Muster v. Muster

921 A.2d 756, 2005 WL 5420089
CourtDelaware Family Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 2005
DocketCS99-04606
StatusPublished

This text of 921 A.2d 756 (Muster v. Muster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muster v. Muster, 921 A.2d 756, 2005 WL 5420089 (Del. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

HENRIKSEN, J.

This is the Court’s decision on the remaining matter ancillary to the divorce of Rhetta Muster (“Wife”) and Chester Muster (“Husband”) which involves the Court’s decision on whether to- award attorney’s fees, and if so, in what amount.

In the Court’s decision of February 2, 2004, the Court previously set forth the law which it finds applicable in awarding attorney’s fees in marital property cases. 1 In that decision, the Court spelled out specific incidents where the Court believed that Wife demonstrated a level of bad faith in her negotiations and actions. Those areas of bad faith involved: 1) Wife’s failure to follow through with an Interim Stipulation and Order of the Court, dated March 20, 2002, involving the party’s former marital home; 2) Wife’s failure to follow through with providing discovery which was ordered by the Court in a Pretrial Order of March 23, 2001; 3) the Court’s concern with the significant omissions and possible misrepresentations contained in Wife’s various pleadings; 4) Wife’s failure to provide justified reasons for not cooperating in the execution of joint tax returns; and 5) Wife’s misrepresentations involving the rental payments concerning ten acres of farm land. Of these particular items, the Court finds that Mr. Gay’s hourly fee of $200.00 per hour was reasonable and appropriate. The Court also accepts the time representations made by Mr. Gay in his affidavit on these issues. Although Mr. Gay indicated in his summary that he spent three (3) hours of time on the income tax issue, his affidavit only listed two (2) hours of time. Having combined all of the fees incurred by Husband for Mr. Gay’s time reported on these particular incidents, including two (2) hours on the tax issue, the Court finds it appropriate that Wife should pay to Husband, at a minimum, attorney’s fees of $2,590.00.

The Court was concerned that the combination of all of these particular incidents of bad faith committed over time by Wife and/or her attorney may have destroyed any hope whatsoever of the partys’ ability to negotiate in good faith a possible settlement. Therefore, the Court, in its property division order, invited Husband’s attorney to itemize all time spent on Husband’s behalf from the date of the first of these aforementioned infractions to the date of trial. The first of these infractions began as a result of Wife’s failure to provide certain discovery following the Court’s Pre-trial Scheduling Order of March 23, 2001. This was followed by the problems surrounding Husband’s buyout of Wife’s interest in the marital home, which occurred in late March 2002, and was then followed by the misrepresentations made around December 2002 concerning the ten acres of land ownership.

Only because the Court had direct involvement in either deciding motions prior *758 to trial or hearing testimony at trial about the previously noted specific problems was the Court in a position to make a determination on the facts surrounding those specific issues. Generally, however, a Court decides the issue of attorney’s fees following the property division decision where it learns of additional information, especially settlement negotiations between attorneys, that would not be permissible for the Court to hear prior to making its decision on the property division.

Having reviewed the affidavits and supporting documents presented by both parties at this juncture, the Court remains convinced that it should not alter the Court’s previous findings of bad faith by Wife in the previously described events.

The Court would be remiss if it did not state that the Court recognizes and is aware of Wife’s position that all or part of her bad faith conduct was attributable to the conduct of her then attorney, Mr. Rogers. Any language which the Court uses in this opinion whenever it describes any bad faith conduct by Wife does not decide nor rule out the possibility for Wife’s attorney being attributed with all or part of the fault leading to the findings against Wife.

These specifically noted incidents constituted either disregard for Orders of the Court or the making of clearly misleading and incorrect factual representations. However, the recent information provided to the Court following the property division decision relates to what additional fees the Court might consider assessing against either of the parties for the manner in which they handled their various negotiations, and, more particularly, whether those negotiations were pursued in bad faith.

There was no question in this Court’s mind that the particular incidents already noted regarding Wife’s bad faith not only merited attorney’s fees for the time taken by Husband’s attorney to deal specifically with those matters, but also may have infected to such a degree the negotiation potential for this case that there could be no hope of settlement. For this reason, the Court specifically invited Husband’s attorney, Mr. Gay to seek additional fees. He has submitted a request totaling $27,600.00 for 138 hours of work at $200.00 per hour he performed going back to September 18, 2000. And, although Mr. Gay in his argument added an additional 10 hours to prepare his affidavit, his time-sheets, as pointed out by Wife’s present attorney, Mr. Bounds, have included only 4.9 hours for the preparation of the affidavit. Since Wife’s previously noted incidents of bad faith caused the Court to direct Mr. Gay to prepare his affidavit for services to time of trial, the Court will allow an additional $980.00 in fees for Mr. Gay’s 4.9 hours at $200.00 per hour to prepare the affidavit.

CIVILITY

Wife’s current attorney, Mr. Bounds, makes certain compelling arguments to suggest that Wife should not have to pay any additional fees. Most compelling, and most unfortunately, Mr. Bounds’ avers that “the prime cause of both Husband’s and Wife’s attorney’s fees and costs in this case is the acrimonious conduct exhibited by and between Messer’s Gay and Rogers during the course of their four year battle over this case.” Having now had the opportunity to review much of the correspondence between these two attorneys, which was contained in both Mr. Gay’s Motion for Fees and highlighted in Mr. Bound’s response, the Court must agree. The Court is extremely concerned with the lack of civility each of these two experienced and capable attorneys have demonstrated towards each other in their correspondence, and how this acrimonious conduct *759 quite probably further fueled their clients’ already existing venom for each other.

The Court is unable to determine which attorney first crossed the line from zealous representation, which is time-honored, to incivility. The Court does not believe that line was crossed, nor was there any demonstration of bad faith, when Mr. Rogers sent his first, and last offer letter on behalf of Wife, dated January 12, 2001. Though clearly off the mark from the Court’s final decision, the offer was politely made. The Court also fully understands that the offer was made where no party at the time had the benefit of an expert valuation of the husband’s logging business. When Mr. Gay responded on January 28, 2001 to Mr. Rogers offer, the Court is also of the belief that Mr. Gay did not have the benefit at that time of an expert’s appraisal of the business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
921 A.2d 756, 2005 WL 5420089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muster-v-muster-delfamct-2005.