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Ethical and
Procedural Considerations in Family Court Ex-Parte
Requests
By Gregory S. Forman -
Material for Charleston County Family Court
CLE–November 2007
Ex-parte relief is a drastic remedy
as it denies the opposing party significant due
process rights. Seeking ex-parte relief from
the Family Court implicates both the Rules of
Professional Conduct and the Rules of Civil
Procedure. Failure to follow the rules set in place
for seeking ex-parte relief raises
professional conduct considerations that could lead
to attorney discipline. Family law attorneys should
familiarize themselves with the few rules that
govern ex-parte requests.
There are four rules that family court
practitioners must be familiar with in properly
handling ex-parte requests: South Carolina
Rules of Civil Procedure 5(b)(3) and 65(b) [Rule
2(a) of the South Carolina Family Court Rules makes
these rules applicable to Family Court], South
Carolina Code of Judicial Conduct Canon 3(B)(7)(a)
and Rule 407, SCACR, South Carolina Rules of
Professional Conduct (hereinafter SCRPC) Rule
3.3(d). Rule 5(b)(3), SCRCP, sets forth requirements
that must be met in submitting proposed orders
(including ex-parte orders) to the court.
Rule 65(b), SCRCP, sets forth the standards the
court must apply in considering requests for
ex-parte restraining orders and the procedures
that must be applied if ex-parte relief is
granted. Canon 3(B)(7)(a) of the South Carolina Code
of Judicial Conduct sets forth the standard of
conduct for any judge considering an ex-parte
request. Rule 3.3(d), SCRPC, sets forth ethical
requirements attorneys must meet in seeking
ex-parte relief.
Rule 5(b)(3), SCRCP requires that "[a]ny party
providing a proposed order, proposed findings of
fact or conclusions of law, or proposed judgment or
other paper to the court for its consideration in
any pending matter shall serve the same on all
counsel of record at the same time and by the same
means." This rule would not appear to apply to
ex-parte requests filed at the beginning of the
case, as there is no opposing counsel. However, once
counsel appears, proposed orders must be served on
opposing counsel at the same time and by the same
means that they are provided to the court. This rule
encompasses not only ex-parte requests
involving substantive relief but also includes
proposed ex-parte orders requesting expedited
or emergency hearings.
This rule of procedure has not kept up with
technology and many attorneys, in an attempt to
comply with this rule, will send opposing counsel a
facsimile of the proposed ex-parte order
before hand delivering it to the court. This
procedure does not comply with the language of Rule
5(b)(3), though it clearly complies with the intent
of the rule. However, it is definitely problematic
(a violation of the Rules of Civil Procedure and
potentially a violation of the Rules of Professional
Conduct) to send the court an ex-parte
request that has not been provided opposing counsel
prior to submission.
Canon 3(g) of the South Carolina Rules of
Judicial Conduct states that:
A judge shall accord to every person who
has a legal interest in a proceeding, or
that person's lawyer, the right to be heard
according to law. A judge shall not
initiate, permit, or consider ex parte
communications, or consider other
communications made to the judge outside the
presence of the parties concerning a pending
or impending proceeding except that: (a)
Where circumstances require, ex parte
communications for scheduling,
administrative purposes or emergencies that
do not deal with substantive matters or
issues on the merits are authorized;
provided: (i) the judge reasonably believes
that no party will gain a procedural or
tactical advantage as a result of the ex
parte communication, and (ii) the judge
makes provision promptly to notify all other
parties of the substance of the ex parte
communication and allows an opportunity to
respond.
This canon creates the following directives for
judges in considering ex-parte requests: 1)
judges cannot have ex-parte communications
that deal with substantive issues; 2) judges can
have ex-parte communications that deal with
scheduling or administrative issues or emergencies
that are not substantive; 3) judges can only have
ex-parte communications that deal with
scheduling or administrative issues or emergencies
that are not substantive if the judge a) reasonably
believes that no party will gain a procedural or
tactical advantage as a result of the ex-parte
communication; b) makes provision promptly to
notify all other parties of the substance of the
ex-parte communication and; c) allows an
opportunity to respond.
Perhaps the most important rule regarding
ex-parte requests is the ethical obligation
created by Rule 3.3(d) SCRPC: "In an ex parte
proceeding, a lawyer shall inform the tribunal of
all material facts known to the lawyer that will
enable the tribunal to make an informed decision,
whether or not the facts are adverse" (emphasis
added). This rule creates an ethical obligation for
counsel seeking ex-parte relief to provide
the court all material facts known to the lawyer,
not just the material facts that support the
client’s request. While no reported South Carolina
case involves an attorney’s failure to comply with
this rule, attorneys in other states have been
subjected to discipline based on violation of this
rule. See e.g., In re Arabia, 283 Kan. 851,
156 P.3d 652 (2007); Iowa Supreme Court Attorney
Disciplinary Bd. v. Gottschalk, 729 N.W.2d 812
(Iowa 2007); Reciprocal Discipline of Page,
326 Or. 572, 955 P.2d 239 (1998); Matter of Black,
262 Kan. 825, 941 P.2d 1380 (1997).
Requests for Expedited/Emergency
Hearings
All of the above rules apply when requesting
expedited or emergency hearings on an ex-parte
basis. In making such a request, counsel must inform
an opposing attorney at the same time and in the
same manner that counsel makes the ex-parte
scheduling request to the family court. The family
court must also be informed of all material facts
relevant to the scheduling request.
Requests for Substantive Relief
Requests for ex-parte substantive relief from the
family court impose greater obligations on the
requesting attorney. The obligation is greater, in
part, because requests for substantive relief
implicate SCRPC Rule 3.3(d)’s requirement of candor
in ways that mere scheduling requests may not.
Rarely will there be material and adverse facts
relevant to an ex-parte scheduling request;
frequently there will be material and adverse facts
relevant to an ex-parte request for
substantive relief.
Further, requests for substantive ex-parte
relief must comply with the provisions of Rule
65(b), SCRCP, related to temporary restraining
orders. That rule reads as follows:
No temporary restraining order shall be
granted without notice of motion for the
order to the adverse party unless it clearly
appears from specific facts shown by
affidavit or by a verified complaint that
immediate and irreparable injury, loss or
damage will result to the applicant before
notice can be served and a hearing had
thereon. Every temporary restraining order
granted without notice shall be endorsed
with the date and hour of issuance; shall be
filed forthwith in the clerk's office and
entered of record; shall be served, together
with a summons and complaint in the event no
summons and complaint have previously been
served in the action, upon the adverse party
in accordance with the provisions of Rule 4;
shall define the injury and state why it is
irreparable and why the order was granted
without notice; and shall expire by its
terms within such time after entry, not to
exceed 10 days, as the court fixes, unless
within the time so fixed the order, for good
cause shown, is extended for a like period
or unless the party against whom the order
is directed consents that it may be extended
for a longer period. The reasons for the
extension shall be entered of record. In
case a temporary restraining order is
granted without notice, the motion for a
temporary injunction shall be set down for
hearing at the earliest possible time and
takes precedence of all matters except older
matters of the same character; and when the
motion comes on for hearing the party who
obtained the temporary restraining order
shall proceed with the application for a
temporary injunction and, if he does not do
so, the court shall dissolve the temporary
restraining order. On two days' notice to
the party who obtained the temporary
restraining order without notice or on such
shorter notice to that party as the court
may prescribe, the adverse party may appear
and move its dissolution or modification and
in that event the court shall proceed to
hear and determine such motion as
expeditiously as the ends of justice
require.
There are numerous requirements and protections
under this rule that are routinely ignored in the
family courts: 1) ex-parte relief cannot be
granted "unless it clearly appears from specific
facts shown by affidavit or by a verified complaint
that immediate and irreparable injury, loss or
damage will result to the applicant before notice
can be served and a hearing had thereon"; 2) the
ex-parte order must "define the injury and state why
it is irreparable and why the order was granted
without notice"’ 3) the ex-parte order must, by its
own terms, expire within ten days. This first
obligation is one placed on the attorney; the other
two obligations are placed upon the judge issuing
the order (though it is generally the attorney who
is preparing the proposed ex-parte
restraining order). Further when ex-parte
relief is granted "the motion for a temporary
injunction shall be set down for hearing at the
earliest possible time and takes precedence of all
matters except older matters of the same character."
The party aggrieved by an ex-parte temporary
restraining order may move for its dissolution or
modification on two days’ notice (or shorter notice
"as the court may prescribe").
In my experience, rarely do the affidavits
accompanying ex-parte requests give the court
a balanced view of the facts (or report any material
and adverse facts). However, failure to inform the
court of all material facts in making an
ex-parte request is a violation of the Rules of
Professional Conduct. Counsel should be extremely
cautious in making ex-parte requests and in insuring
that such substantive requests comply with ethical
obligations.
Counsel should further insure that ex-parte
applications and orders comply with the provisions
of Rule 65(b). Counsel for a party aggrieved by an
ex-parte restraining order should consider
seeking immediate review of the order or even
seeking supersedeas with the appellate courts.
See Rule 225(d)(1) (ex-parte orders are
subject to immediate supersedeas review in the
appellate courts without first seeking review by the
issuing court).
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