Nathan T. Cooling, Respondent/Cross-Appellant v. State of Missouri, Department of Social Services, Family Support Division, Appellant/Cross-Respondent.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 21, 2014
DocketED100863
StatusPublished

This text of Nathan T. Cooling, Respondent/Cross-Appellant v. State of Missouri, Department of Social Services, Family Support Division, Appellant/Cross-Respondent. (Nathan T. Cooling, Respondent/Cross-Appellant v. State of Missouri, Department of Social Services, Family Support Division, Appellant/Cross-Respondent.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nathan T. Cooling, Respondent/Cross-Appellant v. State of Missouri, Department of Social Services, Family Support Division, Appellant/Cross-Respondent., (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION ONE

NATHAN T. COOLING, ) Nos. ED100863 and ED100897 ) Respondent/Cross-Appellant, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the City of St. Louis vs. ) ) Honorable Michael F. Stelzer STATE OF MISSOURI, DEPARTMENT OF ) SOCIAL SERVICES, FAMILY SUPPORT ) DIVISION, ) ) Appellant/Cross-Respondent. ) Filed: October 21, 2014

In this action for attorney’s fees following proceedings in the Family Support Division,

the court determined that attorney’s fees were due. The court did not, however, award an

amount of attorney’s fees pursuant to its determination. Therefore, we must dismiss the appeal

for lack of a final judgment.

Factual and Procedural Background

The Family Support Division of the Department of Social Services pursued father,

Nathan Cooling, for past-due child support, asserting that he owed $45,900. The Division sent

notice that it intended to refer father’s name to consumer-reporting agencies as a person who

owed past-due child support. The Division also issued an income-withholding order to father’s

employer. Ultimately, an administrative hearing officer determined that father owed no child-

support arrearage. Importantly, the Division did not contest that determination. Instead, the Division refunded the withheld income to father and did not report him to any consumer-

reporting agency.

Having successfully contested the amount of past-due support owed by him, father

applied for attorney’s fees under the provisions of Section 536.087.1 The administrative hearing

officer denied father’s request. The officer concluded that an award of attorney’s fees was not

authorized because the proceedings giving rise to father’s request did not constitute an “agency

proceeding” as defined by Section 536.085(1) and required for an award of attorney’s fees under

Section 536.087. The officer further determined that even if there had been an “agency

proceeding,” an award of attorney’s fees was improper because the Division was substantially

justified in its actions. Father sought judicial review in the circuit court.

The circuit court viewed matters differently. The court determined that the underlying

administrative child-support proceedings were contested and that the Division was not

substantially justified in its actions. The court awarded father $2,500 in attorney’s fees against

the Division.

The Division filed a post-judgment motion, arguing in part that the court’s fee award

should be stricken as premature and not ripe for adjudication because the underlying merits of

the case had not been finally determined when the court ruled on father’s application for

attorney’s fees. The circuit court granted the Division’s point and vacated the award of

attorney’s fees as untimely. In all other respects, the court stated that its judgment remained

intact. The court reasoned that its September judgment was not a final and unreviewable

decision under Section 536.087.4 because the Division had filed a post-trial motion and had

1 Section 536.087.1 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri reads: A party who prevails in an agency proceeding or civil action arising therefrom, brought by or against the state, shall be awarded those reasonable fees and expenses incurred by that party in the civil action or agency proceeding, unless the court or agency finds that the position of the state was substantially justified or that special circumstances make an award unjust.

2 indicated that it intended to appeal the finding of no “substantial justification.” As such, the

court concluded that it could not render a decision on father’s fee application.

The parties now appeal to this Court, raising the issues of whether the underlying

administrative child-support proceedings constituted an “agency proceeding” and whether the

Division was substantially justified in its actions.

Discussion

Before we consider the merits of this appeal, we must sua sponte determine whether we

have the authority to decide the case. Ndegwa v. KSSO, LLC, 371 S.W.3d 798, 801 (Mo. banc

2012); City of Portage Des Sioux v. Klaus Lambert, 323 S.W.3d 462, 464 (Mo. App. E.D. 2010).

This Court does not have authority if there is no final judgment. Id. For purposes of appeal, a

final judgment disposes of all parties and issues in a case, and leaves nothing for future

determination. Ndegwa, 371 S.W.3d at 801.

The circuit court’s judgment is not a final judgment. The circuit court determined that

father was entitled to attorney’s fees, but in the end did not award those fees. The court did not

finally resolve the very issue it was called upon to decide. As it stands now, the court’s

judgment leaves the award to future determination and subjects the case to piecemeal appeals.

Even though we review the hearing officer’s judgment, the court’s judgment is necessary to the

adjudication of the issue of attorney’s fees.

The circuit court, at the Division’s erroneous behest, vacated the fee award as premature.2

In making its argument, the Division cited two subsections of Section 536.087 as well as this

2 In post-argument briefing before this Court, the Division now agrees that the circuit court’s judgment is not a final judgment because the court did not enter an award of fees, and thus did not dispose of all issues in the case. The Division urges this Court to remand the case to the circuit court for entry of a final judgment. Father also agrees that the circuit court’s judgment is not final, but claims Section 536.087.4 creates an exception to the final-judgment rule, and that the circuit court is mandated by statute, as well as the Hutchings decision, to hold his application in abeyance until this Court on appeal renders a decision on the merits.

3 Court’s decision Hutchings v. Roling, 151 S.W.3d 85 (Mo. App. E.D. 2005). First, quoting

Section 536.087.3, the Division noted that:

“[a] party seeking an award of fees and other expenses shall, within thirty days of a final disposition in an agency proceeding or final judgment in a civil action, submit to the court, agency or commission which rendered the final disposition or judgment an application which shows that the party is a prevailing party and is eligible to receive award under this section….”

Moreover, citing Section 536.087.4, the Division noted that:

“[w]hen the [S]tate appeals the underlying merits of an adversary proceeding, no decision on the application for fees and other expenses in connection with that adversary proceeding shall be made under this section until a final and unreviewable decision is rendered by the court on the appeal or until the underlying merits of the case have been finally determined pursuant to the appeal.”

Finally, relying on Hutchings, the Division noted that:

“[W]hile a fee application is properly filed prior to a final judgment, it is held in abeyance until the adversarial proceeding becomes final.”

151 S.W.3d at 91-92. In sum, the Division argued that the circuit court must hold an award of

attorneys’ fees in abeyance until the underlying merits of the case – father’s entitlement to

attorney’s fees – have been finally determined on appeal.

The parties and the circuit court misread the statute and thus the court incorrectly vacated

the attorney’s fee award as premature.

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Nathan T. Cooling, Respondent/Cross-Appellant v. State of Missouri, Department of Social Services, Family Support Division, Appellant/Cross-Respondent., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nathan-t-cooling-respondentcross-appellant-v-state-of-missouri-moctapp-2014.