Klein v. Demers-Klein

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJune 13, 2019
DocketCUMcv-18-0377
StatusUnpublished

This text of Klein v. Demers-Klein (Klein v. Demers-Klein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein v. Demers-Klein, (Me. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

/ \

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

Cumberland, ss. Civil Action

MARK KLEIN,

Plaintiff

V. Docket No. CUMSC-CV-18-0377

JESSICA DEMERS-KLEIN now known as Jessica Demers, and AMANDA MYERS,

Defendants

ORDER ON DEFENDANTS' MOTIONS FOR ADDITIONAL ATTORNEY FEES

Defendant Amanda Myers's Application for Attorney Fees After Appeal and

Defendant Jessica Demers's Motion for Award ofAttorney Fees are before the court,1

alm;g with Plaintiff Mark Klein's memoranda in opposition to the motions and the

Defendants' reply memoranda. The court elects to decide the motions without oral

argument. See M.R. Civ. P. 7(b)(7).

The Defendants' motions are brought under the anti-SLAPP statute. 14 M.R.S.

§ 556, which permits but does not require the court to award attorney fees to the

prevailing party. See id. ("If the court grants a special motion to dismiss, the court

may award the moving party costs and reasonable attorney's fees, including those

incurred for the special motion and any related discovery matters.") The Defendants

1 As the assigned single justice while the case was pending in Superior Court, I have been asked to decide the pending motions. (

clearly prevailed, the Superior Court having granted their special motions to dismiss

and the Law Court having summarily affirmed the dismissal. See Klein v. Myers, Me.

Supr. Jud. Ct., Docket No. CUM-19-258 (mem. dee. March 3, 2020).

The Defendants' motions seek awards of their attorney fees and costs incurred

in opposing Plaintiffs motion for reconsideration of the Superior Court's April 17,

2019 dismissal order, and in opposing the Plaintiffs appeal of that Order and the

Superior Court's August 13, 2019 Order awarding attorney fees and costs to the

Defendants. The amounts requested by Defendants in their pending motions for

additional awards are amply supported and documented in fee affidavits and records,

and are reasonable and appropriate under the applicable factors. See Poussard v.

Commercial Credit Plan, Inc., 479 A.2d 881, 885 (Me. 1984).

Plaintiff Klein does not challenge any specific component of the fees and costs

claimed. Instead, his opposition presents several blanket objections, none of which is

substantiated. . In its August 13, 2019 Order making an initial award of fees, the

court spelled out in detail the reasons why the fee award was justified. All of those

reasons apply as well to the Defendants' motions for additional fees. For all of those

reasons, Plaintiff Klein's decision to bring the underlying case was ill-advised and his

decision to appeal the dismissal of the case even more so

It is hereby ORDERED AS FOLLOWS:

1. Defendant Amanda Myers's Application for Attorney Fees After Appeal is

hereby granted. Defendant Amanda Myers is hereby awarded $21,365.57 in attorney

2 fees and costs against Plaintiff Mark Klein. Plaintiff shall make payment in full within

30 days of when the judgment becomes final.

2. Defendant Jessica Demers's Motion for Award of Attorney Fees is hereby

granted. Defendant Jessica Demers is hereby awarded $23,954 in attorney fees and

costs against Plaintiff Mark Klein. Plaintiff shall make payment in full within 30 days

of when the judgment becomes final.

3. The foregoing awards are m addition to the amounts awarded to the

Defendants in the court's August 13, 2019 Order.

Pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 79(a), the Clerk is hereby directed to incorporate this

Order by reference in the docket.

Dated July 28, 2020

A. M. Horton, Justice

Entered on the Docket: () 7/ 3 ~/z e,

Plaintiff-Thomas Hallett, Esq. Defendant Demers Klein-Elizabeth Germani, Esq. Defendant Myers-Theodore Irwin, Esq.

3 • (

MARK KLEIN, ) ) Plaintiff ) ) V. ) Docket No. CUMSC-CV-18-0377 ) JESSICA DEMERS-KLEIN ) now known as Jessica Demers, and ) AMANDA MYERS, ) REc~~J (~fJ~¥~i3 (~LE~~t

ORDER ON DEFENDANTS' PENDING MOTIONS

Plaintiff Mark Klein has brought tort claims in this case against his former

spouses, Defendants Amanda Myers and Jessica Demers, who was formerly known as

Jessica Demers-Klein. Each of the Defendants has filed a special motion to dismiss

pursuant to Maine's anti-SLAPP statute, 14 M.R.S. § 556 1 and also a motion to dismiss

pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).

The Media Law Resource Center describes anti-SLAPP statutes, their origins and purposes as follows:

Anti-SLAPP laws are designed to provide for early dismissal ofmeritless lawsuits filed against people for the exercise of First Amendment rights. The acronym "SLAPP" stands for "Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation - a phrase coined by two law school professors in the late 1980s. They identified a trend of retaliatory lawsuits brought to intimidate and silence opponents and critics who had spoken out in the public sphere, typically on land use and development issues. Anti-SLAPP statutes were proposed to provide a quick, effective and inexpensive mechanism to combat such suits.

http://www.medialaw.org/topics-page For the Plaintiff: Daniel Feldman, Esq. For Jessica Demers: Elizabeth Germani, Esq. For Amanda Myers: Theodore Irwin, Esq. (

Factual Background

The following recitation of facts is drawn from Plaintiff Klein's Complaint and

the affidavits and affidavit exhibits that each of the three parties has filed in connection

with the Defendants' special motions to dismiss, and also from material that may be

considered in connection with a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss.

The anti-SLAPP statute authorizes the court to consider affidavits (and

presumably exhibits incorporated into and annexed to affidavits) in addressing a

special motion to dismiss, see 14 M.R.S. § 556. Under Rule 12(b)(6), the court may

consider "official public documents, documents that are central to the plaintiffs claim,

and documents referred to in the complaint without converting a motion to dismiss

into a motion for a summary judgment when the authenticity of such documents is not

challenged." See Moody v. State Liquor and Lottery Commission, 2004 ME 20, 110, 843

A.2d 43, 48.

Mark Klein and Amanda Myers were married in January of 2003 and divorced

on September 26, 2011. (Def Myers Ex. 5 at 2) 2; (Pl.'s Compl., 10). Klein and Myers

have two daughters together, A.K. and E.K. (Pl.'s Compl. 14). Their divorce

settlement provided that they had shared parental rights over A.K and E.K. (Def

Myers Ex. 5 at 4).

2 This and similar references are to the parties' affidavits and / or exhibits thereto.

2 Klein and Demers were married on January 2, 2015. (Pl.'s Compl. ,1s). They

have one daughter together, S.K, born in September 2015. (Pl.'s Compl. ,5). Klein

and Demers lived together in Falmouth, Maine. (Demers Aff. , , 1, 9).

In 2016, the marital relationship deteriorated and Demers took her daughter

S.K. to Pennsylvania on August 10, 2016, without notifying Klein. (Pl.'s Compl.

,,17-19).; (Demers Aff. ,1s). Klein filed for divorce from Demers on August 18,

2016. (Pl.'s Compl. ,24). Klein left the marital home on August 22, 2016. (Pl.'s

Compl. ,s7). Klein and Demers have lived separately since that date. (Pl.'s Compl.

, 3 7).

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Klein v. Demers-Klein, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-demers-klein-mesuperct-2019.