Hermina v. Baltimore Life Insurance

739 A.2d 893, 128 Md. App. 568, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 175
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 27, 1999
Docket1807, Sept. Term, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 739 A.2d 893 (Hermina v. Baltimore Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hermina v. Baltimore Life Insurance, 739 A.2d 893, 128 Md. App. 568, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 175 (Md. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

THEODORE G. BLOOM, Judge (Retired, Specially Assigned).

This appeal by John W. Hermina is from an order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County finding him guilty of direct civil contempt of court and imposing a sanction of $8,500, with a provision that the contempt may be purged by paying $8,500 to Barrett W. Freedlander, Esquire, on or before 28 August 1998.

The direct contempt found by the court was the failure of appellant, who was the attorney of record for Adel Alalfey and David Griggs, two of the defendants 1 in a civil action brought by appellees, Baltimore Life Insurance Company and Life of *572 Baltimore, Inc. (collectively, Baltimore Life), to appear for trial on 15 April 1998. On 23 April, Mr. Freedlander and another member of his law firm, who were counsel for Baltimore Life in the suit against Alalfey, et al., filed in those proceedings a Motion for Sanctions, asserting that appellant was guilty of criminal contempt and asking for an award of sanctions against appellant in the amount of $8,500. The motion was accompanied by a lengthy memorandum, which contained derogatory allegations about appellant’s conduct in proceedings totally unrelated to the case at hand.

Appellant’s response to the Motion for Sanctions and supporting memorandum contained a personal attack on Mr. Freedlander’s conduct in various cases. It also denied any contumacious intent by appellant and set forth an exculpatory explanation for his failure to appear in court on 15 April 1998.

There was no order issued by the court directing appellant to appear at a date and time certain to show cause why he should not be found to be in contempt and be punished therefore. On 29 July 1998, there was a hearing on pending motions, which included certain motions filed by the defendants, along with appellees’ Motion for Sanctions. At that hearing, the court first addressed and disposed of the defendants’ motions by denying all of them, after which the court took up appellees’ Motion for Sanctions.

Counsel appearing for appellant on appellees’ Motion for Sanctions addressed the court and outlined appellant’s explanation for his failure to appear on 15 April. The scheduled trial date was 14 April. On 13 April, in a telephonic conversation with someone in the assignment office, appellant was advised that the case would not be tried on the 14th, because there were no judges available. On the basis of that information, appellant, who was ill, went home. Counsel denied the allegation of appellees’ attorney that appellant was told to call the assignment office before 4 p.m. the next day to learn of the trial status. Appellant never received word that the case was reset for trial on 15 April. Counsel presented a note from appellant’s doctor, which stated that he saw appellant on 13 *573 April and treated him for bronchitis on that day, and he also saw and treated appellant for an ear condition on 16 April.

The court next took testimony from Linda Hopkins, the Assistant Director for the Central Assignment Division of the Court. Ms. Hopkins testified that her notes reflected that she telephoned appellant’s office on 13 April 1998 and, because appellant was not available, she told a secretary that there was no judge available to start the trial on the 14th and explained the court’s procedure in such cases. Her notes reflected that Mr. Hermina called her back later in the day, and she repeated the procedure to him, as follows:

When we don’t have a Judge to start the case, we can tell them that the case had to go on standby. We request the attorneys stay in the office and notify their client and any witnesses and tell them not to come into court and to please be available if we need to call. And we tell them, if you don’t hear from us by noon, they are to call our office at four o’clock the next day to see if it would be on the assignment for the following day. We tell everybody this. And that we would allow an hour travel time.

On cross-examination, Ms. Hopkins admitted that she was unaware that appellant’s brother was his partner, so that, when she received a call from Mr. Hermina on the 13th, she assumed she was speaking to appellant.

Appellant then testified. His recollection conflicted with Ms. Hopkins’s testimony. He said that he called the assignment office on the 13th to report that he was sick and to ask about the procedure followed by the court. He was told that for lack of a judge to begin the trial on the 14th the case was on standby. He understood that he would be notified when the case was reset for trial. He never received notice that the case was set for trial on 15 April. He stated that, in any event, he was too ill to appear on the 15th. He assured the court that he had not intended any disrespect.

There was also testimony from J. Joseph Curran, III, another attorney involved in the case, to the effect that appellant’s brother, in a telephone conversation on 14 April, *574 told him that appellant was in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. George Hermina, appellant’s brother, then testified. He admitted that in his conversation with Mr. Curran on 14 April he indicated that his brother might be at the courthouse in Towson. He also admitted that he did not tell Mr. Curran that appellant was ill, because he did not want his brother to be harassed at home by appellees’ attorneys.. He assumed that, if it were important and the judge wanted to get in touch with appellant, he would get a call from the judge’s office.

At the conclusion of all the testimony, the judge found appellant guilty of direct civil contempt, which could be purged by paying $8,500 to Mr. Freedlander, that sum being the amount of expenses that he had incurred or would incur “as outlined on Page six of his memorandum in support of his Motion for Sanctions.” The judge also found “beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Hermina has the ability to pay $8,500,” and that those expenses were reasonable. A written Order of Contempt was later filed, along with his “decision,” or comments. At appellant’s request, those comments were sealed.

DISCUSSION

Appellant presents the following assertions of error:

I. The court did not follow appropriate procedures as mandated by the rules in holding the attorney in contempt.
A. The court was in error in allowing a motion by a party to seek a finding of direct and criminal contempt.
B. The court was in error in finding a direct civil contempt.
C. The court was in error in not requiring notice to the alleged contemnor as to whether the court was considering civil or criminal, direct or constructive contempt.
*575 D. When the Movant called upon the court to consider his personal knowledge, the court was in error in not recusing himself and referring the hearing to another judge.
E. The court was in error in failing to specify the evidentiary facts known to the court and any other evidentiary facts not so known in the written order which formed the basis of the court’s finding.

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Bluebook (online)
739 A.2d 893, 128 Md. App. 568, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hermina-v-baltimore-life-insurance-mdctspecapp-1999.