Michael Alan Schwartz v. Sara Oltarz-Schwartz

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 9, 2018
Docket338291
StatusUnpublished

This text of Michael Alan Schwartz v. Sara Oltarz-Schwartz (Michael Alan Schwartz v. Sara Oltarz-Schwartz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Alan Schwartz v. Sara Oltarz-Schwartz, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MICHAEL ALAN SCHWARTZ, UNPUBLISHED August 9, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 338291 Oakland Circuit Court Family Division SARA OLTARZ-SCHWARTZ, LC No. 2013-810233-DO

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and BOONSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this divorce action, plaintiff appeals by right the order of the trial court, entered on remand from this Court,1 directing him to pay attorney fees and costs incurred by defendant as a result of plaintiff’s unreasonable conduct. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The circumstances of the parties’ marital breakdown were summarized by this Court in its previous opinion arising from these divorce proceedings:

Plaintiff and defendant, both attorneys, were married on December 8, 1973. The marriage produced two children who were adults at the time of the divorce.

In the early 2000s, plaintiff lost approximately $1 million in investments when the stock market crashed. The parties agreed at trial that the initial collapse of their marriage coincided with the loss. However, they also provided extensive testimony regarding their respective perspectives on the subsequent breakdown of their relationship, including the fact that the couple stopped sharing a marital relationship at least 10 years prior to trial. At some point, plaintiff began

1 See Schwartz v Oltarz-Schwartz, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued September 22, 2016 (Docket Nos. 324555, 330031, and 330213).

-1- engaging in a long-term affair with Julie Mareski, whom he secretly supported financially for several years prior to the divorce.[2]

In the earlier appeal, this Court held that the trial court had properly awarded attorney fees to defendant based on two instances of plaintiff’s misconduct. First, during discovery, defendant issued a single request for admission to plaintiff, asking him to admit

[t]hat you have in the past, for a number of years, provided for the support, or otherwise provided gratuitous financial benefits to another person, other than your immediate family, namely a person with the initials “J.M.” to include, but not be limited to phone services, auto lease responsibility, insurance, living expenses, gifts of jewelry, cosmetics, and intimate clothing, veterinary bills, by way of example and not limitation.

On September 24, 2013, plaintiff admitted that he provided support and financial benefits to Mareski, but qualified his admission with the following statement: “The source of most of said support and/or financial benefits was derived either from a loan which was made to the Plaintiff or from an inheritance which he received from his mother upon her death.” After a three-day bench trial, the trial court determined that plaintiff had been supporting Mareski since at least 2004, years before he received a loan from his former employer and the inheritance from his mother. Consequently, it awarded attorney fees to defendant for this misconduct, as well as for an additional instance of misconduct related to plaintiff’s payment of the mortgage for the parties’ marital home. The trial court ultimately ordered plaintiff to pay defendant $68,452.60 in attorney fees.

This Court affirmed the award under the common-law exception permitting recovery of fees a party is forced to incur as a result of the other party’s misconduct during the course of litigation. However, because the record did not demonstrate the necessary link between plaintiff’s misconduct and the amount of attorney fees awarded, this Court remanded the matter to the trial court for a determination of the fees actually incurred as a result of plaintiff’s unreasonable conduct.

On remand, defendant filed a brief concerning attorney fees and attached a copy of defense counsel’s billing statements, on which defense counsel, James P. Cunningham, had placed check marks next to each entry pertaining to the two issues for which attorney fees had been awarded. Cunningham also testified at an evidentiary hearing about his calculation of the fees sought by defendant. After Cunningham briefly outlined his services by reading some of the descriptions of relevant, marked entries and occasionally commenting on the reason certain types of services were required, plaintiff’s attorney cross-examined Cunningham at length about his billing descriptions. Although Cunningham was not always able to remember specific details concerning some of the billing entries, he explained his general reasons for performing certain types of work. Cunningham testified that, because plaintiff had asserted that he had primarily

2 See Schwartz, unpub op at 1.

-2- supported Mareski from a loan or inheritance rather than from the marital estate, he conducted extensive discovery regarding plaintiff’s finances. He issued subpoenas to plaintiff’s banks and credit card companies because he could not rely on plaintiff to provide complete information. A subpoena was also issued to plaintiff’s life insurance carrier to determine whether the policy named Mareski or defendant as the beneficiary. Several billing entries referred to depositions, and only plaintiff, defendant, and Mareski were deposed. According to Cunningham, divorce cases do not always require party depositions, even when the case is likely to go to trial. He stated that he would not have deposed the parties but for the “two issues” for which defendant was seeking attorney fees.

After the evidentiary hearing, the trial court issued a lengthy opinion and order setting forth specific findings with respect to each billing entry for which defendant sought payment of attorney fees. To summarize the trial court’s individual findings, with regard to the misconduct involving plaintiff’s support of Mareski, the trial court disallowed all billing entries that occurred before plaintiff responded to the request for admission. The trial court also disallowed billing entries for work performed by paralegals as being outside the scope of this Court’s remand order, as well as billing entries in which, though occurring after the request for admission, Cunningham “could not identify the relationship between this entry and the remanded matters.” It allowed charges that it found demonstrated “a sufficient connection to plaintiff’s unreasonable conduct,” specifically the necessity that Cunningham “audit Plaintiff’s financial choices and deduce the information Plaintiff concealed.” It also allowed charges related to the depositions, based on Cunningham’s testimony that they would not have been necessary but for plaintiff’s actions. The trial court also reduced certain charges by one-half, to reflect the fact that, although the charge may have been incurred regardless of plaintiff’s misconduct, the misconduct required that extra time be expended on the matter. With respect to plaintiff’s misconduct concerning the mortgage, the trial court allowed charges where the billing entry specifically related to the mortgage issue. After addressing whether each entry was related to the misconduct identified by this Court, the trial court stated that Cunningham was a highly credible witness. It also found that

[t]he extensive discovery, subpoenas, motions, and Ms. Mareski’s involvement occurred in great part because of Plaintiff’s misconduct. Had Plaintiff’s answer to the Request for Admission[] provided the necessary financial information to [Cunningham], the disclosure would have obviated Defendant’s expenditure of additional attorney fees.

Based on the foregoing, the trial court found that defendant was entitled to recover fees incurred for “95.67 hours ($30,449.50) related to Plaintiff’s unreasonable conduct regarding the Request for Admission, [and] 26.15 hours ($8,986.25) related to the mortgage issue . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Michael Alan Schwartz v. Sara Oltarz-Schwartz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-alan-schwartz-v-sara-oltarz-schwartz-michctapp-2018.