Washburn v. Washburn

475 A.2d 410, 1984 D.C. App. LEXIS 393
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1984
Docket83-331
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 475 A.2d 410 (Washburn v. Washburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washburn v. Washburn, 475 A.2d 410, 1984 D.C. App. LEXIS 393 (D.C. 1984).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This is an appeal from an order of the Superior Court denying appellant’s motion for attorney’s fees. Appellant had sought an award of $375 “for the actual cost of defending himself” against a motion to hold him in contempt, which was withdrawn by appellee after appellant had filed an opposition pro se. The trial court denied the motion for attorney’s fees, finding that appellee’s actions had not been unreasonable or improper, and that there was no evidence that appellee had acted in bad faith in filing the motion for an adjudica *411 tion of contempt. Although we are troubled by some aspects of the case, we nevertheless affirm the trial court’s ruling.

I

Appellant and appellee were divorced in 1981 after a lengthy and sometimes acrimonious proceeding in the trial court. 1 The judgment awarding appellant the divorce directed him to pay $7,500 in attorney’s fees to his wife’s counsel, in monthly installments of $500, following the transfer of certain properties. The judgment specified that all payments were to be made through the clerk of the Family Division of the Superior Court. By mistake, however, appellant made his first payment in April 1982 by mailing a check directly to appel-lee’s counsel. After rereading the court’s order and discovering his error, he thereafter made all his payments to the clerk of the court. Appellant delivered his check for the May installment to the clerk’s office on May 24, but counsel did not receive the money from the clerk until June 2.

Appellant made the payments for June and July on time, but they were not forwarded promptly to counsel by the clerk. On July 22, having received no payment for June and fearing that he would receive none for July, appellee’s counsel wrote to appellant:

I would like to have these payments made in a timely manner and in accordance with the court order. I do not mind if they are made in the latter part of each month for the month involved, but I do want to receive them within the proper month. I see no necessity for you to make these payments through the court, since you will have a cancelled check from me in every case and can easily show that you have made payment, but I have no objection to the payments coming through the court if you insist on making them that way provided they get here by the end of the month.
I would like to have this matter brought up to date without having to take any further legal action so I urge you to see that the June and July payments are made very promptly, and that future payments be made as indicated above.

Appellant did not respond to this letter. When no payments came in July, appellee filed a motion on August 4 asking the court to hold appellant in contempt for “willful disobedience” of the court’s judgment. Appellant, acting pro se, 2 filed an opposition on August 6, asserting that he had faithfully made the monthly payments to the clerk of the court as the judgment had commanded him to do, and suggesting that appel-lee’s grievance lay with the clerk’s office, not with him.

On August 9 appellee’s counsel wrote to appellant, expressing his surprise at being told that appellant had made the payments in June and July, since he had never received them. He also said that after reading appellant’s opposition, he had spoken with Sidney Sprinkle, head of the finance section of the clerk’s office, who had told him “that there [was] no record of receipt by this office of either the June or July check.” Counsel’s letter concluded:

As I said to you in my earlier letter, all of this turmoil about payments could be easily resolved by your simply sending the payments directly to me by your personal check. I am aware of the final paragraph of Judge Kessler’s original opinion and order which says that all payments are to be made through the clerk of the court, but I am prepared to waive that requirement and have you pay me directly. If you do so, you will have a cancelled check for each payment and there will be no issue as to whether you have paid or not.
*412 In the absence of your agreement to the foregoirig and/or making up the payments that are due, I intend to go forward with my motion because, in fact, I have not received the payments. [Emphasis added.]

Appellant responded in a letter dated August 11, pointing out that he had a “responsibility to paj| the award in the manner ordered by thé court,” and stating that he did not intend! to violate the court’s order merely because counsel was willing to waive the requirement of payment through the clerk’s office. On the same day, August 11, appellee’s counsel received a check for $1,000 from the clerk’s office, “unaccompanied by any explanation of why [he] had previously! been told that the two payments in question had not been received” (Appellee’s Brief at 3). Counsel immediately withdrew th¿ motion to hold appellant in contempt. i

A few ^eeks later appellant filed a motion seeking $375 in “reimbursement” for the “actual cost of defending himself against [appellee’s] frivolous and ill-considered motion!’ After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion in an order which contained threej findings:

1. That the record lacks any evidence showing that the defendant acted in bad faith in filing the Motion to Adjudicate plaintiff in ccjntempt.
2. That th'e defendant’s actions in her attempt to receive the attorneys fees that were due her pursuant to this Court’s order! were not unreasonable or improper in light of the fact that certain payments were not received by her counsel when due
3. That the record indicates that the defendant acted on what she believed to be accurate information from the Superi- or Court’s fijiance office, that no payments had been made for the months of June and July 1982.

The third finding cannot be sustained, because the motion to hold appellant in contempt was filed several days before counsel’s conversation with Mr. Sprinkle; indeed, it is undisputed that counsel called Mr. Sprinkle after reading appellant’s opposition to the motion. The first two findings, however, are supported by the record and give us a sufficient basis to affirm the denial of the motion for attorney’s fees.

II

This court has not yet decided whether a pro se litigant may ever recover attorney’s fees for his own efforts. Almost all the courts that have considered the issue, however, have refused to grant attorney’s fees to pro se litigants, albeit for varying reasons. See Note, Pro Se Can You Sue? Attorney Fees for Pro Se Litigants, 34 Stan.L.Rev. 659, 666-669 (1982). Only the federal courts in the District of Columbia have consistently awarded such fees, and even in these instances the courts have acted under specific statutes authorizing attorney’s fee awards, though not necessarily to pro se litigants. Crooker v. U.S. Department of the Treasury, 213 U.S.App. D.C.

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Bluebook (online)
475 A.2d 410, 1984 D.C. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washburn-v-washburn-dc-1984.