Talley v. Talley

564 A.2d 777, 317 Md. 428, 1989 Md. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 12, 1989
Docket69, September Term, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 564 A.2d 777 (Talley v. Talley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talley v. Talley, 564 A.2d 777, 317 Md. 428, 1989 Md. LEXIS 145 (Md. 1989).

Opinion

McAULIFFE, Judge.

This case involves a challenge to the validity of an order entered by the Court of Special Appeals directing an attorney to pay attorney’s fees of $500.00. The order was entered as a part of the intermediate appellate court’s disposition of a motion to dismiss an appeal for failure to comply with Maryland Rule 1028 (now Rule 8-501). The questions before us are: 1) whether the petitioner was afforded procedural due process and, 2) whether attorney’s fees may be assessed in the absence of a finding of bad faith or lack of substantial justification.

I

Facts

An action for abuse of process was filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County by Maurice Talley against three of his brothers. That action involved an earlier action *431 of ejectment that had been filed by Maurice’s mother against Maurice. In the abuse of process action, Maurice claimed that his brothers had actually brought the ejectment action against him. He claimed that his brothers brought the action in the name of their mother, purporting to act upon the authority of one or more powers of attorney. Maurice alleged that his brothers, in bringing the action, acted contrary to his mother’s intentions, and contrary to an oral agreement that his mother had made to convey the property in question to him. He said that his brothers brought the action as a part of a conspiracy to have his mother disinherit him, and to deprive him of the real property to which he was entitled.

Maurice’s brothers moved to dismiss the complaint, and for summary judgment, pointing out that Maurice had lost the ejectment action, and argued that the abuse of process action was simply an attempt to relitigate issues that had been finally decided in the earlier case. At a hearing held on 10 September 1987, Judge J. James McKenna determined that Maurice’s complaint did not state a cause of action for abuse of process, and that in view of the previous final judicial determination of certain facts adverse to Maurice there was no possibility that he could state a good cause of action if he were given leave to amend the complaint. The trial judge also granted requests made by Maurice’s brothers for an award of attorney’s fees, but did not articulate a finding that Maurice was guilty of bad faith or lack of substantial justification in bringing the action. Judge McKenna directed counsel for Maurice’s brothers to submit an appropriate order for his signature.

Maurice was represented at the September 10 hearing by an associate of the attorney who had represented him at the trial of the ejectment action. The associate’s lack of firsthand knowledge concerning the details of the earlier litigation prompted Judge McKenna to declare that he would hear from the principal attorney “if he wants to come back in with regard to all of these matters.” Before any order was signed, Maurice’s principal attorney filed a “Motion for *432 Reconsideration”, and a hearing on that motion was held on 6 October 1987. At the conclusion of that hearing, Judge McKenna said that his mind had not been changed—that he previously believed, and still believed, that Maurice’s action was brought in bad faith. He thereupon signed an order dismissing the action with prejudice, and directing Maurice to pay attorney’s fees to his brothers’ attorneys.

Maurice appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. In his brief, he argued that: 1) his complaint stated a cause of action for abuse of process; 2) the trial judge failed to afford him a sufficient hearing on the question of attorney’s fees; 3) there was insufficient evidence to support a finding of bad faith; and, 4) the trial judge erred in failing to make an independent determination of a reasonable fee to be awarded. As an appendix to his brief, Maurice filed a record extract consisting of the docket entries in the abuse of process case, the complaint, and a transcript of the September 10 hearing.

Two of Maurice’s brothers, the respondents here, filed a motion to dismiss the appeal. They contended that Maurice had violated Maryland Rule 1028 by failing to contact them concerning the proposed contents of the record extract, and by failing to include in the record extract the transcript of the October 6 hearing and other papers necessary for resolution of the issues raised. 1 Citing Rule 1-341, respondents requested an award of attorney’s fees for five hours effort in preparing the motion to dismiss the appeal, at the suggested rate of $120.00 per hour. Maurice filed two answers to the motion. In his first answer, he contended that the hearing at which the attorney’s fees were awarded *433 was that of September 10, and that it was unnecessary, in his opinion, to include a transcript of the argument of counsel at the rehearing of October 6. He proffered, however, that if the court disagreed with his assessment of what was reasonably required, he would promptly print any additional material designated by the court. As to respondents’ request for attorney’s fees, he said:

It is interesting to note that counsel has certainly not indicated any reason why a fee should be awarded in this case other than as a pro forma request, which because of Rule 1-341, now seems to be a request made in all motions filed in the various courts in the State of Maryland.

Maurice concluded by asking that the motion be denied and “that, if the court wishes, this matter be set down for oral hearing.”

In his supplemental answer, filed about six days later, Maurice stated that “to be on the safe side” he was voluntarily filing, as an additional appendix to his brief, the complete transcript of the October 6 hearing. This answer, together with the supplemental transcript to which it referred, apparently crossed in the mail with the court’s order of February 9, 1988, ruling on the motion to dismiss. That order provided that the appeal would be dismissed unless Maurice filed, on or before March 25, a “new record extract in full compliance with Maryland Rule 1028, including all pleadings and exhibits filed in the proceedings below together with the transcript of the hearing held on October 6, 1987----” With regard to the requested attorney’s fees, the order provided:

It is further ORDERED, that counsel fee in the amount of Five hundred ($500.00) dollars be paid by Victor L. Crawford, Esquire, and not his client, Maurice F. Talley, to James J. Debelius, Esquire as an attorney fee in connection with appellees’ Motion to Dismiss.

After some discussion, and in spite of strident demands by respondents that Maurice reprint the transcripts of hearings already provided, Maurice was permitted to file a *434 second supplemental appendix which, when combined with the first two, provided all the information required by the court.

Maurice’s attorney also filed a “request for hearing as to sanctions,” arguing that the court had not made any finding of “willfulness” on his part. He conceded that he may have been guilty of neglect and inadvertence, but contended that he did not act in bad faith, and further argued that he should have been given a full hearing before sanctions were imposed. The request was denied without comment.

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Bluebook (online)
564 A.2d 777, 317 Md. 428, 1989 Md. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talley-v-talley-md-1989.