Ann Marie Jahimiak v. David Ralph Jahimiak
Citation410 Wis. 2d 557, 2024 WI App 5
Date Filed2023-12-21
Docket2023AP000573
Cited2 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
2024 WI App 5
COURT OF APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
PUBLISHED OPINION
Case No.: 2023AP573
Complete Title of Case:
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF:
ANN MARIE JAHIMIAK,
PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,
V.
DAVID RALPH JAHIMIAK,
RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
Opinion Filed: December 21, 2023
Submitted on Briefs: September 14, 2023
JUDGES: Kloppenburg, P.J., Blanchard, and Taylor, JJ.
Appellant
ATTORNEYS: On behalf of the respondent-appellant, the cause was submitted on the
briefs of Amy Hetzner of Schmidt Rupke Tess-Mattner & Fox, S.C.,
Brookfield.
Respondent
ATTORNEYS: On behalf of the petitioner-respondent, the cause was submitted on the
brief of Laura J. Seaton of Bosshard Parke, Ltd., La Crosse.
2024 WI App 5
COURT OF APPEALS
DECISION NOTICE
DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If
published, the official version will appear in
the bound volume of the Official Reports.
December 21, 2023
A party may file with the Supreme Court a
Samuel A. Christensen petition to review an adverse decision by the
Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and
RULE 809.62.
Appeal No. 2023AP573 Cir. Ct. No. 1997FA501
STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF:
ANN MARIE JAHIMIAK,
PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,
V.
DAVID RALPH JAHIMIAK,
RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for La Crosse County:
RAMONA A. GONZALEZ, Judge. Affirmed in part; reversed in part and
remanded.
Before Kloppenburg, P.J., Blanchard, and Taylor, JJ.
¶1 BLANCHARD, J. David Jahimiak and Ann Jahimiak were divorced
in 1999. David appeals rulings made by the circuit court in 2023 regarding Davidâs
No. 2023AP573
motion to modify maintenance payments and awarding attorneyâs fees to Ann.1 The
courtâs rulings resulted from a hearing de novo that followed a court commissioner
order.
¶2 As a threshold issue, David contends that the circuit court lost
competency to hold the hearing de novo, and the parties must follow the court
commissionerâs order, because the circuit court held its hearing more than 60 days
after Ann filed a motion seeking the hearing. See WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3) (2021-
22) (âThe [circuit] court shall hold a hearing de novo no later than 60 days from the
date of the filing of the motionâ seeking the hearing de novo).2 We reject this
argument, based on our interpretation of the word âshallâ in § 767.17(3). In a case
of first impression, we conclude that this imposes a directory duty on the circuit
court, not a mandatory duty, and therefore the court did not lose competency to hold
the hearing when it did.
¶3 Separately, David argues that the circuit court erroneously exercised
its discretion in ordering modification of his monthly maintenance to $3,850, and
that he should pay less. We conclude that David has shown that the court failed to
explain adequately the basis for this award and our independent review of the record
does not reveal a basis. Accordingly, we remand for further proceedings at which
the court is to explain the basis for whatever modification decision the court deems
appropriate, as the facts existed when the court issued its ruling in February 2023.
1
Because the parties share a surname, we refer to them by their first names.
2
The statute contains an exception to the 60-day limit, not relevant here, for cases
involving a proposed relocation of a child to a new residence 100 miles or more from the other
parent. WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3).
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise noted.
2
No. 2023AP573
¶4 David also contends that the circuit court erroneously exercised its
discretion in awarding Ann some of her attorneyâs fees. We conclude that David
fails to show that the court erroneously exercised its discretion in awarding the
attorneyâs fees.
BACKGROUND
¶5 By the time of the 1999 divorce, Ann and David had been married for
more than 27 years. At that time, Ann was 49, worked as a sales clerk part time,
and attended college part time. David was 51 and worked as a self-employed
dentist. The circuit court awarded Ann âpermanent spousal maintenance of $4,500
per month,â which âshall continue until the death of either party or [Annâs]
remarriage.â3 However, despite using the term âpermanent,â the court also stated
that â[t]he amount of maintenance may be reviewed by the Court when [David]
reaches an appropriate age of retirement, which this Court now anticipates being
age 65.â4
3
The Hon. John A. Damon presided at the time of the divorce in 1999. The 2023 rulings
challenged in this appeal were made by the Hon. Ramona A. Gonzalez.
4
We note for context an earlier appeal to this court in this case. In 2000, Ann filed a
motion in the circuit court (Judge Damon presiding) seeking an order increasing maintenance based
on the proposition that David had experienced favorable substantial changes of financial
circumstances, while her own financial circumstances had remained the same. Jahimiak v.
Jahimiak, No. 2001AP0167, unpublished slip op., ¶4 (WI App July 6, 2001). The circuit court
denied Annâs motion, concluding that Davidâs improved financial circumstances did not constitute
a substantial change of circumstances, and Ann appealed. Id., ¶5. We affirmed in a per curiam
opinion, based in part on the observations that Annâs financial circumstances were âconsiderably
better off than the court contemplated at the time of the divorce,â as a result of Ann receiving in
the judgment of divorce âliquid assets totaling some $500,000 with no debts,â and that Ann
conceded that, in the meantime, she had failed to âwisely use[] her liquid assets.â Id., ¶7 & n.2.
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No. 2023AP573
¶6 In September 2020, when David was 73, he brought a motion,
accompanied by an affidavit, requesting a termination or reduction of his
maintenance obligation, pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 767.59, based on factors that
included Davidâs work status and health issues. Ann opposed Davidâs motion. The
court commissioner held a hearing, followed by a hearing de novo before the circuit
court in September 2021. The circuit court denied Davidâs motion, leaving the
monthly amount at $4,500. The court determined that there was âno reasonâ to
modify the original maintenance order because David had not yet retired from his
dental practice âand there was no substantial change in circumstances in 2021 to
change the amount of spousal maintenance.â David represented at a September
2021 hearing that he planned to fully retire on November 15, 2021.5
¶7 On October 19, 2021, David filed the motion at issue in this appeal,
with an accompanying affidavit. He sought âan order terminating maintenance as
of November 18th, 2021[,] based on the facts that David ⊠is undergoing a spinal
fusion at that time and will be unable to work for a minimum of three months,â
âwith a recovery expected to be approximately 12 months,â and that he had âentered
an agreement to terminate his ownership in the dental practice and to cease operation
as of November 12, 2021.â
5
This resulted in another prior appeal to this court. As referenced below in the course of
discussion regarding Davidâs current challenge to the February 2023 court order requiring him to
pay attorneyâs fees, David filed an appeal challenging the September 2021 circuit court decision
(Judge Gonzalez presiding) to deny his October 2020 motion to revise his maintenance obligation.
Jahimiak v. Jahimiak, No. 2021AP1863, unpublished slip op. and order (WI App June 30, 2022).
His only argument in this prior appeal was that Ann lost the chance for a hearing de novo because
she violated a local rule of the La Crosse County Circuit Court that required motions seeking a
hearing de novo to be filed no more than 30 days after the court commissionerâs decision. Id. In
a summary order, we concluded that the circuit court properly exercised its discretion by enlarging
the time for Ann to seek the hearing de novo. Id.
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No. 2023AP573
¶8 After hearing evidence, the court commissioner rendered an oral
decision on June 8, 2022. As memorialized in a written order issued on July 25,
2022, the commissioner denied the request to terminate maintenance, but ordered
that monthly maintenance payments be reduced to $2,800 and that any outstanding
arrearages be vacated.
¶9 On June 10, 2022, Ann filed a motion for a hearing de novo in the
circuit court. The motion noticed the hearing for August 22. On August 18, David
filed a motion asking the circuit court to refrain from holding the hearing de novo
because it had not been held within 60 days of Annâs June 10 motion, as required
by WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3).6
¶10 The circuit court commenced the hearing de novo on the day noticed
in Annâs motion, August 22. At the outset of the hearing, the court briefly addressed
and denied Davidâs motion based on the 60-day time limit. The courtâs reasoning
involved the concept that David forfeited an objection based on a lack of court
competency when he failed, upon his receipt of Annâs June 10 motion, to object to
the August 22 noticed date.7
¶11 After taking evidence over the course of one day each in August,
September, and October 2022, and considering proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law submitted by the parties, the circuit court issued a written order
in February 2023 for the following: David to pay Ann $3,850 per month as of
6
As discussed in more detail in the text below, WIS. STAT. § 767.17 was significantly
changed by 2021 Wisconsin Act 205, effective March 20, 2022. Ann does not dispute that the
changed provisions were in effect when David filed his motion relying on § 767.17(3).
7
We need not, and do not, address the circuit courtâs forfeiture rationale for denying
Davidâs motion based on WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3), given our decision that the 60-day time limit is
directory.
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No. 2023AP573
October 1, 2022, ending upon the death of either party or Annâs remarriage; David
to pay Ann $1,200 in outstanding attorneyâs fees from an appeal to this court, plus
$19,000 âtrial court attorney fees and costs in order to level the playing field
between the parties and to act as a deterrent for any future meritless litigation or bad
faith actions.â David appeals.
DISCUSSION
I. FAILURE TO HOLD DE NOVO HEARING WITHIN 60 DAYS
¶12 There is no dispute that the circuit court held the hearing de novo more
than 60 days after Ann moved for it. Therefore, we must interpret the meaning of
âshallâ in WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3)âs requirement that â[t]he court shall hold a
hearing de novo no later than 60 days from the date of the filing of the motion âŠ.â
(Emphasis added.) Whether the circuit court lost competency to hold the hearing
de novo turns on whether the 60-day time limit is mandatory or directory. See State
v. Olson, 2019 WI App 61, ¶11,389 Wis. 2d 257
,936 N.W.2d 178
(âA partyâs failure to comply with a statutory time limit deprives a court of competency to proceed only when the time limit is mandatory.â). If âshallâ in this context is mandatory, then the timing of the hearing deprived the court of competency to hold the hearing. But if âshallâ is directory, then the court retained competency. Seeid.
Whether a statutory time limit is mandatory or directory presents an issue of
statutory interpretation that we review de novo. Id., ¶10.
¶13 âThe word âshallâ is presumed mandatory when it appears in a
statute.â Id., ¶12. âWhen used in a statute imposing a time limit, however, the word
âshallâ can nevertheless be âconstrued as directory if necessary to carry out the
legislatureâs clear intent.ââ Id. (quoting Karow v. Milwaukee Cnty. Civil Serv.
Commân, 82 Wis. 2d 565, 571,263 N.W.2d 214
(1978)).
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No. 2023AP573
¶14 We rely on the following factors to determine whether a statutory time
limit using the word âshallâ is mandatory or directory:
(1) the purpose of the statute; (2) the statuteâs history;
(3) whether a penalty or prohibition is imposed for the
violation of the time limit; and (4) the consequences of
interpreting the statutory time limit as either mandatory or
directory, including whether the failure to act within the time
limit works an injury or wrong [to persons other than the
party that failed to act within the limit].
Olson, 389 Wis. 2d 257, ¶13 (citing State v. R.R.E.,162 Wis. 2d 698, 708, 711
,470 N.W.2d 283
(1991) (stating that pertinent âfactorsâ âinclude âthe objectives sought
to be accomplished by the statute, its history, the consequences which would follow
from the alternative interpretations, and whether a penalty is imposed for its
violation.ââ (quoted source omitted))).8
¶15 We first provide additional background for context and then explain
our conclusions based on each of the four factors.9
A. Additional background
¶16 Before WIS. STAT. § 767.17 was repealed and recreated in 2021
Wisconsin Act 205, the pertinent statutes were spare. Section 767.17 (2019-20)
stated in its entirety: âA decision of a circuit court commissioner under
[Chapter 767, âActions Affecting the Familyâ] is reviewable under [WIS. STAT.
§] 757.69(8).â In turn, § 757.69 addressed the powers and duties of court
8
We observe that, given the potential for âshallâ to be ambiguous depending on its
statutory context, the combined use of these four factors to determine legislative intent is a specific
application of the general rule that when a statute is ambiguous courts may look beyond intrinsic
sources and consider extrinsic sources such as legislative history. See State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit
Court for Dane Cnty., 2004 WI 58, ¶¶48-50,271 Wis. 2d 633
,681 N.W.2d 110
.
9
In their initial briefing, neither side sufficiently developed an argument on the
mandatory-directory issue. We requested, and have now reviewed, supplemental letter briefs.
7
No. 2023AP573
commissioners. The referenced subsection (8) stated in its entirety (as it continues
to state after enactment of Act 205):
Any decision of a circuit court commissioner shall be
reviewed by the judge of the branch of court to which the
case has been assigned, upon motion of any party. Any
determination, order, or ruling by a circuit court
commissioner may be certified to the branch of court to
which the case has been assigned, upon a motion of any party
for a hearing de novo.
Sec. 757.69(8) (2019-20). Also pertinent for context are WIS. STAT. §§ 757.68(1)
and 757.69(1), which have not been changed by Act 205 and which create the court
commissioner role within Wisconsinâs circuit courts. They define the
commissionersâ powers and dutiesâwith commissioners to be appointed in
numbers deemed ânecessary for the efficient administration of judicial business
within the circuit courtsâ of Wisconsin counties. See § 757.68(1).
¶17 Although our primary focus is subsection (3), we now quote in its
entirety WIS. STAT. § 767.17 as repealed and recreated:
De novo review. (1) RIGHT TO DE NOVO REVIEW.
Any decision of a circuit court commissioner under [WIS.
STAT. ch. 767, âActions Affecting the Familyâ] shall be
reviewed by the judge of the branch of court to which the
case has been assigned, upon motion of any party. Any
determination, order, or ruling by a circuit court
commissioner under this chapter may be certified to the
branch of court to which the case has been assigned, upon a
motion of any party for a hearing de novo. A party is
required to be present at the hearing in order to seek a de
novo review. The right to seek a de novo review does not
apply to stipulations entered into between the parties.
Notices requesting a hearing de novo will not stay the order
unless the trial court specifically grants a stay of the order.
(2) TIME LIMITS. If a party seeks to have the trial
court conduct a hearing de novo of a determination, order, or
ruling entered by a court commissioner in an action affecting
the family under this chapter, the party shall file a motion for
a hearing de novo within 20 calendar days of the oral
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No. 2023AP573
decision of the court commissioner or within 20 calendar
days of the mailing of a written decision or order by the court
commissioner if the decision or order was not given orally
by the court commissioner at the time of the hearing. As set
forth under [WIS. STAT. §] 801.15(1), 20 calendar days are
counted consecutively and include weekends and holidays.
(3) HEARING. The court shall hold a hearing de novo
no later than 60 days from the date of the filing of the motion
under this section, except as otherwise required under [WIS.
STAT.] 767.481[, addressing cases involving a proposed
relocation of a child to a new residence 100 miles or more
from the other parent].
¶18 The phrase âhearing de novoâ is used consistently in both the old and
new versions of WIS. STAT. § 767.17. Pre-Act 205 case law established what this
means, and neither party here argues that it has a different meaning now: the circuit
court conducts âliterally a new hearing,â which requires the circuit court to take âa
fresh look at the issues, including the taking of testimony.â See Stuligross v.
Stuligross, 2009 WI App 25, ¶¶12-13,316 Wis. 2d 344
,763 N.W.2d 241
(a de novo
hearing is a âânew hearing of a matter, conducted as if the original hearing had not
taken place.ââ (quoting BLACKâS LAW DICTIONARY 738 (8th ed. 2004)). In this
case, for example, the circuit court extended the hearing over the course of three
days in three successive months in order to accomplish this âfresh lookâ based on
all relevant evidence.
B. Legislative purposes of WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3)
¶19 The first factor, as identified above, involves ââthe objectives sought
to be accomplished by the statute.ââ R.R.E., 162 Wis. 2d at 708 (quoted source
omitted). We conclude that on balance this factor does not favor either a mandatory
or directory construction of âshall,â given potentially competing legislative
objectives. In short, two evident objectives support the directory interpretation
while two other evident objectives support the mandatory interpretation. The
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No. 2023AP573
directory-supporting objectives are creating efficiency for circuit courts and
providing for circuit court reviews of commissioner rulings. The mandatory-
supporting objectives are creating statewide uniformity in resolving disputes in
family law cases and assuring promptness in resolving such disputes.
¶20 While it pre-dated Act 205, we consider the following observations
from an opinion of this court to be pertinent to an understanding of some legislative
purposes behind WIS. STAT. § 767.17, even after the statute was repealed and
recreated, based on what remains in the statutes after the legislative changes. See
Nehls v. Nehls, 2012 WI App 85,343 Wis. 2d 499
,819 N.W.2d 335
. In Nehls, we
noted that the legislature has authorized the creation of the court commissioner
position, including directing the use of commissioners to resolve disputes in family
law cases, âto increase efficiency while still affording the safeguard of circuit court
review of all decisions, upon motion, and a de novo hearing in contested matters.â
Id., ¶13. In other words, two purposes are to use court commissioner hearings to
help the circuit courts operate more efficiently and to âafford[] the safeguard of
circuit court review.â See WIS. STAT. § 757.68(1) (commissioner appointments to
be made as ânecessary for the efficient administration of judicial business within
the circuit courtsâ).
¶21 The purposes of efficiency and âsafeguard of circuit court reviewâ
continue to be objectives of WIS. STAT. § 767.17, even after legislative changes. In
support, we note that the legislature has maintained the court commissioner function
of providing the parties with an initial ruling by a neutral decision maker, while also
maintaining a de novo level of review by circuit courtsâproviding the parties with
an opportunity for a new hearing without deference to prior decisions of the court
commissioner. Further, circuit court review remains necessary for the parties to
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No. 2023AP573
retain the right to appellate review.10 The circuit courts and parties continue to
benefit from the efficiency of court commissioner rulings, some percentage of
which, for example, are not appealed to the circuit court. At the same time, the
parties retain the option to obtain a completely âfresh lookâ by an elected judge, not
an appointed court commissioner, as well as review by the appellate courts. These
objectives of efficiency and the safeguard of circuit court (and appellate) review are
not in themselves diminished by the changes to § 767.17.
¶22 At the same time, also evident are other potentially competing
legislative purposes: creating uniformity in time limits applied by individual circuit
courts and across the stateâs counties (given the potential for varying local rules
between counties); and encouraging promptness in the resolution of family law
disputes. Both the new 20-day time limit for the filing of a motion for hearing de
novo, WIS. STAT. § 767.17(2), and the new 60-day time limit for the holding of a
hearing de novo, § 767.17(3), are intended to create a statewide presumptive 80-day
target date for resolution of a family law issue from the time the court commissioner
acts to the time when a requested hearing de novo is âheld.â As to uniformity, this
has virtues that include allowing counsel and parties to accurately anticipate
timelines. As to promptness, its advantages are obvious for family law disputes,
especially those affecting children.
¶23 We recognize that, in itself, a legislative goal of establishing a uniform
time limit generally counts in favor of a mandatory interpretation. At the same time,
10
A party cannot appeal a circuit court commissionerâs written order, but must instead
first obtain a final judgment or order from a circuit court. See WIS. STAT. RULE 809.01(1); Dane
County v. C.M.B., 165 Wis. 2d 703, 709,478 N.W.2d 385
(1992). Thus, a party deprived of a
chance to obtain a final judgment or order on the merits in the circuit court is deprived of any
chance for appellate court review of the only merits decision, the one rendered by the court
commissioner.
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No. 2023AP573
we reject Davidâs attempt to suggest that one opinion of our supreme court stands
for the proposition that, across legal contexts, a legislative goal of statewide
uniformity that involves use of the word âshallâ dictates a mandatory interpretation.
See Wagner v. State Med. Examining Bd., 181 Wis. 2d 633, 643-44,511 N.W.2d 874
(1994) (construing as mandatory deadlines for service of notices of appearance and for agency transmission of records of administrative proceedings set forth in statutes that used âshallâ in WIS. STAT. ch. 227). Because of its differing context, the brief discussion by our supreme court in Wagner appears to add nothing to the analysis here. Seeid.
The court appeared to rest its analysis on the specific structure and purposes of the administrative law defined in chapter 227 and the court did not intend, as David suggests, to announce a rule of interpretation that equates the goal of uniformity with the goal of mandatory application across all statutory contexts when the word âshallâ appears. Further, we are not aware of any feature of WIS. STAT. ch. 767 or case law governing family law actions that is meaningfully analogous to the chapter 227 context, as opposed to the many obvious differences. In addition, to apply Wagner as broadly as David suggests would create a rule that all time limits created by the legislature are mandatory, which case law explains is not the rule. See Olson,389 Wis. 2d 257
, ¶10.
¶24 Further, regarding the promptness purpose, we discern nothing about
the 60-day time limit that ties into other statutes or case law in a way that would
elevate this purpose to the same level as safeguarding circuit and appellate court
review. Put differently, we see no indication in the language of WIS. STAT.
§ 767.17(3) or closely related statutes to suggest that the legislative purpose of
promptness could not be reasonably served by directory time limits.
¶25 David argues that a further clue to legislative purpose is found in the
word âmayâ that appears in the following sentence of WIS. STAT. § 767.17(1): âAny
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No. 2023AP573
determination, order, or ruling by a circuit court commissioner under this chapter
may be certified to the branch of court to which the case has been assigned, upon a
motion of any party for a hearing de novo.â (Emphasis added.) Based on this use
of âmay,â David evokes the proposition that â[w]hen the words âshallâ and âmayâ
are used in the same section of a statute, one can infer that the legislature was aware
of the different denotations and intended the words to have their precise meanings.â
See Karow, 82 Wis. 2d at 570-71. We interpret the phrase âthe same section of a
statuteâ in Karow to mean the same portion or subpart of a statute. With that
interpretation in mind, the âmayâ in § 767.17(1) that David cites is not in âthe same
sectionâ of the statute as the âshallâ that is at issue here. In the statutory text at issue
in Karow, there were a series of statements about what a commission âshallâ do,
immediately followed by a statement about what the commission âmayâ do,
appearing to suggest a distinction in purposes. Id. In contrast here, as far as David
explains, the lone âmayâ in § 767.17(1)âused in the passive voice in connection
with certification to a judicial branchâsuggests nothing about the timeline-related
âshallâ in § 767.17(3). David fails to explain how this particular use of âmay,â
which is unrelated and not in the same statutory subpart, could shed light on
legislative purpose in using the term âshallâ in § 767.17(3).11
C. History of WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3)
¶26 We conclude that the history of WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3) may favor the
mandatory side of the equation, but only slightly. The timelines in subsections (2)
and (3) are entirely new; there had been no statutory timelines in this context before.
11
Separately, David purports to rely on a Wisconsin Legislative Council Act Memo
regarding Act 205 around the time of its enactment, but the memo says nothing regarding the
mandatory-directory issue. Instead, it merely states the obvious: that the act âcreates specific
timelines for de novo reviews in actions affecting the family.â The issue here is not whether
Act 205 creates specific timelines but whether those timelines are mandatory or directory.
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No. 2023AP573
But the legislature created them without providing clues as to whether the time
limits are mandatory or directory.
¶27 Thus, while the addition of time limits could count in favor of his
argument, we reject Davidâs implied argument that the fact that the 60-day time
limit, as well as the companion 20-day time limit, are new to this statutory scheme
in itself signals that the promptness rationale is paramount over other legislative
purposes. It appears about as likely, for example, that the legislature decided to
impose a uniform set of statewide timelines for these time periods, without
undermining the purpose of safeguarding circuit court and appellate review. As
David acknowledges, before Act 205, âthe time limits imposed by local rule[s]
varied from county to county,â which is a circumstance that the legislature
apparently intended to change. This is consistent with pre-Act 205 case law, which
reflects that Wisconsin circuit courts have used local court rules, so long as they
were not inconsistent with WIS. STAT. §§ 767.17 and 757.69 (2019-20), to define
further a partyâs ability to obtain a hearing de novo. See Nehls, 343 Wis. 2d 499
(consent given by a party to the entry of a circuit court commissioner order without
a hearing acted as âwaive[r]â of the partyâs ability to obtain a hearing de novo under
a local rule; local rule governed because it was not inconsistent with pertinent
statutes). The uniformity purpose is furthered under the directory interpretation,
even if not to the greater degree that would occur under a mandatory interpretation.
D. Penalty or a prohibition imposed for violation of WIS. STAT.
§ 767.17(3)
¶28 WISCONSIN STAT. § 767.17(3) lacks any penalty or prohibition for a
violation of the 60-day time limit, which favors the directory interpretation. âSuch
an omission generally supports construing a statutory time limit as directory,â
although it is âonly one factor to be considered.â Olson, 389 Wis. 2d 257, ¶29.
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No. 2023AP573
¶29 This factor is especially notable here because the failure of a circuit
court to âholdâ a hearing de novo within the 60 days might result even if the party
seeking the hearing has been scrupulously prompt at each stage of the litigation.
Given that dynamic, it is not clear what an appropriate penalty or prohibition would
entail. David merely asserts, without providing supporting authority, that â[t]here
are rarely penalties included in statutes where the obligation is placed on the court
rather than on a party.â This assertion does not assist in the analysis.
E. Consequences of interpretation and potential injuries
¶30 We conclude that the consequences also strongly favor the directory
interpretation. If the 60-day limit precludes a party from litigating a dispute in the
circuit court because a hearing de novo was not held within that timeframe, the
injury to the party seeking the hearing may be severeâthe permanent foreclosure
of additional litigation that could bring potential relief in either circuit court or an
appellate court.
¶31 It is true that delay in the adjudication at the circuit-court level in a
family law matter could result in at least temporary injury to one party or the other.
But mere delay in holding a circuit court hearing de novo stands in sharp contrast to
an opinion on which David relies that involved the complete absence of adjudication
during and after the period covered by a statutory time limit, resulting in a county
employee not being able to work and receive paychecks. See Karow, 82 Wis. 2d at
572-73 (construing as âmandatoryâ a statutory three-week time limit for the holding
of a disciplinary hearing against Karow, taking into account the language of the
statute and its evident objectives, as well as the financial injury suffered by Karow,
who was not working and was not receiving pay checks pending the disciplinary
hearing). Turning to the context here, after a court commissioner rules, the parties
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No. 2023AP573
have the concrete benefit of a decision by a neutral decision maker to whom the
parties had an opportunity to make their arguments. Further, to the extent that the
circuit courtâs ruling on a topic varies from the commissionerâs ruling, a party can
ask the court to fashion relief for any inequity or loss that might have resulted from
the commissionerâs ruling in the meantime.
¶32 As Ann points out, the most likely injuries that one would expect to
result from construing âshallâ as mandatory in this context would be that parties in
family law matters would be deprived of opportunities for both circuit court and
appellate court reviews, often as a result of either circuit court calendar congestion
or extenuating circumstances such as illnesses or personal emergencies over which
the circuit courts have no control. Thus, possibly without the slightest fault of his
or her own, or for that matter the slightest fault of a circuit court, a party would have
no recourse or remedy from a possibly erroneous commissioner ruling. Therefore,
the construction with the best prospects to avoid injuries across cases would be to
deem âshallâ as directory.
¶33 David does not make a general argument on the potential injury issue
but instead tries to argue that in this case it was him, and not Ann, who was injured
by the fact that the circuit court held the hearing after the 60-day period. It is
sufficient to explain that Davidâs case-specific points are not persuasive standing on
their own, much less do they succeed as stand-ins for a general argument regarding
the proper construction of WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3).
¶34 Notably, WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3) provides that the circuit court âshall
hold a hearing de novo no later than 60 days from the date of the filing of the
motionâ for a hearing. It does not provide that the court âshall commenceâ or âshall
scheduleâ a hearing within that time. Cf. WIS. STAT. § 970.03(2) (âThe preliminary
16
No. 2023AP573
examination shall be commenced ... within 10 days [of an initial appearance] if [a]
defendant is in custody and bail has been fixed in excess of $500. On stipulation of
the parties or on motion and for cause, the court may extend such time.â (emphasis
added)). Under the logic of Davidâs interpretation, the legislature has made a
surprising decision. That would be to mandate the completion of a hearing de novo
within 60 days. This would limit the efficiency of the circuit courts and nullify the
safeguard of circuit court or appellate review in all family law cases in which a
scheduling issue arising for the court, counsel, a party, or a witnessâincluding such
extenuating circumstances as illnesses and personal emergenciesâcauses a hearing
de novo not to be completed within the 60 days.
¶35 Significantly, impediments to holding a hearing de novo in a family
law case within 60 days will include the many other cases of all types on the docket
of the assigned circuit court, which of course compete for time on the courtâs
calendar. Some of these other cases will themselves require prioritization for
various reasons. Further, courts cannot unreasonably shorten any of the contested
matters over which they preside. For example, if the court has a two-week homicide
trial set to go, followed by a one-week armed robbery trial, these two cases
immediately occupy a large portion of the courtâs short-term calendar and the court
cannot unreasonably shorten the trials.
¶36 In addition, turning to case-specific issues in a family law case that
needs a hearing de novo, the circuit court has to deal with scheduling conflicts of
the attorneys and of any required participant in the case, as well as unanticipated
illnesses or emergencies experienced by any required participant.
¶37 As Ann points out, this case provides an apt example. It appears that
the no doubt busy circuit court was able to take all the evidence offered by the parties
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No. 2023AP573
(including experts called by David) only by continuing the hearing across three days
in successive months. But under the logic of Davidâs argument, the legislative intent
to accomplish the uniformity and promptness goals alone would prohibit such
schedulingâno matter what else is occurring on the circuit courtâs docket, no matter
how necessary or complex the evidence is in the family law case, and no matter how
blameless the party is in the family law matter who would lose all possibility of
circuit court or appellate review.
¶38 David makes an argument, apparently on the consequences factor, that
is difficult to follow. The argument is based on the fact that, under WIS. STAT.
§ 767.17(1), a motion for a hearing de novo does not by itself have the effect of
staying a court commissionerâs order; instead, a circuit court must affirmatively
grant a stay of a commissionerâs order. Based on this provision, David asserts that
the legislature could not have intended for commissioner orders to âremain in place
for an indefinite period of time.â Whatever David intends to argue along these lines,
we fail to see how anything about the rule assigning circuit courts the authority to
stay commissioner orders supports his argument about legislative purpose. If
anything, this rule would appear to provide further support for the idea that the
legislature in Act 205 continues to prioritize the safeguarding of circuit court review
of contested family law matters, by giving circuit courts the sole decision-making
authority regarding potential stays of commissionersâ orders.
¶39 David argues that deeming âshallâ to be directory in this context
âwould mean that local circuit courts could make their own rules,â suggesting that
courts would sometimes or even typically ignore a merely directory provision. But
David fails to explain why the legislature would suspect or assume that circuit courts
would disregard directory time limits. For that matter, David fails to explain why
the legislature would suspect or assume that courts would prefer to delay hearings
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No. 2023AP573
de novo instead of resolving them in the most expeditious manner possible,
consistent with the 60-day limit, even if it is construed to be directory. It is common
knowledge that circuit courts and those who assist courts in scheduling make
difficult choices on a daily basis regarding case priorities and scheduling of both
contested and uncontested matters. We see no reason to think that the legislature
would anticipate that courts would fail to make sincere and generally effective
efforts to abide by this time limit when making scheduling decisions unless âshallâ
were interpreted to be mandatory.
F. Combined result of factors
¶40 Considering these factors as a whole, we conclude that the 60-day
time limit in WIS. STAT. § 767.17(3) is directory, not mandatory. As we have
discussed, we are especially struck by the fact that the mandatory interpretation
would subject parties in family law cases to potentially extremely harsh
consequences, losing all possibility of either circuit court review of court
commissioner rulings or appellate court review of circuit court rulings that can fall
outside the control of parties and circuit courts. If enlargement of the 60-day
window were impossible, parties through no fault of their own could forever lose
the ability to obtain the benefits of valuable legal rights.
II. MODIFICATION OF MAINTENANCE
¶41 As explained in more detail below, we conclude that the circuit court
failed to demonstrate a rational process that could support some material aspects of
its modification of the maintenance award. Accordingly, we reverse and remand to
provide the court with the opportunity to properly exercise its discretion, proceeding
based on the existing record or taking such additional evidence as it deems
appropriate. See King v. King, 224 Wis. 2d 235, 254,590 N.W.2d 480
(1999)
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No. 2023AP573
(â[W]hen a reviewing court finds that a circuit court erroneously exercised its
discretion in determining maintenance, the correct course of action is to reverse the
award and remand the case to the circuit court so that it may properly exercise its
discretion.â). We emphasize that, because we are not able to exercise the discretion
that belongs to the circuit court, our analysis is primarily limited to simply
explaining why reversal and remand is necessary, without ourselves purporting to
resolve various related issues or to determine an appropriate outcome that is based
on the facts that existed when the court issued its ruling on February 1, 2023.
A. Legal standards
¶42 A circuit court âmayâ â[r]evise and alterâ a divorce maintenance
award when the movant demonstrates âa substantial change in circumstances
warranting the proposed modification.â WIS. STAT. § 767.59(1c)(a)1., (1f)(a);
Rohde-Giovanni v. Baumgart, 2004 WI 27, ¶30,269 Wis. 2d 598
,676 N.W.2d 452
. A âsubstantial changeâ in circumstances ââmust relate to a change in the financial circumstances of the parties.ââ Kenyon v. Kenyon,2004 WI 147, ¶13
,277 Wis. 2d 47
,690 N.W.2d 251
(quoted source omitted). A âsubstantial change of circumstancesâ determination calls for a comparison of the facts on which the prior maintenance award was based to the new facts in order to ascertain whether âthe difference is enough to justify the courtâs considering whether to modify the order.â Licary v. Licary,168 Wis. 2d 686, 692
,484 N.W.2d 371
(Ct. App. 1992). A court reviewing a modification request should adhere to the findings of fact made in the previous proceeding setting maintenance and may not retry the factual determinations decided in that proceeding. Kenyon,277 Wis. 2d 47, ¶27
.
¶43 As part of this analysis, the circuit court âmust consider the same
factors governing the original determination of maintenanceâ under WIS. STAT.
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No. 2023AP573
§ 767.56. Poindexter v. Poindexter, 142 Wis. 2d 517, 531-32,419 N.W.2d 223
(1988) (referring to WIS. STAT. § 767.26 (1987-88), which has been amended and is now § 767.56). The factors provided in § 767.56 are designed to further two distinct maintenance goals: (1) support of the recipient spouse âin accordance with the needs and earning capacities of both the recipient spouse and the payor spouseâ; and (2) âa fair and equitable financial arrangement between the parties.â Kenyon,277 Wis. 2d 47, ¶29
; Rohde-Giovanni,269 Wis. 2d 598, ¶29
.
¶44 A circuit courtâs decision as to whether there has been a substantial
change of circumstances is a discretionary one that will be affirmed if there is a
reasonable basis in the record to support it. Cashin v. Cashin, 2004 WI App 92,
¶44,273 Wis. 2d 754
,681 N.W.2d 255
; Rohde-Giovanni,269 Wis. 2d 598, ¶17
.
¶45 If there has been a substantial change of circumstances, the decision
whether to modify the amount or duration of maintenance is committed to the circuit
courtâs sound discretion. Rohde-Giovanni, 269 Wis. 2d 598, ¶17.
¶46 An erroneous exercise of discretion involves a failure to consider the
relevant factors, basing an award on factual errors, making an error of law, or
granting an excessive or inadequate award. Id., ¶18. â[A] discretionary
determination must be the product of a rational mental process by which the facts
of record and law relied upon are stated and are considered together for the purpose
of achieving a reasoned and reasonable determination.â Hartung v. Hartung, 102
Wis. 2d 58, 66,306 N.W.2d 16
(1981). We affirm if the court âexamined the relevant facts, applied a proper standard of law, and, using a demonstrated rational process, reached a conclusion that a reasonable judge could reach.â Long v. Long,196 Wis. 2d 691, 695
,539 N.W.2d 462
(Ct. App. 1995).
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No. 2023AP573
B. Additional background
¶47 For purposes of calculating maintenance in 1999, Judge Damon found
Annâs annual income to be $10,000, although the court characterized this as a mere
âguessâ based in part on her then part-time annual salary of $5,000. The court noted
that there was âcredible evidence as to the limited nature of [her] potential earning
capacity,â and that her âlongstanding depression will require significant ongoing
treatment, and it will further affect her ability to work full-time.â âThere is little
likelihood that [Ann] will ever earn income sufficient to adequately provide for her
own support at anywhere near the level she enjoyed during the marriage.â
¶48 Judge Damon found Davidâs annual income to be $165,484. The
court found that David had not âover the last number of yearsâ âpursuedâ earnings
âto his full capacity.â Instead, he had âexpended substantial energy and money
racing and restoring motor vehiclesâ as an âavocation.â
¶49 In setting Davidâs maintenance obligation at $4,500 a month,
potentially to be revisited upon Davidâs retirement, the court took into account the
facts that the property division gave David âa large debt loadâ and that Ann would
have âsubstantial assets such as the home free and clearâ going forward. The net
marital estate totaled almost $1.7 million, and Ann would receive a property
settlement of one-half that amount.
¶50 We turn to the 2023 hearing de novo before Judge Gonzalez. Ann
requested this hearing after a court commissioner reduced Davidâs monthly
maintenance obligation from $4,500 to $2,800. Ann argued in part to the circuit
court that Davidâs
lifestyle precludes his argument that he cannot afford
spousal maintenance. He has 3 pieces of real estate, two of
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No. 2023AP573
which are rentals. He has numerous vehicles, including a
vintage race car. He is able to hire one attorney for trial and
another for the appeal. He had 3 expert witnesses involved
in his case âŠ.
Ann proposed $3,850 in monthly permanent maintenance. She based this request
in substantial part on a chart purporting to show total monthly gross income to David
of $11,643 and total monthly gross income to Ann of $3,072. Annâs chart included
the following categories as purported monthly gross income to David, in addition to
payments from social security and required minimum distributions from an
individual retirement account: $1,242 monthly in dividends and interest; $1,996
monthly in rent income; and $3,333 monthly in â[s]tock [p]roceeds.â Explaining
the $3,333 figure, the chart stated: â$40,000 Remains [with David] Ă· 12 months =
$3,333.â In other words, Ann asserted that, because David held stocks with a total
value of $40,000, his monthly gross income included one twelfth of that amount.
¶51 David submitted that he had stopped working as a dentist in
November 2021 and the following month underwent spinal fusion surgery, âwhich
limited his ability to lift to a maximum of 25 lbs.â He contended in part that he
owned âa small home with a mortgage,â a former office building, and a âsmall
rental,â and that he âis not involved in stock trading and had approximately $40,000
in assetsâ in a trading account, âprior to the payment of the 2022 [r]eal estate taxes.â
David proposed that his monthly maintenance obligation be reduced to $1,150,
asserting that this would represent â[a]n equal division of income at this time.â
¶52 In its order, the circuit court awarded Ann the $3,850 monthly
âpermanentâ maintenance that she requested. The order reproduced, and appeared
to rely on, Annâs monthly gross income chart referenced above. The court also
repeatedly made negative credibility findings regarding David, including
âpresum[ing]â that David possessed âmissing cashâ that he was not accounting for,
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No. 2023AP573
although the court did not attempt to quantify the amount of any âmissing cash.â
Further, the court found that David had âpurposelyâ taken losses on stocks worth
more than $800,000, by pretending to be âan incompetent stock trader,â in order to
support his case for paying less in maintenance to Ann.
¶53 In sum, the circuit court set the maintenance amount at a new level,
relying substantially on Annâs monthly gross income chart.
C. Arguments and analysis
¶54 Regarding maintenance modification, David primarily makes two
related arguments, one specific and the other more general. The more specific
argument is that there was no evidence before the circuit court to support the specific
dividends and interest, rental income, or stock proceeds figures (collectively, âthe
gross income figuresâ) that Ann attributed to David in her gross income chart, which
the court adopted as its findings. Davidâs more general primary argument is that the
court failed to explain how, based on particular evidence, it reached the new
monthly maintenance figure of $3,850. He submits that this problem was
exacerbated by the courtâs decision not to consider testimony that could have
supported his argument that Ann failed to show initiative or effort to become self-
supporting, or at least more self-supporting, in the years since the divorce. Beyond
those arguments, David also contends that the court âwholly failed to consider
whether it was fair to David to continue his maintenance obligation to Ann.â
¶55 Ann has nothing clear to say on the more specific argument about the
gross income figures. This is all the more puzzling because she proposed these
numbers to the circuit court. Ann emphasizes that the circuit court found that David
lacked credibility, but she fails to develop an argument that could support any of the
gross income figures based on the courtâs finding of a lack of credibility. As a result,
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No. 2023AP573
Ann does not directly dispute Davidâs detailed and supported arguments that, at least
based on the record created to date: witnesses testified that during the relevant time
period David did not hold any income-producing stocks or other investments; the
only admissible evidence regarding his rental income showed net losses; and there
was no logic to attributing monthly âincomeâ to David based on one-twelfth of the
value of the remaining stocks that David held. Our âtask on appeal is to âexamine
the record, not for facts to support a finding the trial court did not make or could
have made, but for facts to support the finding the trial court did make.ââ Johnson
v. Merta, 95 Wis. 2d 141, 154,289 N.W.2d 813
(1980) (quoted source omitted).
Here, we are left with considerable uncertainty as to what evidence supported the
gross income figures.
¶56 Davidâs winning argument regarding the lack of an evidentiary basis
for the gross income figures goes a long way toward proving his more general
primary argument that, in essentially adopting Annâs proposed gross income figures
for David, the circuit court failed to explain how it reached the new monthly
maintenance amount. Beyond that, we are unable to discern in the courtâs decision
any logical path to the new monthly award of $3,850. Ann vaguely suggests that
the fact that the court lowered the monthly award of $4,500 to $3,850 demonstrates
application of the support and fairness objectives. But this does not provide a basis
for us to conclude that the court âexamined the relevant facts, applied a proper
standard of law, and, using a demonstrated rational process, reached a conclusion
that a reasonable judge could reach.â See Long, 196 Wis. 2d at 695.
¶57 Recall that our exclusive focus on this issue involves Davidâs
challenge to the maintenance aspect of the circuit courtâs February 1, 2023 order.
Therefore, to the extent that there has been further litigation in this case in the circuit
court in the meantime, or to the extent that following remand the parties submit
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No. 2023AP573
pleadings or make arguments in the circuit court regarding alleged facts that have
occurred since February 2023, all of that would fall outside the scope of this opinion
and would be subject to new rulings by the circuit court that we could not now
address.
¶58 In addition, we do not direct that the circuit court must hold a new
evidentiary hearing on remand, nor that the court may not do so. Instead, the court
may consider whether, in its judgment, it is appropriate for the court to decide
Davidâs motion based on the evidence that the court has already been presented
with, taking argument from the parties as the court deems appropriate. Although
we reverse this aspect of the order on appeal, this opinion should not be interpreted
as preventing the court from considering the same facts underlying its previous
decision.12
12
To assist the circuit court and the parties following remand we reach the following two
legal conclusions on issues that have been briefed by the parties in this appeal.
First, we agree with David that following remand the circuit court may not decline to
consider evidence or argument that could support an argument that Ann lacked initiative or failed
to expend effort to become self-supporting on the ground that such evidence or argument would be
irrelevant. See Vander Perren v. Vander Perren, 105 Wis. 2d 219, 230,313 N.W.2d 813
(1982) (maintenance âis not to be viewed as a permanent annuity,â but instead is âdesigned to maintain a party at an appropriate standard of living, under the facts and circumstances of the individual case, until the party exercising reasonable diligence has reached a level of income where maintenance is no longer necessary.â). Our supreme court expressly articulated this principle in the contexts of both an original award of maintenance and an order âterminating maintenance.âId.
Again,
however, we take no position on what the circuit court here might find along these lines, or on how
any finding might figure into a proper analysis. We simply agree with David that the circuit court
made statements that could be construed as erroneously taking the position that this âexercising
reasonable diligenceâ concept is not a feature of Wisconsin law.
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No. 2023AP573
III. ATTORNEYâS FEES
¶59 The circuit court ordered David to pay Ann $19,000 in fees that Ann
was billed by her attorney between April 2020âwhen David unilaterally stopped
paying the then-required monthly maintenance of $4,500âthrough January 17,
2022, based on the courtâs finding that David âhas engaged in a bad faith campaign
to eliminate the valid permanent order.â This order was based in part on detailed
billing records submitted to the court by Annâs attorney.13
¶60 The parties disagree about whether the circuit court erroneously
exercised its discretion in ordering payment of the $19,000 in fees based on the
overtrial doctrine.14 We conclude that David fails to show an erroneous exercise of
discretion.
¶61 âThe overtrial doctrine may be invoked in family law cases when one
partyâs unreasonable approach to litigation causes the other party to incur extra and
Second, we reject Davidâs argument that the circuit court could not find that David, as he
now puts it, âdeliberately lost $800,000 of his own money [invested in stocks] in an effort to avoid
payingâ âa $54,000 annual [maintenance] obligation,â because it would have âdefie[d] logicâ for
him to do so. To be sure, this would have been an irrational financial decision, but people
sometimes make irrational financial decisions. More than that, people can act in ways that a neutral
observer might view as highly irrationalânot least in the context of emotionally charged family
law disputes. If the circuit court on remand continues to find that David intentionally lost this
money, and the court can explain how this plays a legitimate role in the proper analysis of a motion
to modify a maintenance award, the court is not precluded from doing so on the ground that such
conduct would defy logic.
13
As noted above, the circuit court also ordered David to pay Ann $1,200 to cover a
portion of the attorneyâs fees she was billed in connection with Davidâs 2021 appeal referenced
above in note 5, regarding the local rule of the La Crosse County Circuit Court. David references
the $1,200 portion of the attorneyâs fees award in this appeal, but he fails to develop any argument
directed toward the $1,200. We affirm this aspect of the award based on the lack of any argument.
14
We resolve this issue based on the application of the overtrial doctrine and therefore
have no need to reach the arguments of the parties based on WIS. STAT. § 767.241(1)(a), which
permits a family court to order one side to pay the other sideâs attorneyâs fees under certain
circumstances.
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No. 2023AP573
unnecessary fees.â Hottenroth v. Hetsko, 2006 WI App 249, ¶49,298 Wis. 2d 200
,727 N.W.2d 38
; Zhang v. Yu,2001 WI App 267, ¶16
,248 Wis. 2d 913
,637 N.W.2d 754
(â[T]he circuit court has inherent authority to manage civil litigation within its jurisdiction, to preserve the effectiveness of the judicial system and to enforce compliance with its orders fashioned to prevent overtrial.â). âWhether excessive litigation occurred is a question committed to the discretion of the circuit court.â Hottenroth,298 Wis. 2d 200, ¶49
.
¶62 David does not challenge any particular entry or subset of entries in
the billing records that Ann submitted to the circuit court and his arguments are not
well developed. We now explain why we reject his limited arguments on this topic.
¶63 David asserts that, because Ann did not file a âformal motionâ or
provide âthe ground upon which she was seeking such fees,â this violated the
requirement that David receive notice and an opportunity to be heard on this issue.
See Zhang, 248 Wis. 2d 913, ¶¶14, 16 (stating that a party must be given notice and
an opportunity to be heard on an overtrial claim). But Ann made her position clear
in submissions to the circuit court in August 2022: she claimed entitlement to these
fees because David caused them through unreasonable and irrelevant arguments,
cancellations, and delays. This sufficiently stated a claim for attorneyâs fees based
on overtrial. David also fails to persuade us that he lacked ample opportunities to
argue that the court should not award these fees in order to, as the court stated in
making its ruling, âlevel the playing field between the parties and to act as a
deterrent for any future meritless litigation or bad faith actions.â
¶64 David argues that the circuit court could not require him to pay
attorneyâs fees based on overtrial because â[i]t was undisputed at trial that Davidâs
motion had merit due to his retirement.â This argument is off point. The issue is
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No. 2023AP573
not whether David made individual arguments in the litigation that had merit, such
as his position that there had been a substantial change of circumstances due to his
retirement and health issues. The issue is whether the court had a basis to reasonably
determine that he had engaged in âunreasonableâ litigation that had âresult[ed] in
unnecessary proceedings or unnecessarily protracted proceedings, together with the
attendant preparation time.â See Zhang, 248 Wis. 2d 913, ¶13.
¶65 David confusingly asserts that he could not have engaged in overtrial
because Ann âfail[ed] to reach ⊠an out-of-court settlement,â and because Ann
sought hearings de novo of two court commissioner rulings. This is also off point.
Both sides had the opportunity to properly seek their goals in litigation, but the
circuit court determined that David alone engaged in overtrial. David fails to show
that this determination was clearly erroneous.
CONCLUSION
¶66 We affirm the circuit courtâs rulings that it had competency to hold a
hearing de novo and awarding the challenged attorneyâs fees to Ann. We reverse
the courtâs ruling modifying monthly maintenance to $3,850, based on the facts as
they existed when the court issued its ruling in February 2023, and remand for
further proceedings on that topic.
By the Court.âOrder affirmed in part; reversed in part and remanded.
29