Janella Jordan v. Jason Miller and Mark H. Bodner, Esquire

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 2022
Docket0156224
StatusUnpublished

This text of Janella Jordan v. Jason Miller and Mark H. Bodner, Esquire (Janella Jordan v. Jason Miller and Mark H. Bodner, Esquire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Janella Jordan v. Jason Miller and Mark H. Bodner, Esquire, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Malveaux and Callins UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

JANELLA JORDAN MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0156-22-4 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN SEPTEMBER 20, 2022 JASON MILLER AND MARK H. BODNER, ESQUIRE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY David A. Oblon, Judge1

James A. DeVita for appellant.

No brief or argument for appellee Jason Miller.

Mark H. Bodner, Guardian ad litem for Jason Miller.

Janella Jordan (wife) appeals the court’s denial of her motion for sanctions against Mark H.

Bodner, an attorney appointed as guardian ad litem (GAL) for her incarcerated husband. Wife

argues that the GAL unnecessarily litigated “a wholly uncontested divorce solely to delay the

resolution of the case and to improperly increase his claim for attorney’s fees.” Wife also contends

that the court erred “by basing [its] decision to deny [wife’s] motion for sanctions on a personal

relationship” with the GAL.2

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 Although Judge Oblon entered the final divorce decree, Judge Thomas Mann presided over wife’s motion for sanctions underlying this appeal. 2 In a companion case decided this day, DeVita v. Miller, No. 0489-21-4 (Va. Ct. App. Sept. 20, 2022), we affirmed in part and reversed in part an order granting the GAL’s motion for sanctions against wife’s counsel. BACKGROUND3

In October 2019, wife filed for divorce from Jason Miller (husband), an incarcerated felon.

The complaint alleged that the parties were married for ten months, had no children, and had been

separated since January 1, 2013. Wife requested a divorce based on a one-year separation under

Code § 20-91(A)(9)(a), an award of “her own separate property,” and an “equitable share of the

parties’ marital property.”

Because husband was incarcerated, the court appointed Bodner as his GAL. See Code

§ 8.01-9(A) (requiring the appointment of a GAL to “represent the . . . interest” of a defendant who

is “under a disability”); Code § 8.01-2(6)(a) (defining “[p]erson under a disability” to include an

incarcerated felon).

The GAL’s answer did not dispute the ground for divorce but contested equitable

distribution because wife did not claim that the parties “ha[d] marital or other property or debts that

require determination and distribution.”

Wife sent the GAL a proposed property settlement agreement (PSA), which included

language that both parties waived support and property distribution. Under the proposed PSA, the

parties would retain any assets and liabilities already titled in their respective names, and wife

would maintain the payments for a car acquired after the separation.

The GAL questioned the need for a PSA when wife’s statutory ground for divorce did not

require it. He served eight interrogatories on wife, mainly asking her to identify any marital or

separate property. Wife responded that she had no significant assets other than her vehicle.

3 There are no transcripts. The court entered an order pursuant to Rule 5A:8 certifying certain paragraphs in wife’s proposed statement of facts, augmented by certain paragraphs in the GAL’s objections. The order also states that “[t]he appellate [court] can decide whether or not it will consider sections [twelve] and [thirteen] of [wife’s] statement of facts,” which relate to the merits of wife’s appeal. Wife’s subsequent attempt to file an updated statement of facts, and the court’s order striking the entire statement, were untimely. Therefore, we do not consider them. -2- Wife then propounded twelve interrogatories and over forty requests for production of

documents. The GAL responded that wife’s discovery requests “seem a bit over the top” and

reiterated his inquiry about the need for a PSA or a trial date. He explained that the only reason he

served the eight interrogatories was because, as the GAL, he needed to “assur[e] that [husband] does

not miss out on recovery of any marital property.” The GAL also filed objections, with grounds, to

all of wife’s discovery requests.

Wife’s counsel, James A. DeVita, pursued a motion to compel. By agreement, DeVita and

the GAL appeared before a calendar control judge and obtained a hearing date of July 31, 2020.4

However, DeVita failed to file the actual motion, so the court removed the matter from the docket.

On three subsequent occasions, DeVita emailed the GAL requesting his appearance before

the calendar control judge to schedule the motion to compel. The GAL sent emails agreeing to the

requested dates and asking DeVita to file written notices. The GAL in fact appeared on the three

requested dates, but DeVita did not.

On August 31, the court advised the GAL that wife had set her motion to compel for

September 4. The praecipe contained DeVita’s certification that he had served the GAL on August

19. The GAL, however, did not actually receive the praecipe until the court forwarded a copy. The

praecipe also contained DeVita’s certification of compliance with Rule 4:15(b), which requires

reasonable efforts to confer and resolve a motion before filing and “to determine a mutually

agreeable hearing date and time.” However, DeVita had taken neither action required by Rule

4:15(b). DeVita explained that he forgot to contact the GAL before setting the hearing, and he

agreed to reschedule it.

4 The court conducted calendar-control business by videoconference during that phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. -3- At the end of the rescheduled hearing, the court denied wife’s motion to compel discovery

on spousal support but ordered husband to respond to requests concerning equitable distribution,

conditioned on the parties participating in conciliation. The conciliation did not occur.

The GAL moved for sanctions against DeVita and argued that DeVita had deliberately

harassed him, increased the costs of litigation, and acted with “wilful [sic] indifference.” The court5

heard arguments on January 29, 2021, and it reviewed copies of emails and other documents

supporting the parties’ positions. The GAL submitted evidence to show that he spent three hours

dealing with DeVita’s “abuse of the calendar control process.”

The court entered an “Order for Sanction” based on Code § 8.01-271.1, finding that DeVita

engaged in sanctionable conduct by emailing the GAL to arrange calendar control appearances, yet

failing to appear on three occasions, and by filing a praecipe “falsely certifying” compliance with

Rule 4:15(b). The court determined that DeVita acted with “reckless indifference” and “cause[d]

needless expense,” and it ordered him to pay the GAL $900.

Wife requested sanctions against the GAL and asked the court to remove the GAL from the

case, deny his fees, and require him to pay her attorney fees. The GAL responded that because wife

filed her divorce complaint as a contested matter seeking equitable distribution, and later insisted on

a PSA, his discovery requests limited to issues of marital and separate property were reasonable.

On May 7, 2021, the court denied wife’s motion for sanctions against the GAL. The order

reflected the court’s finding that the GAL had “properly and faithfully performed his duties to

represent and protect the interests of his ward [i.e., husband]” and that “no evidence was presented

to establish that [the GAL] has filed pleadings needlessly in this matter or in any way violated any

provision under [Code §] 8.01-271.1 . . .

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