Title: Re: Gurarianship: Bond v. Round

State: idaho

Issuer: Idaho Supreme Court (civil)

Document:

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO 
 
Docket No. 41485-2013 
 
IN THE MATTER OF THE 
GUARDIANSHIP OF JANE DOE AND 
JANE DOE I. 
_______________________________________ 
 
ANDY BOND and RONNA BOND, husband 
and wife, 
 
Petitioners-Appellants, 
 
v. 
 
AMBER ROUND, 
 
Respondent. 
 
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Boise, November 2014 Term 
 
2014 Opinion No. 136 
 
Filed: December 18, 2014 
 
Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk 
 
 
 
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of 
Idaho, in and for Ada County.  Hon. Michael McLaughlin, District Judge; Hon. 
Roger E. Cockerille, Magistrate Judge. 
 
The decision of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. 
 
Derek A. Pica, Boise, argued for appellants. 
 
Joshua A. Townsend, Sr., Arkoosh Law Offices, Boise, argued for respondent. 
 
 
 
EISMANN, Justice. 
 
This is an appeal by guardians out of Ada County from a decision of the district court 
affirming an order of the magistrate court granting a mother visitation with her children who are 
under guardianship and affirming the magistrate court’s sua sponte denial of attorney fees to both 
parties without a hearing.   We agree that the magistrate court did not err in granting the mother 
visitation with her children, but on different grounds than asserted by the district court, and we 
reverse the district court’s decision that the magistrate court did not err in denying an award of 
attorney fees sua sponte without the opportunity for a hearing.   
  
 
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I. 
Factual Background. 
 
 
On September 15, 2009, Andy and Ronna Bond filed this action to be appointed 
guardians of two children who were at that time two and eight years of age.  The older child had 
lived with the Bonds off and on for the first six years of her life, and both children had lived with 
them exclusively since June 2007.  The Bonds (Guardians) were initially appointed temporary 
guardians of the children.  Amber Round (Mother) is the mother of the children.  She was 
initially represented by counsel, but he was permitted to withdraw and she did not file a timely 
notice of how she would proceed.1  Her default was entered on March 17, 2010, and she filed a 
motion to set aside the default on the same day.  The following day, she also filed a notice of 
appearance, informing the magistrate court that she would be representing herself.  She claimed 
that she had moved and did not receive notice of her attorney’s withdrawal. 
On March 25, 2010, the magistrate court held a hearing on Mother’s motion to set aside 
the default.  The court found, considering the evidence presented and Mother’s credibility and 
demeanor, that service was properly made upon her.  It therefore denied her motion to set aside 
the default. 
On April 8, 2010, the magistrate court appointed the Guardians upon the ground that 
Mother and Ty Round, the children’s father (Father), were unable to provide the children with a 
stable home environment.  Father and Mother were later divorced on November 15, 2010. 
Mother appealed to the district court.  On May 18, 2010, she filed in the district court a 
petition to terminate the guardianship and a motion to allow for visitation.  These motions were 
apparently transferred to the magistrate division of the district court. 
                                                 
1 When, as in this instance, an attorney needs leave of court to withdraw as counsel for a client, the attorney must 
file a motion and serve it upon all parties, including the attorney’s client.  I.R.C.P. 11(b)(2).  If the court grants leave 
to withdraw, the order permitting withdrawal “shall direct the party whose attorney is withdrawing to appoint 
another attorney to appear, or to appear in person by filing a written notice with the court stating how the client will 
proceed without an attorney, within 20 days from the date of service of the order.”  I.R.C.P. 11(b)(3).  The order 
must also state that if within that 20-day period the party fails to file a written appearance in person or through new 
counsel, “such failure shall be sufficient ground for entry of default and default judgment against such party or 
dismissal of the action of such party, with prejudice, without further notice, which shall be stated in the order of the 
court.”  Id.  The clerk of the court must immediately serve the order upon the withdrawing attorney’s former client 
by mailing a copy of the order to the client at the address designated by the withdrawing attorney as the one most 
likely to give notice to the former client.  I.R.C.P. 11(b)(3), 77(d).  This procedure was followed in this case.    
 
 
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On December 30, 2010, the district court affirmed the magistrate court’s denial of the 
motion to set aside the default and its appointment of Guardians.  The district court awarded 
Guardians $7,965.00 as attorney fees on the ground that the appeal was frivolous. 
 
Mother’s motion to terminate the guardianship was set for trial to commence on January 
11, 2011, in the magistrate court, but prior to that date she had been sentenced to a minimum of 
two years in prison, with the district court retaining jurisdiction to consider suspending the 
sentence and placing her on probation after completion of a rehabilitation program in prison.  
During the pendency of the guardianship, Mother struggled with addiction to methamphetamine 
and committed felony and misdemeanor offenses.  As a result of Mother’s incarceration, the 
petition was dismissed without prejudice on March 1, 2011.  The magistrate court awarded 
Guardians court costs and attorney fees totaling $35,521.25. 
 
Mother was released from prison in July.  On December 8, 2011, Mother again filed a 
petition to terminate the guardianship.  She also filed a motion seeking visitation with her 
children from 5:00 p.m. on Friday until 5:00 p.m. on Sunday pending the final outcome of her 
petition to terminate and a shared holiday schedule where she could spend meaningful time with 
her children during Christmas vacation.  The magistrate court later denied that motion on 
January 25, 2012, but the order doing so is not in the record on appeal.   
On December 13, 2011, Guardians filed a motion seeking to stay all proceedings until 
Mother paid the court costs and attorney fees previously awarded against her.  That motion was 
heard on January 27, 2012, and the magistrate court orally denied the motion at the conclusion of 
the hearing.  The court also entered an order denying the motion, but that order is not in the 
appellate record. 
 
Trial was scheduled to commence on April 12, 2012, but on that date Guardians raised 
the issue that Father was an indispensable party.  The magistrate court agreed, and the matter was 
postponed so that he could be served.  The trial was reset for August 16, 2012, but on that date 
the guardian ad litem pointed out that Father had not been given notice of the hearing.  The trial 
was then postponed to December 6 and 7, 2012. 
 
The magistrate court entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law on January 9, 
2013.  It found that terminating the guardianship would not be in the children’s best interest, but 
that Mother should be granted visitation with the children.  The court also held that both parties 
would bear their own costs and attorney fees.  Mother timely appealed to the district court.  It 
 
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affirmed the order of the magistrate court in its entirety, and Guardians then timely appealed to 
this Court.  In an appeal from a district court’s determination of a case appealed to it from the 
magistrate court, we review the decision of the district court to determine whether it correctly 
applied the applicable standard of appellate review.  Peterson v. Peterson, 156 Idaho 85, 88, 320 
P.3d 1244, 1247 (2014). 
 
 
II. 
Did the District Court Err in Upholding the Magistrate Court’s Denial of Guardians’ 
Requested Stay? 
 
 
On December 8, 2011, Mother filed her petition to terminate the guardianship.  On 
December 13, 2011, Guardians filed a motion to stay resolution of Mother’s petition until she 
had paid the two judgments awarded against her for costs and attorney fees incurred by 
Guardians in earlier proceedings in this case.2  The magistrate denied the motion for a stay, and 
on appeal the district court held that the magistrate court did not abuse its discretion in doing so. 
The magistrate court denied the motion to stay, held an evidentiary hearing on Mother’s 
motion, and denied the motion.  Any contention that it abused its discretion in denying the 
                                                 
2 Guardians did not cite any authority that would permit the stay they requested.  They cited Rule 41(d) which 
provides that “[i]f a plaintiff who has once dismissed an action in any court commences an action based upon or 
including the same claim against the same defendant,” a court may stay proceedings until the plaintiff has paid the 
costs of an action previously dismissed.  I.R.C.P. 41(d).  Rule 41(d) has no application to these proceedings.  It 
applies where “a plaintiff who has once dismissed an action in any court commences an action based upon or 
including the same claim against the same defendant.”  I.R.C.P. 41(d) (emphases added).  Mother was not the 
plaintiff in this action; it was Guardians who commenced this action to be appointed as guardians of Mother’s 
children.  Mother did not dismiss any prior action against Guardians; she dismissed a prior motion to terminate the 
guardianship that was brought in this action. 
 
Guardians also argue:  “[T]he ruling is inconsistent with Rodriguez v. Rodriguez, 150 Idaho 614, 249 P.3d 
413 (2011) wherein the Idaho Supreme Court ruled a party in contempt cannot move to modify custody of [sic] 
visitation of children.”  Actually, Rodriguez was an opinion issued by the Idaho Court of Appeals, not by this Court.  
In Rodriguez, the Court of Appeals affirmed an appellate decision of the district court holding that the magistrate 
court erred in refusing to hear a mother’s motion to amend visitation on the ground that she was in contempt for 
nonpayment of child support where there had been no hearing to determine whether she had the current ability to 
purge the contempt.  150 Idaho at 618, 249 P.3d at 417.  In this case, Mother was not found in contempt.  The only 
similarity between the two cases is that here the magistrate court stated it would not stay the proceedings because 
Mother did not have “wealth or resources” and requiring payment would close the courthouse door to her and in 
Rodriguez the Court of Appeals held that the district judge correctly held that the mother in that case could not be 
denied a hearing without a determination that she was financially able to purge the contempt.  Guardians are also 
apparently unaware that in State Department of Health & Welfare v. Slane, 155 Idaho 274, 279, 311 P.3d 286, 291 
(2013), this Court overruled the opinions upon which Rodriguez was based, holding that those opinions, which 
permitted a court to refuse to hear a motion brought by a party in contempt for nonpayment of child support violated 
Article 1, § 18, of the Idaho Constitution. 
 
 
   
 
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motion for a stay is moot.  Fischer v. Bd. of Trustees of Meridian Joint Sch. Dist. No. 2, 131 
Idaho 856, 857, 965 P.2d 1292, 1293 (1998). 
 
III. 
Did the District Court Err in Holding that Guardians’ Challenge to the Magistrate Court’s 
Denial of the Petition to Terminate the Guardianship Was Moot? 
 
 
The magistrate court denied Mother’s petition to terminate the guardianship.  In their 
appeal to the district court, Guardians argued that the magistrate court used the wrong standard in 
denying Mother’s motion to terminate the guardianship.  The district court held on appeal that 
because Guardians had prevailed on Mother’s motion, any challenge to it was moot. 
 
“A case is moot if it presents no justiciable controversy and a judicial determination will 
have no practical effect upon the outcome.”  Goodson v. Nez Perce Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, 133 
Idaho 851, 853, 993 P.2d 614, 616 (2000). For example, a case is moot when: “The appellants 
have received all the relief to which they might have been found to be entitled. Only hypothetical 
questions remain. It being impossible for this court to grant appellants other or additional relief, 
we will not proceed to formal judgment on the hypothetical issues but will dismiss the 
appeal.”  Dorman v. Young, 80 Idaho 435, 437, 332 P.2d 480, 481 (1958). 
 
In this case, Guardians received all of the relief to which they were entitled with respect 
to the merits of Mother’s petition to terminate the guardianship.  The petition was denied. 
 
They argue that the case is not moot because the magistrate court used the wrong legal 
standard in denying Mother’s motion.  This Court has recognized three exceptions to the 
mootness doctrine:  “(1) when there is the possibility of collateral legal consequences imposed 
on the person raising the issue; (2) when the challenged conduct is likely to evade judicial review 
and thus is capable of repetition; and (3) when an otherwise moot issue raises concerns of 
substantial public interest.”  Ameritel Inns, Inc. v. Greater Boise Auditorium Dist., 141 Idaho 
849, 851-52, 119 P.3d 624, 626-27 (2005).  Although Guardians do not expressly argue this 
exception, their argument would fit within the first exception.  A guardianship is a continuing 
case until the guardianship is terminated.  Any future petition to terminate the guardianship 
would probably be brought in this case and heard by the same magistrate judge.  If the magistrate 
court applied the wrong standard in ruling upon Mother’s motion, it may apply the same standard 
in ruling upon a subsequent motion.  Deciding whether the correct standard was applied in ruling 
 
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on Mother’s motion would preclude having to appeal based upon that issue if Mother again 
moved to terminate the guardianship and the court granted her motion.  See State v. Manley, 142 
Idaho 338, 343-44, 128 P.3d 954, 959-60 (2005). 
 
Guardians raise two contentions regarding the magistrate court’s alleged use of the wrong 
standard.  First, they argue that the court “set forth a ‘roadmap’ for Amber to successfully prevail 
in terminating the guardianship in a subsequent proceeding that is based upon an erroneous legal 
standard for the termination of a guardianship.”  In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, 
the court wrote: 
In the future, Amber needs to: 1) get her financial affairs in order; 2) 
obtain adequate living accommodations for herself and her children; 3) continue 
to abide by all terms and conditions of her probation; 4) establish that she can 
remain drug free outside of the watchful eye of her mother; 5) establish that she 
can be an involved and responsible parent during the overnight visitation; 6) 
maintain her full-time employment; 7) become more involved in the children’s 
school and extra-curricular activities; and 8) attend and successfully complete a 
16 hour parenting class from a qualified professional counselor. 
 
On the same date that the court entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the 
court entered a document titled “Judgment and Decree Denying Petition to Terminate 
Guardianship.”  That document was incorrectly titled as being a “Judgment and Decree” rather 
than an order.  Mother’s petition was not a pleading, I.R.C.P. 7(a),3 and therefore the denial of 
the motion did not constitute either the resolution of a claim for relief in the action or the 
termination of the action, for which a judgment could be entered.  Spokane Structures, Inc. v. 
Equitable Inv., LLC, 148 Idaho 616, 619, 226 P.3d 1263 1266 (2010).  The magistrate court’s 
order denying Mother’s petition did not include the language quoted above from its findings of 
fact and conclusions of law.  Thus, the quoted language was clearly not part of the court’s order. 
The court did not state that if Mother accomplished these things, the guardianship would 
terminate or that it would grant a motion to terminate the guardianship.  It merely provided her 
guidance regarding areas of her life that she needed to correct.  Guardians are to be commended 
                                                 
3 Rule 7(a) of the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure provides: 
 
There shall be a complaint and an answer; and there shall be a reply to a counterclaim 
denominated as such; an answer to a cross-claim, if the answer contains a cross-claim; a third-
party complaint, if a person who was not an original party is summoned under Rule 14 and there 
shall be a third-party answer, if a third-party complaint is served.  No other pleading shall be 
allowed, except that the court may order a reply to an answer or a third-party answer. 
 
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for supporting the children and providing them a stable, loving home.  The children have thrived 
in their care.  At the time of oral argument, Mother was again incarcerated, and neither counsel 
had any idea when she would be released.  In making the challenged statement, the magistrate 
court was undoubtedly informing Mother that simply being the children’s mother and wanting 
them to live with her was not a sufficient basis for terminating the guardianship.  She would have 
to make significant changes in her life.  The court may also have been hoping to discourage 
Mother from filing future frivolous motions to terminate the guardianship, thereby causing 
needless expense to Guardians.  Under no stretch of the imagination could the court’s statement 
be considered a legal standard that the court adopted for deciding any future motion to terminate 
the guardianship. 
 
Second, Guardians argue that the magistrate court incorrectly denied Mother’s motion on 
the ground that she failed to prove that termination of the guardianship was in the best interest of 
the children rather than on the ground that she failed to prove that Guardians were unfit or 
unqualified.  They cite In re Doe, 148 Idaho 432, 224 P.3d 499 (2009), in support of this 
argument and contend that termination of the guardianship would require proving that Guardians 
were unfit or unqualified.  Simply reading that case would show that the standard for removing a 
guardian on the ground that the guardian was unfit or unqualified was limited to a situation in 
which a party was attempting to remove a guardian appointed by the parents in their wills 
pursuant to Idaho Code section 15-5-202; it did not apply to the removal of a court-appointed 
guardian.  Id. at 437-40, 224 P.3d at 504-07. 
 
Guardians have failed to establish an exception to the mootness doctrine.  Therefore, the 
district court did not err in holding that their appeal of the denial of Mother’s motion was moot. 
 
IV. 
Did the District Court Err in Upholding the Magistrate Court’s Order Granting Mother 
Visitation with Her Children? 
 
 
At the time of these proceedings, there was no order permitting Mother to have visitation 
with her children.  Guardians allowed Mother’s mother to have visitation with the children in her 
home from Saturday to Sunday, and because Mother lived with her mother she was able to see 
the children during those visits.  The magistrate court ordered that Mother be able to visit the 
 
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children in her mother’s home from 5:30 p.m. on Friday until 5:30 p.m. on Saturdays, with the 
visitation being supervised by Mother’s mother and the children sleeping in her home. 
 
Guardians argued that the magistrate court did not have the authority to award Mother 
visitation with her children.  The district court held that the court was granted that authority by 
Idaho Code section 15-5-212(b), which states that “[a]fter notice and hearing on a petition for 
removal or for permission to resign, the court may terminate the guardianship and make any 
further order that may be appropriate.”  The district court held that it would be too narrow of an 
interpretation to hold that the authority to “make any further order that may be appropriate” 
applied only if the motion to terminate the guardianship was granted. 
 
“The interpretation of a statute is a question of law over which we exercise free review.  
It must begin with the literal words of the statute; those words must be given their plain, usual, 
and ordinary meaning; and the statute must be construed as a whole.”  A & B Irr. Dist. v. Idaho 
Dep’t. of Water Res., 154 Idaho 652, 654, 301 P.3d 1270, 1272 (2012) (citations omitted).  The 
district court misconstrued the statute. 
 
The statute states:  “After notice and hearing on a petition for removal or for permission 
to resign, the court may terminate the guardianship and make any further order that may be 
appropriate.”  The statute states that the court “may terminate the guardianship and make any 
further order that may be appropriate.”  I.C. § 15-5-212(b) (emphasis added).  Under the clear 
wording of the statute, the further order may only be made if the court terminates the 
guardianship.  Therefore, the district court misinterpreted the statute.  However, “[w]here the 
lower court reaches the correct result by an erroneous theory, this Court will affirm the order on 
the correct theory.”  Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist. v. Mussell, 139 Idaho 28, 33, 72 P.3d 868, 873 
(2003). 
Guardians argue that the magistrate court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction to 
award Mother visitation.  They state, “Nowhere in the guardianship statutes (e.g. Idaho Code § 
15-5-201 et. seq.) does it provide for court ordered visitation for a non-guardian.”  That argument 
misapprehends the nature of a guardianship.  It is not a termination of parental rights; it is a 
limitation on parental rights. 
We must start with the premise that “[a] parent has a fundamental liberty interest in 
maintaining a relationship with his or her child.”  In re Adoption of Doe, 143 Idaho 188, 191, 141 
P.3d 1057, 1060 (2006).  There is nothing in the guardianship statutes that purports to terminate 
 
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that parental right.  Idaho Code section 15-5-209 states that the guardian of a minor “has the 
powers and responsibilities of a parent who has not been deprived of custody of his minor and 
unemancipated child.”  The powers of a parent who has not been deprived of custody of a minor 
child do not include the power to deprive the other parent of visitation with the child.  Doe v. 
Doe, 149 Idaho 669, 239 P.3d 774 (2010) (upholding the change of primary physical custody 
from the mother to the father due to mother’s refusal to permit the father to exercise visitation). 
“Unless it is otherwise indicated in the order of guardianship, a court appointed guardian 
of a minor child is entitled to the custody of the ward.  Custody is but an incident of 
guardianship.”  In re Revello, 100 Idaho 829, 832, 606 P.2d 933, 936 (1979).  “The guardian is 
empowered to facilitate the ward’s education, social, or other activities and to authorize medical 
or other professional care, treatment, or advice.”  I.C. § 15-5-209(3).  “Until the guardianship is 
terminated, the guardian’s right to custody of the minor is superior to that of the minor’s parent.”  
In re Doe I, 145 Idaho 337, 340, 179 P.3d 300, 303 (2008).  However, that the guardian has a 
superior right to the custody of the child does not mean that the child’s parent has no right to 
visitation with the child.  “Guardianship proceedings in Idaho are governed by statute.”  Doe v. 
Doe, 150 Idaho 432, 434, 247 P.3d 659, 661 (2011).  There is nothing in the guardianship 
statutes that purports to deny a parent visitation with his or her child during the guardianship.  
We recognized that fact in Roe v. Doe, 142 Idaho 174, 125 P.3d 530 (2005), where a parent 
defending an action to terminate his parental rights on the ground of neglect argued that the 
appointment of guardians for the child limited his ability to see his child.  We stated, “Doe was 
also granted visitation in the guardianship order and could have used the legal system to enforce 
his visitation rights, had he truly been concerned about his inability to see Baby Doe.”  Id. at 178, 
125 P.3d at 534.  Although the appointment of a guardian for an unemancipated minor child is a 
significant restriction on the rights of the child’s parent, it does not terminate the parent’s right to 
visitation with the child. 
 The paramount issue in guardianship proceedings is the best interests of the child.  In re 
Guardianship of Copenhaver, 124 Idaho 888, 892, 865 P.2d 979, 983 (1993).  The best interests 
of the child is “the primary factor in the determination whether to appoint, and whom to appoint, 
as a guardian for such child,” I.C. § 15-5-204; the court must appoint the person “whose 
appointment would be in the best interests of the minor,” I.C. § 15-5-206; the court must appoint 
the person nominated by a child fourteen years of age or older, “unless the court finds the 
 
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appointment contrary to the best interests of the minor,” id.; and the standard for removal of a 
court-appointed guardian or termination of the guardianship is the best interest of the child, Doe 
v. Doe, 150 at 436, 247 P.3d at 663. 
The best interests of the child is likewise the standard governing visitation between the 
parent and the ward.  If the guardian and the parent cannot agree on what visitation would be in 
the ward’s best interest, including any restrictions or conditions for exercising visitation, then 
that matter will have to be determined by the court presiding over the guardianship action.   
 
Finally, Guardians argue that Mother’s motion did not include a request for visitation and 
that the district court would not address that issue on appeal.  The district court held that because 
Guardians did not raise the issue before the magistrate court, they could not raise it for the first 
time on appeal. 
Guardians assert that the district court erred, but they do not allege that they were 
prejudiced by either the magistrate court sua sponte awarding Mother visitation or the district 
court failing to address the issue.  In their case in chief, Guardians called an expert witness to 
testify and elicited from the witness testimony that it was in the best interests of the children to 
continue visiting with their mother and to gradually increase the visitation.  The questioning was 
as follows: 
GUARDIANS’ COUNSEL:  Q. At this time what do you believe is in the 
best interest for [the children]? 
EXPERT WITNESS:  A. I think the best interest is for them to continue to 
live with their current living circumstances and to continue to visit with their 
mother on a regular basis to gradually increase the amount of time depending 
upon how they’re doing and how the process of spending additional time with 
their mother goes.  . . . . 
Q.  With regard to the visits, do you think it’s important that Amber would 
have some of those visits on her own without her mom being present, other family 
members? 
A.  I would certainly think that that would be the logical next step, yes. 
 
 
“The court at every stage of the proceeding must disregard any error or defect in the 
proceeding which does not affect the substantial rights of the parties.”  I.R.C.P. 61.  Absent an 
argument that a party was prejudiced, we need not address the claimed error or defect in the 
proceeding.  Houston v. Whittier, 147 Idaho 900, 904, 216 P.3d 1272, 1276 (2009).  Because 
Guardians have not even asserted they were prejudiced, much less presented any argument on 
that issue, we will not address this alleged error on appeal.   
 
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V. 
Did the District Court Err in Upholding the Magistrate Court’s Denial of an Award of 
Attorney Fees? 
 
 
In its order denying Mother’s motion, the magistrate court wrote that “the parties shall 
bear their own attorney’s fees and costs.”  Guardians argued to the district court that the 
magistrate court erred by summarily denying attorney fees.  The district court held that the issue 
was improperly raised for the first time on appeal because they did not seek attorney fees before 
the magistrate, file any objection to the denial, or file a motion to reconsider it.  In so ruling, the 
district court erred.   
 
In its order, the magistrate court sua sponte ruled “that the parties shall bear their own 
attorney’s fees and costs.”  Prior to the issuance of the court’s order, neither party could have 
known what the court’s ruling would be and would have no basis for claiming to be the 
prevailing party.  Once the court ruled, Guardians did not have to file a memorandum of costs or 
object in order to preserve the issue for appeal.  Oakes v. Boise Heart Clinic Physicians, PLLC, 
152 Idaho 540, 544, 272 P.3d 512, 516 (2012).  Likewise, Guardians did not have to file a 
motion for reconsideration in order to preserve the issue on appeal.  Parkside Sch., Inc. v. Bronco 
Elite Arts & Athletics, LLC, 145 Idaho 176, 179, 177 P.3d 390, 393 (2008).  Therefore, the 
district court erred in failing to vacate the magistrate court’s sua sponte ruling that neither party 
was entitled to an award of court costs or attorney fees.  In so ruling, we are not expressing any 
opinion as to whether either party is entitled to such an award.  Assuming that Guardians 
properly make such a request on remand and there is a timely objection, the magistrate court 
must decide whether Guardians are entitled to costs under Rule 54(d)(1)(B) of the Idaho Rules of 
Civil Procedure.  If the court determines that they are entitled to costs and they request an award 
of attorney fees under Idaho Code section 12-121, the court must decide, in its discretion, 
whether to award attorney fees under that statute.  Those are decisions for the magistrate court, 
not for this Court to make on appeal. 
 
VI. 
Is Either Party Entitled to an Award of Attorney Fees on Appeal? 
 
 
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Guardians and Mother request an award of attorney fees on appeal pursuant to Idaho 
Code section 12-121.  “In order to be eligible for an award of attorney fees under Idaho Code 
section 12-121, the party must be the prevailing party on appeal.”  Armand v. Opportunity Mgmt. 
Co., Inc., 155 Idaho 592, 602, 315 P.3d 245, 255 (2013).  Because both parties prevailed in part, 
we will not award attorney fees on appeal. 
 
IV. 
Conclusion. 
 
 
We affirm the ruling of the district court except with respect to its holding that appellants 
did not preserve the issue of the magistrate court’s sua sponte denial of court costs and attorney 
fees, which we reverse.  We do not award costs or attorney fees on appeal. 
 
 
Chief Justice BURDICK, Justices J. JONES, HORTON and Senior Justice Pro Tem 
WALTERS CONCUR.