Felzak v. Hruby

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 28, 2006
Docket2-05-0848 NRel
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Felzak v. Hruby, (Ill. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

No. 2--05--0848 filed: 7/28/06 ______________________________________________________________________ ________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________ ________

GERALDINE FELZAK, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Du Page County. Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 94--D--860 ) RALPH HRUBY and SONDRA HRUBY, ) Honorable ) C. Stanley Austin, Defendants-Appellants. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________

________

JUSTICE KAPALA delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendants, Ralph and Sondra Hruby, appeal from an August 22, 2005, order

holding them in indirect civil contempt of court for failing to obey a June 15, 1995, order

providing for grandparent visitation, and from a June 8, 2005, order denying their motion to

dismiss plaintiff's, Geraldine Felzak's, petition to enforce the June 15, 1995, order. We

affirm in part and vacate in part.

I. BACKGROUND

Ralph Hruby and Deborah Hruby were married in 1977 and had three children

together: Greg, born November 25, 1983; Jeffery, born August 4, 1985; and Katie, born

July 22, 1989. Shortly after Katie was born, Deborah died of a cerebral hemorrhage. On

July 16, 1992, Ralph was married to Sondra Hruby. Soon after her marriage to Ralph, No. 2--05--0848

Sondra adopted the Hruby children on November 1, 1993. On April 6, 1994, plaintiff,

Deborah's mother, filed a petition for grandparent visitation with the Hruby children

pursuant to section 607(b) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (the Act)

(750 ILCS 5/607(b) (West 1992)).

In her petition for grandparent visitation, plaintiff alleged that despite her continued

involvement in the Hruby children's lives after the death of her daughter, defendants would

no longer permit her to have visitation with the Hruby children. Plaintiff alleged that after

the death of her daughter, she provided regular care for the children, bought them clothes

and shoes, and arranged birthday and holiday celebrations for them. However, plaintiff

alleged that soon after defendants married, defendants refused to allow plaintiff visitation

with the children. In their answer, defendants claimed that during her visitation with the

children, plaintiff continually made disparaging remarks to the children about Sondra, and

that the visitation was harming the Hruby children and detracting from defendants' attempts

to nurture and build their family. The parties agree that plaintiff's visitation with the two

boys ended on December 25, 1993. In their answer, defendants contended that the boys

did not want to visit with plaintiff and that defendants would not force the boys to continue

to visit with plaintiff. Defendants also claimed that plaintiff continued overnight visitation

with Katie on alternating weekends until April 1994. Defendants' answer to plaintiff's

petition for grandparent visitation included an affirmative defense that the provisions of

section 607 of the Act pertaining to grandparent visitation were unconstitutional.

On April 29, 1994, the court entered an agreed conciliation order referring the parties

to Dr. Daniel Hynan for conciliation counseling on the issue of visitation. Dr. Hynan

interviewed plaintiff, defendants, and the Hruby children and administered psychological

-2- No. 2--05--0848

tests. On October 28, 1994, Dr. Hynan recommended that it was in the best interest of the

children to continue visitation with plaintiff. As a result of Dr. Hynan's recommendations,

defendants decided to agree to visitation. Before the court ruled on defendants' affirmative

defense, the parties entered into an agreed order on December 16, 1994, allowing plaintiff

visitation with the three Hruby children one day per month for six hours and allowing

telephonic visitation with the children for up to 30 minutes once per month. In exchange,

plaintiff withdrew her claims for grandparent visitation. As part of their agreement, the

parties also provided that if disputes arose over the agreed order, they would return to

counseling to mediate the dispute before submitting the dispute to a court. The order also

provided that the court retained jurisdiction to enforce the order.

On April 10, 1995, plaintiff filed a petition for further conciliation and other relief,

alleging that defendants had failed to provide any visitation with Greg and Jeff pursuant to

the December 16, 1994, agreed visitation order, asking that the court order the parties to

return to counseling, and requesting overnight visitation with Katie. Following a pretrial

conference on April 10, 1995, the court entered an interim order allowing plaintiff to write to

Greg and Jeff, and requiring defendants to encourage them to respond. The interim order

also provided that the parties should attempt to resolve overnight visitation between plaintiff

and Katie. On May 24, 1995, the court entered an order setting plaintiff's petition for

hearing on August 1, 1995.

On June 15, 1995, however, plaintiff and defendants entered into an agreed order

that, in lieu of the previously ordered six hours per month of visitation with the three Hruby

children, allowed plaintiff to visit with Katie twice per month, between 3:30 p.m. and 8:30

-3- No. 2--05--0848

p.m. on days to be agreed upon by the parties. The order further provided that plaintiff

would withdraw her pending petition for conciliation and other relief.

On February 24, 2005, plaintiff filed a petition to enforce the agreed order of June

15, 1995. In that petition, plaintiff alleges that for nine years following the June 15, 1995,

agreed order, she visited with Katie and Katie never missed a visit. Both parties later

testified that during this time, they agreed outside of court that plaintiff would have one 10-

hour visitation with Katie per month instead of two 5-hour periods, because this was more

convenient for both parties. In her February 2005 petition, plaintiff alleges that in May

2004, two months before Katie's fifteenth birthday, defendants stopped plaintiff's visitation

with Katie completely. Sondra Hruby testified that this was because Katie returned home

crying after her April 2004 visit with plaintiff, and that Katie did not want to go on any more

visits with plaintiff. Plaintiff alleges that defendants did not ask the court to modify the

visitation order prior to stopping visitation and that she requested defendants to abide by

the June 15, 1995, agreed order on several occasions in the months after her visitation with

Katie ceased. Ralph wrote plaintiff on February 3, 2005, stating that because the Illinois

grandparent visitation statute (750 ILCS 5/607(b) (West 1992)) had been found

unconstitutional, he believed that the June 15, 1995, agreed order granting plaintiff

visitation with Katie was void and unenforceable.

In response to plaintiff's February 24, 2005, petition to enforce the June 15, 1995,

agreed order, defendants filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to section 2--619 of the Code

of Civil Procedure (the Code) (735 ILCS 5/2--619 (West 2004)), which was later

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