Wednesday, November 23, 2022

Two Decisions the Day Before Thanksgiving (By the SD Supreme Court)

 

The SD Supreme Court handed down two decisions this morning:

 

  1. Appeal (from grant of summary judgment) dismissed;

 

  1. Attorney fees in regard to trust supervision litigation addressed.

 

Summaries follows:

 

GOENS v. FDT, LLC, 2022 S.D. 71: Plaintiffs sued two Defendants.  Defendant #1 filed Answer.  Defendant # 2 field an Answer and a Counterclaim. Trial court granted Summary Judgment for Defendant # 1.  Plaintiff appealed.  The SD Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, noting that there was no certification under SDCL 15-6-54(b) which is required for the rendering of an appealable final judgment, stating:

 

[¶5.] … [T]his interlocutory judgment “is not a final judgment under SDCL 15-6-54(b) and is not appealable.” Because active claims remained in this action at the time of appeal and no Rule 54(b) certification was made, we dismiss for lack of appellate jurisdiction under SDCL 15-26A-3.

 

The Court’s ruling is unanimous (5-0) with opinion authored by Justice Myren.

 

MATTER OF PETERSEN TRUSTS, 2022 S.D. 72: This litigation involves two trusts. Daughter Sally filed suit seeking reformation of one of the trusts.  Daughter Mindy opposed Sally’s suit and also filed suit seeking clarification and other relief. The trial court ruled against Mindy, but ruled in favor of Sally and granted reformation.  Also, the trial court denied Sally and her husband’s request for attorney fees and expenses, “concluding the trust did not receive an economic benefit from the litigation, which, the court determined, was required to justify reimbursement from the trust.”  

 

Sally appeals.  The sole issue on the appeal relates to the trial court’s ruling on attorney fee and expenses.  Sally (& her husband) also request an award appellate attorney fees.   

 

The SD Supreme Court denied appellate attorney fees but otherwise reversed and remanded the issue of attorney fees as handled by the trial court.  The Court took provided a more liberal interpretation of the attorney fee statute than did the trial court, stating:

 

[¶42.] Attorney fees are authorized in trust supervision proceedings under SDCL 15-17-38 where the litigation has been beneficial to the trust estate. Though the benefit will often be expressed in terms of an economic benefit, the concept is broader than that and can include instances, such as this one, where a beneficiary’s litigation was necessary to uphold the settlor’s universally acknowledged intent. In those cases where the benefit asserted by an attorney fees applicant is economic, the applicant must show that the litigation produced a benefit beyond that which the trust estate would have otherwise realized.

 

[¶43.] Here, then, attorney fees are authorized for Sally’s efforts to vindicate her father’s intent. Short of litigation, there was no other means for her to do so. We reverse the circuit court’s denial of attorney fees for Sally’s litigation efforts to obtain the homestead. However, the circuit court correctly determined that attorney fees were not authorized for Mike and Sally’s efforts to resist Mindy’s attempt to reform the Land Trust and retire the mortgage debt sooner, and we affirm this determination.

 

[¶44.] Finally, the plain fact that fees are authorized does not make a fee award a fait accompli. See Ctr. of Life Church v. Nelson, 2018 S.D. 42, ¶ 34, 913 .W.2d 105, 114 (holding the fact that a court was authorized to exercise its discretion and award attorney fees did not obligate it to do so). Whether to exercise its discretion to award attorney fees and, if so, in what amount are beyond the issues presented here, and we remand the case for the court to consider these questions.

 

 The Court’s decision is unanimous (5-0) with opinion authored by Justice Salter.

 

These decisions may be accessed at

 

http://ujs.sd.gov/Supreme_Court/opinions.aspx .