Lilienthal v. District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District

650 P.2d 779, 200 Mont. 236, 1982 Mont. LEXIS 905
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1982
Docket81-355
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 650 P.2d 779 (Lilienthal v. District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lilienthal v. District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District, 650 P.2d 779, 200 Mont. 236, 1982 Mont. LEXIS 905 (Mo. 1982).

Opinion

*238 MR. JUSTICE SHEA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant Lilienthal appeals a Rosebud County District Court judgment finding him in contempt of Court for his failure to vacate real property belonging to the Powder River County Bank (Bank) and ordering him to pay the Bank $5,500 in compensatory damages.

He raises essentially two issues on appeal: (1) He claims that he was denied due process because the District Court did not allow him sufficient time to seek legal assistance before declaring him in contempt. (2) He claims that the District Court had no jurisdiction to award compensatory damages to the Bank because they are not allowed in contempt actions.

We reverse the judgment on the ground that the District Court improperly rendered judgment by denying Lilienthal adequate time to prepare for the Court’s contempt hearing, and hold that because this action was one in the nature of a trespass as well as contempt, the District Court could award compensatory damages in an amount reasonably proportionate to the damages suffered by the Bank. However, there is no evidence in the record regarding the reasonableness of the damages, and therefore, the award is vacated and the case remanded for reconsideration of this issue.

Lilienthal has also requested that we issue either a writ of supervisory control or a writ of certiorari because the District Court exceeded its jurisdiction by awarding the compensatory damages. We decline to issue the writs but have resolved the same questions in this appeal.

In November 1980, the Bank filed a complaint alleging that in September 1979 Lilienthal had conveyed real property in Rosebud County to the Bank under a confession of judgment, but had refused to remove his six unit trailer motel from the property. The Bank alleged in its complaint that this trespass entitled it to an order compelling Lilienthal to remove the motel and pay the Bank’s costs in the action. In January 1981, the Court entered Lilienthal’s default, ordered him to remove the motel, and authorized the *239 Bank to remove it if he failed to do so.

In late February 1981, the Bank moved the Court to compel performance of its order and to find Lilienthal in contempt because the motel had not yet been removed. The Bank alleged the sheriff refused to remove the motel because people were residing in it. Lilienthal appeared without counsel and explained that he was having trouble finding someone experienced in moving this type of trailer motel, and that he was having trouble evicting his remaining four tenants because it was the middle of winter. The Bank requested that Lilenthal be declared in contempt of Court and that he be given one week (until 5:00 p.m. March 16) to remove the motel or be assessed a $500 per day penalty until its removal. The Court asked Lilienthal if the Bank’s request sounded reasonable and Lilienthal replied “Yes.” The Court granted the Bank’s motions and stated that it would sign an order as soon as the Bank’s attorney prepared one. On March 12, the Court signed the Bank’s prepared order, finding Lilienthal in contempt and giving him until 5:00 p.m. March 16 to remove the motel or be penalized in the amount of $500 per day.

On April 1, the Bank informed the Court that as of 2:00 p.m. March 23, the motel still had not been removed, and moved the Court to assess the $500 per day penalty. On Thursday, April 2, Lilienthal was served with notice to show cause at 10:00 a.m., Monday, April 6. Lilienthal appeared without counsel on April 6 and informed the Court that he had been unable to reach his attorney on the previous Friday (the only remaining working day before the hearing) and knew that he needed counsel in the matter. Nonetheless, the Court allowed the hearing to continue. When called as an adverse witness, Lilienthal testified that the motel finally had been removed but that he was unsure of the exact date on which it had been done. The Court found that Lilienthal had complied by removing his property on March 27, and therefore the $500 per day penalty was assessed for 11 days. Again, the Court relied upon the *240 Bank’s attorney to prepare an order. On April 10, the Court signed the Bank’s prepared order, finding Lilienthal in contempt, for failing to comply with the March 12 order, and assessed a $5,500 penalty to be paid to the Bank.

Lilienthal, through an attorney, then moved the Court to vacate its judgment, and allow him either a new trial or the opportunity to purge himself of the contempt citation. The Court denied Lilienthal’s motion, stating that the Bank’s choice of language finding Lilienthal in contempt was unfortunate since the case was never a contempt action, but one in the nature of a trespass. The Court determined that Lilienthal had ample time in which to obtain counsel, and that since this was not a criminal action, the Court was not obligated to require him to have counsel. The Court further found that its March 12 order did nothing but establish the Bank’s liquidated damages. Lilienthal then took this appeal.

We must first address a contention by the Bank that this appeal was not timely. The Bank argues that Lilienthal filed his motion for an opportunity to purge himself of contempt on April 21, 1981, but that the District Court did not hear the motion within ten days as required by Rule 59(d), M.R.Civ.P. It is the Bank’s position that this motion was then deemed denied 15 days after it was submitted (May 6, 1981) and that the 30 day period for filing the notice of appeal commenced on that date and terminated on June 5, 1981. Therefore, the Bank contends that the July 2, 1981 notice of appeal was not timely and we are without jurisdiction to hear this appeal. We disagree. According to Rule 59(d), the April 21 motion is deemed denied if no hearing has been held within 10 days after the motion was served except that at any time after the notice of the hearing on the motion has been served, the Court may issue an order continuing the hearing no longer than 30 days. If the hearing is continued, the Court must rule upon the motion within 15 days of the hearing or it will be deemed denied.

The record shows that Lilienthal’s April 21 motion was set *241 for hearing April 29, but according to an April 29 minute entry, the parties stipulated to continue the hearing. The hearing was subsequently held on May 29, which was exactly 30 days later, and within the Rule 59(d) time limit for continuing a hearing. The Court’s ruling was filed on June 2, which was also within the Rule 59(d) time limit, and therefore Lilienthal had from June 2 until July 2, 1981 to file his notice of appeal. That notice was filed with the District Court on July 1 and with this Court on July 2, 1981. Therefore, the appeal was timely and we have jurisdiction.

First Lilienthal contends that the District Court’s judgment was improper because the Court did not allow him sufficient time to seek the assistance of counsel to defend against the contempt charge. The Bank has not responded to this contention, other than to argue that this was a trespass proceeding and not a contempt proceeding. The District Court’s final order before this appeal, stating that its April 10, 1981 order finding Lilienthal in contempt was “. .

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Bluebook (online)
650 P.2d 779, 200 Mont. 236, 1982 Mont. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lilienthal-v-district-court-of-the-sixteenth-judicial-district-mont-1982.