Goldbach v. Atchley

801 So. 2d 1217, 2001 WL 1505184
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 2001
Docket01-CA-616
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 801 So. 2d 1217 (Goldbach v. Atchley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldbach v. Atchley, 801 So. 2d 1217, 2001 WL 1505184 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

801 So.2d 1217 (2001)

Susan E. GOLDBACH, Wife of Ronald Atchley
v.
J. Ronald ATCHLEY.

No. 01-CA-616.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

November 27, 2001.
Rehearing Denied January 14, 2002.

*1218 André P. Guichard, New Orleans, LA, Counsel for Robert T. Garrity, Jr. and Richard E. Anderson, Defendants in Rule/Appellants.

John V. Baus, Jr., Jennifer C. deBlanc, Baus, Hammond & Daly, L.L.P., New Orleans, LA, Counsel for J. Ronald Atchley, Plaintiff-in-Rule/Appellee.

Panel composed of Judges EDWARD A. DUFRESNE, Jr., JAMES L. CANNELLA and SUSAN M. CHEHARDY.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

This matter arises out of a community property partition between Susan E. Goldbach Atchley and J. Ronald Atchley. Ronald Atchley's sister, Mary Lou Atchley, intervened in the partition proceedings to assert rights to bearer bonds in Ronald Atchley's possession that she alleged were part of their late father's estate.[1] The intervention was dismissed in March 1997 and the dismissal was affirmed by this Court on appeal. Atchley v. Atchley, 97-474 (La.App. 5 Cir. 1/14/98), 707 So.2d 458.

After the intervention was dismissed, Ronald pursued a motion for sanctions against Mary Lou's attorneys, Robert Garrity and Richard Anderson, for the "frivolous, harassing and delaying nature of intervenor's actions." Subsequently he filed a motion for additional sanctions against Garrity and Anderson for failure to appear at a hearing. On April 25, 2000 the trial court cast Garrity and Anderson in judgment for failure to appear on a scheduled court date and ordered that they pay Ronald Atchley $1,700.00.

*1219 On appeal, however, that award was vacated by this Court. Atchley v. Atchley, 01-67 (La.App. 5 Cir. 5/30/01), 788 So.2d 690. We held that the only authority for such an award is through the trial court's contempt powers and that the trial court erred in failing to follow proper procedures for a contempt rule, imposing a fine in excess of the amount authorized by law, and in making the fine payable to the opposing party rather than to the court. Id.

Now before us is a judgment rendered October 18, 2000, in which the trial court granted Ronald's Motion to Dismiss Intervention, denied Ronald's Motion for Sanctions, and ordered Garrity and Anderson pay all court costs incurred in connection with the petition for intervention filed on behalf of Mary Lou Atchley.[2]

Ronald Atchley appealed; Garrity and Anderson cross-appealed.

On appeal Ronald contends the trial court erred in failing to find Garrity and Anderson in violation of La.C.C.P. art. 863, in applying a subjective standard, and in failing to award sanctions for Ronald's reasonable attorney's fees in defending against the petition for intervention.

On their cross-appeal, Garrity and Anderson argue the trial court erred in taxing them, as intervenor's counsel, with the court costs for the intervention.

Ronald sought dismissal of the intervention on the ground that the property his sister was seeking to recover could not have been property of his marital community, because it was bearer bonds alleged to have been part of his father's estate. He argued the bonds clearly were separate property as part of an inheritance and not part of his marital community, especially because Ronald and Susan did not marry until several years after his father's death.

Ronald also contended that his sister and her attorneys had violated a protective order the trial court had issued prohibiting release of information concerning Ronald's community finances. In addition, he asserted that information sought by Garrity and Anderson during discovery was irrelevant to the subject matter of the intervention, but rather was aimed at attempting to establish that Ronald was either violating federal and state tax laws or was violating ethical procedures for securities traders (his profession).

FACTS

The hearing on the motion for sanctions took place over three separate days-June 23 and August 25, 1999 and April 10, 2000.

Robert Garrity testified that in filing the intervention they were trying to establish "forensic accounting-a method or pattern showing excessive amounts of cash and where they came from," which he likened to federal prosecutions of bank and homestead officers for stealing treasury bonds. Garrity admitted, with respect to his examination of a domestic employee who cared for Ronald's elderly invalid mother,

We were trying to establish a pattern of everybody's paid in cash, no taxes are paid on them, the people aren't declaring the taxes, there are no social security earnings paid on them. That's where we were going, because we were trying to tie this in with the money being drawn off of these bearer bonds.

Garrity also admitted he questioned the domestic employees regarding how they were paid, whether taxes or Social Security *1220 contributions were withheld, whether the employees received tax forms, whether they filed tax returns, and whether they had other sources of income such as welfare. Garrity denied any of these discovery actions were taken to harass employees of Ronald or his mother. Asked what relevance these inquiries had to determining whether the bonds alleged in the petition for intervention had anything to do with the community property, Garrity stated,

We were trying to trace cash and we were trying to trace payment that may have come from the estate. Specifically, other questions were asked in there about her doing work for Mr. Atchley and it was our belief that Mr. Atchley was using these funds that we believe were spirited from his father's estate to pay this domestic help. We were trying to track it.

Garrity said further, in discussing statements he made to the trial court in arguing Mary Lou's motion for permission to intervene,

[T]he allegations I made to the court for the intervention on behalf of Mary Lou is that Mr. Atchley said in his deposition that there were bonds that were not run through his father's succession. And in an attempt to show the court that this was a wheeler-dealer-this was a person who would have done that type of thing, we brought our other evidence from his deposition to show the court that he did not always strictly adhere to the practice or strictly adhere to the laws that were required in his profession. And for which he has also sued us for defamation.[3]

Garrity acknowledged that after taking discovery he realized there was no basis for the claim in the intervention proceeding:

We couldn't track anything. We couldn't track the bonds, we couldn't match up the cash that we were looking for with these household employees with the bond money, we could not-at some point he gave us-he gave a second deposition in which he went in and listed out bonds that were not listed the first time. And after that, we reached a dead end. We could not prove our case.... I believe my statement was we could not prove our case after completion of discovery.
* * *
The reason why we intervened is because we thought, and we knew, that there was a claim by Susan Atchley for the bonds. And if this Court made the determination that the bonds were separate property, then Mary Lou had a claim in a separate proceeding. And that is, in reopening the succession for that money.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
801 So. 2d 1217, 2001 WL 1505184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldbach-v-atchley-lactapp-2001.