Lowman v. Morgan-Smart

564 P.3d 1203
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2025
Docket50973
StatusPublished

This text of 564 P.3d 1203 (Lowman v. Morgan-Smart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowman v. Morgan-Smart, 564 P.3d 1203 (Idaho 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 50973

ANTHONY SCOTT LOWMAN, ) ) Petitioner-Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) KAYLA MARIE MORGAN-SMART, ) ) Respondent-Respondent on Appeal, ) Boise, January 2025 Term ) and ) Opinion Filed: February 27, 2025 ) JANE DOE (2023-32), ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk ) Minor Child-Appellant, ) ) and ) ) NATASHA RAY, ) ) Intervenor. ) _______________________________________ )

Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Ada County. Roger S. Burdick, Senior District Judge. Annie McDevitt, Magistrate Judge. Ransom Bailey, Magistrate Judge.

The decision of the district court is affirmed.

Seiniger Law Office, Greenville, South Carolina. Wm. Breck Seiniger, Jr. argued.

Kayla Marie Morgan-Smart, Nampa, and Anthony Lowman, Kuna, Respondents Pro Se. ________________________

BRODY, Justice This appeal is from the district court’s order dismissing an intermediate appeal from the magistrate court’s judgment in a divorce case and addresses the authority of an attorney to represent a minor child in the divorce proceeding absent court authorization.

1 I. BRIEF SUMMARY Child was born to Anthony Lowman (“Father”) and Kayla Morgan-Smart (“Mother”) (collectively “Parents”) in 2015. Shortly after her birth, her paternal grandmother, Natasha Ray (“Grandmother”), was appointed as her temporary guardian. Thereafter, Grandmother was permitted to intervene in Parents’ underlying divorce action to determine legal and physical custody of Child once the guardianship terminated, which occurred in August 2021. Before Grandmother’s temporary guardianship was terminated, attorney Wm. Breck Seiniger, Jr. was asked by Grandmother to represent Child, which Seiniger accepted. He was never appointed by the magistrate court to represent Child in the guardianship case, and his authority to act on behalf of Child in that action is the subject of a separate appeal, Ray v. Morgan-Smart, No. 49946. Seiniger subsequently filed a notice of appearance on behalf of Child in the underlying divorce action and Parents objected. Following a hearing, the magistrate court ruled that Seiniger could not represent Child because: (1) there had not been a motion to appoint counsel to represent Child in the divorce proceeding pursuant to Idaho Code section 32-704(4) and Idaho Rule of Family Law Procedure 118; (2) it was not necessary for Child to be represented by counsel at that stage; and (3) the court would find a “completely neutral attorney” in the event the appointment of counsel for Child was necessary. Child had a guardian ad litem at the time who had been appointed in the guardianship case. After years of highly contentious litigation between Parents and Grandmother concerning the temporary guardianship, Parents came to an agreement between themselves regarding custody of Child and filed a stipulation for entry of judgment awarding them joint physical and legal custody. Although the magistrate court had ruled that Seiniger could not represent Child, Seiniger filed an objection to the proposed judgment on Child’s behalf. Seiniger and Grandmother’s attorney also appeared at the hearing to approve the stipulated settlement and objected to the proposed custody order. The magistrate court overruled those objections and entered a judgment consistent with Parents’ stipulation. Grandmother appealed the custody judgment to the district court which was joined by Seiniger on behalf of Child. However, the district court concluded Seiniger had no authority to represent Child and characterized Seiniger as “an officious interloper” who had “needlessly drawn out” the divorce/custody proceedings. The district court also concluded that Grandmother lacked standing in the underlying divorce action because she failed to demonstrate at trial that Parents were not fit. Consequently, the district court dismissed the intermediate appeal. Seiniger and

2 Grandmother subsequently appealed; however, Grandmother’s appeal of the district court’s decision was subsequently dismissed by this Court for failure to provide timely briefing. For the reasons explained below, we affirm the district court’s order of dismissal. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Father filed a petition for divorce against Mother on October 6, 2016. Two years later, the parties signed a stipulation for divorce, and the magistrate court entered a judgment and decree of divorce, which expressly retained jurisdiction to determine the custody of Child at a later time. Grandmother was Child’s temporary guardian at the time Parents divorced. Prior to the entry of judgment and decree of divorce, on March 15, 2018, Grandmother filed a motion to intervene, seeking to be appointed de facto custodian of Child pursuant to Idaho Code sections 32-1701 and 32-717(3). The magistrate court permitted Grandmother to intervene “for purposes of determining legal and physical custody of the minor child subject to the above litigation.” The magistrate court also stated in the order granting Grandmother’s motion to intervene that Grandmother “must prove [she has] standing as [a] grandparent[] for evaluating what custody arrangements are in the best interest of the child.” Following a trial in a separate guardianship proceeding, a different magistrate court denied Grandmother’s motion for “permanent” guardianship because she failed to prove that Parents were unfit. Grandmother then asked attorney Wm. Breck Seiniger, Jr. to represent Child in the guardianship proceeding. The magistrate court in the guardianship proceeding never appointed Seiniger as Child’s attorney. Seiniger filed a motion to be appointed as Child’s counsel and then withdrew it after an objection was made. He subsequently filed a notice of appearance in the guardianship case and proceeded to litigate the matter without authorization from the magistrate court. Seiniger also subsequently appeared on Child’s behalf at a status conference in the underlying divorce action and later that same day filed a notice of appearance on behalf of Child, and a motion and affidavit for a fee waiver. The magistrate court granted Seiniger’s motion to waive Child’s fees. Three days later, Mother filed an objection to Seiniger’s notice of appearance, arguing that Grandmother lacked authority to hire Seiniger because a temporary guardian’s powers were limited to “those necessary to protect the immediate health, safety or welfare of the minor child until a hearing may be held and must include the care and custody of the minor” under Idaho Code section 15-5-207. Mother also informed the magistrate court that the temporary guardianship was set to terminate during the following week.

3 After the guardianship terminated, the parties appeared before the magistrate court in the underlying divorce case. The parties first addressed Mother’s motion to remove Seiniger as the attorney for Child. Mother argued that Seiniger should be dismissed because the temporary guardianship had ended, Parents had expressed to Seiniger that his services were unwanted in this case, and Seiniger’s appearance was inappropriate because he had allowed Grandmother to take Child to a cabin Seiniger owned in McCall during Parents’ scheduled visitation times with Child (Seiniger is a longtime friend of Grandmother and her partner): As I stated, the temporary guardianship terminated and in that it never did expand past the temporary guardianship. . . . [A] temporary guardianship is only for the immediate needs and the necessity of it with the termination date of August 2nd at 9:30 a.m. This case contemplates stuff that would happen after that, so we felt that it was not appropriate in the guardianship for it—with their legal authority granted from there to appointment Mr. Seiniger . . . .

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Bluebook (online)
564 P.3d 1203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowman-v-morgan-smart-idaho-2025.