King

2 Am. Tribal Law 51
CourtConfederated Salish & Kootenai Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1999
DocketNo. AP-DA-282-88
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Am. Tribal Law 51 (King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Confederated Salish & Kootenai Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King, 2 Am. Tribal Law 51 (salishctapp 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DESMOND, Justice:

This is an appeal of an Order entered by the Tribal Trial Court on November 7, 1997, denying Appellant Michael Thomas King’s (“Michael”) Motion to change custody of Adri Antoine.

Adri Antoine, born in 1989, is the child of Appellant Michael King and Peggy S. Keele (“Peggy”).1 Apparently, Michael and Peggy had separated by the time Adri was born. Michael was awarded custody of the parties’ older child, Michael Jr., age 12, and Michael Sr. remains Michael Jr.’s custodian. Adri has spent a great deal of her life in the care of her maternal aunt Janita Hammond (“Janita”), with whom she lives at present. Adri has lived for relatively brief periods with her mother but not, apparently, with her father.

Through the years, Michael has consistently tried to obtain custody of Adri. In 1992, he prevailed in a custody dispute against Peggy. However, the decision was overturned on appeal and custody was awarded to Peggy. Later, in 1994, when Michael filed a Motion for custody, the Tribal Trial Court removed Adri from Peggy’s custody but rather than placing Adri in Michael Sr.’s home, instead placed her in the temporary custody of Janita Hammond.

The events leading up to this appeal, according to Michael’s Brief, are as follows. In the spring of 1997, Janita left her husband and moved to Indiana, taking Adri with her, without notifying Michael or the tribal trial court. When Michael located Janita and Adri and tried to visit Adri, Janita returned to Dixon, Montana. Then on April 9, 1997, Michael filed, a Motion to change custody. He served the Motion on Peggy, Janita and Deb DuMontier, the tribal CASA (“Court Appointed Special Advocate”) Attorney. None of the three filed a timely response.

Then, on May 27, 1997, Michael filed a request for hearing. A hearing was set for July 8, 1997. The Court Clerk served Michael, Janita, Peggy and Ms. DuMontier with notice of the hearing. After service of the notice of hearing upon her, Janita, on July 2, 1997, served a response to Michael’s Motion on his attorney. The July 8, 1997 hearing date was continued to July 11, 1997, due to illness of the Trial Court Judge. At the request of Michael’s attorney, the Trial Court later reset the hearing for September 16, 1997. On July 14, 1997, Michael’s attorney filed a Motion to Strike Janita’s Response, At the request of Jani-ta’s counsel and with the agreement of Michael’s counsel, on September 17, 1997, the court continued the case to November 4, 1997. On that day, in chambers, Michael: (1) renewed his Motion to Modify, based on Peggy’s failure to appear or respond; (2) moved to strike Janita’s response, both for failure to timely respond to the original Motion and for failure to respond to Michael’s Motion to Strike the Response as untimely; and (3) moved for entry of an Order awarding Michael residential custody of Adri.

Peggy did not appear for the November 4, 1997 hearing. The Court denied Michael’s Motions and it is from that denial that he appeals.2 The Court did direct [53]*53Tribal Social Services to perform home studies of the homes of Michael, Peggy and Janita and continued the hearing until completion of the home studies.

Essentially, Michael argues that the Court should have awarded custody to him because Peggy and Janita have forfeited their right to be heard. Specifically, he points out that Peggy has not responded, despite being served with all pleadings and Janita responded late.

Although the parties did not raise the issue of appealability of the Tribal trial Court Order, this Court raised the issue itself and requested and received briefing and argument from the parties on appeala-bility. We conclude that the appeal is not permissible under § 3-2-203 of Ordinance 90B, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribal Appellate Procedures Ordinance.

Like that of most other appellate courts, except as specifically indicated otherwise, this Court’s appellate jurisdiction is limited generally to what are often called “Final” judgments. Thus, § 3-2-303, C.S. & K. Trib.App. Proc. Ord., sets forth the appellate jurisdiction of this court in relevant part, as follows:

The Court of Appeals has exclusive jurisdiction over appeals by an aggrieved party from a judgment or order in the following cases:
(1) From a final judgment entered in an action or special proceeding commenced in the Tribal Court ...
(2) From an order .. . and from such interlocutory judgments or orders in actions involving the custody, guardianship, or conservatorship of minors or incompetent persons as may determine permanently, and not on an emergency or temporary basis pending further proceedings, the rights, interests, responsibilities of the respective parties and direct the disposition of the person or property of the minor or incompetent person in accordance with the determination . ..

This Court has not, before now, interpreted, in the context of an Order denying a custody modification, the meaning of “final judgment” as that phrase in used in § 3-2-303(1), C.S. & K. Trib.App. Proc. Ord., or the portion of subsection (2) that may apply more specifically in this matter.

In Baylor v. Confe,derated. Salish and Kootenai Tribes et al, CV-039-92, June 28, 1996, the Court of Appeals determined that a Trial Court Order denying a Motion to Dismiss is not a final judgment within the meaning of § 3-2-303(1), C.S. & K. Trib.App. Proc. Ord., and was not appeal-able as an interlocutory Order. The Court held that a Motion to dismiss was not included in the list of interlocutory orders made appealable by § 3-2-303(2) and (3), C.S. & K. Trib.App. Proc. Ord. The Court stated:

The negative implications of these provisions are strong—that other interlocutory orders of the Tribal Court are not appealable to this Court, and we are not disposed to set aside these implications.

Baylor, Slip op. at 11.

The Baylor appellate Court reviewed the reasons for what it called the “Rule of Finality” in terms that provide guidance here:

Among them is efficiency—providing a framework in which an appellate court will only hear a case once, after all relevant decisions have been made by the trial court and will not need to review interim orders that may not be relevant by the time a case is brought to conclusion. Further, the trial judge is given control of a case, control that would be [54]*54weakened if an attorney could file appeals at each juncture that the trial court reaches an adverse decision.

Id. The Court continued by stating that rules of finality have been strictly interpreted in other courts and should be so interpreted in this Court.

We have reviewed the, question before us by interpreting § 3-2-303(1), C.S. & K. Trib.App. Proc. Ord., in light of Baylor, and the meaning of appealability as generally accepted in other jurisdictions.

According to the United States Supreme Court, a final judgment is one that determines all of the issues as to all parties in a case. Catlin v. United States, 324 U.S. 229, 65 S.Ct. 631, 89 L.Ed. 911 (1945). The Supreme Court further stated in Cat-iin

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Related

Catlin v. United States
324 U.S. 229 (Supreme Court, 1945)
Dodge v. Nakai
298 F. Supp. 26 (D. Arizona, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Am. Tribal Law 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-salishctapp-1999.