee, J.
    We concur:
    Johanson, J.
    Maxa, C.J.
    6