Faubion v. Phillips

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 2016
Docket113709
StatusUnpublished

This text of Faubion v. Phillips (Faubion v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faubion v. Phillips, (kanctapp 2016).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 113,709

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

LUCINDA JUNE FAUBION, Appellant,

v.

CURTIS W. PHILLIPS, Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Pawnee District Court; BRUCE T. GATTERMAN, judge. Opinion filed July 15, 2016. Affirmed.

Kevin Zolotor and Morgan O'Hara Gering, of O'Hara & O'Hara LLC, of Wichita, for appellant.

Robert E. Keeshan, of Scott, Quinlan, Willard, Barnes & Keeshan, LLC, of Topeka, for appellee.

Before BUSER, P.J., HILL, J., and WALKER, S.J.

Per Curiam: In this appeal, we must decide if the district court had jurisdiction to find Lucinda June Faubion in contempt of court for failing to comply with its order dividing personal property. It did, and we affirm.

A couple seeks partition of real estate.

After living together for about 1 1/2 years, Faubion and Curtis W. Phillips decided to go their separate ways. In August 2012, Faubion filed a petition for the partition of real

1 property she jointly owned with Phillips. The district court ordered the parties into mediation.

Then, in December 2012, Faubion asked the court to enforce a settlement agreement the parties had reached but not yet signed. Basically, the agreement provided:

 Faubion would ultimately dismiss the petitions for protection from abuse she had filed in Pawnee County;  Faubion would pay Phillips $25,000 for the real property and assume the debt secured by a mortgage on the property;  Phillips would be allowed to remove all personal property from the premises because he vacated the premises under court order; and  Phillips would sign all documents necessary to effectuate the agreement.

After taking evidence on the matter, the district court found the settlement contract valid and binding on Faubion and Phillips.

But the settlement agreement did not specify which items of personal property belonged to Phillips. So, the court heard testimony on the issue and afterwards listed items of personal property that belonged to Phillips, as well as some items belonging to his father, Ralph Phillips, and his daughter, Kristen Phillips.

After this, the court found that all issues regarding two horses allegedly owned by Kristen Phillips would have to be decided in a separate action. To keep the peace, the court ordered Phillips' father to be present when Phillips and his daughter removed their personal property from the house. The court provided that either party could request civil standby assistance from the Pawnee County Sheriff's Office during the exchange. The court also ordered that the temporary protection from abuse orders in Pawnee County would be extended until the property removal was completed. 2 In April 2013, Phillips' father went on to the real estate and recovered some shipping containers that were supposed to contain all of Phillips' personal property other than the appliances in the house.

Phillips seeks court assistance to recover his personal property.

In December 2013, Phillips started a contempt action stating that Faubion had refused to return many of the items of personal property the court had awarded to him. The district court ordered Faubion to appear and show cause why she should not be held in indirect contempt.

During the contempt trial, Phillips testified that he went to Faubion's home in Oklahoma to see if his property was there. Phillips took pictures of items on Faubion's property that he claimed was personal property as set out in the court's prior order. The items included: GE washer and dryer, pellet stove plate, Harmon pellet stove, black wheelbarrow, chainsaw, chainsaw case, air compressor, GE dehumidifier, truck pack, green gate panels, Slimvibe, wobbler sprinklers, pole set, Circle Y saddle with a unique nylon belly strap and silver medallions, and a horse named April. Phillips testified that he knew the air compressor was his because he modified it by putting a new hose reel, a green hose, and new motor on it like the one in the photograph. He testified he knew that the pole set was his because he built it for his daughter. A normal manufactured pole set would have a weighted rubber base and smaller poles than the one he had made.

In order to take pictures, Phillips pulled the door open to a trailer on Faubion's property and stepped inside. He also opened the door to a garage on her property, stepped inside, and took pictures. Phillips testified there was no "no trespassing" sign and the gate to the property was open. Faubion objected to the admission of the photos because Phillips broke the law to obtain them. The court responded by saying: "Might be true in a criminal case if law enforcement was doing it" and admitted the photographs.

3 After hearing the evidence, the court found Faubion to be in indirect contempt of court for her willful failure to comply with the court's orders to return Phillips' personal property. It then ordered her to return the items to Phillips within 30 days. We need not repeat the long list of items found in the court's order, as the parties are well aware of what the court ordered.

In Faubion's request for the court to reconsider the matter, she contended that Phillips had abandoned his property when he did not retrieve it within 30 days as specified in the settlement agreement. She also argued that at the contempt trial the court erroneously admitted into evidence some photographs of the property in Oklahoma because the photos were obtained through trespass. She also argued there was new evidence that justified reopening the case. Faubion also argued that she did not have an obligation to ensure that Phillips receive his items according to the court's order.

The court denied Faubion's motion for reconsideration. It found that Phillips did not abandon his property. Phillips picked up the storage containers from the real estate, but not all of his personal property was in the containers. Phillips did not go onto the premises after that because he was restricted from the premises due to the protection from abuse order.

The court rejected Faubion's request to reconsider on the basis of illegal conduct. The court found that Faubion knew she was in violation of the court's order because she took Phillips' personal property and transported it to Oklahoma. The court found Faubion's various explanations at the hearing inconsistent, including her assertions that

 the property was owned by her late husband;  the property was owned by Bobbi Lee or her son;  the property was planted by Phillips;

4  Phillips stole appliances from the house, and Phillips abandoned the appliances.

The court also denied Faubion's request to reconsider its attorney fee award.

Faubion appeals, raising six issues. For her first two, she claims the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear a contempt action and had no jurisdiction over property that did not belong to either party. For her third and fourth issues, Faubion contends that the trial court should not have admitted the photographs and for the first time on appeal contends the trial court used an incorrect standard of proof for a contempt proceeding. The fifth issue focuses on the finding that Faubion was in contempt of court and her final issue claims the court erred when it found her in indirect contempt regarding Phillips' personal property. We will take up the issues in that order.

The district court had jurisdiction to order the division of property and enforce its orders.

In a convoluted argument, Faubion contends that she simply violated provisions of a settlement contract, not any orders of the court.

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Faubion v. Phillips, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faubion-v-phillips-kanctapp-2016.