Munoz v. Zepeda

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedAugust 4, 2020
Docket1 CA-CV 19-0500-FC
StatusUnpublished

This text of Munoz v. Zepeda (Munoz v. Zepeda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munoz v. Zepeda, (Ark. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

In re the Matter of:

RODRIGO MUNOZ, Petitioner/Appellee,

v.

NARDA ZEPEDA, Respondent/Appellant.

No. 1 CA-CV 19-0500 FC FILED 8-4-2020

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. FC2015-051627 The Honorable Brian S. Rees, Judge Pro Tempore, Retired

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Morse Law Group, Phoenix By Judith A. Morse Counsel for Petitioner/Appellee

McCulloch Law Offices, Tempe By Diane McCulloch Counsel for Respondent/Appellant MUNOZ v. ZEPEDA Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Kent E. Cattani delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge Paul J. McMurdie and Judge Jennifer B. Campbell joined.

C A T T A N I, Judge:

¶1 Narda Zepeda (“Mother”) appeals the superior court’s denial of an attorney’s fees award for her post-dissolution child support proceedings. For reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 Mother and Rodrigo Munoz (“Father”) were married for a little over a year and a half before Father petitioned for dissolution in March 2015. They have one minor child together. In January 2018, the parties finalized the dissolution through a consent decree. The parties agreed that the child would reside primarily with Father and that Mother would pay Father $248 per month in child support, consistent with the Arizona Child Support Guidelines. They also agreed that Father would provide health insurance for the child.

¶3 In August 2018, Father petitioned for an increase in child support from $248 to $716 per month. The petition indicated that Father’s income had decreased since the dissolution decree, that he began incurring monthly childcare expenses, and that he had been providing insurance for the child. In response, Mother cross-petitioned for a decrease in child support from $248 to $82 per month. Mother’s cross-petition alleged that both her and Father’s income increased since the dissolution decree and asserted that even if Father’s income had decreased, the decrease was voluntary. Mother further asserted that Father failed to provide any proof of his purported childcare and insurance expenses and that she had been paying for the child’s health insurance.

¶4 The superior court held three days of hearings, at which both parties testified. The court thereafter determined that Father’s income had not, in fact, decreased, that he had not consistently been paying for the child’s health insurance, and that Mother had been providing health insurance for the child. Accordingly, the court modified Mother’s monthly

2 MUNOZ v. ZEPEDA Decision of the Court

child support payment to $392 per month, and ordered Father to provide health insurance.

¶5 Mother filed a motion for attorney’s fees, and Father failed to respond timely. Having received no objection, the court granted Mother’s request for fees. The same day the court awarded Mother fees, Father filed a motion objecting to Mother’s request and requesting fees himself.

¶6 One week later, Father moved for relief from the order awarding Mother fees, stating that his failure to file a timely response resulted from an administrative error in his attorney’s office. The court agreed to set aside Mother’s fee award, and after considering both parties’ requests for fees, declined to award fees to either party. The court opined that “both parties were being less than candid and were fighting rather than seeking to resolve their dispute” and that “the case had been significantly over tried.” The court further noted that the amount each party incurred in legal fees far exceeded the amount by which they stood to benefit by prevailing in the litigation.

¶7 Mother timely appealed the order denying fees, and we have jurisdiction under A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(2).

DISCUSSION

I. Motion for Relief.

¶8 As a threshold matter, Mother argues the superior court erred by granting Father’s motion for relief from its order awarding her attorney’s fees. We disagree.

¶9 Rule 85(b)(1) of the Arizona Rules of Family Law Procedure grants the superior court discretion to relieve a party from an order for “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.” “Neglect is excusable when it is such as might be the act of a reasonably prudent person in the same circumstances.” Ulibarri v. Gerstenberger, 178 Ariz. 151, 163 (App. 1993). We review the superior court’s grant of a motion for relief for an abuse of discretion. Clark v. Kreamer, 243 Ariz. 272, 275, ¶ 10 (App. 2017).

¶10 Here, the superior court initially awarded Mother attorney’s fees after Father failed to file a timely response. Father’s request for relief included his counsel’s sworn statement that counsel timely prepared the response and later discovered it was mixed up with another client’s paperwork. This type of administrative error falls squarely within Rule 85(b)(1). See City of Phoenix v. Geyler, 144 Ariz. 323, 332 (1985) (finding

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excusable neglect where “the mistake . . . which led to the late filing of the motion . . . was the type of clerical error which might be made by a reasonably prudent person who attempted to handle the matter in a prompt and diligent fashion”). The superior court determined that “[F]ather’s attorney’s office staff mistake should not be the deciding factor here,” and this decision was a sound exercise of the court’s discretion.1

II. Fees Under A.R.S. § 25-324.

¶11 Mother argues the superior court erred by denying her request for fees under A.R.S. § 25-324(A) and (B). We review the denial of fees under § 25-324 for an abuse of discretion. Lehn v. Al-Thanayyan, 246 Ariz. 277, 286, ¶ 29 (App. 2019).

A. Fees Under A.R.S. § 25-324(A).

¶12 Under A.R.S. § 25-324(A), the superior court may order a party to pay a reasonable amount of attorney’s fees “after considering the financial resources of both parties and the reasonableness of the positions each party has taken throughout the proceedings.”

1. Disparity in Financial Resources.

¶13 Mother challenges the superior court’s conclusion that “[F]ather’s income is only marginally greater than [M]other’s,” so “disparity is not a factor here.” She argues the court erred by only considering the parties’ incomes, rather than their cumulative financial resources.

¶14 Under § 25-324(A), a party moving for attorney’s fees must show “that a relative financial disparity in income and/or assets exists between the parties.” See Lehn, 246 Ariz. at 286, ¶ 30 (citation omitted). As Mother’s reply brief points out, however, the superior court had “no evidence of Mother’s financial resources except . . . her income.”

¶15 Mother argues that the superior court should have awarded her attorney’s fees based on evidence that Father’s financial resources were greater than hers. At the hearing, Mother presented evidence of Father’s

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Related

City of Phoenix v. Geyler
697 P.2d 1073 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1985)
Ulibarri v. Gerstenberger
871 P.2d 698 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1993)
Jhagroo v. City of Phoenix
694 P.2d 1209 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1984)
Magee v. Magee
81 P.3d 1048 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2004)
In Re the Marriage of Williams
200 P.3d 1043 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2008)
Valer C. Austin v. Josiah T. Austin
348 P.3d 897 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2015)
Marriage of Clark v. Clark
370 P.3d 1119 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2016)
Lehn v. Al-Thanayyan
438 P.3d 646 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
Munoz v. Zepeda, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munoz-v-zepeda-arizctapp-2020.