Lee-Magana v. Carpenter

375 P.3d 60, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 83, 2016 WL 3600219
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 2016
Docket7113 S-15854
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 375 P.3d 60 (Lee-Magana v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee-Magana v. Carpenter, 375 P.3d 60, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 83, 2016 WL 3600219 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal involves two petitions for long-term dotnestic violence protective orders, A woman prevailed both on a petition she brought against her ex-boyfriend and on a petition he brought against her, She moved for attorney's fees in both cases, but the trial court denied her motions at first and again *62 on reconsideration. The woman appeals, asserting that the trial court abused its discretion by not awarding her full attorney's fees on both petitions-on hers because she was the prevailing petitioner in a domestic violence case for whom fees are allowed by statute, and on her ex-boyfriend's because she was the prevailing party and his petition was vexatious.

We affirm the superior court's denial of attorney's fees for the woman's successful defense against her ex-boyfriend's petition. As for the court's denial of attorney's fees to the woman as the prevailing petitioner, we conclude there was no adequate reason for denying fees and therefore reverse and remand for an award of fees in an appropriate amount.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Background

Olivia Lee-Magana and Jacob Carpenter met as teenagers sometime in the 1990s. 1 They were in a two-year romantic relationship beginning in 2012 and had a child together. But their relationship was often tumultuous. In late 2014 Carpenter attempted to evict Lee-Magana from his home, and there followed a dispute over child custody and allegations of domestic violence by each party against the other.

B. Lee~-Magana's Petition For A Domestic Violence Protective Order

Lee-Magana filed a petition for a protective order against Carpenter on September 16, 2014. At the close of an ex parte hearing, the magistrate judge granted her a twenty-day protective order. The subsequent hearing on a long-term protective order was heard by the superior court judge assigned to the parties' custody dispute,. At the hearing, Carpenter stipulated to an act of domestic violence because of a finding recently made by another judge, in a different case, involving a different petitioner, and the judge entered a long-term protective order predicated on that stipulation. Much of the rest of the hearing involved working out such details as no-contact provisions and the retrieval of personal property.

After the hearing Lee-Magana filed a motion for an award of $1,000 in reasonable actual attorney's fees, "pursuant to [AS] 18.66.100(c)(14), based upon her status as the prevailing litigant in this case." She filed the motion late and moved that it be accepted late; the superior court denied the fees motion without explanation. A few weeks later Lee-Magana moved for reconsideration, asking the court to explain its ruling.

C. Carpenter's Petition For A Domestic Violence Protective Order

A few weeks after Lee-Magana filed her petition for a long-term domestic violence protective order against Carpenter, he filed a petition for both short-term and long-term orders against her. Carpenter, unlike Lee Magana, was denied a short-term order, The hearing on Carpenter's request for a long-term order took place in late October, again before the judge in the custody case, two weeks after the judge had granted Lee-Magana a long-term order. On Carpenter's petition against Lee-Magana, the superior court found "that [the ease] was close," but it declined to issue a long-term order on the ground that Carpenter had failed to prove he was the victim of domestic violence.

Lee-Magana moved for attorney's fees on this petition too, again seeking $1,000. Carpenter opposed the motion and, as in the other case, the superior court denied the motion without explanation. Lee-Magana moved for reconsideration and Carpenter again filed an opposition.

D. The Superior Court's Orders On Reconsideration

On reconsideration, the superior court issued orders in both domestic violence matters explaining why it had denied Lee-Maga-na's motions for attorney's fees, The court explained that it did not award fees for Lee-Magana's successful defense against Carpenter's petition because it did not want to "cast *63 a chilling effect on the pursuit of relief in the face of perceived entitlement to protection from alleged domestic violence." It further stated that it was "unwilling to characterize Mr. Carpenter's efforts [in pursuing his petition against Lee-Magana] as 'vexatious.'"

As for Lee-Magana's petition against Carpenter-on which she succeeded in obtaining a long-term protective order-the superior court noted that "Carpenter stipulated to the entry of [the] Long-Term Domestic Violence Order" and that "[a] significant portion of that hearing (which was also set on in the custody matter ...) was spent with property and interim support issues which were to be included in[ ] the LTDV Order." The court ruled that "[tlo the extent that proceeding dealt with [domestic violence] issues, attorney fees are denied, with prejudice." However, "[tlo the extent the proceedings addressed custody and support issues, the request for attorney fees is dismissed, without prejudice. Attendant attorney fees issues may be raised in connection with any application for attorney fees in [the custody case]." .

Lee-Magana filed this appeal, It addresses only the denial of her requests for attorney's fees in the two domestic violence cases..

III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

We review attorney's fee awards for abuse of discretion. 2 An award or denial of attorney's fees is an abuse of discretion if it is "arbitrary, capricious, manifestly unreasonable, or improperly motivated. 3 Interpretation of statutes, including those authorizing awards of attorney's fees in particular types of cases, is subject to de novo review. 4

IV. DISCUSSION

The superior court's denials of attorney's fees in the two cases-one in which Lee-Magana was the prevailing respondent and one in which she was the prevailing petitioner-are subject to different analyses. We reach different conclusions in the two cases.

A. The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion By 'Denying Attorney's Fees To Lee-Magana For Her Successful Defense Against Carpenter's Petition.

Lee-Magana contends on appeal that in seeking fees for the domestic violence proceeding brought by Carpenter, "she simply relied upon [Alaska] Civil Rule 82 and her status as the prevailing party." 5 But in fact her initial motion relied solely on the statute governing the allowable provisions of a domestic violence protective order, AS 18.66.100(c)(14); she did not cite Rule 82 until she moved for reconsideration, at which point the court was not obliged to consider a new basis for her fees request. 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
375 P.3d 60, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 83, 2016 WL 3600219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-magana-v-carpenter-alaska-2016.