Selena Gudino v. Dennis Gudino

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 2012
Docket2016112
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Selena Gudino v. Dennis Gudino, (Va. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Felton, Judges Frank and Kelsey Argued at Richmond, Virginia

SELENA GUDINO MEMORANDUM OPINION* v. Record No. 2016-11-2 BY JUDGE D. ARTHUR KELSEY JUNE 12, 2012 DENNIS GUDINO

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY Timothy J. Hauler, Judge

Jonathan W. Ware (Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer US LLP, on briefs), for appellant.

No brief or argument for appellee.

Louise A. Moore (Louise A. Moore, Esquire, LLC, on briefs), Guardian ad litem for the minor children.

In this case, the circuit court entered an order compensating the guardian ad litem for her

work in a custody case involving the children of Selena and Dennis Gudino. On appeal, Selena

Gudino argues the court erred in several respects. The circuit court, however, did not address her

objections to the award because they were filed after the entry of the order. Given the unique

circumstances of this case, we hold good cause exists to excuse wife’s procedural default. We

remand this matter to the circuit court for reconsideration of its fee award.

I.

The divorce of Selena and Dennis Gudino involved various cases litigated in the

Chesterfield Circuit Court, including a divorce and equitable distribution case (No. CL10-2086)

and several de novo appeals from the Chesterfield Juvenile and Domestic Relations District

Court: namely, a custody dispute (No. CJ10C-12) and two cases involving support and attorney

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. fees (Nos. CL10J-339 and CL10J-2336). The circuit court appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL)

for the parties’ three children in the custody dispute and awarded fees to the GAL for her

representation of the children. Wife appealed the circuit court’s custody decision on various

grounds, including the appointment of the GAL and the apportionment of her fees. In an

unpublished opinion, we affirmed the circuit court. See Gudino v. Gudino, No. 0068-11-2, 2011

Va. App. LEXIS 327 (Nov. 1, 2011) (hereinafter Gudino I).

On August 22, 2011, while Gudino I was on appeal to us, the GAL attended an

evidentiary hearing in the circuit court scheduled to address support, attorney fees, and equitable

distribution — but not custody.1 Nothing in the record suggests the GAL gave written notice of

her intention to appear. After a recess in the hearing, the GAL orally asked the circuit court to

issue an order awarding fees arising out of the custody dispute (No. CJ10C-12). She proffered a

fee statement seeking $39,978.62 in fees for her work in the JDR court and circuit court. See

App. at 187 (claiming unpaid fee balance was “from both Juvenile Court and the Circuit Court

proceedings”).

At the hearing, wife was represented by different counsel than had represented her in the

custody case involving the GAL. She appeared pro se regarding equitable distribution issues.

When the GAL made her request for fees during the hearing, neither wife nor her counsel

objected. Counsel, however, reminded the court that the custody dispute was then pending on

appeal and that separate counsel represented wife in that matter.

Without further discussion, the trial judge stated from the bench, “the guardian ad litem is

going to get paid.” App. at 188. At the conclusion of the hearing, the GAL asked the court to

1 On December 6, 2010, the circuit court consolidated for purposes of an evidentiary hearing the custody case, the two support cases, and the divorce and equitable distribution case. Neither party has addressed whether this consolidation order affects the Rule 5A:18 analysis. Lacking any argument on this issue, we likewise do not address it.

-2- “make a decision in terms of the guardian ad litem fees” and “determine which amounts will be

paid by which party . . . .” Id. at 242. After learning from the court reporter that it would take

three weeks to prepare a transcript, the circuit court advised the parties: “I will get you a

decision, obviously, it’s not going to be before the next 21 days.” Id. at 244. The court directed

the GAL to submit a draft order addressing her fee request. Id. at 247. The court stated the order

should include a “Rule 1:13 waiver” of counsel endorsement. Id.2 It is unclear from the court’s

remarks if the twenty-one-day delay period applied to all, or only some, of the orders to be

issued after the hearing.

One week later, on August 29, the GAL forwarded to the court a draft order awarding her

$42,866.12 in fees. The record reveals no reason for the variance from the $39,978.62 request

made at the hearing a week earlier. The draft order waived the requirements of Rule 1:13

(requiring endorsement of counsel) and Rule 1:12 (requiring service on opposing counsel). The

caption of the draft order identified the custody dispute by the case number (No. CJ10C-12) and

listed each of the children’s names.

The GAL’s cover letter to the court did not state that copies had been forwarded to wife

pro se, her counsel in Gudino I, or her counsel at the August 22 hearing. The following day,

August 30, the GAL sent the same letter and draft order to the court, the only change appearing

to be the inclusion of a “cc” noting that copies had been mailed to counsel appearing at the

August 22 hearing — but not to wife pro se or to counsel representing her in Gudino I.

On September 6, the circuit court entered the GAL’s draft order — six days before the

end of the twenty-one-day delay period noted by the court at the August 22 hearing. The order

2 “Rule 1:13 specifically provides that compliance with the rule may be modified or dispensed with by the court in its discretion.” Smith v. Commonwealth, 32 Va. App. 766, 773, 531 S.E.2d 11, 15 (2000) (internal quotation marks omitted). Nothing in our opinion implies that dispensing with the requirements of Rule 1:13 should be disfavored.

-3- entered by the court did not direct the clerk of court to forward copies of the entered order to the

parties or their counsel, and the clerk apparently never did so.

On September 8, seventeen days after the hearing, wife filed objections to the GAL’s fee

request, unaware that the court had already entered an order awarding fees on September 6.

Wife challenged the GAL’s fee request on various grounds and asserted the circuit court had

used an improper procedure to consider it. Wife initially filed her objections in the divorce case

(No. CL10-2086), in which the GAL had appeared at the August 22 hearing. The next day,

September 9, wife filed the same objections in the custody case (No. CJ10C-12), in which the

GAL fees were incurred. Wife forwarded copies of her objections to the GAL and husband’s

counsel.

Sometime after wife filed her objections, she learned that the court had entered the GAL

order on September 6, but had filed the order in one of the support cases, No. CL10J-339. The

GAL had not been appointed in the support case, and her fee request was not related to that case.

The entered order showed that the custody case number (No. CJ10C-12) had been crossed out

and the support case number (No. CL10J-339) had been handwritten directly below it. On

October 5, wife filed a notice of appeal in the support case (No. CL10J-339), in which the GAL

order had been entered.

It appears someone — presumably in the office of the clerk of court — attempted to

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