In Re Marriage of Boeckman

2010 OK CIV APP 106, 241 P.3d 296, 2010 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 86, 2010 WL 4160820
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 17, 2010
Docket106,442. Released for Publication by Order of the Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 2010 OK CIV APP 106 (In Re Marriage of Boeckman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marriage of Boeckman, 2010 OK CIV APP 106, 241 P.3d 296, 2010 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 86, 2010 WL 4160820 (Okla. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

KENNETH L. BUETTUTNER, Presiding Judge.

{ 1 Respondent/Appellant Brian Boeckman (Husband) appeals from a September 24, 2008 judgment finding Husband guilty of indirect contempt for failure to pay alimony and attorney fees awarded to Petitioner/Ap-pellee Melody Boeckman (Wife) in a temporary order in the parties' divorcee proceeding. After Husband filed this appeal from the contempt judgment, Husband and Wife entered an agreed dissolution decree in which they agreed that the contempt judgment would not merge into the decree. The ree-ord supports the trial court's finding of clear and convincing evidence that Husband wilfully refused to pay a lawful order. We affirm the judgment.

T2 Wife filed her Petition for Dissolution of Marriage January 5, 2005. Wife filed an Application for Citation for Contempt August 6, 2008, in which she asserted that since the December 20, 2006 temporary order, Husband had failed to pay any of the amounts ordered. Wife charged that Husband owed $90,000 in temporary support alimony and $2,000 in temporary attorney fees. Wife contended that Husband had the ability to pay and had willfully refused to pay. The certificate of service indicates the application was hand-delivered to Husband in the Tulsa County Courthouse. 1 The trial court docket sheet indicates that on August 6, 2008, Husband was served with "paperwork from" Wife in open court, Husband was arraigned that day on the contempt charge, he entered a not guilty plea, and requested a jury trial. The docket entry for that date shows the trial on contempt was set for August 28, 2008.

T3 Husband filed a Motion to Dismiss August 28, 2008. Husband asserted the court was without jurisdiction because no "citation" had been filed. Husband also asserted that "(Following the 12-20-06 hearing (Wife) failed to memorialize the courts orders,. ..." Husband also claimed that in her application, Wife failed to allege Husband acted wilfully. Husband finally asserted Wife's Application for Contempt Citation included nothing more than Wife's "recall and representations" of the December 2006 temporary order, which Wife failed to file or serve on Husband. 2

*298 T4 Hearing on the contempt application was also held August 28, 2008. Husband repeated his complaint that no citation had been filed, but the trial court responded that Husband had been "nearly impossible" to locate and had been evasive. The court noted Husband was on notice of the hearing. The court directed the Temporary Order to be filed. 3

T5 At the hearing, Wife testified she was present in court December 20, 2006 when the court directed Husband to pay temporary alimony and attorney fees. Wife testified she had received no money from Husband since then. Wife also testified that she did not have health insurance after December 2006. Wife denied stealing artwork or other property of Husband while he was in jail. Wife asserted Husband wrote to her from jail and told her to take what she needed to support herself. Wife agreed she sold marital property worth $970 after the temporary order.

16 Husband also testified at the hearing. Husband agreed he was present with counsel at the December 20, 2006 temporary order hearing, "but I don't remember what the hearing was." At the contempt hearing, he testified he was then living in Broken Arrow in a duplex with his girlfriend. His monthly rent was $700-750 per month, and his friend Ronald James Abercrombie gave him the money to pay the rent each month. 4 Husband thought Abererombie also paid the retainer for Husband's attorney in the divorce case. Husband testified he had another attorney for his criminal case, and Husband's father paid the criminal defense attorney $100,000. Husband testified he had paid a third lawyer since December 2006, "because I was getting sued everywhere." Husband believed his father and Abercrombie paid that attorney on his behalf. Husband testified he probably had not asked his father or Abercrombie to pay the support alimony due under the temporary order. Husband testified he was released from jail in February or March 2008 and he remained unemployed, stating he did not have time to search for a job due to hearings and meetings with his lawyers. Husband testified he purchased groceries each month with money wired to him from Abercrombie. Husband testified he did not know what assets he owned. Counsel for Wife offered a 2004 financial statement which he asserted had been admitted at the temporary order hearing. Husband recognized the document. Husband agreed the financial statement showed that his net worth was then more than $15,000,000. Husband testified he had not paid the attorney fees ordered nor Wife's health insurance because he was in jail. 5 Husband denied receiving income from any source but Abercrombie. Husband testified that "a couple of times" Abercrombie had given Husband money to help pay for Husband's girlfriend's legal expenses.

17 Husband testified that in the temporary order, the court awarded Wife possession of two pieces of property: the marital home (which later was subject to foreclosure), and a home in Broken Arrow, which was debt-free. Husband testified that he *299 had several judgments entered against him since the time of the temporary order and had not paid those. Husband testified he had sued Wife and other employees for taking things from his office while he was in jail. Husband testified Wife and others took 200 pieces of art that he had gotten from thrift stores and antique stores. Husband testified the artwork was worth $400,000 to $600,000, but Husband had not insured the art. Husband testified he did not know or did not recall whether he told Wife to sell things from his office. Husband agreed that Wife's Exhibit 1 was a letter he wrote telling Wife she could get things from his office "for survival." Husband testified he did not remember that. Husband testified he and Wife may have owned the artwork jointly, "I guess because it was part of the marital [estate]."

T8 Wife asked for judgment for $92,000. Husband asked for an offset and contended he did not have the ability to pay and therefore there was no evidence of wilful failure to pay as required for contempt. The trial court announced that it found there was a temporary order hearing December 20, 2006, at which Husband was directed to pay $4,500 per month beginning January 1, 2007, as well as continue to provide health insurance for Wife and pay $2,000 for her attorney fees.

T9 The court then addressed the issue of wilfulness. The court noted that despite not being employed, Husband was able to pay rent, maintain a car, post bond on a first-degree murder complaint, hire a criminal defense lawyer, and pay his girlfriend's attorney. The trial court was "not convinced that he doesn't have the money." The court found Husband's decision to pay for other things but not pay temporary support to Wife was clear and convincing evidence that Husband acted wilfully. The court found Husband was in indirect contempt of court and awarded judgment to Wife of $91,515. The court sentenced Husband to 6 months in the county jail, which was stayed for 60 days in which Husband could purge the debt.

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Related

Sommer v. Sommer
1997 OK 123 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1997)
Nantz v. Nantz
749 P.2d 1137 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)
Potter v. Wilson
1980 OK 51 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1980)
Webber v. Webber
1936 OK 720 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
2010 OK CIV APP 106, 241 P.3d 296, 2010 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 86, 2010 WL 4160820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-boeckman-oklacivapp-2010.