Waters v. District Court for Seventeenth Judicial District

935 P.2d 981, 1997 Colo. LEXIS 275, 1997 WL 157949
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 7, 1997
Docket96SA372
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 935 P.2d 981 (Waters v. District Court for Seventeenth Judicial District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waters v. District Court for Seventeenth Judicial District, 935 P.2d 981, 1997 Colo. LEXIS 275, 1997 WL 157949 (Colo. 1997).

Opinion

Justice MULLARKEY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The petitioner, Doris A. Waters, Esq. (Waters), filed this original proceeding pursuant to C.A.R. 21 seeking a writ of mandamus compelling the respondent trial court (respondent court), the Honorable John J. Vigil, to authorize and order payment of certain attorney fees and costs to Waters. Waters seeks these funds to compensate her for her work as court-appointed counsel in a dependency and neglect proceeding. She also seeks payment for the attorney fees and costs she has incurred in bringing this original proceeding.

We issued a rule to show cause why the relief requested by Waters should not be granted. We now hold that the respondent court abused its discretion when it rescinded her appointment as counsel and denied her *984 all of her attorney fees and costs. Accordingly, we make the rule absolute and direct the respondent court to conduct a hearing to reconsider the indigency status and eligibility for court-appointed counsel of Waters’s client and to order payment of Waters’s attorney fees and costs consistent with this opinion. However, we find no basis to award attorney fees and costs to Waters for the expense of bringing this original proceeding.

I.

On or about January 15,1995, Waters filed a “Motion for Court Appointed Attorney,” in accordance with section 19-3-202, 8B C.R.S. (1996 Supp.), 1 of the Children’s Code, on behalf of a respondent father, R.F., in a dependency and neglect proceeding. That proceeding began in early January 1995, when the Adams County Department of Human Services (ACDHS) filed a petition in dependency and neglect regarding R.F.’s minor child. 2

On January 23, 1995, the trial court in the dependency and neglect proceedings, the Honorable John E. Popovich, Jr., granted Waters’s motion for court appointment and found in part:

1. [R.F.] is indigent, and without funds to continue to retain the services of private counsel.
2. Doris A. Waters, Esq., is appointed effective January 6, 1995, as counsel for [R.F.].
3. Doris A. Waters, Esq., shall be paid by the State at the rates established for Court appointed counsel in dependency and neglect proceedings.

Waters represented R.F. as his court-appointed counsel for the next one and one-half years. At several points over the course of the proceedings, R.F. provided the trial court with information regarding his employment and financial status. In particular, on November 15, 1995, at the court’s request, R.F. filed an affidavit regarding his financial status. In January 1996, Judge Popovich completed his rotation in juvenile court, and the Honorable John J. Vigil began presiding over the proceedings at issue. On February 2, 1996, R.F. attended a hearing on the issue of child support, at which time the respondent court specifically found R.F.’s gross monthly income to be $1,078.00 for the purposes of computing child support. On or about April 14, 1996, Waters submitted a “Motion and Order for Payment of Excess Attorney Fees” for all the fees and costs incurred from the date of her appointment up to March 26, 1996. She submitted an itemized billing statement with her motion and requested a total sum of $2,855.04. At the request of the clerk of the court, on May 16, 1996 Waters resubmitted to the court a copy of R.F.’s financial affidavit dated November 15, 1995.

On May 21, 1996, the respondent court issued an order denying Waters’s motion for payment of excess fees. The order stated that “[a] review of [R.F.’s] financial] af-fid[avit] indicates that he is above the indi-gency guidelines for appointment of counsel. Accordingly, this request for fees is denied. Counsel may submit a motion for an order requiring [R.F.] to pay said fees.” This order was the first determination of R.F.’s indigency status since the court’s initial determination appointing Waters at the outset of the proceedings on January 23,1995.

The parties appeared in court on June 6, 1996 for a Permanency Planning Hearing. At that time, Waters requested clarification and the respondent court made additional findings regarding the issue of Waters’s court appointment and motion for attorney fees and costs. The respondent court stated in relevant part:

*985 With respect to the issue of who pays for [R.F.’s] counsel’s fees, I’m going to order that [R.F.] continue to be responsible for his own attorneys fees. I’ve reviewed the affidavit that was submitted and I find [R.F.] is above the guidelines for court appointed counsel.

Waters requested clarification on the issue, asking the following:

I would like to know at what point in time he was responsible for that, just for my— like I said, for practical purposes because I was appointed by the Court. I am aware of this Court, of your Honor’s ruling recently but I don’t know at what point in time [R.F.] or that the Court was referring to that he’s to continue private counsel because I was laboring under the assumption for about two years now that I was court appointed on his case.

The respondent court answered, in part:

To the extent that you were laboring under that deception, I’m rescinding any of your prior orders determining that he’s no longer indigent and that it’s appropriate, based on his employment status, to make him responsible for all of his attorneys fees.

Thus, the respondent court rescinded Waters’s appointment and denied her all of her attorney fees and costs.

Waters now petitions this court for a writ of mandamus compelling the respondent court to order payment of her attorney fees and costs in the amount of $2,780.04, incurred as court-appointed counsel in representation of R.F., and attorney fees and costs in the amount of $1,310.00, incurred in preparation and filing of the petition now before us.

II.

Waters advances two principal arguments: (1) that the respondent court abused its discretion in determining that the client for whom she was appointed counsel was no longer indigent and therefore was ineligible for court-appointed counsel, and (2) that assuming arguendo that her client’s indigency status changed, the respondent court abused its discretion in denying her all of her attorney fees and costs. We will address Waters’s contentions in turn.

A.

As an initial matter, Waters asserts that the respondent court abused its discretion in finding R.F. to be ineligible for court-appointed counsel because the respondent court failed to consider R.F.’s total financial circumstances. In particular, Waters contends that the respondent court refused to permit R.F. an opportunity to present information other than the November 15, 1995 financial affidavit regarding R.F.’s financial circumstances. Waters cites Nikander v. District Court,

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Bluebook (online)
935 P.2d 981, 1997 Colo. LEXIS 275, 1997 WL 157949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-v-district-court-for-seventeenth-judicial-district-colo-1997.