Eric Matthew Iles v. Angelna Lynn Iles

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 13, 2022
Docket2020 CA 000423
StatusUnknown

This text of Eric Matthew Iles v. Angelna Lynn Iles (Eric Matthew Iles v. Angelna Lynn Iles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eric Matthew Iles v. Angelna Lynn Iles, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: OCTOBER 14, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2020-CA-0423-MR

ERIC MATTHEW ILES APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM GRANT CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE R. LESLIE KNIGHT, JUDGE ACTION NO. 00-CI-00058

ANGELINA LYNN ILES AND COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEES

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, L. THOMPSON, AND K. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

THOMPSON, K., JUDGE: Eric Mathew Iles1 appeals from the Grant Circuit

Court’s order finding him in contempt and sentencing him to 30 days in jail for

failure to pay child support. We affirm.

1 This appeal was taken in the name of Eric Mathew Iles; however, the record begins referring to the appellant as “Eric Deck formerly Eric Iles” beginning in July, 2015. We will refer to him as Iles throughout. On April 11, 2000, Iles was ordered to pay child support in the

amount of $66.84 per week for his minor child, who was born in 1998. On August

3, 2000, the Commonwealth filed its first motion to hold Iles in contempt for

failure to pay child support. By order entered on November 13, 2000, Iles was

found in contempt and ordered to show cause why he should not be incarcerated

for thirty days.

On December 14, 2000, a new child support order was entered setting

child support at $290.32 per month and requiring an additional $40 per month to be

paid towards his accumulated arrearage of $6,917.77.

On March 5, 2003, an agreed order was entered indicating Iles no

longer owed an arrearage but was to continue to pay child support.

The record does not show any activity thereafter until July 13, 2015,

when a motion was filed to hold Iles in contempt for failure to pay. This motion

stated that Iles had not made a child support payment since May 30, 2015, and he

was now $35,673.96 in arrears. The Domestic Relations Commissioner (DRC)

confirmed that amount and set a show cause date for August 26, 2015, in a

recommended order entered on August 3, 2015.

At the show cause hearing on August 26, 2015, Iles appeared pro se

and informed the circuit court that he currently had custody of the child. The

circuit court ordered that his monthly child support obligation be suspended but

-2- recognized that such would not affect the arrearage which was still owed. The

circuit court found Iles in contempt and ordered him to serve ten days in jail on

weekends. However, Iles did not serve any time as on September 16, 2015, a new

agreed order modifying child support was entered which suspended the current

child support obligation but ordered Iles to pay $76.84 per week towards the

arrearage, which was now calculated as $35,690.80.

The circuit court also suspended Iles’s ten-day sentence with the

caveat that “if Defendant should fail to pay as ordered herein, he shall serve the 10

(ten) days previously ordered in addition to any sentence imposed in the future for

contempt.” Iles personally signed the agreed order.

A year later, on October 13, 2016, a motion was filed to again hold

Iles in contempt for failure to pay child support alleging that the last payment Iles

had made was on May 25, 2016. His arrearage, however, was now down to

$32,540.92.

The DRC conducted a hearing on October 19, 2016, with Iles again

appearing pro se. Iles testified that he had been incarcerated since December of

2015 and had only been released on August 1, 2016. Iles also stated that he was

now employed and provided the name of his employer. Upon that information, the

Commonwealth decided to remand its motion and only refile if Iles did not pay on

his arrearage obligation in the amount of $74.86 per week.

-3- Almost a year later, on August 24, 2017, another motion for contempt

was filed alleging that Iles had not made a payment towards his arrearage since

March 23, 2017, and that his arrearage was $31,225.30 as of July 31, 2017. The

DRC attempted to conduct a hearing on September 20, 2017; however, Iles was not

present and it was discovered that mail to him had been returned to the

Commonwealth.

Almost two years later, on May 24, 2019, the Commonwealth filed

another motion for contempt against Iles. A hearing was held before the DRC on

June 5, 2019. Again, Iles was not present. Nothing had changed since the prior

abortive hearing in 2017. Iles had not made a payment since March 23, 2017. The

DRC recommended 10 days in jail, a purge amount of $2,000, and ordered Iles to

appear before the circuit court on July 24, 2019, to show cause why sanctions

should not be imposed.

Iles did not appear at the July 24, 2019, hearing. The Commonwealth

stated that mail sent to him had not been returned and that he was not currently in

jail. However, the notice of the hearing mailed to Iles was later returned to the

Grant Circuit Court Clerk on August 26, 2019.

Not knowing that Iles had not been served, and it having been shown

by the Commonwealth that he was in violation of the prior agreed order, the circuit

court issued a bench warrant for his failure to appear and set the bond as the

-4- current amount of his arrearage owed of $31,225.30. The bench warrant was

signed on July 29, 2016, but Iles was not taken into custody until December 13,

2019.

On January 15, 2020, the circuit court appointed counsel for Iles and

scheduled his contempt hearing for January 29, 2020. Iles remained in jail until

the hearing. The circuit court found Iles in contempt for failure to pay, gave him

credit for time served, released him with orders to make his $76.84 per week

payments and to report any future address or employer changes. Additional facts

from this contempt hearing will be discussed as they become relevant.

Iles appealed, arguing that his due process rights were violated when:

(1) the circuit court did not appoint him counsel prior to his being jailed; and (2)

the circuit court did not conduct an inquiry into his ability to pay child support.

First, we address the Commonwealth’s argument that the issue is

moot given that even were this Court to vacate the circuit court’s trial order, Iles

has already served his sentence for contempt. The general rule that moot cases

must be dismissed is subject to the “capable of repetition, yet evading review”

exception.

Two elements must be present for the capable-of- repetition-yet-evading review exception to apply: (1) the challenged action must be too short in duration to be litigated to completion prior to its expiration; and (2) a reasonable expectation must exist that the same party will be subject to the same action again.

-5- C.S. v. Commonwealth, 559 S.W.3d 857, 865 (Ky.App. 2018).

In C.S., the Court chose to apply this exception as both grounds were

satisfied. We agree that the first ground applies to Iles since “[c]ontempt orders . .

. are often of very limited duration.” Id. As to the second ground, given Iles’s

history of only sporadic compliance with the circuit court’s orders, coupled with

the size of his arrearage, we have a reasonable expectation that these same issues

could arise again.

A trial court has broad authority to enforce its orders, and contempt

proceedings are part of that authority. Lewis v. Lewis, 875 S.W.2d 862 (Ky. 1993).

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Eric Matthew Iles v. Angelna Lynn Iles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-matthew-iles-v-angelna-lynn-iles-kyctapp-2022.