Gifford v. Burke

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 2018
DocketAC 17-P-341
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Gifford v. Burke, (Mass. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557- 1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us

17-P-341 Appeals Court

JOHN A. GIFFORD vs. ANDREW J. BURKE & another.1

No. 17-P-341.

Suffolk. December 6, 2017. - February 8, 2018.

Present: Milkey, Henry, & Wendlandt, JJ.

Contempt. Practice, Civil, Contempt, Appeal, Attorney's fees, Costs.

Civil action commenced in the Land Court Department on December 30, 2008.

A complaint for contempt, filed on July 20, 2016, was heard by Alexander H. Sands, III, J.

Michael J. Traft for the plaintiff. Robert J. Cotton, pro se.

MILKEY, J. John A. Gifford and Debra F. Gifford, who are

married, together held a fifty percent, undivided interest in

waterfront property in Revere (property). In 2008, the Giffords

filed a petition for partition in Land Court against their

1 Robert J. Cotton, partition commissioner, was granted leave to participate in this appeal as an intervener. Andrew J. Burke did not participate in this appeal. 2

coowner, Andrew J. Burke. A Land Court judge appointed a

partition commissioner (intervener Robert J. Cotton, henceforth,

the commissioner) to assist the parties and the judge in

resolving the matter. See G. L. c. 241, § 12. Nevertheless,

the process did not go smoothly. Indeed, the case, together

with related litigation spawned in the Land Court, the Superior

Court, and the United States Bankruptcy Court, took a path that

best can be described as tortuous.

The current appeal, which is the third one having come

before this court, is limited in scope. In it, John Gifford

appeals a contempt judgment that, in pertinent part, required

him to pay certain fees and costs to the commissioner.2 We agree

that the majority of the contested fees and costs are not

recoverable, and we therefore vacate the contempt judgment and

remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Background. We begin by summarizing only those milestone

events relevant to the current appeal. In 2011, the Land Court

judge ordered the Giffords to sell their share of the property

to Burke and to pay off their mortgage on it. In an unpublished

memorandum and order issued on December 7, 2012, pursuant to our

rule 1:28, that Land Court order was affirmed on appeal.

2 As noted below, only John Gifford was the subject of the contempt judgment, because the proceedings involving Debra Gifford remained stayed as a result of pending bankruptcy proceedings. Debra Gifford is not a party to this appeal. 3

Gifford v. Burke, 83 Mass. App. Ct. 1101 (2012). After the

Giffords failed to comply, Burke filed a contempt complaint, but

the matter was stayed after each of the Giffords filed for

bankruptcy protection. Once the bankruptcy of John Gifford

concluded, the property was in fact conveyed to Burke and the

mortgage was discharged. After some additional Land Court

proceedings related to the bankruptcy, final judgment in the

partition action entered on April 6, 2015 (2015 judgment).

In the 2015 judgment, the judge ordered the Giffords to pay

the commissioner $30,635 within thirty days after the entry of

the judgment. That amount represented 100% of the

commissioner's then-outstanding fees and costs. The judgment

also referenced the judge's order of the same date, which

included the following language relevant to the current appeal:

"If [the Giffords] fail to timely comply with this [o]rder, the [c]ommissioner may seek additional relief against [the Giffords] in order to compel such compliance, including, without limitation, the entry of a monetary judgment against [the Giffords] in the amount of the [c]ommissioner's unpaid legal bills and/or an order of contempt for non-compliance with this [o]rder, and [the Giffords] may be held liable for any further legal fees as may be incurred by the [c]ommissioner in connection with enforcing this [o]rder."

The Giffords filed a notice of appeal from the 2015

judgment on April 17, 2015 (second appeal). They challenged the

judge's allocation to them of 100% of the commissioner's

outstanding fees, arguing that the judge erred in not requiring 4

Burke to pay a share of those fees. The Giffords also argued

that the commissioner was not entitled to any fees for work done

after they had paid off their mortgage.

Although the commissioner was not a party to the second

appeal and never sought status as an intervener in the appeal,

he submitted his own brief in support of Burke's position. He

also participated in oral argument. A panel of the court once

again ruled in Burke's favor in a memorandum and order pursuant

to our rule 1:28, but summarily denied his request for appellate

attorney's fees and double costs. Gifford v. Burke, 89 Mass.

App. Ct. 1116 (2016). The commissioner made a parallel request

to recover his own appellate attorney's fees and double costs,

which was also denied.3 The rescript was entered on the Land

Court docket on July 12, 2016, and the second appeal came to a

close.

On July 20, 2016, the commissioner filed a complaint for

civil contempt against the Giffords, because he still had not

been paid the fees and costs covered by the 2015 judgment.

Those fees long since have been paid and no longer are in

dispute. In the contempt action, the commissioner also sought

payment for the time he spent representing himself in the second

3 Both Burke and the commissioner had argued that the second appeal was frivolous and pursued in bad faith, citing to G. L. c. 231, § 6F; Mass.R.A.P. 25, as appearing in 376 Mass. 949 (1979); and Mass.R.Civ.P. 11(a), as amended, 456 Mass. 1401 (2010). 5

appeal. Those requested fees and costs, which the Land Court

judge and the parties referred to as "the Appeals Court

[b]ills," totaled $17,619.51. According to the commissioner,

the Giffords are liable for such fees and costs pursuant to the

2015 judgment, because they constitute "further legal fees as

may be incurred by the [c]ommissioner in connection with

enforcing [the 2015 judgment]." On this same basis, the

commissioner sought payment for his time and costs in pursuing

his contempt action, which he valued at $6,750. The parties

agreed that the contempt action should proceed only against John

Gifford, because Debra Gifford's bankruptcy action remained

pending. The judge eventually issued a contempt judgment that,

inter alia, required John Gifford to pay the commissioner "the

entirety of the Appeals Court [b]ills, to wit: $17,619.51 [and]

the entirety of his legal fees in connection with the

[c]ommissioner's [c]ontempt [a]ction, to wit: $6,750.00."4

Discussion. 1. The Appeals Court bills. For purposes of

this appeal, we will assume arguendo that the 2015 judgment

4 Monies to fund the Giffords' obligations to the commissioner were placed in escrow. Notwithstanding the pendency of this appeal, the judge ordered that $6,750 (for the commissioner's legal fees in the contempt action) be released to the commissioner from the escrow account.

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