In Re Contempt of ACIA

624 N.W.2d 443, 243 Mich. App. 697
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 2001
Docket201920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 624 N.W.2d 443 (In Re Contempt of ACIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Contempt of ACIA, 624 N.W.2d 443, 243 Mich. App. 697 (Mich. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

624 N.W.2d 443 (2000)
243 Mich. App. 697

In re CONTEMPT OF AUTO CLUB INSURANCE ASSOCIATION and Norris Goudy.
Hawra Algarawi, a Minor, by her Next Friend, Ali Abdul-Hussein Algarawi, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Auto Club Insurance Association, Defendant-Appellant, and
Norris Goudy, Appellant.

Docket No. 201920.

Court of Appeals of Michigan.

Submitted April 3, 2000, at Detroit.
Decided December 15, 2000, at 9:35 a.m.
Released for Publication February 14, 2001.

*446 Gross, Nemeth & Silverman, P.L.C. (by Steven G. Silverman), Detroit, for Auto Club Insurance Association and Norris Goudy.

Before HOOD, P.J., and GAGE and WHITBECK, JJ. *444

*445 WHITBECK, J.

Appellants Norris Goudy and Auto Club Insurance Association (ACIA) appeal as of right. ACIA challenges the trial court's March 3, 1997, order holding it in contempt of court. Goudy, in-house counsel for ACIA, challenges the trial court's March 5, 1997, order holding him in contempt of court. We reverse.

I. Introduction

As so often occurs in contentious litigation, this appeal arises largely because the lawyers' zest for legal combat overwhelmed their common sense. In the process, a relatively uncomplicated settlement process became a battleground between a stubborn insurer, ACIA, and the equally stubborn attorneys for the claimant, Hawra Algarawi. While the insurer's legal position was legally correct, the bitter legal warfare between the parties ultimately strained the trial court's patience to the breaking point, resulting in contempt orders against the insurer and its attorneys. Ironically, after the trial court entered those contempt orders, the parties apparently negotiated a truce, if not a peace agreement, under which the insurer paid the full amount of the $16,500 settlement to Ali Abdul Hussein Algarawi, Algarawi's father, as her next friend.

With the smoke clearing from this battlefield, we need not address any issues concerning the underlying claim for insurance benefits in this case. Rather, we must confront a series of issues relating to the trial court's contempt orders. In particular, we must determine whether the trial court's contempt orders in this case were for criminal or civil contempt, whether the trial court followed the appropriate procedures to hold ACIA and Goudy in contempt, and whether the sanctions the trial court ordered were proper. Because we ultimately resolve this case on procedural grounds, we need not address whether there was sufficient evidence to prove that Goudy and ACIA committed contempt.

We make one other preliminary note to clarify what could be a confusing element in this case. Although the trial court held Mary T. Nemeth, ACIA's retained attorney, in contempt of court, she does not appeal. Thus, while we recount the circumstances concerning the contempt order against her because those facts are closely connected to the facts that concern Goudy and ACIA, we neither affirm nor reverse the trial court's contempt order against her.

II. Basic Facts And Procedural History

The parties placed a settlement agreement on the record in January 1997. Shortly thereafter, in mid-February 1997, Algarawi filed an emergency motion to show cause. She claimed that ACIA refused to issue a check to her father as her next friend. She also alleged that ACIA was attempting to force her to open a probate estate before it would pay the settlement, even though the payments would be used to pay her medical and legal expenses, leaving none left over for her. Algarawi asked the trial court to issue an order directing ACIA to deliver a check in compliance with the settlement agreement. In response to the motion, ACIA argued that it could pay a sum of this magnitude only if Algarawi, because she was a minor, opened a probate estate. At the hearing on the emergency motion that same day, the trial court asked Goudy to determine whether ACIA would issue the check if Algarawi did not open a probate estate. The trial court concluded the hearing, but did not issue a written order resolving the parties' dispute.

In late February 1997, Algarawi filed a second emergency motion to show cause arguing that, at the earlier hearing, the *447 trial court had ruled that ACIA must issue a check payable to her father and to her attorneys and that ACIA must deliver the check within ten days. Algarawi contended that ACIA refused to deliver the check as ordered and, therefore, requested an order directing ACIA to deliver the check. ACIA countered that Goudy had told the trial court that he would ask ACIA to approve issuing the check and—if it agreed to do so—he would have the check within ten days. ACIA also continued to argue that Algarawi had to open a probate estate to receive the settlement, which would ensure that she would not sue ACIA when she reached the age of majority if her father mismanaged or misappropriated the funds.

On February 26, 1997, the trial court held a hearing on Algarawi's second emergency motion to show cause, after which it concluded that Algarawi did not need to open a probate estate in order to receive the settlement money.[1] As a result, the trial court ruled that ACIA had to give the settlement money to Algarawi by hand-delivering a check to her attorneys' offices by noon on February 28, 1997. The trial court did not issue a written order to this effect.

According to ACIA, on February 28, 1997, Nemeth, ACIA's retained attorney, appeared at Algarawi's attorneys' offices where she presented a $5,000 check. Nemeth attempted to explain to Algarawi's attorneys that it would be illegal for ACIA to pay more than $5,000 directly to Algarawi's father. When Algarawi's attorneys refused to accept the $5,000 check, instead demanding a check in the full amount of $16,500, ACIA moved to compel Algarawi's attorneys to accept $5,000 in partial satisfaction of the settlement.

Also on February 28, 1997, ACIA filed a motion to modify the trial court's oral ruling on the second emergency motion, arguing that it had attempted to comply with the ruling to the fullest extent possible without violating the law by offering the $5,000 check to Algarawi's attorneys. ACIA argued that only a conservator appointed to administer a probate estate for Algarawi could accept the remaining $11,500. ACIA asked the trial court to direct Algarawi's attorneys to commence appropriate probate proceedings to open an estate so that a court could appoint a conservator for her and so it could finally pay the remaining $11,500. ACIA also asked the trial court to enter an order granting its motion because Algarawi's attorneys had refused to approve a proposed order concerning this $5,000 partial payment.

On the same day, however, Algarawi moved to hold Goudy in contempt of court. She argued that, at the hearing on the first emergency motion, the trial court had ordered Goudy to deliver a check for $16,500, Goudy had violated this order, the trial court had granted Algarawi's second emergency motion, and Nemeth had attempted to persuade Algarawi's attorneys to accept a $5,000 check, violating the trial court's second ruling. Algarawi therefore contended that the trial court should hold Goudy in contempt and sanction him until ACIA delivered a check for $16,500.

On March 3, 1997, the trial court held a hearing on Algarawi's motion to hold Goudy in contempt.

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Bluebook (online)
624 N.W.2d 443, 243 Mich. App. 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-contempt-of-acia-michctapp-2001.