Jeffery Alholm v. Rebecca (Alholm) Allen ( 2012 )


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  •                                                                 FILED
    Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D),
    this Memorandum Decision shall not be
    regarded as precedent or cited before
    any court except for the purpose of                           Jul 30 2012, 9:13 am
    establishing the defense of res judicata,
    collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.                         CLERK
    of the supreme court,
    court of appeals and
    tax court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                           ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
    DAVID W. STONE IV                                 KIMBERLY J. BACON
    Stone Law Office & Legal Research                 Indianapolis, Indiana
    Anderson, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    JEFFERY ALHOLM,                                   )
    )
    Appellant-Petitioner,                      )
    )
    vs.                                )      No. 48A05-1109-DR-466
    )
    REBECCA (ALHOLM) ALLEN,                           )
    )
    Appellee-Respondent.                       )
    APPEAL FROM THE MADISON CIRCUIT COURT
    The Honorable David Happe, Special Judge
    Cause No. 48D04-1102-DR-63
    July 30, 2012
    MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    NAJAM, Judge
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    Jeffery J. Alholm1 (“Father”) appeals the post-dissolution order that modified child
    custody and parenting time, found Father in contempt of court, and ordered him to pay
    attorney’s fees to Rebecca (Alholm) Allen (“Mother”). Father presents three issues for
    review, which we restate as:
    1.      Whether the post-dissolution court erred when it modified custody.
    2.      Whether the post-dissolution court erred when it modified parenting
    time.
    3.      Whether the post-dissolution court erred when it ordered Father to
    pay $18,500 of Mother’s attorney’s fees.
    We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Father and Mother were married on October 5, 2003, and have one child, T.A.,
    born January 12, 2005. Father initiated dissolution proceedings on March 3, 2005. The
    parties entered into a Partial Mediated Agreement setting out Father’s parenting time with
    the child and awarding joint legal custody of T.A. to the parties. The dissolution court
    approved the agreement on May 1, 2006.                 In part that agreement set out Father’s
    parenting time and appointed a Level II Parent Coordinator. On June 29, 2006, the
    dissolution court entered a decree that incorporated the Partial Mediated Agreement,
    distributed the marital property and dissolved the parties’ marriage (“Decree”).2
    1
    Father’s first name is spelled in one of two ways throughout the record on appeal: Jeffery and
    Jeffrey. We use the spelling used by Father in his pro se Notice of Appeal.
    2
    On appeal, this court affirmed the Decree regarding parenting time, the property distribution,
    and the order for the payment of attorney’s fees in the Decree. Alholm v. Alholm, No. 48A02-0608-CV-
    644 (Ind. Ct. App. July 18, 2007).
    2
    Since the entry of the Decree, the parties have relentlessly litigated issues
    regarding custody, parenting time, child support, attorney’s fees, and contempt citations.3
    In January 2007, the dissolution court issued an order requiring that: (1) Father maintain
    a life insurance policy owned by Mother; (2) Father reimburse Mother for past premiums;
    (3) Mother name the child as the beneficiary of that policy; and (4) Father pay $2000 for
    Mother’s appellate attorney’s fees.            The order also appointed a Level III parenting
    coordinator for the parties. The post-dissolution court subsequently modified Father’s
    parenting time based on a binding recommendation filed by the parenting coordinator.
    On appeal, this court affirmed the order as to the life insurance and appellate attorney’s
    fees issues but reversed the limitation on Father’s parenting time. Alholm v. Alholm, No.
    48A02-0707-CR-598 (Ind. Ct. App. Dec. 31, 2007).
    On May 7, 2009, Father filed a petition for a Trial Rule 35 evaluation, and the
    post-dissolution court ordered the parties to be evaluated by Dr. Bart Ferraro at Father’s
    expense. Subsequently, on October 7, 2010, the court entered an order (“October 7
    Order”) following a hearing on multiple issues. In relevant part, the October 7 Order
    found Father to be in arrears $2870 for child support; ordered him to pay $750 toward
    Mother’s attorney’s fees; dismissed Father’s petition for modification for failure to
    appear at the hearing;4 and ordered parenting time pursuant to the Indiana Parenting Time
    Guidelines (“the Guidelines”) for in-state parents.
    3
    The procedural history of this case is lengthy and convoluted, partly due to the litigiousness in
    this case. We discuss only the pleadings and orders relevant to disposition of this appeal in our decision.
    4
    The parties do not indicate where in the record to find Father’s motion for modification or
    explain the modification he requested.
    3
    On November 9, Mother filed a petition for rule to show cause why Father should
    not be found in contempt for his continued failure to pay child support. On December 8
    she filed a petition for attorney’s fees incurred due to Father’s motion to modify custody,
    which had been dismissed October 7 due to his failure to appear at the hearing. On
    January 12, 2011, Mother filed a petition for contempt citation for Father’s failure to
    strike from a panel of proposed special judges. Mother then filed a petition for rule to
    show cause why Father should not be found in contempt for failing to maintain life
    insurance as ordered and for violation of the parenting time guidelines and relocation
    statute. And on April 25 Mother filed a motion to modify custody and parenting time.
    On May 12 the post-dissolution court held a hearing on “all pending matters” but
    took Mother’s request for change of custody and parenting time under advisement,
    resetting those issues for hearing on July 7. On June 15, the post-dissolution court
    entered an order (“June 15 Order”), in part finding Father in contempt for failure to pay
    child support, for failure to reimburse Mother for life insurance, and for violation of the
    parenting time guidelines and relocation statute. And on June 21, the court held a hearing
    on Mother’s petition for rule to show cause and motion to compel discovery responses,
    for sanctions, and for attorney’s fees.     The post-dissolution court found Father in
    contempt for failing to respond to discovery requests by the date ordered. The court also
    set the determination of the sanction, as well as Mother’s pending attorney’s fee request
    and petition to modify custody and parenting time for hearing on July 7.
    Finally, the post-dissolution court held a hearing on July 7 and 8. Father appeared
    pro se, and Mother appeared in person and by counsel. After taking the matter under
    4
    advisement, the post-dissolution court issued its findings of fact and conclusions thereon
    (“August Order”), modifying custody and parenting time, finding Father in contempt, and
    awarding attorney’s fees to Mother. Father now appeals.
    DISCUSSION AND DECISION
    Standard of Review
    Where, as here, a trial court has entered findings and conclusions sua sponte,
    the specific findings control only as to the issues they cover, while a
    general judgment standard applies to any issues upon which the court has
    not found. Harris v. Harris, 
    800 N.E.2d 930
    , 934 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003),
    trans. denied. Thus, in reviewing this judgment, we must apply a two-
    tiered standard. 
    Id.
     First, we determine whether the evidence supports the
    findings and second, whether the findings support the judgment. 
    Id.
     In
    deference to the trial court’s proximity to the issues, we will reverse a
    judgment only when it is shown to be clearly erroneous. 
    Id.
     A judgment is
    clearly erroneous when it is unsupported by the findings of fact and
    conclusions entered on the findings. 
    Id.
     In determining the validity of the
    findings or judgment, we consider only the evidence favorable to the
    judgment and all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, and we will
    not reweigh the evidence or assess the credibility of witnesses. 
    Id.
    However, although we defer substantially to findings of fact, we do not do
    so to conclusions of law. 
    Id.
     We evaluate questions of law de novo and
    owe no deference to a trial court's determinations of such questions. 
    Id.
    J.S. v. J.D., 
    941 N.E.2d 1107
    , 1109-10 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied.
    Appellate deference to the determinations of our trial court judges, especially in
    domestic relations matters, is warranted because of their unique, direct interactions with
    the parties face-to-face, often over an extended period of time. Best v. Best, 
    941 N.E.2d 499
    , 502 (Ind. 2011). Thus enabled to assess credibility and character through both
    factual testimony and intuitive discernment, our trial judges are in a superior position to
    ascertain information and apply common sense, particularly in the determination of the
    best interests of the involved children. 
    Id.
    5
    Here, again, Father presents three issues for review, which we restate as
    challenges to the three separate directives in the August Order. We consider Father’s
    challenge to each directive in turn.
    Issue One: Modification of Custody
    Father contends that the post-dissolution court erred when it modified the Decree
    by awarding sole legal and physical custody to Mother. A court may modify a child
    custody order if it finds that the modification is in the best interests of the child and that
    there has been a substantial change in one or more statutory factors in Indiana Code
    Section 31-17-2-8. 
    Ind. Code § 31-17-2-21
    . The court must consider the following
    factors when determining whether to modify a custody order:
    (1)    The age and sex of the child.
    (2)    The wishes of the child’s parent or parents.
    (3)    The wishes of the child, with more consideration given to the child’s
    wishes if the child is at least fourteen (14) years of age.
    (4)    The interaction and interrelationship of the child with:
    (A) the child’s parent or parents;
    (B) the child’s sibling; and
    (C) any other person who may significantly affect the
    child’s best interests.
    (5)    The child’s adjustment to the child’s:
    (A) home;
    (B) school; and
    (C) community.
    (6)    The mental and physical health of all individuals involved.
    (7)    Evidence of a pattern of domestic violence by either parent.
    (8)    Evidence that the child has been cared for by a de facto custodian,
    and if the evidence is sufficient, the court shall consider the factors
    described in [Indiana Code Section 31-17-2-8.5.]
    
    Ind. Code § 31-17-2-8
    .
    Father first contends that the post-dissolution court’s findings are insufficient
    because they restate testimony but do not clearly articulate that the post-dissolution court
    6
    determined such testimony to be fact. Father is correct that a court “does not find
    something to be a fact by merely reciting that a witness testified to X, Y, or Z.” Bowyer
    v. Ind. Dep’t of Natural Res., 
    944 N.E.2d 972
    , 984 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). The vast majority of the post-dissolution court’s
    eighty-five paragraphs of “findings” are worded as restatements of the testimony or
    evidence, such as “Father stated that . . .” or “Mother testified that . . . .” Such “findings”
    are merely restatements of the evidence but are not findings of fact. Only one of the post-
    dissolution court’s findings denominated as such, finding paragraph 76, qualifies as a
    finding of fact relevant to the modification of custody.
    But the purpose of special findings of fact and conclusions thereon is to provide
    the reviewing court with the legal basis upon which the decision was reached. Sanders v.
    Sanders, 
    452 N.E.2d 1057
    , 1058 (Ind. Ct. App. 1983).                 Several of the court’s
    determinations listed as “conclusions” are actually findings of fact. We consider those
    findings of fact in reviewing the August Order. See 
    id. at 1059
     (remand to the trial court
    with instructions to enter more specific findings and conclusions would be “unnecessary
    and burdensome, and not in the interest of judicial economy” where findings adequately
    inform us of the reasoning behind the post-dissolution court’s decision).
    The post-dissolution court made the following findings, or findings denominated
    as conclusions, pertaining to the modification of custody:
    76.    [Father’s] erratic behavior escalated over the last year as he has
    become more hostile. He has brought his older children to record
    custody exchanges between the parties and has reactivated his civil
    suit against Mother in Hamilton County, that had been dormant.
    ***
    7
    CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND ORDER
    5.    There has been on-going conflict between the parties since the
    divorce was finalized in 2006.
    ***
    15.   The Court finds Father’s behavior avoidant, and his refusal to pay
    the policy as ordered willful and intentional, and enters a finding of
    contempt on the issue of payment of life insurance premiums.
    16.   Father has moved several times since the marriage was dissolved.
    17.   The Court finds that Father has the ability to work and there is no
    evidence that he suffers from a disability that would prevent him
    from working.
    18.   Father has presented no persuasive evidence that he has actively
    sought employment or that Mother has impaired his seeking
    employment.
    19.   Father chooses to rely on his family and savings to support him,
    rather than actively seeking employment.
    20.   Therefore, the court finds that Father is willfully unemployed.
    21.   [Mother] is the more stable parent and consistent parent[] and should
    have physical custody of [T.A.].
    22.   That [sic] the parties’ child is bonded with his sibling [Mother’s
    older son] and has a good relationship with him.
    23.   The parties’ child is involved in both school and extracurricular
    activities and is well grounded in the community where Mother
    resides.
    24.   Father has been inconsistent in exercising his parenting time.
    25.   Based on the parties’ inability to effectively communicate, the Court
    concludes that Mother’s concerns about Father’s inability to
    maintain a residence, provide her with a valid address and Father’s
    escalating irresponsible behaviors are reasonable and legitimate.
    ***
    27.   Father’s parenting time has had a detrimental effect on [T.A.], not
    because Father does not genuinely care about his son, but because of
    the erratic and unpredictable nature of the parenting time, and the
    related hostility between the parties.
    28.   Both parties agree that they are unable to communicate with each
    other.
    29.   The Court has concerns about the parties’ inability to communicate,
    which make[s] it difficult to co-parent.
    8
    30.    [Father] needs intensive individualized therapy to help him deal with
    his underlying issues of ADHD and depression.
    31.    [Mother] needs to increase her therapy [to] ensure that any issues she
    is addressing do not negatively impact [T.A.].
    32.    A parenting coordinator (PC) would also be helpful to the parties
    and to [T.A.].
    33.    The current custody arrangement will have an adverse impact on
    [T.A.].
    34.    There has been a substantial change in that [Father’s] behavior has
    become increasingly unstable and the parties’ ability to
    communicate about parenting matters has become worse since the
    divorce decree was issued in 2006.
    35.    [Mother] has a stable residence, adequate financial resources, and
    has encouraged [the child] to develop[] good relationships with his
    brother, his friends, and the community.
    Appellant’s App. at 25-30. These findings show that the post-dissolution court found a
    substantial change in circumstances since the entry of the Decree, namely: (1) that
    Father’s “erratic behavior escalated over the last year as he has become more hostile[,]”
    id. at 25; (2) that, “[b]ased on the parties’ inability to communicate, . . . Mother’s
    concerns about Father’s inability to maintain a residence, provide her with a valid address
    and Father’s escalating irresponsible behavior are reasonable and legitimate[,]” id. at 29;
    and (3) that there has been a “substantial change in that [Father’s] behavior has become
    increasingly unstable and the parties’ ability to communicate about parenting matters has
    become worse since the divorce decree was issued in 2006,” id. The testimony from
    Father and Mother supports these findings. And the findings support the post-dissolution
    court’s conclusion that a substantial change in circumstances has occurred with regard to
    a deterioration in Father’s mental health. See 
    Ind. Code § 31-17-2-8
    (8).
    The post-dissolution court’s determinations listed above also support its
    determination that modification of custody is in T.A.’s best interests. The evidence is
    9
    replete with examples of the parties’ inability to communicate, and the post-dissolution
    court expressed its concern about the resultant effect on their ability to co-parent. “There
    are times when a breakdown of communication between parents renders joint custody no
    longer in the best interests of the child.” In re A.S. (B.M.S. v. E.M.), 
    948 N.E.2d 380
    ,
    387 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). Such is the case here. The evidence supports the post-
    dissolution court’s conclusion that modification of sole physical and legal custody to
    Mother is in the child’s best interests.
    Still, Father contends that the modification was clearly erroneous. In support, he
    challenges the findings in paragraphs 26 and 70. But our decision does not rely on those
    paragraphs. Father further contends that the August Order “makes no mention of the
    mother taking the Fifth [at the modification hearing] let alone drawing an adverse
    inference against her.” Appellant’s Brief at 20. Father cites numerous cases from foreign
    jurisdictions in support of his contention that the post-dissolution court could have drawn
    an adverse inference from Mother’s assertion of her Fifth Amendment privilege against
    self-incrimination.   He also cites a single Indiana case, and he is correct that “the
    privilege against self-incrimination does not prohibit the trier of fact in a civil case from
    drawing adverse inferences from a witness’ refusal to testify.” Weinberger v. Boyer, 
    956 N.E.2d 1095
    , 1107 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied. But a trial court is not required to
    draw that negative inference. 
    Id.
     In essence, Father asks us to re-weigh the evidence,
    which we will not do. J.S., 
    941 N.E.2d at 1110
    .
    The evidence supports the post-dissolution court’s finding that Father’s behavior
    has become increasingly erratic and more hostile since the dissolution and that the parties
    10
    are unable to communicate, which affects their ability to co-parent. Those findings
    support the court’s conclusion that it is in the child’s best interest for Mother to have sole
    legal and physical custody of the child. Father has not shown that the court erred when it
    modified custody.
    Issue Two: Modification of Parenting Time
    Father next challenges the post-dissolution court’s modification of his parenting
    time with T.A. A court may modify an order granting or denying visitation rights
    whenever modification would serve the child’s best interests. 
    Ind. Code § 31-17-4-2
    .
    Courts shall not, however, restrict a parent’s visitation rights unless the court finds that
    the visitation might endanger the child’s physical health or significantly impair the
    child’s emotional development. 
    Ind. Code § 31-14-4-1
    . That requires a court to make a
    specific finding “of physical endangerment or emotional impairment prior to placing a
    restriction on the noncustodial parent’s visitation.” 
    Ind. Code § 31-14-14-1
    (a). “A party
    who seeks to restrict a parent’s visitation rights bears the burden of presenting evidence
    justifying such a restriction.” Arms v. Arms, 
    803 N.E.2d 1201
    , 1212 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2004) (citing Farrell v. Littell, 
    790 N.E.2d 612
    , 616 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003)).
    The post-dissolution court’s findings and conclusions regarding custody, quoted
    above, are equally applicable to its modification of Father’s parenting time. Again, the
    court found that Father’s “erratic behavior escalated over the last year as he has become
    more hostile[]” and that “[t]here has been on-going conflict between the parties since the
    11
    divorce was finalized in 2006[.]” Appellant’s App. at 25, 27. In addition, the post-
    dissolution court made the following findings relevant to visitation:5
    16.     Father has moved several times since the marriage was dissolved.
    ***
    36.     The Court finds that it is not in [T.A.’s] best interests to continue
    with the existing parenting time order.
    ***
    43.     Due to the instability in Father’s life due to his lack of regular
    employment or daily routine, numerous lawsuits, and Father’s own
    report of inappropriate conduct involving [T.A.] while at Father’s
    residence, parenting time in Kansas would be detrimental to [T.A.’s]
    emotional and physical health, and academic and social
    development.
    Id. at 28, 30-31. As a result, the post-dissolution court limited Father’s parenting time to
    supervised visitation for one hour per week “[u]nless and until” (1) “Father is actively
    participating in therapy as ordered” and (2) “a parenting coordinator has accepted
    appointment and is available to facilitate communication between the parties.” Id. at 32.
    The court further limited Father’s visitation as follows:
    45.    Unless the Court grants specific permission or unless the parties
    agree otherwise:
    a.    Father shall not take [T.A.] out of the State of Indiana.
    b.    Father shall not exercise parenting time, including
    summer parenting time[,] for more than four
    consecutive days.
    c.    Father may continue to have phone or electronic
    communication with [T.A.] that is reasonable in
    duration and frequency. . . .
    Id.
    5
    Again, these findings are denominated as conclusions by the post-dissolution court. But they
    are actually findings of ultimate fact, and we treat them as such.
    12
    We initially note that Father has not set out the standard for review of a
    modification of parenting time. Further, his argument that the modification is erroneous
    is limited, again, to challenging only two findings by the post-dissolution court, findings
    in paragraphs 26 and 70. But, as in Issue One above, we do not rely on either of those
    paragraphs to support the modification of visitation. Father also takes issue with the
    order that he participate in weekly individual psychotherapy. Specifically, he contends
    that Dr. Ferraro “did not request the authority to recommend a Kansas therapist,” that Dr.
    Ferraro does not know any Kansas therapists, and, therefore, that the order “in effect
    requires the father to travel from his home in Kansas to Indiana on a weekly basis. That
    is impractical due to the cost involved.” Appellant’s Brief at 20. But having Dr. Ferraro
    interview and approve a Kansas therapist is not an onerous burden, regardless of whether
    that is the course Dr. Ferraro requested in his testimony. Moreover, Father did not lodge
    a similar challenge to the order requiring weekly family therapy in Indiana.
    In any event, the evidence supports the findings quoted above regarding visitation.
    Significantly, the court found that Father’s behavior has become increasingly erratic and
    hostile, that Father lacks stability in his daily life, that continuing the previous parenting
    time order was not in the child’s best interests, and that visitation in Kansas would be
    detrimental to the child’s emotional and physical health and academic and social
    development. Father has not shown that the evidence does not support the findings or
    that the findings do not support the post-dissolution court’s modification of his parenting
    time.6 Thus, Father’s contentions regarding the modification of parenting time must fail.
    6
    To the extent Father reasserts his argument that the post-dissolution court should have
    considered Mother’s assertion of her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in determining the
    13
    Issue Three: Attorney’s Fees
    Finally, Father contends that the post-dissolution court erred when it ordered him
    to pay $18,500 of Mother’s attorney’s fees. We have previously explained that,
    [i]n post-dissolution proceedings, the trial court may order a party to pay a
    reasonable amount for attorney’s fees. The trial court has broad discretion
    in awarding attorney’s fees. Reversal is proper only where the trial court’s
    award is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances
    before the court. In assessing attorney’s fees, the trial court may consider
    such factors as the resources of the parties, the relative earning ability of the
    parties, and other factors bearing on the reasonableness of the award. In
    addition, any misconduct on the part of a party that directly results in the
    other party incurring additional fees may be taken into consideration.
    Further, “the trial court need not give its reasons for its decision to award
    attorney’s fees.”
    Bessolo v. Rosario, 
    966 N.E.2d 725
    , 733 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012) (citations omitted).
    The post-dissolution court made the following findings that are relevant to the
    attorney’s fee award in favor of Mother:
    41.     . . . The Court finds that [Father] failed to meet his discovery
    obligations by making timely and diligent search for the requested
    information including information held by his attorneys, accountants
    or other agents.
    42.     [Father] alleged that this information existed on a CD that he still
    had in his possession, However, after being given an opportunity to
    retrieve said information, [Father] was unable to provide evidence or
    testimony as to when the information was turned over to his prior
    counsel.
    ***
    45.     [After Father’s prior counsel withdrew his representation, Father]
    did not make any efforts to contact [prior counsel] to determine if
    there were any interim court dates.
    46.     [Father] has hired and dismissed a large number of attorneys within
    the last few years in Kansas and in Indiana.
    parenting time modification, again, the post-dissolution court was not required to draw that negative
    inference, see Weinberger, 
    956 N.E.2d at 1107
    , and we will not re-weigh the evidence, J.S., 
    941 N.E.2d at 1110
    .
    14
    47.    He acknowledged that he did not always pay the attorneys when they
    were retained and denied that the attorneys withdrew due to any fault
    of his for failure to communicate.
    ***
    53.    [Father] was unable to provide documentation of his attempts to find
    employment or his inability to work.
    ***
    55.    Furthermore, he had been the CEO of several companies and the
    owner of seven patents.
    ***
    58.    He was unable to produce any evidence that [Mother] had authored
    [defamatory letters that caused tortuous interference with his
    business relationships regarding his search for work] or that the
    letters continued beyond 2007.
    59.    In May 2008, [Father] received a severance packaged that totaled
    over $400,000.00
    60.    He spent all of these funds, largely on attorneys and expenses.
    61.    During this time he did not pay his taxes or other accumulating debt.
    62.    . . . [Father] provided no evidence [that he had filed bankruptcy].
    ***
    64.    On May 12, 2011, [Father] by his counsel informed the Kansas court
    that he was scheduled for court in Indiana.
    65.    On the same date in Indiana, [Father] by his counsel alleged he was
    unable to appear due to his [f]ather’s cancer surgery in the State of
    Kansas.
    ***
    85.    [Mother] has incurred over $20,000.00 with present counsel alone
    not including the fees for the most recent two-day trial. She has also
    paid $3,000.00 as [a] witness fee to secure Dr. [Bart] Ferraro’s
    presence at this trial.
    Appellant’s App. at 22-26. The court then made the following findings and conclusions
    thereon:
    15
    6.    Father has failed to appear for the last two scheduled Court hearings
    in October 2010 and May 2011.
    ***
    8.    Father is not current in his support[] and is making payments in an
    untimely manner causing an undue hardship on the parties’ child
    because Mother cannot plan for the child’s expenses.
    ***
    10.   Father has retained multiple attorneys within the last four years in
    Kansas and Indiana.
    11.   Father is able to reimburse [Mother] for the [life] insurance
    premiums [that secure his child support obligation] and pay support
    in a timely manner.
    12.   Father is found in contempt for willful and intentional failure to pay
    child support in a consistent and timely manner as ordered.
    13.   The court took judicial notice of [its] file and testimony at past
    hearings that Mother made three requests for reimbursement of the
    life insurance premiums. The requests were made by e-mail . . . . A
    fourth request was made by certified mail to his Carmel address
    which was not picked up from the post office.
    14.   On June 15, 2011, this Court issued [its] order for Father to
    reimburse Mother within five days of this order for her payment of
    the life insurance premiums.
    15.   The Court finds Father’s behavior avoidant[] and his refusal to pay
    the policy [premiums] as ordered willful and intentional[] and enters
    a finding of contempt on the issue of payment of the life insurance
    premiums.
    16.   Father has moved several times since the marriage dissolved.
    17.   The Court finds that Father has the ability to work and there is no
    evidence that he suffers from a disability that would prevent him
    from working.
    18.   Father has presented no persuasive evidence that he has actively
    sought employment or that Mother has impaired his seeking
    employment.
    19.   Father chooses to rely on his family and savings to support him
    rather than actively seeking employment.
    20.   Therefore, the court finds that Father is willfully unemployed.
    ***
    16
    50.    Mother has been represented throughout the pendency of these
    proceedings by Kimberly J. Bacon, at the rate of $185.00 per hour.
    51.    Mother has incurred over $20,000.00 in attorney’s fees in her effort
    to obtain child support and benefits for her child.
    52.    Father has employed five attorneys (2009-2011) in Indiana alone.
    Father is in a better position to contribute to attorney fees which
    have been incurred and he should be responsible for paying a portion
    of Mother’s attorney’s fees for the following reasons:
    a.     He has more income and has the potential to earn more
    income than Mother.
    b.     He has been found to be in contempt for willfully
    failing to pay child support timely.
    c.     He has been found to be in contempt for willfully
    failing to pay life insurance premium reimbursements
    to Mother for the preservation of the child support
    obligation for [the child] should Father pass away.
    d.     He has been found to be in contempt of Court for
    willful failure to abide by the Court’s order to respond
    to discovery.
    e.     He has failed to appear, after having been ordered to
    do so.
    Id. at 27-28, 34-35.    The court then ordered Father to pay $18,500 to Mother for
    attorney’s fees and instructed that that amount was non-dischargeable in bankruptcy
    because it was “incurred in obtaining support for the parties’ child.” Id. at 35.
    Father asserts several errors regarding the award of attorney’s fees in favor of
    Mother. First, he contends that the billing statements admitted into evidence at the
    hearing show duplicate billing and that the fee award duplicates a previous fee award in
    favor of Mother in the amount of $750 as a sanction for contempt. In support Father
    points to the billing statements at issue. But Mother had incurred more than $20,000 in
    fees in the past year plus additional fees for a two-day hearing. The post-dissolution
    court awarded her only $18,500. Father provides no calculation to show that Mother was
    actually awarded duplicate fees. Father’s arguments are without merit.
    17
    Next, Father contends that Mother failed to comply with a prior order when she
    filed multiple petitions seeking contempt citations without first mediating those issues;
    that the fee award includes a March 31, 2010, expense for a contempt proceeding that
    sought enforcement of a “nonexistent order[,]” Appellant’s Brief at 15; and that Mother
    should not have been awarded fees for contempt for Father’s failure to strike from a panel
    during the change of venue process. But, again, Father has not shown any computation
    of how the court arrived at the $18,500 fee figure, nor has he pointed to evidence in the
    record to show that part of that amount is attributable to fees for the incurred in seeking
    contempt citations. And although the post-dissolution court was not required to state the
    reason for the fee award, the post-dissolution court did so here. The fee award was based
    in large part on misconduct by Father (other than the contempt issues listed above),
    which, in turn, was the reason the parties were in court again. Father has not shown that
    the fee award is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before
    the court. See Bessolo, 
    966 N.E.2d at 733
    .
    Father asserts that the fee award was erroneous because the billing statement
    contains a blatant error, assessing $1868.50 in fees for 1.1 hours of work at a rate of $185
    per hour. The error is indeed obvious. He also argues that there was no evidence that the
    fee award was reasonable. Indiana’s Rules of Professional Conduct provide guidance as
    to factors to be considered in determining the reasonableness of attorney’s fees. Benaugh
    v. Garner, 
    876 N.E.2d 344
    , 348 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007).             Specifically, we look to
    Professional Conduct Rule 1.5(a), which lists the following non-exclusive factors to be
    considered:
    18
    (1) the time and labor required, the novelty and difficulty of the questions
    involved, and the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly;
    (2) the likelihood, if apparent to the client, that the acceptance of the
    particular employment will preclude other employment by the lawyer;
    (3) the fee customarily charged in the locality for similar legal services;
    (4) the amount involved and the results obtained;
    (5) the time limitations imposed by the client or by the circumstances;
    (6) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client;
    (7) the experience, reputation, and ability of the lawyer or lawyers
    performing the services; and
    (8) whether the fee is fixed or contingent.
    Father contends that “simply stating what he has been billed by an attorney is
    insufficient to uphold an award of fees.” Appellant’s Brief at 16.
    Father is correct that evidence of the fee award’s reasonableness is required in this
    case.   But the record is not devoid of evidence of many of the factors listed in
    Professional Rule 1.5(a). Specifically, Mother admitted into evidence billings from her
    attorney showing the time and labor required in this case (Rule 1.5(a)(1)); Mother
    testified that she had been billed more than $20,000 in fees and that she had incurred
    additional fees for a two-day hearing (Rule 1.5(a)(4)); the pleadings filed, prior hearings,
    and prior orders entered by the post-dissolution court show the “result[s] obtained” to
    date (Rule 1.5(a)(4)); and Mother had had the same counsel representing her in the post-
    dissolution action for at least one year (Rule 1.5(a)(5)).        And, again, Professional
    Conduct Rule 1.5(a) provides a non-exhaustive list of factors to be considered in
    determining the reasonableness of attorney’s fees.       Here, other factors are relevant,
    namely: Father had employed five attorneys between 2009 and 2011 in Indiana alone;
    Father is in a better position to contribute to attorney’s fees; Mother incurred the fees in
    part in order to obtain child support and benefits for the child; the Chronological Case
    19
    Summary shows that this has been a highly litigious case; Father obtained a $400,000
    severance package in 2008 and has spent that sum on attorney’s fees and expenses while
    willfully unemployed; and the trial court awarded Mother only $18,500 for attorney’s
    fees although she had incurred more than $20,000 in fees plus an additional sum for her
    attorney’s services in a two-day hearing.
    Except as we have discussed and rejected above, Father does not challenge the
    factual findings in support of the attorney’s fee award. He has not shown that the
    evidence does not support the findings or that the findings do not support the post-
    dissolution court’s award of attorney’s fees. Nor has he demonstrated that the $18,500
    award, less than the amount Mother incurred, was unreasonable. Thus, Father has not
    shown that the trial court erred in awarding attorney’s fees to Mother.
    Conclusion
    Father has not shown that the evidence does not support the post-dissolution
    court’s findings that Father’s behavior has become increasingly erratic and more hostile
    since the dissolution and that the parties are unable to communicate, which affects their
    ability to co-parent. Father challenges only two findings by the post-dissolution court,
    but we do not rely on those findings. The remaining findings relevant to custody support
    the court’s conclusion that it is in the child’s best interest for Mother to have sole legal
    and physical custody of the child.
    Father also has not shown that the evidence does not support the post-dissolution
    court’s findings regarding modification of his parenting time. Father again challenged
    only the same two findings he challenged with regard to custody. Again, we do not rely
    20
    on those findings in support of the August Order. Finally, Father has not shown that the
    award in favor of Mother of $18,500 for attorney’s fees is clearly against the logic and
    circumstances of the facts of this case in light of the facts that Mother has spent more
    than $20,000 in fees with her current attorney and the fees were incurred in part to obtain
    child support and life insurance premium reimbursements from Father. In sum, Father
    has not shown that the post-dissolution court erred, and we affirm the August Order.
    Affirmed.
    RILEY, J., and VAIDIK, J., concur.
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