William Byarley v. Karen Berg in Her Capacity as Successor Trustee of the Gordon Living
This text of William Byarley v. Karen Berg in Her Capacity as Successor Trustee of the Gordon Living (William Byarley v. Karen Berg in Her Capacity as Successor Trustee of the Gordon Living) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
RENDERED: AUGUST 14, 2020; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals
NO. 2018-CA-001848-MR
WILLIAM BYARLEY, PEARL MARIE BYARLEY, RAYMOND CROFT, AND JUDY ANN CROFT APPELLANTS
APPEAL FROM CRITTENDEN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE C. RENE’ WILLIAMS, JUDGE ACTION NO. 16-CI-00014
KAREN BERG, IN HER CAPACITY AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE OF THE GORDON LIVING TRUST; AND GORDON FARMS, INC. APPELLEES
OPINION AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; ACREE AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
ACREE, JUDGE: William and Pearl Byarley and Raymond and Judy Croft
(Appellants) appeal the Crittenden Circuit Court’s summary judgment in favor of
Karen Berg, as Successor Trustee of the Gordon Living Trust. The Appellants allege the circuit court improperly applied the law when it denied them recovery of
attorney’s fees. Finding no error, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
On February 4, 2016, Berg filed a Petition for Declaratory Judgment,
seeking determination of the legal status of an unpaved, dirt road called “Cletis
Millikan Road” (Road) in Crittenden County. Berg was the owner of two tracts of
land separated by the Road. Her petition sought a determination either that the
Road: (1) was a private road, which required an easement for utility purposes; or
(2) was a public road to which every member of the public is granted unfettered
access.
Without access to the Road, Berg’s property would be landlocked.
Without the proper establishment of an easement over the existing roadway for
ingress and egress, Appellants’ property would continue to be landlocked as well.
Appellants took issue with Berg’s attempt to make the pathway a public road or
grant an easement across the property for utilities. Therefore, Appellants filed a
counterclaim against Berg for attorney’s fees and prospective damages, calling her
suit an “improper action.”
The circuit court granted a partial judgment on the pleadings and
established an easement over the existing roadway for the purposes of ingress and
egress. It further ordered “all other matters/issues/claims raised in the pleadings,
-2- including the scope of use of the existing roadway by the parties hereto, their heirs,
successors and assignees, shall remain subject to further adjudication before this
Court.”
Berg eventually sold the property and filed a motion to dismiss
because she no longer had an interest in the subject matter of the action. The
circuit court granted this motion in its November 8, 2018 order. Also, in this order,
the circuit court granted Berg’s summary judgment motion on Appellants’
counterclaim for attorney’s fees and prospective damages. The court found that
attorney’s fees and prospective damages for diminution in fair market value were
inappropriate and unrecoverable. This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The standard of review when a circuit court grants a motion for
summary judgment is “whether the trial court correctly found that there were no
genuine issues as to any material fact and that the moving party was entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.” Scifres v. Kraft, 916 S.W.2d 779, 781 (Ky. App.
1996). The trial court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
non-moving party, and summary judgment should be granted only if it appears
impossible the non-moving party will be able to produce evidence at trial
warranting a judgment in his favor. Steelvest, Inc. v. Scansteel Service Center,
Inc., 807 S.W.2d 476, 480-82 (Ky. 1991). The party seeking summary disposition
-3- bears the initial burden of establishing that no genuine issue of material fact exists,
and the burden then shifts to the party opposing the motion to present “at least
some affirmative evidence showing that there is a genuine issue of material fact for
trial.” Id. at 482.
ANALYSIS
The only issue Appellants raise on appeal is the circuit court’s denial
of attorney’s fees in its summary judgment order. Appellants argue the circuit
court improperly applied the law established in Bell v. Commonwealth, Cabinet for
Health and Family Services, Department for Community Based Services, which
says:
[T]he only appropriate award of attorney’s fees as a sanction comes when the very integrity of the court is in issue. To that end, attorney’s fees may be awarded under Civil Rule 11 for filing pleadings that are not “well grounded in fact,” not “warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification or reversal of existing law,” or that are filed for “any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation.”
423 S.W.3d 742, 749 (Ky. 2014) (quoting CR1 11).
Appellants parroted and paraphrased Bell suggesting there were five
factual issues that could only be decided by the trier of fact, namely whether
1 Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.
-4- Berg’s action was: (1) not well grounded in fact; (2) not warranted under existing
law; (3) made solely to harass Appellants; (4) made to needlessly increase
Appellants’ cost to defend same; and (5) whether Berg’s delay of eighteen months
before filing a motion to dismiss their remaining claims caused an unnecessary
delay in the action.
Appellants’ reliance on Bell is misplaced. To begin with, Bell also
stated that attorney’s fees are “not awarded as costs to the prevailing party unless
there is a statute permitting it or as a term of a contractual agreement between the
parties. They may also be awarded as a sanction but only under limited
circumstances.” Id. at 748. Appellants were not the prevailing party and there is
no statute or contract on point. Appellants’ only remaining argument is that
attorney’s fees are necessary as a sanction. Yet, Appellants identify no evidence
that a sanction is justified.
Berg’s defense to Appellants’ pursuit of CR 11 sanctions by means of
a summary judgment motion may have been mildly unconventional. However, we
see no reason, given these facts, why the grant of that motion was wrong.
Our procedural rules entrust to the trial court the responsibility of
deciding whether to impose CR 11 sanctions. In that process, the court sits as
factfinder. “[W]here sanctions have been denied, our review is limited to a
determination of whether the trial court abused its discretion.” Clark Equipment
-5- Co., Inc. v. Bowman, 762 S.W.2d 417, 420 (Ky. App. 1988). We see no abuse of
such discretion here.
Furthermore, what was stated in Bell is also directly applicable here:
[W]here attorney’s fees are appropriate as a sanction, it is . . . because there has been an intrusion on the very power of the court. Any cases to the contrary are misguided, for only in this narrow use to support the integrity of the court may attorney’s fees be awarded without subverting the “American Rule” of not awarding attorney’s fees as costs.
The integrity of the court is not in question here.
423 S.W.3d at 749 (footnote omitted). Consequently, dispensing with Appellants’
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