C.S.G. v. R.G.

559 S.W.3d 416
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 2018
DocketNo. ED 106028
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 559 S.W.3d 416 (C.S.G. v. R.G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.S.G. v. R.G., 559 S.W.3d 416 (Mo. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

ROBERT G. DOWD, JR., Judge

C.S.G. ("Appellant") appeals from the judgment denying her motion to hold her ex-husband, R.G. ("Respondent"), in civil contempt for failing to fulfill his financial obligations under an order of protection.1 We reverse and remand.

In July 2013, Appellant sought and received a full order of protection in which Respondent was ordered to refrain from abusing, threatening, harassing, stalking, communicating with or entering the residence of Appellant. The court also ordered Respondent to pay $600 a month to Appellant for mortgage payments. In August 2013, Appellant filed a motion for civil contempt, alleging that Respondent had not made the first monthly payment under the order of protection. Shortly thereafter, Appellant also filed a motion for indirect criminal contempt, alleging that Respondent had violated the other provisions of the order of protection by repeatedly threatening to kill her.2

The trial court held a hearing on both the motions for civil and indirect criminal contempt in April 2014. The court found Respondent in indirect criminal contempt and entered an order sentencing him to six months in jail. The court also entered an order finding Respondent to be in civil contempt for failing to make the $600 payments as he was obligated to do in the order of protection even though he had the ability to make those payments. The court ordered Respondent to return to court for "disposition of this matter." The order of protection automatically renewed in July 2014.

After multiple continuances, the parties returned to court in January 2015, at which time the court instituted a payment plan, ordering Respondent to make $300 monthly payments to Appellant. The court stated that the total amount owed would be determined at the next court appearance. The order of protection again renewed in July of 2015, containing all of the original orders therein including the monthly $600 payments. After a case conference in May 2016, the court entered an order setting a hearing and indicating that Respondent had agreed to pay $800 to Appellant before that hearing date and another $800 a month later. The court ordered that Respondent was also to continue making payments as previously ordered.

On June 17, 2016, Appellant filed another motion for indirect criminal contempt alleging that, again, Respondent was threatening to kill her. She also filed that day another motion to hold Respondent in *419civil contempt for failure to pay her what he owed under the order of protection. On July 8, 2016, the court dismissed the "current" civil contempt motion because that matter was already being handled through the civil contempt motion Appellant had filed in 2013.

The order of protection expired in July 2016. In August 2016, in a separate cause of action, Respondent was charged with felony aggravated stalking of Appellant. He pled guilty and was sentenced in December 2016, ultimately being placed on five years' probation. Also in December 2016, based on threats Respondent had made about the judge in this case, the case was reassigned and set for hearing on January 6, 2017 before a new judge. At that hearing, the court took up both the motion for indirect criminal contempt and the civil contempt matter. Respondent did not appear, and his counsel explained that he had not been in contact with Respondent since August or September 2016, which would have been when Respondent was arrested on the stalking charge and was thereafter in custody awaiting resolution of that matter.

Appellant testified at the January 2017 hearing about the allegations in her motion for indirect criminal contempt and about the civil contempt matter. Appellant testified that Respondent was ordered to pay her $600 a month pursuant to the order of protection. She said that Respondent was found to be in contempt of that order in April 2014 for not paying and that when the parties returned to court for final disposition of the civil contempt matter in January of 2015, Respondent agreed to start getting in compliance by paying $300 a month. Appellant testified that Respondent made some payments from March 2015 to August 2016. Appellant had a list of these payments, which was admitted into evidence without objection. Appellant testified that, as the list showed, the payments were not made regularly and were often less than had been ordered, sometimes only $150 or less. Based on the total amount he owed under the original order ($600 a month from July 2013 until the order of protection expired in July 2016), minus the amounts he had already paid, Appellant testified that Respondent owed her $17,765.87.

After the hearing, the court immediately entered an order adjudging Respondent in indirect criminal contempt and sentenced him to six months in jail. Several months later, the court entered judgment denying Appellant's motion for civil contempt as moot, concluding that the July 8, 2016 order, entered by the previous judge, had dismissed the civil contempt matter in its entirety. Appellant moved to vacate or set the judgment aside, pointing out that only the duplicative motion for contempt filed in 2016 was dismissed in the previous judge's order, not the original 2013 motion for contempt. After hearing argument on the motion to vacate, the trial court entered a new judgment in order to clarify its reasons for denying Appellant's motion for civil contempt. The court noted first that "[Appellant] presented no evidence on the Respondent's ability to pay the amounts alleged to have been owed." The court also opined that the financial obligation contained in the order of protection was entered without legal authority, and therefore Respondent could not be held in contempt thereof. The court also indicated that the reasons outlined in its original judgment--the only one being that civil contempt was moot--was still a proper basis to find Respondent not in contempt. This appeal follows. We agree with Appellant that each of the trial court's alternate reasons for denying her motion for civil contempt are erroneous.

*420As in any court-tried matter, this Court will affirm the judgment in a civil contempt proceeding unless there is no substantial evidence to support the decision, the decision is against the weight of the evidence, or the decision erroneously declares or applies the law. See Ream-Nelson v. Nelson , 333 S.W.3d 22, 28 (Mo. App. W.D. 2010). Moreover, a civil contempt ruling will not be disturbed on appeal absent a clear abuse of discretion. See id.

First, the trial court's conclusion that the civil contempt issue was moot is based on an erroneous reading of the previous judge's July 8, 2016 order. That order clearly dismissed only the duplicate motion for civil contempt filed in 2016, not the original and still pending 2013 motion:

The Court, having reviewed the Petitioner's request to hold Respondent in Civil Contempt filed on June 17, 2016, has determined that the Civil Contempt matter is already being handled in Division 16 through a Motion for Civil Contempt filed by Petitioner on September 3, 2013,3 and thereafter served upon Respondent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
559 S.W.3d 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/csg-v-rg-moctapp-2018.