Boyd and Boyd

CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 5, 2024
DocketA176229
StatusPublished

This text of Boyd and Boyd (Boyd and Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd and Boyd, (Or. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

No. 376 June 5, 2024 69

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

In the Matter of the Marriage of James Daniel BOYD III, Petitioner-Respondent, and Rosemary Ellen BOYD, Respondent-Appellant. Clackamas County Circuit Court DR12030206; A176229

Thomas J. Rastetter, Judge. Argued and submitted April 20, 2023. Erica R. Tatoian argued the cause for appellant. Also on the opening brief was Harrang Long Gary Rudnick P. C. Also on the reply brief was Harrang Long P. C. Andrew Walker Newsom argued the cause and filed the brief for respondent. Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, and Joyce, Judge, and Jacquot, Judge. JACQUOT, J. Corrected supplemental judgment of attorney fees reversed and remanded for entry of a supplemental judg- ment excluding paragraph 7; otherwise affirmed. 70 Boyd and Boyd Cite as 333 Or App 69 (2024) 71

JACQUOT, J. Mother appeals from a corrected supplemental judgment awarding father $75,000 in attorney fees following a proceeding to modify custody, parenting time, and child support. Mother raises five assignments of error, including a challenge to the trial court’s decision to categorize the attorney fee judgment “as being in the nature of child sup- port.” For the reasons explained below, we conclude that the trial court erred by categorizing the attorney fee award in that way. However, we reject mother’s other assignments of error. We therefore reverse the corrected supplemental judg- ment and remand for entry of a supplemental judgment that excludes the paragraph categorizing the attorney fee judg- ment as being in the nature of child support, but we other- wise affirm. Jurisdiction. As an initial matter, we address whether we have jurisdiction. ORS 19.270(2)(a) provides that timely service of the notice of appeal on the parties is jurisdictional. ORS 19.500 states that documents shall be served in the manner provided by ORCP 9 B, which in turn provides that when a party is represented, the service shall be made on the party’s attorney. Compliance with ORCP 9 B is a prerequisite for appellate court jurisdiction. See J. A. H. v. Heikkila, 355 Or 753, 756-58, 333 P3d 275 (2014) (reading ORS 19.270, ORS 19.500, and ORCP 9 B together to determine service requirements for purposes of confer- ring jurisdiction). Here, the trial court entered the corrected supple- mental judgment on May 3, 2021. Father’s former attorney filed a notice of withdrawal on May 28, 2021, and he served it on mother by first class mail. Mother did not receive it until June 11. In the meantime, on June 2, mother filed her notice of appeal, and she mailed it to father’s former attor- ney, but she did not mail it to father directly. The Appellate Commissioner issued an order to show cause why the case should not be dismissed for failure to timely serve the notice of appeal on father. After considering mother’s declara- tion in response to the order to show cause, the Appellate Commissioner determined that we have jurisdiction, rea- soning that mother did not receive the notice of withdrawal 72 Boyd and Boyd

until after she had filed and served the notice of appeal. The commissioner’s order was without prejudice to father raising the jurisdictional question in his briefing. Having considered the parties’ arguments in their briefing, we agree with the Appellate Commissioner that we have jurisdiction. ORS 9.390 provides that when the attorney-client relationship is terminated, written notice of the termination “shall be given to the adverse party. Until the notice is given, the adverse party is bound to recognize the former attorney.” Although neither party analyzes in any detail what it means for notice to be “given,” ORS 9.390 indi- cates that the adverse party must continue to act in a cer- tain way until that occurs. We understand that term to refer to the time when notice is received by the adverse party. See Banerjee and Fiorillo, 310 Or App 446, 451-52, 485 P3d 920, rev den, 368 Or 787 (2021) (focusing on when the adverse party received notice in discussing ORS 9.390). To conclude otherwise would promote gamesmanship whereby the notice of withdrawal could be utilized to deprive us of jurisdiction to hear an appeal. Because mother did not receive the notice of withdrawal until June 11, we conclude that she timely served her notice of appeal on June 2 by mailing it to father’s former attorney. Therefore, we have jurisdiction. We turn to mother’s assignments of error. Attorney Fees and Child Support. In her second assignment of error, mother argues that the trial court erred by categorizing the attorney fee judgment as “being in the nature of child support.” Father requested that lan- guage in the proposed supplemental judgment to make it more difficult for mother to obtain a discharge of her debt for attorney fees in any future federal bankruptcy proceeding. After hearing argument from the parties, the trial court struck some language from the proposed judgment, but kept paragraph 7, the paragraph that categorizes the attorney fee judgment “as being in the nature of child support.”1

1 Technically, the paragraph at issue is paragraph 6, because the trial court removed the preceding paragraph, which appears in the corrected supplemental judgment as a strikethrough. For the sake of clarity, we emphasize that when we refer to paragraph 7, we mean the one that categorizes the attorney fee judgment as being in the nature of child support. Cite as 333 Or App 69 (2024) 73

Preliminarily, we reject father’s suggestion that mother failed to preserve her argument in sufficient detail. On the merits, we conclude that the trial court erred when it categorized the attorney fee judgment as being in the nature of child support. We are not aware of any Oregon law authoriz- ing the trial court to have done so, and the parties cite none. In Jacobs and Jacobs, 219 Or App 144, 147 n 2, 182 P3d 244 (2008), we observed in dicta that most states regard attorney fees “awarded to a spouse as akin to spousal support.” But that case referred to spousal support, not child support. An award of child support is intended to benefit the child. See, e.g., ORS 25.275(2)(a) (“The child is entitled to benefit from the income of both parents to the same extent that the child would have benefited had the family unit remained intact or if there had been an intact family unit consisting of both parents and the child.”). By contrast, a discretionary award of attorney fees, such as the one at issue here, is for the benefit of the other party. See ORS 107.135(8) (“[T]he court may assess against either party a reasonable attorney fee and costs for the benefit of the other party.”); see also ORS 107.445 (“the court may render a judgment awarding to a party, or directly to the party’s attorney, a sum of money” determined to be a reasonable attorney fee).

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Related

State v. Gornick
130 P.3d 780 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2006)
In Re the Marriage of Jacobs
182 P.3d 244 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)
State v. Vanornum
317 P.3d 889 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2013)
J. A. H. v. Heikkila
333 P.3d 275 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2014)
Banerjee and Fiorillo
485 P.3d 920 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2021)

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Bluebook (online)
Boyd and Boyd, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-and-boyd-orctapp-2024.