                          In the Missouri Court of Appeals
                                  Eastern District
                                            SOUTHERN DIVISION


    PAUL L. PASTERNAK                                     )   No. ED102319
                                                          )
            Appellant,                                    )   Appeal from the Circuit Court of
                                                          )   St. Francois County
    vs.                                                   )
                                                          )   Honorable Shawn R. McCarver
    DENISE M. PASTERNAK,                                  )
                                                          )
            Respondent.                                   )   Filed: November 24, 2015

                                                   Introduction

           Paul Pasternak (Father) appeals the trial court’s judgment awarding Denise Pasternak

(Mother) $12,500 in attorney’s fees. In two points on appeal, Father claims that the trial court

erred in ordering Father to pay Mother’s attorney’s fees because (1) the judgment was prohibited

by § 452.377.13,1 which precludes the award of attorney’s fees against any party who objects in

good faith to the relocation of the child’s principal residence, and (2) the judgment was not

supported by substantial evidence. We affirm.

                                               Factual Background

                                2013 Modification and Relocation Proceeding

           Mother and Father previously divorced and shared custody of their children.           In

September 2012, Mother filed a motion to modify child custody seeking sole legal and physical

1
    All statutory references are to RSMo (2000).
custody of the children. Father objected to the motion. In May 2013, before a hearing on the

motion to modify, Mother filed notice of proposed relocation, seeking to relocate the parties’

children from Farmington, Missouri to Silva, Missouri, approximately 50 miles away. Father

objected to the proposed relocation and filed a counter-motion to modify, also seeking sole legal

and physical custody of the children. In August 2013, the trial court granted the relocation and

gave Mother sole legal custody of the children. Mother and Father retained joint physical

custody, but the court modified the custody schedule. Mother requested attorney’s fees for these

trial proceedings, which the trial court denied, noting Father’s good faith objection to the

relocation.

        Father appealed the trial court’s judgment regarding both relocation and custody

(hereinafter, “2013 appeal”).         After this Court’s decision in August 2014, the case was

transferred to the Missouri Supreme Court.              The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s

judgment, concluding that substantial evidence supported relocation and modification of custody.

See Pasternak v. Pasternak, 467 S.W.3d 264 (Mo. banc 2015).

                               Motion for Attorney’s Fees for 2013 Appeal

        In June 2014, Mother filed a motion requesting $23,750 in attorney’s fees for the cost of

the 2013 appeal.2 The parties stipulated that their incomes, expenses, assets and liabilities were

the same from the time of 2013 modification and relocation proceeding (hereinafter, “2013

modification proceeding”), and neither party presented any additional evidence.                       Mother’s

attorney testified that “probably a third of [the total bill] would go toward relocation, and the rest

of it was just — was maybe a mix.” The trial court suggested that Mother’s attorney submit a

bill identifying his hours devoted to relocation, but the attorney stated that because he did not


2
 Mother filed her motion for attorney’s fees for the 2013 appeal on June 12, 2014, after Mother had submitted her
brief to this Court for the 2013 appeal. Oral argument took place on June 24, 2014.


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“necessarily identify what issues I [was] reviewing at any particular point,” the one-third

estimate was “as good as we’re going to get.”

        After the hearing, the trial court awarded Mother $12,500 in attorney’s fees for the

appeal. In its judgment, the trial court noted that Father did not challenge relocation alone in the

2013 appeal, but also raised points concerning custody modification, including his request for

sole legal and physical custody. The trial court also considered “all relevant factors, including

but not limited to, the merits of all aspects of [Father’s] case on appeal.” Father appeals the

award of attorney’s fees.

                                        Standard of Review

        We will reverse the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees only upon the showing of an

abuse of discretion. Aubuchon v. Hale, 453 S.W.3d 318, 325 (Mo. App. E.D. 2014). “To

demonstrate an abuse of discretion, the complaining party must prove that the award is clearly

against the logic of the circumstances and so arbitrary and unreasonable as to shock one’s sense

of justice.” Id.

                                             Discussion

          Point I: § 452.377.13 Does Not Completely Bar an Award of Attorney’s Fees

        In his first point on appeal, Father argues that § 452.377.13 prohibits the trial court from

ordering him to pay any portion of Mother’s attorney’s fees for the 2013 appeal because the trial

court found that his objections to the relocation were in good faith. Mother counters that the

statute does not apply to appeals or, in the alternative, that the trial court can segregate attorney’s

fees between relocation and non-relocation issues.

        Generally, parties in domestic litigation are responsible for their own attorney’s fees.

Bryant v. Bryant, 351 S.W.3d 681, 691 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011). However, under § 452.355.1, a




                                                  3
court, “after considering all relevant factors including the financial resources of both parties, the

merits of the case and the actions of the parties during the pendency of the action,” may order

one party to pay a reasonable amount of the other party’s attorney’s fees. Section 452.377.13

provides an exception to § 452.355.1 and prohibits a trial court from ordering “[a]ny party who

objects in good faith to the relocation of a child’s principal residence . . . to pay the costs and

attorney’s fees of the party seeking to relocate.”

         Invoking § 452.377.13, Father contends that the trial court cannot order him to pay

Mother’s attorney’s fees for the 2013 appeal because Mother was “the relocating party on

appeal.” Father maintains that because the trial court concluded that Father objected to the

relocation in good faith in the 2013 modification proceeding, the court was prohibited from

ordering him to pay Mother’s attorney’s fees. However, appeals are “a distinct stage in the

proceeding” and the court’s denial of attorney’s fees for the trial does not control the ability to

award attorney’s fees for the appeal. Trapani v. Trapani, 686 S.W.2d 877, 878 (Mo. App. E.D.

1985).

         Nonetheless, Father argues that because he objected to the relocation in good faith, the

trial court was precluded from awarding Mother any amount of her attorney’s fees from the

appeal. This argument is without merit. Father’s appeal of the 2013 modification proceeding

was four-fold. In two points, Father challenged relocation and in the other two points, Father

challenged the custody modification.3 Mother requested a total of $23,750 in attorney’s fees for

the appeal, one-third of which Mother’s counsel estimated went toward the relocation issues,



3
  Our Supreme Court rejected all of Father’s points on appeal. In finding that Father’s arguments were without
merit, the Court noted that Father’s contrary evidence was “irrelevant” and “inconsistent with [the] Court’s standard
of review.” See Pasternak, 467 S.W.3d at 270, 274. The Court concluded that there was substantial evidence to
modify custody “based on the evidence that Mother and Father’s relationship was so contentious that they could not
effectively function, communicate, or make joint decisions regarding the children, and that Father’s negative
conduct had a deleterious impact on the children.” Id. at 266.


                                                         4
approximately $7,916.67. Under these circumstances, we cannot conclude that an award of

$12,500—an amount less than the remaining two-thirds of the bill—was an abuse of discretion.

See Aubuchon v. Hale, 453 S.W.3d 318, 325 (Mo. App. E.D. 2014) (concluding that the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in awarding the mother one-fifth of her attorney’s fees on the

appeal of the trial court’s denial of her motion seeking sole custody and relocation of the

children). While the trial court is barred by the statute from awarding attorney’s fees if a party

objects to relocation in good faith, it is nonetheless within the trial court’s discretion to award

attorney’s fees for modification. See Aubuchon, 453 S.W.3d at 325.4 Therefore, the trial court

may segregate attorney’s fees into those that cannot be awarded under § 452.377.13 and those

that are within its discretion to award under § 452.355.1. Id. Accordingly, Point I is denied.

                 Point II: Substantial Evidence Supported the Trial Court’s Award

        In his second point on appeal, Father argues that even if the award of attorney’s fees was

appropriate, the award was not supported by substantial evidence. Mother contends that the

evidence before the trial court was sufficient.

        We again note that under § 452.355.1, a court, “after considering all relevant factors

including the financial resources of both parties, the merits of the case and the actions of the

parties during the pendency of the action,” may order one party to pay a reasonable amount of

the other party’s attorney’s fees. The party requesting attorney’s fees has the burden of proving

that she is entitled to such an award. Bryant, 351 S.W.3d at 691. A trial court has “wide

discretion in awarding attorney’s fees” and “is an expert in the area of attorneys’ fees.”



4
  When a party requests to relocate the children, modification of previous custody arrangements is generally
necessary and allocation of attorney’s fees as relocation fees and modification fees may not be possible. However,
in this case, both parties requested sole physical and legal custody of the children, beyond that required by the
relocation. To the extent that these two issues did not overlap, it is possible to separate the attorney’s fees for
relocation and custody modification.



                                                        5
Downard v. Downard, 292 S.W.3d 345, 350 (Mo. App. E.D. 2009). “[T]he judge who tries a

case is acquainted with the issues and can fix the amount of attorney’s fees without the aid of

evidence” of the actual fees. Fleming v. Fleming, 446 S.W.3d 677, 683 (Mo. App. W.D. 2014)

(affirming the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees despite the lack of evidence of the number of

hours a party’s attorney worked on the case).

       Father contends that because Mother’s counsel could only estimate that one-third of his

fees were for his work on the relocation issue, there was insufficient evidence for the trial court

to determine the award of attorney’s fees and that Mother did not satisfy her burden of proof.

The record reflects that the trial court considered that Mother requested a total of $23,750 in

attorney’s fees from the appeal of the 2013 modification proceeding. The trial court reduced that

number to $15,833.33 to account for Mother’s counsel’s assessment that one-third of the fees

were exclusively for his work on the issue of relocation. The trial court considered the fact that

many of the issues relating to relocation and child custody were overlapping. Additionally, the

trial court was familiar with the parties’ financial resources, the merits of Father’s appeal, as well

as the parties’ actions during the pendency of the action. Accordingly, the trial court awarded

Mother less than two-thirds of her attorney’s fees on appeal, $12,500.

       We conclude that the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees was supported by substantial

evidence. Point II is denied.

                                      Response to the Dissent

         Finally, we address the dissent’s argument that the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees

constitutes an abuse of discretion. The dissent contends that our opinion conflicts with this

Court’s opinion in Orth v. Orth, 637 S.W.2d 201 (Mo. App. E.D. 1982). In Orth, the trial court

awarded the wife fees after a hearing on modification issues “presumably because the court




                                                  6
believed that [the wife] did not have sufficient means to defend or prosecute on her own.” Id. at

207. The Orth court held that the trial court “reached an inconsistent result in failing to provide

for [the] wife’s expenses on appeal when faced with the question several months [after awarding

the wife’s fees for the hearing]; nothing was before the trial court to indicate that the parties’

circumstances had changed.” Id. Furthermore, the court noted that the party in the more

advantageous financial position, the husband, appealed the trial court’s judgment, and as a result,

the wife “would have been obliged to incur considerable expense after trial whether or not she

prosecuted an appeal.” Id. The dissent suggests that Orth created a categorical rule that a trial

court’s order granting or denying attorney’s fees for trial controls whether the court may do the

same for fees for an appeal, and vice versa. The dissent likens the present case to Orth because

the trial court did not award attorney’s fees for the hearing, but awarded fees for the appeal.

         However, Orth does not stand for the proposition that if a trial court denied attorney’s

fees for the hearing, it cannot grant attorney’s fees for an appeal. “An appeal is a distinct stage

in the proceeding for which attorney fees may be granted” and “[t]the denial of attorney fees for

the trial is not controlling.” Trapani v. Trapani, 686 S.W.2d 877, 878 (Mo. App. E.D. 1985).

Further, the decision in Orth is limited to its facts, which are clearly distinguishable from the

present case.5 Here, no attorney’s fees were awarded for the hearing where both sides presented

numerous, heavily disputed facts. On appeal of the custody points, our Supreme Court found

Husband essentially ignored the standard of review and argued irrelevant evidence. The Court

found Father’s arguments to be without merit. Pasternak, 467 S.W.3d at 270.6 We again note


5
  We do agree with the dissent to the extent that there is one similarity between the present case and Orth, in that
Father chose to pursue a meritless appeal, forcing Mother to incur fees defending that appeal. Orth, 637 S.W.2d at
207.
6
  We also agree with the dissent that the trial court did not possess the benefit of the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Pasternak when it wrote its order for fees on appeal. That does not limit the ability of the trial court to analyze those
legal merits. Ultimately, the Supreme Court determined Father’s appeal was meritless, which supports our
conclusion that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding fees for the appeal.


                                                           7
that one of the relevant factors for the trial court to consider in awarding attorney’s fees is the

merits of the case. § 452.355.1. Here, the trial court specifically noted “the merits of all aspects

of [Father’s] case on appeal” in its order for attorney’s fees for the appeal.

       The dissent also states that “the mere filing of an appeal in and of itself” does not justify

the award of attorney’s fees. We agree, and believe that the dissent is misconstruing our opinion

to stand for a proposition that it does not. The filing of the appeal was not the reason for the trial

court’s award. Unlike in Orth, where the main relevant factor—the financial disparities between

the parties—was the same at trial and on appeal, here the main relevant factor—the legal merits

of Father’s case—was different on appeal than at the hearing. The merits of Father’s legal

arguments, given the appellate court’s standard of review, were diminished on appeal compared

to the hearing. A similar conclusion was reached by the Western District in Runyon v. Runyon,

907 S.W.2d 267 (Mo. App. W.D. 1995), which the dissent fails to address. In that case, the

Court did not award fees for the modification hearing but did award fees on appeal. The wife,

invoking Orth, argued this outcome was a “fatal inconsistency.” Id. at 273. The Runyon Court

concluded that Orth did not control and that it did not amount to an abuse of discretion for the

trial court “to order each party to pay their own attorney’s fees at trial simply because [the

husband] was ordered to pay [the wife’s] . . . fees on appeal.” Id. The Court noted that since the

trial, the parties had changed circumstances warranting an award of fees for the appeal. Orth is,

thus, inapposite.




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                                           Conclusion

       The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.


                                             _______________________________
                                             Philip M. Hess, Judge



Lisa S. Van Amburg, C.J., concurs.
James M. Dowd, J., dissents in separate opinion.




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