In re the Marriage of Dixon v. Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates PC

2015 COA 99, 411 P.3d 942
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 16, 2015
Docket14CA0716
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2015 COA 99 (In re the Marriage of Dixon v. Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates PC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of Dixon v. Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates PC, 2015 COA 99, 411 P.3d 942 (Colo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion


Colorado Court of Appeals Opinions || July 16, 2015

Colorado Court of Appeals -- July 16, 2015
2015 COA 99. No. 14CA0716. In re the Marriage of Dixon v. Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates PC.

 

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2015 COA 99

Court of Appeals No. 14CA0716
Jefferson County District Court No. 08DR1219
Honorable Randall C. Arp, Judge


In re the Marriage of Kristy Marie Dixon, n/k/a Kristy Casagranda,

Petitioner,

and

Brian Todd Dixon,

Appellee,

v.

Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates PC,

Attorney-Appellant.


ORDER AFFIRMED IN PART
AND REVERSED IN PART

Division VII
Opinion by JUDGE NAVARRO
Gabriel and Richman, JJ., concur

Announced July 16, 2015


Jody Brammer-Hoelter, LLC, Johanna L. Brammer-Hoelter, Lafayette, Colorado, for Appellee

Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates PC, Samuel J. Stoorman, Nicole R. Hanson, Denver, Colorado, for Attorney-Appellant

 

¶1        Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates PC (law firm), the lien claimant in this marital dissolution action, appeals from the trial court’s order denying its motion for entry of judgment against Brian Todd Dixon (husband) and awarding him reasonable attorney fees and costs. The law firm sought to enforce its lien against the maintenance payments that husband was obligated to pay to the law firm’s former client, Kristy Marie Dixon, now known as Kristy Casagranda (wife). The law firm had represented wife in the dissolution action giving rise to husband’s maintenance obligation. The trial court determined that the maintenance payments were exempt from enforcement of the attorney’s lien. We agree with that conclusion and, thus, affirm the order denying the law firm’s motion for judgment against husband. We reverse, however, the award of attorney fees and costs to husband.

I. Background

¶2        The law firm represented wife in her February 2009 divorce from husband. The permanent orders entered as part of the dissolution decree required husband to pay wife monthly maintenance of $1500 for seventy-two months, or until February 2015.

¶3        In June 2008, before the permanent orders hearing, the law firm filed notice of its claim of an attorney’s lien pursuant to section 12-5-119, C.R.S. 2014. On May 18, 2009, the law firm amended its notice and moved to foreclose and enforce its lien against wife, and for entry of judgment against her in the amount of $13,744.68. On June 26, 2009, the trial court granted the motion and entered judgment, finding that the law firm had a “valid and enforceable lien in the amount of $13,268.06 as of April 9, 2009 upon all the monies, properties, choses in action, claims and demands in suit, and upon any property awarded to” wife in the dissolution action, including “any money due [wife] in the hands of [husband].”

¶4        In October 2012, the law firm notified husband by letter that its lien had attached to “maintenance (alimony) payments” that husband owed wife. The letter noted that husband had been served with the law firm’s May 18, 2009, amended notice of lien as well as the court’s judgment enforcing the lien against wife. The letter requested that husband forward to the law firm all payments payable to wife after May 18, 2009, “as your failure to have done so (or to continue to do so in the future) may expose you to multiple liability pursuant to Colorado law.” The law firm claims that husband ignored its notice and continued to make spousal maintenance payments directly to wife.

¶5&        In January 2014, the law firm moved for a judgment against husband in the amount of $31,126.85, consisting of the full amount of its judgment against wife plus interest. The trial court denied the law firm’s motion for judgment against husband and entered an order awarding him the attorney fees and costs he had incurred in defending against it.

¶6        The trial court noted that the law firm’s lien notification put husband in a difficult position. Complying with the notification possibly could have led to his being held in contempt for failing to pay court-ordered maintenance, while ignoring the notification exposed him to the risk of having to pay maintenance to both wife and the law firm. Ultimately, the trial court determined that (1) an attorney’s lien requires some form of “execution” to be effective against third parties such as husband and (2) husband’s maintenance obligation to wife was exempt from the reach of the attorney’s lien under section 13-54-102(1)(u), C.R.S. 2014. That statute exempts from levy and sale under writ of attachment or writ of execution “[a]ny court-ordered domestic support obligation or payment, including a maintenance obligation or payment or a child support obligation or payment [complying with section 13-54-102.5, C.R.S. 2014].” The trial court further found that enforcing an attorney’s lien against maintenance payments or obligations would violate public policy.

¶7        In awarding attorney fees and costs to husband, the trial court found that the law firm lacked any basis for its attempt to obtain judgment against him.

II. Was the Attorney’s Lien Enforceable Against Husband’s Maintenance Obligations?

¶8        The law firm contends that the trial court erred in finding that the law firm’s attorney’s lien could not be enforced against husband’s spousal maintenance obligations. We disagree.

A. Attorney Charging Liens

¶9        Section 12-5-119 provides, in relevant part:

All attorneys- and counselors-at-law shall have a lien on any money, property, choses in action, or claims and demands in their hands, on any judgment they may have obtained or assisted in obtaining, in whole or in part, and on any and all claims and demands in suit for any fees or balance of fees due or to become due from any client. In the case of demands in suit and in the case of judgments obtained in whole or in part by any attorney, such attorney may file, with the clerk of the court wherein such cause is pending, notice of his claim as lienor, setting forth specifically the agreement of compensation between such attorney and his client, which notice, duly entered of record, shall be notice to all persons and to all parties, including the judgment creditor, to all persons in the case against whom a demand exists, and to all persons claiming by, through, or under any person having a demand in suit or having obtained a judgment that the attorney whose appearance is thus entered has a first lien on such demand in suit or on such judgment for the amount of his fees. . . . Such lien may be enforced by the proper civil action.

¶10        The lien, called a charging lien, automatically attaches to the fruits of the attorney’s representation of the client, to the extent of the attorney’s reasonable fees remaining due and unpaid. In re Marriage of Berkland, 762 P.2d 779, 782 (Colo. App. 1988). It accrues from the moment an attorney commences services, and its purpose is to satisfy the attorney’s equitable claim for services rendered to the client. In re Fisher

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Related

Samuel J. Stoorman & Associates, P.C. v. Dixon
2017 CO 42 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2017)
In re the Marriage of Morton and Lee
2016 COA 1 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2016)
In re the Marriage of Morton
2016 COA 1 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 COA 99, 411 P.3d 942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-dixon-v-samuel-j-stoorman-associates-pc-coloctapp-2015.