Court Opinion

ID: 6350256
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-15 20:10:45.323128+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:16:16.260721
License: Public Domain

06/15/2022
                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                           AT KNOXVILLE
                                 January 18, 2022 Session

                     LAUREN FRONTZ v. TRISTAN J. HALL

                    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Knox County
                      No. 149454 Gregory S. McMillan, Judge

                              No. E2021-00154-COA-R3-CV

Lauren Frontz (“Petitioner”) filed a petition for an order of protection against her ex-
boyfriend Tristan J. Hall (“Respondent”) on July 31, 2020. The trial court granted an ex
parte order of protection and set a hearing for ten days later. Several bridging orders were
subsequently entered by the trial court extending the length of time for the protective order.
Petitioner alleged Respondent was guilty of criminal contempt by violating the order of
protection. After a hearing, the trial court found Respondent guilty on five counts of
criminal contempt and sentenced him to fifty days in jail. The trial court also awarded
Petitioner her attorney’s fees in the amount of $77,525.75. Respondent appeals, arguing
that the bridging orders were invalid and that the trial court erred in its award of attorney’s
fees. We affirm.

        Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
                            Affirmed; Case Remanded

KRISTI M. DAVIS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY,
C.J., and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., joined.

Darren V. Berg, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tristan J. Hall.

Michael S. Kelley and A. Reece Brassler, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Lauren
Frontz.

                                         OPINION

                                      I. BACKGROUND

      The trial court set the hearing on Petitioner’s request for an order of protection for
August 13, 2020, ten days after it granted the temporary ex parte order. At that hearing,
Respondent’s first attorney requested that the trial court postpone the case until a related
criminal harassment matter against him was resolved, asserting among other things
Respondent’s Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. The trial court granted
Respondent’s request, entering a bridging order extending the order of protection until
September 17, 2020.

        Respondent’s criminal harassment charge was dismissed on September 14, 2020.
As found by the trial court, “on September 17, 2020, the ex parte order of protection was
bridged to November 5, 2020. At counsels’ request, the parties did not have a hearing.
Counsel expressed that, by passing the case, they would have additional time to review
phone records and conduct discovery.” Five days later, Respondent filed a notice stating
that he “has terminated [his] counsel . . . and intends to proceed pro se until new counsel
is obtained.”

       On September 25, 2020, Respondent, acting pro se, filed three motions. The first
requested “unfettered access to review the subpoenaed phone records of Petitioner and to
obatin attorney/client work product in the possession of the court.” The second stated that
“Respondent is preparing to propound extensive discovery and pleadings regarding the
mental and physical health of Petitioner,” and asked the court to seal the record in this case.
The third motion was “to dissolve Petitioner’s ex parte order of protection for lack of good
cause.” The motions contained a notice setting them for hearing on October 16, 2020.

       On October 9, 2020, Petitioner filed a motion for a protective order against
Respondent’s discovery requests and a motion for continuance of the November 5, 2020
hearing date “[s]o that the Petitioner may have an opportunity to answer any allowed
discovery from the Respondent and allow the Respondent to answer any discovery requests
from the Petitioner allowed by” the trial court. Respondent filed a response in opposition
to these motions, and also asked the trial court to compel Petitioner to answer his discovery
requests, vacate the temporary protective order, award him $11,000 in attorney’s fees, and
order Petitioner to appear and show cause as to why she should not be held in contempt.
Attached to Respondent’s response was a copy of a complaint filed by him against
Petitioner in Knox County Circuit Court, wherein he sued her for malicious prosecution,
defamation, false imprisonment, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

        In late October of 2020, both parties hired new counsel. On November 4, 2020, the
trial court conferred with new counsel via telephone. The trial court found as follows:

       On November 4, 2020, the Court conducted a phone conference with Steve
       Sharp, (representing Mr. Hall) and Doug Toppenberg (representing Ms.
       Frontz). Both parties were jointly seeking to continue the hearing set the
       following day. Counsel agreed that the case would take an estimated four
       hours and that they would work with the Court’s assistant to find a trial day
                                              2
       upon which to set the case. The Court entered an order continuing the ex
       parte order of protection to a date “to be determined by counsel.”

(Emphasis added). The trial court entered another bridging order on November 4, 2020
extending the order of protection and stating that “a hearing on the extension of this Order
of Protection will be held on . . . to be determined by counsel.”

       Respondent’s second counsel withdrew from representing him on November 23,
2020. The trial court’s order granting the withdrawal states that “[t]his shall not delay any
previously determined discovery dates or trial date.” On November 30, 2020, the trial court
entered an order denying Respondent’s motion to dissolve the protective order, stating that
“the Court finds that the issues raised in the motion to dissolve are factual in nature and
will be addressed at the trial of this cause.” The trial court also noted that
       Petitioner’s motion for continuance was denied and the matter remained
       upon the November 5, 2020 docket. Subsequent to this hearing, the
       November 5, 2020 hearing date was continued by agreement on November
       4, 2020, and [c]ounsel were directed to be placed upon the Court’s trial
       docket.

(Emphasis added). In early December, Respondent, acting pro se, filed four additional
motions. On December 1, 2020, Respondent filed a motion to disqualify Petitioner’s
counsel; he shortly thereafter requested the trial court to disqualify her attorney’s entire
law firm. On December 4, 2020, Respondent filed a “motion to set an immediate trial date;
or, in the alternative, dissolve the temporary (ex parte) order of protection.”

       On December 22, 2020, Petitioner filed a motion for an order to Respondent to show
cause for why he should not be held in contempt for seven alleged violations of the order
of protection. Petitioner alleged that Respondent directly sent her several emails stating,
among other things, the following:

       I don’t know what’s going on with your phone but read this and call your
       goddamn lawyers. I’m starting to get pissed . . .

       You keep seeing people change everything because of me. The world
       changes when I get angry. Why is it so difficult? . . . How many more people
       should I destroy before you finally get it?

       For you I will destroy worlds. No one will ever harm you or they will know
       wrath. Fuck your attorneys. Fuck everyone . . . Stop listening to [your
       attorney]. I make judges. I destroyed judges. [Your attorney] sold you on
       lies. He was never anything. I have much more power and control than he
       will ever have.
                                             3
Petitioner also alleged that Respondent sent her attorney emails that included the
statements, “I have people watching. And I intentionally violated the order [of protection]
to forewarn her. I don’t care. As long as she’s safe. You can send me to jail. . . I will burn
this world if someone hurts her.”

       The trial court found as follows regarding what happened next:

       On January 8, 2021, Attorney Darren Berg made his first appearance on
       behalf of [Respondent]. At the hearing, Mr. Berg informed the Court that he
       had been retained only two days earlier. During the hearing, Mr. Berg
       withdrew [Respondent’s] motion seeking an immediate trial date. After
       discussion among the Court and counsel, it was determined that, due to Mr.
       Berg’s recently having been retained, the uncertainty as to which motions
       were set, the fact that at least one motion was not ripe for hearing due to
       insufficient notice, and the fact that the show cause order had not been
       served, the best course of action would be to hear all pending motions on
       January 29, 2021.

                                           *       *     *

       On January 29, 2021, the Court held a hearing pursuant to its rulings made
       as part of the hearing held on January 8, 2021. Neither counsel had timely
       noticed any of the matters they wished to be heard. Both parties had served
       their notices of hearing by mail, neglecting to add an additional three days as
       required for notice served by mail. Since neither party would waive the
       required notice, the Court could not hear the various matters.

                                           *       *     *

       The Court then held a hearing [on February 5, 2021] on the alleged violations
       and found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that [Respondent] had violated the ex
       parte order of protection on five separate occasions and sentenced him to jail
       for a term of ten days for each violation, to be served consecutively.
       [Respondent] made a motion for release on bond while the contempt finding
       was appealed. That motion was granted.

       The Court then called the underlying order of protection for hearing, at which
       point [Respondent] conceded that, since the Court had found (beyond a
       reasonable doubt) that [Respondent] had committed the acts for which he
       was convicted and that [Petitioner’s] petition for an order of protection had
       been amended to include those allegations, he could not contest that

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       [Petitioner] was entitled to an order of protection. A one-year order of
       protection was entered.

(Emphasis in original). The trial court indicated in the protective order that “the issue of
attorney’s fees for the underlying order of protection [is] reserved.” Petitioner’s counsel
filed an affidavit of fees and expenses shortly thereafter. The trial court conducted a
hearing on the issue of attorney’s fees and expenses on March 19 and 23, 2021. In an
extensive and detailed thirteen-page order, the court awarded Petitioner $77,525.75 of her
total requested amount of $80,397.25.

                                         II. ISSUES

       Respondent raises the following issues, as restated:

1. Whether the trial court’s bridging order of protection entered November 4, 2020, is void
for failing to specify a period of time it would remain in effect, and if so, whether
Respondent’s five counts of indirect criminal contempt for violating the protective order
must be vacated.

2. Whether the trial court’s “refusal to go forward” with a hearing on the merits of the case
on December 11, 2020, should have resulted in termination of the case or dismissal for
failure to prosecute.

3. Whether the trial court erred in its award of attorney’s fees and expenses to Petitioner.

       In her statement of the issues presented, Petitioner requests an award of her
attorney’s fees on appeal.

                                III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

       As stated by our Supreme Court,

       In a non-jury case such as this one, appellate courts review the trial court’s
       factual findings de novo upon the record, accompanied by a presumption of
       the correctness of the findings, unless the preponderance of the evidence is
       otherwise. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Armbrister v. Armbrister, 414 S.W.3d
       685, 692 (Tenn. 2013). We review the trial court’s resolution of questions
       of law de novo, with no presumption of correctness.

Kelly v. Kelly, 445 S.W.3d 685, 691-92 (Tenn. 2014).

                                              5
        “[A] determination of attorney’s fees is within the discretion of the trial court.”
Wright ex rel. Wright v. Wright, 337 S.W.3d 166, 176 (Tenn. 2011). “Consequently, a trial
court’s award of fees will be upheld unless it has abused its discretion, ‘meaning that it
either applied an incorrect legal standard or reached a clearly unreasonable decision’
resulting in an injustice.” House v. Estate of Edmondson, 245 S.W.3d 372, 378 (Tenn.
2008) (quoting Kline v. Eyrich, 69 S.W.3d 197, 203-04 (Tenn. 2002)). “We presume that
the trial court’s discretionary decision is correct, and we consider the evidence in the light
most favorable to the decision.” Wright, 337 S.W.3d at 176 (citing Henderson v. SAIA,
Inc., 318 S.W.3d 328, 335 (Tenn. 2010)).

                                       IV. ANALYSIS

                    A. Order of Protection and Criminal Contempt

        The correctness of the trial court’s criminal contempt findings against Respondent
is not at issue on appeal. He admits in his brief that he “does not challenge the sufficiency
of the evidence supporting the criminal contempt misdemeanor convictions.” At the
February 5, 2021 hearing, the parties announced an agreement for the trial court to enter
an order of protection against Respondent. The following discussion took place:

       THE COURT: The Court accepts the agreement of an agreed order of no
       contact, no communication, for a period of 11 months and 29 days. Today
       is February 5th. It will be in effect until February 4th of 2022. The Court is
       making no findings of fact.

       [Petitioner’s counsel]: Well, can I interrupt you? You’re not making any
       findings of fact, but they are stipulating that they’re not contesting our facts.

       THE COURT: It’s an agreed order; no contact, no communication. I don’t
       know how to do it otherwise.

       [Respondent’s counsel]: We’re simply not contesting the facts, Your Honor.

       [Petitioner’s counsel]: I would like to have that noted in the order that it is
       they are not contesting the allegations.

       THE COURT: Okay. That would be the whole substance of an agreed order,
       is they’re agreeing for a no contact, no communication going down; that they
       are saying we agree to it. That’s the whole point. If they were contesting it,
       I would be having a hearing, and I would either grant it or deny it based on
       the facts and the determination of -- after I hear it.

                                              6
(Emphasis added). As can be seen from the above, the trial court’s order of protection
entered after this hearing was agreed to and has not been contested by Respondent on
appeal.

       Respondent’s argument is summarized in his brief as follows:

       The November 4, 2020 Bridging Ex Parte Order of Protection (as well as the
       September 17, 2020 Bridging Ex Parte Order of Protection) is Void on its
       Face as it is Devoid of a New Hearing Date Within One Year or any other
       Period of Time in Violation of the Mandatory Provisions of the Statutes
       Governing the Same (Nov. 4, 2021); in the alternative, both Bridging Ex
       Parte Orders of Protection are Void or Voidable Based on a Violation of the
       Statutorily Required Mandate that Either the Respondent or His Counsel
       Agree to the Same; Therefore, the Court’s Order, Finding Petitioner in
       Indirect Criminal Contempt of Court and Sentencing Him to Fifty (50) Days
       in Jail. . . . must be reversed and dismissed with prejudice.

(Capitalization in original). This argument was never raised by Respondent or presented
to the trial court, and so it has been waived for failure to raise it below. Even if it were not
waived, it is without merit because the record shows that each continuance, and the
resulting bridging orders, were done either at Respondent’s request or with his agreement
and acquiescence.

       Tennessee Code Annotated section 36-3-605 provides as follows regarding orders
of protection:

       (a) Upon the filing of a petition under this part, the courts may immediately,
       for good cause shown, issue an ex parte order of protection. An immediate
       and present danger of abuse to the petitioner shall constitute good cause for
       purposes of this section.

       (b) Within fifteen (15) days of service of such order on the respondent under
       this part, a hearing shall be held, at which time the court shall either dissolve
       any ex parte order that has been issued, or shall, if the petitioner has proved
       the allegation of domestic abuse, stalking or sexual assault by a
       preponderance of the evidence, extend the order of protection for a definite
       period of time, not to exceed one (1) year, unless a further hearing on the
       continuation of such order is requested by the respondent or the petitioner;
       in which case, on proper showing of cause, such order may be continued for
       a further definite period of one (1) year, after which time a further hearing
       must be held for any subsequent one-year period. Any ex parte order of
       protection shall be in effect until the time of the hearing, and, if the hearing
                                               7
          is held within fifteen (15) days of service of such order, the ex parte order
          shall continue in effect until the entry of any subsequent order of protection
          issued pursuant to § 36-3-609. If no ex parte order of protection has been
          issued as of the time of the hearing, and the petitioner has proven the
          allegation of domestic abuse, stalking or sexual assault by a preponderance
          of the evidence, the court may, at that time, issue an order of protection for a
          definite period of time, not to exceed one (1) year.

Tennessee Code Annotated section 36-3-608 adds that “[a]ll orders of protection shall be
effective for a fixed period of time, not to exceed one (1) year.”

       Our Supreme Court, construing a predecessor version of section 605, held “that the
ten [currently fifteen-]day hearing requirement1 is merely a limitation on the duration of
the ex parte order and not a limitation on jurisdiction,” stating:

          we find that the ten [currently fifteen-]day requirement modifies or refers
          solely to the ex parte order and not the trial court’s jurisdiction. The
          legislature apparently inserted this requirement to insure a prompt hearing to
          determine the validity and necessity of the ex parte relief. When a trial court
          fails to set a hearing within ten [now fifteen] days, the ex parte order expires
          and the case assumes the posture of a case where no ex parte order of
          protection has been issued.

Kite v. Kite, 22 S.W.3d 803, 806 (Tenn. 1997). In Luker v. Luker, 578 S.W.3d 450, 460
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2018), this Court discussed the fifteen-day requirement and the effect of a
party’s discovery request in an ex parte protective order case, stating as follows:

          The 15 day limit for ex parte orders of protection under the Domestic Abuse
          Act and Kite is, in our judgment, designed to protect a respondent and not a
          petitioner. As stated by our Supreme Court in Kite, “[t]he prompt hearing
          requirement limits the potential for abuse by protecting respondents from
          possible ongoing frivolous or retaliatory ex parte protective orders.” Kite,
          22 S.W.3d at 806. After all, upon service of an ex parte order of protection,
          a petitioner already has what he or she wants—immediate court ordered
          protection from the alleged offender. “The legislature apparently inserted
          this requirement to insure a prompt hearing to determine the validity and
          necessity of the ex parte relief.” Id. Therefore, the statutory dissolution of
          that ex parte order after 15 days serves to help only a respondent by
          expediting the matter and allowing him or her to bring a speedy resolution of
          the petition. We, however, see no barrier under the Domestic Abuse Act to

1
    The statute was later amended to increase the ten-day requirement to fifteen days.
                                                       8
       a respondent, such as in this case, requesting that the hearing be put off for
       some definite and limited period of time so he or she can request reasonable
       discovery, subject to the trial court’s management, with the proviso that the
       ex parte order of protection remains in place until that hearing. . . . Consistent
       with the Domestic Abuse Act and Kite, it is only a respondent who has the
       ability to request that the hearing be postponed to allow for discovery with
       the ex parte order of protection remaining in effect. A petitioner cannot
       extend the ex parte order of protection beyond the 15 day limit by requesting
       discovery. However, if the 15 day period is extended and the ex parte order
       remains in effect because of a request for discovery by a respondent, a
       petitioner likewise is allowed reasonable discovery as determined by a trial
       court in its discretion.

Luker, 578 S.W.3d at 460 (brackets in original).

       In Swonger v. Swonger, No. E2015-01130-COA-R3-CV, 2016 WL 1730732 (Tenn.
Ct. App. Apr. 28, 2016), this Court addressed a situation where the trial court entered a
default judgment granting a permanent, open-ended order of protection against a
respondent. We concluded that “the trial court lacked statutory authority to issue a
permanent, open-ended order of protection in this case,” stating that “[p]ursuant to this
Court’s construction of this statutory section [Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-3-605,] at a hearing
following entry of an ex parte order of protection, a trial court has only two options: (1) to
dissolve the ex parte order of protection; or (2) to extend the order of protection for a
definite period not to exceed one year.” Swonger, 2016 WL 1730732, at *5.

       Respondent cites the above-discussed authorities to argue on appeal that the
November 4, 2020 bridging order was void on its face because, he asserts, the trial court’s
statement that “a hearing on the extension of this Order of Protection will be held on . . . to
be determined by counsel” renders it a “permanent, open-ended order of protection.”
Respondent did not raise this objection with the trial court. There is no indication in the
record that he ever argued that the bridging order was void for any reason. The jurisdiction
of this Court is “appellate only,” Peck v. Tanner, 181 S.W.3d 262, 265 (Tenn. 2005)
(quoting Tenn. Code Ann. § 16-4-108(a)(1)), and “[a]ppellate jurisdiction necessarily
implies that the issue has been formulated and passed upon by the trial court.” Houston v.
Scott, No. E2010-01660-COA-R3-CV, 2012 WL 121104, at *5 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan. 17,
2012). Consequently, “[u]nder Tennessee law, issues raised for the first time on appeal are
waived.” Black v. Blount, 938 S.W.2d 394, 403 (Tenn. 1996).

        Moreover, the trial court entered several orders expressly memorializing and noting
Respondent’s agreement to the extensions of time and bridging orders. Regarding its
telephonic conference on November 4, 2020, the trial court found that “[b]oth parties were
jointly seeking to continue the hearing set the following day. Counsel agreed that the case
                                               9
would take an estimated four hours and that they would work with the Court’s assistant to
find a trial day upon which to set the case.” In its order denying Petitioner’s request for a
continuance, the trial court stated, “the November 5, 2020 hearing date was continued by
agreement on November 4, 2020.” In a third order, the court noted that “[o]n January 8,
2021, Attorney Darren Berg made his first appearance on behalf of [Respondent]. . . .
During the hearing, Mr. Berg withdrew [Respondent’s] motion seeking an immediate trial
date.” Respondent’s agreement and acquiescence to the entry of the bridging orders is thus
well documented and established in the technical record.

      In Hall v. Hall, another case cited and relied upon by Respondent, the Court
addressed an ex parte order of protection extended by a bridging order and the trial court’s
apparent failure to hold a hearing within the time allotted by statute, stating as follows:

       The 2005 ex parte order of protection was extended once through an agreed
       bridging order entered on September 15, 2005, with an agreed hearing date
       set for November 17, 2005. The record contains no indication of a November
       17, 2005 hearing, and by statute, the 2005 ex parte order would have expired
       on that hearing date without further agreement by the parties or demonstrated
       proof of Father’s allegations.

Hall v. Hall, No. E2013-02227-COA-R3-CV, 2014 WL 4536650, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App.
Sept. 15, 2014) (emphasis added). The clear implication of the above statement is that
there is no problem with the parties agreeing to extend the time for an ex parte protective
order. Contrary to the situation in Hall, in this case the trial court did not fail to meet the
time requirements imposed by the applicable statutory scheme, nor did the court act in any
dilatory way at all.

        Respondent also argues on appeal that the trial court should have dismissed this
action with prejudice for failure to prosecute, despite his admission that he never asked the
trial court for such relief. This argument is similarly entirely without merit.

                               B. Award of Attorney’s Fees

      The trial court’s award to Petitioner of $77,525.75 in attorney’s fees is authorized
by Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-3-617(a)(1), which provides in pertinent part:

       Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, no domestic abuse victim . . .
       shall be required to bear the costs, including any court costs, filing fees,
       litigation taxes or any other costs associated with the filing, issuance,
       registration, service, dismissal or nonsuit, appeal or enforcement of an ex
       parte order of protection, order of protection, or a petition for either such
       order . . . . If the court, after the hearing on the petition, issues or extends an
                                               10
       order of protection, all court costs, filing fees, litigation taxes and attorney
       fees shall be assessed against the respondent.

Respondent’s argument that the attorney’s fees award was unwarranted is grounded in his
assertion that “no hearing was held on the order of protection and the trial court made no
findings of fact on the underlying order of protection.” But there was a hearing. It occurred
on February 5, 2021, and the transcript is in the record. The trial court stated that “[t]he
Court . . . called the underlying order of protection for hearing, at which point [Respondent]
conceded that, since the Court had found (beyond a reasonable doubt) that [Respondent]
had committed the acts for which he was convicted and that [Petitioner’s] petition for an
order of protection had been amended to include those allegations, he could not contest
that [Petitioner] was entitled to an order of protection.” The hearing was short because
Respondent agreed to the protective order and stipulated to the facts as alleged by
Petitioner. Because there was a hearing that resulted in the issuance or extension of an
order of protection, the trial court correctly applied the mandate of Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-
3-617(a)(1) in awarding attorney’s fees.

        Respondent briefly states, without elaboration or argument, that the award of fees
was excessive. The trial court heard and considered this issue at length in a hearing lasting
two days. Respondent had the opportunity to fully explore the reasonableness of the fee
request and supporting proof, including cross-examining Petitioner’s counsel. In its order
granting $77,525.75 of the requested $80,397.25 in fees, the trial court aptly stated that
“[t]he case was quite prolonged, and a timeline of events within the case is necessary to
establish the length and complexity of the case.” The court then recited seven pages of
procedural history, in an apparent attempt to explain how what should have been a
relatively simple order of protection case resulted in more than eighty thousand dollars in
legal fees charged to Petitioner. Our distillation of this history in Section I above does not
include a number of other issues and skirmishes not directly relevant to the issues presented
on appeal.

       It is apparent that the trial court carefully considered the attorney’s fees affidavit in
painstakingly granular detail, applying the appropriate factors in considering the
reasonableness of the fees. The court disallowed some eighteen specific line items in the
affidavit and timekeeping records for time expended that it found to be inappropriate or
non-compensable. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s award of attorney’s
fees and costs.

       Petitioner asks for attorney’s fees on appeal. In New v. Dumitrache, 604 S.W.3d 1,
21-22 (Tenn. 2020), the Supreme Court interpreted and applied Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-3-
617, stating:

                                              11
       One means the General Assembly chose to ensure that victims of domestic
       abuse receive “enhanced protection” is to enact a statute that broadly declares
       that domestic abuse victims should not be required to bear the financial
       burdens of legal action made necessary by a domestic abuse perpetrator. . . .
       [W]e agree with the Court of Appeals that section 36-3-617 clearly
       authorizes awarding attorney’s fees and costs incurred in obtaining an order
       of protection or the extension of an order of protection, or in defending an
       appeal involving the issuance or extension of an order of protection.

       We also agree with the Court of Appeals that . . . section 36-3-617(a)(1) does
       not authorize an award of attorney’s fees for matters unrelated to obtaining
       an order of protection or an extension of an order of protection or defending
       an appeal involving the issuance or extension of an order of protection.
       Reynolds v. Reynolds, No. M2013-01912-COA-R3-CV, 2014 WL 7151596,
       at *10-11 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 12, 2014); Rodgers v. Rodgers, No. E2011-
       02190-COA-R3-CV, 2012 WL 3900791, at *13 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 10,
       2012). For example, in Rodgers v. Rodgers, the Court of Appeals explained
       that section 36-3-617(a)(1) authorized an award of attorney’s fees on appeal
       incurred in defending the extension of an order of protection but not
       attorney’s fees on appeal incurred for other unrelated issues. Rodgers, 2012
       WL 3900791, at *13. Similarly, in Reynolds v. Reynolds, the Court of
       Appeals held that section 36-3-617(a)(1) did not authorize an award of
       attorney’s fees incurred in successfully prosecuting a petition for criminal
       contempt alleging a willful violation of an order of protection. 2014 WL
       7151596, at *10-11.

In this case, the issues on appeal involve defending the validity of an order of protection.
As did the Supreme Court in New, we conclude that Petitioner is entitled to an award of
her appellate attorney’s fees.

                                     V. CONCLUSION

       The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Upon remand, the trial court shall enter
an order granting Petitioner her reasonable attorney’s fees incurred for this appeal. Costs
on appeal are assessed to the appellant, Tristan J. Hall, for which execution may issue if
necessary.

                                          _______________________________
                                          KRISTI M. DAVIS, JUDGE

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