Marriage of Monteau v. Monteau

5 Am. Tribal Law 26
CourtConfederated Salish & Kootenai Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 2004
DocketNo. AP-02-002-DV
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Am. Tribal Law 26 (Marriage of Monteau v. Monteau) 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
Marriage of Monteau v. Monteau, 5 Am. Tribal Law 26 (salishctapp 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

EAKIN, Justice:

This is an appeal in a divorce action. Appellant Harold Monteau (husband) previously applied for an extraordinary writ which this court denied. We now find that we improvidently denied such a writ. We dismiss the appeal but sua sponte revive the petition for the extraordinary writ and grant a portion of the requested relief. We reinstate that portion of the decree that dissolved the marriage and further reinstate that portion of the decree which ordered the husband to pay child support to Laurel llene Monteau (wife), subject only to motion to modify by the wife.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Neither party is enrolled in the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes but both [29]*29are enrolled elsewhere. The husband is a member of the Chippewa-Cree Tribe; the wife is enrolled in the Onondaga Tribe. The parties were married March 3, 2001 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The parties have one daughter from this marriage. During the marriage, the parties lived off reservation in Kalispell, Montana. After the separation, the husband moved to Poison, Montana, within the jurisdiction of the Tribes. The wife and child remained in Kalispell and then moved to Connecticut. The husband filed for divorce in the tribal court. Extensive efforts were made to obtain personal service on the wife. Personal service was attempted in Kalispell. New London, Connecticut and by certified mail. These efforts were unsuccessful. The husband sought and was granted leave to effect service by publication. The trial court ordered the summons to be published in New London Connecticut. The publication was made in the Char-Koosta News in Pablo. The wife’s default was entered on July 30, 2002. A decree dissolving the marriage and adopting the husband’s parenting plan was entered on September 9, 2002. It awarded the husband the equity in the house purchased prior to the marriage and awarded the wife $49,000 in the joint savings account. It also ordered the husband to pay $3000 per month in child support plus another $500 per month into a trust fund for the child.

The wife appeared in the action on October 21, 2002 and moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. On December 18, 2002 the trial court granted the motion to dismiss on the grounds that publication had not occurred in New London as ordered and on the grounds that the husband had failed to state in the petition his consent to the court exercising personal jurisdiction over him for any counterclaims that might be made.

On January 23, 2003, the husband moved the court to reconsider its order dismissing the action. On February 14, 2003, the trial court denied the motion to reconsider. The husband filed his notice of appeal on March 3, 2003.

On April 11, 2003 the husband filed for an extraordinary writ on the grounds that counsel for the wife had at one time or was currently representing the trial judge. We denied the application on the grounds that the issue could be addressed on appeal. While the appeal progressed in this court, the wife filed a divorce action in Connecticut.

The wife moved to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that it was untimely. She argues that the order vacating the decree, December 18, 2002, was the order being appealed and that the March 3 notice of appeal was not then timely. We reserved the issue of timeliness of appeal for oral argument. The wife chose not to file a brief on the merits.

ISSUES

1. Is the appeal timely?

2. Did the trial court err in failing to disclose the prior attorney-client relationship with counsel for the wife?

3. Does the trial court have jurisdiction over a divorce action when one party is not subject to the court’s personal jurisdiction?

4. Did the trial court err in dismissing the action?

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The issue of timeliness of the appeal is an issue not raised below but is not one generally susceptible to factual dispute. We decide the question as a matter of law.

Whether a trial judge should disclose an attorney-client relationship with [30]*30counsel for a party is a question of law and is reviewed de novo. Whether such a relationship requires disqualification is, a question of fact that cannot be reviewed without a record on that issue but would be reviewed for an abuse of discretion.

DISCUSSION

I. Timeliness of the Appeal

Appeals must be filed within 20 business days of the entry of the final judgment. Rule 1, CSKT R.App. P. The appellant concedes that the notice of appeal was not filed within 20 working days of the December 18, 2002 order but argues the time starts to run anew from the denial of a motion to reconsider. He argues that such a motion can be made within “a reasonable time,” comparing it to a Rule 60 motion in a federal court. Because the husband’s “Rule 60 motion” would not extend the time to appeal, we do not decide if such time can be extended by a proper post judgment motion.

Historically, Rule 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure generally dealt with clerical errors or matters that were not known at trial, e.g. newly discovered evidence, fraud, etc. Rule 60 was not used to reargue points already addressed by the trial court. A motion to alter or amend a judgment made pursuant to Rule 59(e) Fed.R.Civ.P. was used to bring the trial court’s attention to a point of law or fact that was argued at trial but that the court overlooked or misinterpreted in its judgment. A proper Rule 59 motion would extend the time to file a notice of appeal; a Rule 60 motion would not. This led to considerable confusion, especially when counsel titled a motion as a “motion to reconsider” without identifying which rule was being invoked. Several circuits automatically treated a Rule 60 motion as a Rule 59 motion if were filed within the Rule 59 time frame. Finch v. City of Vernon, 845 F.2d 256 (11th Cir.1988); Rados v. Celotex Corp., 809 F.2d 170 (2d Cir.1986); Skagerberg v. Oklahoma, 797 F.2d 881 (10th Cir.1986). To correct this confusion, Rule 4 Fed. R.App. P. was amended to provided that the time to appeal will be extended by a motion for “relief under Rule 60 if the motion is filed no later than 10 days after the judgment is entered.” Rule 4 Fed. R.App. P. (Emphasis supplied.) The husband’s motion to reconsider was not filed within that time. Assuming arguendo that the Tribes have incorporated Rule 59 and /or Rule 60 into the laws of the Tribes,1 the motion was not timely. Since the motion was not timely, the notice of appeal had to be filed within 20 business days of December 18, 2002. It was not. We now grant the motion to dismiss the appeal.

II. The Writ of Review

We previously denied the husband’s petition for an extraordinary wit, holding that there was an adequate remedy on appeal. At the time we did so, the issue of timeliness of the appeal had not been raised and the wife argued foreefully that the issue could be addressed adequately on appeal.

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5 Am. Tribal Law 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-monteau-v-monteau-salishctapp-2004.