NOTICE 2021 IL App (5th) 200236-U NOTICE Decision filed 01/07/21 The This order was filed under text of this decision may be NO. 5-20-0236 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is changed or corrected prior to not precedent except in the the filing of a Petition for Rehearing or the disposition of IN THE limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). the same. APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIFTH DISTRICT ________________________________________________________________________
In re MARRIAGE OF ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of CHRISTOPHER S., ) Madison County. ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) and ) No. 10-D-1126 ) AIMEE S., n/k/a Aimee P., Deceased, ) ) Respondent ) Honorable ) John B. Julian, (Christopher P., Proposed Intervenor-Appellee). ) Judge, presiding. ________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE WELCH delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Boie and Justice Moore concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: The appeal is dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction where the trial court made no special finding of immediate appeal in accordance with Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304 (eff. Mar. 8, 2016), where the indirect civil contempt order entered by the court did not impose any sanctions, and where the orders entered by the court were not final orders allocating parental responsibilities.
¶2 The appellant-father, Christopher S., the biological father of B.S. and E.S., appeals
the orders entered by the circuit court of Madison County, which required him to return
E.S. to the appellee-stepfather, Christopher P., E.S.’s stepfather, and found him in 1 indirect civil contempt for his failure to abide by those orders. On appeal, the appellant-
father argues that by requiring him to return E.S. to the appellee-stepfather, the court had
erroneously allocated parental responsibilities to a nonparty stepparent without first
considering whether the stepparent had standing to request an allocution of parental
responsibilities. In response, the appellee-stepfather contends that this court does not
have jurisdiction under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304 (eff. Mar. 8, 2016) where the
trial court made no special finding of immediate appeal, where the civil contempt order
did not impose any sanctions, and where the orders were not final orders allocating
parental responsibilities. For the following reasons, we dismiss the appeal for lack of
appellate jurisdiction.
¶3 I. BACKGROUND
¶4 The appellant-father, Christopher S., is the biological father of B.S., born August
21, 2003, and E.S., born December 14, 2007. Aimee P. was the children’s biological
mother. The appellant-father and Aimee P. were married in June 2000. However, in
October 2010, the appellant-father filed a verified petition to dissolve the marriage. In
October 2012, the trial court entered a judgment of dissolution of the marriage, a marital
settlement agreement, and a joint parenting plan. In the marital settlement agreement, the
appellant-father and Aimee P. agreed to joint custody of the minor children with Aimee
P. being designated as the primary residential parent. The appellant-father received
visitation with the minor children every other weekend during the school year, one night
of the week during the school year, every other week during summer, and alternate
2 holidays. The appellant-father and Aimee P. shared decision making, and the appellant-
father was ordered to pay child support.
¶5 On August 15, 2016, the appellant-father filed a petition to modify the joint
parenting plan because he was planning on relocating to Las Vegas, Nevada. On
December 7, 2016, the appellant-father filed a petition for temporary relief for additional
parenting time with the minor children, asserting that he had not seen the minor children
since August 21, 2016, that he was unable to exercise his regular parenting time while
living in Nevada, and that Aimee P. had refused to allow him additional parenting time.
On September 13, 2018, the appellant-father filed a petition to remove the minor children
to Nevada. During this time, the parties both remarried; Aimee P. married the appellee.
¶6 On July 7, 2020, before the appellant-father’s petition to modify the joint
parenting plan was decided, he filed a suggestion of death, which informed the trial court
that Aimee P. had died on July 6. That same day, he also filed a petition for allocation of
parental responsibilities and time, which indicated that the minor children were residing
with Aimee P. before her death and alleged that it was in their best interests to allocate
parental responsibilities and time to him. On July 28, 2020, the appellee-stepfather filed
a motion to intervene and a stepparent petition for allocation of parental responsibilities
pursuant to section 601.2(b)(4) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act
(750 ILCS 5/601.2(b)(4) (West 2018)). In the motions, he argued that Aimee P. had the
majority of the parenting time with the minor children while the appellant-father lived in
Nevada, that the appellant-father exercised a “scarce amount” of parenting time, and that
the appellant-father would not see the children for months at a time. The motions noted, 3 in contrast, that the appellee-stepfather had provided for the care, control, and welfare of
the minor children while they lived with him and their mother, the children had expressed
a strong preference to continue living with him, and it would be in their best interests to
continue living with him in Illinois where they had extended family. Additionally, the
appellant-father, without notice, removed E.S., the youngest child, from Aimee P.’s
family’s care after her funeral, he refused to allow the child to communicate with her
older brother and family in Illinois, and it was believed that the appellant-father had no
permanent address and lived with E.S. in a motorhome during this time. The appellee-
stepfather requested that the court enter temporary and permanent orders granting him
sole parental responsibilities and parenting time, requiring the appellant-father to
immediately return E.S. to her home, and enjoining the appellant-father from removing
the children from the appellee-stepfather’s care in the future.
¶7 On July 31, 2020, the trial court scheduled a hearing for August 7, 2020. On
August 5, 2020, the appellant-father filed a motion to dismiss the motion to intervene and
stepparent petition for allocation of parental responsibilities, arguing that before Aimee
P.’s death, the appellant-father and Aimee P. had joint custody of the minor children but
that he now had sole custody of the children since the joint custodian was deceased. He
contended that a stepparent must first establish standing before being permitted to seek an
allocation of parental responsibilities and that the appellee-stepfather had not alleged any
facts that would permit him to intervene in this case. The appellant-father argued that
E.S. had been in his physical custody since Aimee P.’s death; that although he had legal
custody over the oldest child, he had minimal communication with B.S., who had been 4 staying in various places; and that he never voluntarily relinquished custody over the
children. The appellant-father also filed a motion for him to appear telephonically,
electronically, or via video conferencing because he had just started new employment in
Nashville, Tennessee, and had not accrued any paid time off.
¶8 On August 7, 2020, the trial court held a hearing, and, at the beginning of the
hearing, the appellee-stepfather’s counsel noted that the court had previously directed the
appellant-father to be present at the hearing and return E.S. with him but that neither the
appellant-father nor E.S. was present. The court indicated that it was appropriate that the
appellant-father was available via telephone since there was no evidentiary hearing that
day. However, the court noted that it did want E.S. returned to the home that she had
been living for five years before the appellant-father improperly relocated her. In
response, the appellant-father’s counsel argued that the appellee-stepfather was not a
party to the case and had not been granted leave to intervene and that the court was
required to hold a hearing on standing before allowing the appellee-stepfather to
intervene in the case. The appellee-stepfather’s counsel contended that he had pled
standing in his motion to intervene and that standing was based on the appellee-stepfather
being the minor children’s stepfather and that the minor children had lived with him for a
period of years before Aimee P.’s death. The court stated that the parties would have an
opportunity to pursue those issues in more detail in the future but that it sought to “defuse
a situation” that had suddenly come up and ordered the appellant-father to return E.S. to
the appellee-stepfather within 48 hours. The court refused to enter a Rule 304(a) finding
for immediate appeal. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(a) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016). The court then 5 entered a written order, again requiring the appellant-father return E.S. to the appellee-
stepfather’s physical care within 48 hours to maintain the status quo. The court noted
that this order was a temporary order and scheduled a hearing on the petition to intervene.
¶9 That same day, the appellant-father filed a motion to reconsider and vacate the
trial court’s order, arguing that the court did not have jurisdiction to enter any orders with
regard to the appellee-stepfather because he had not been granted permission to intervene
and was not a party to the case. The appellant-father again argued that before the
appellee-stepfather could be allowed to proceed or ask for any relief from the court, the
court must determine that he had standing to request that relief.
¶ 10 On August 10, 2020, the appellee-stepfather filed a petition for adjudication of
indirect civil contempt, arguing that the appellant-father had willfully refused to comply
with the trial court’s August 7 order in that he had failed to return E.S. to the appellee-
stepfather as ordered, that this was the second time that he had failed to return E.S. after
being ordered to do so, and that he had failed to disclose E.S.’s location and had blocked
all of her contact with her family members in Illinois. The appellee-stepfather requested
that the court find the appellant-father in indirect civil contempt of the court and sanction
him by requiring him to pay the appellee-stepfather’s attorney fees and costs and
sentencing him to jail for an indeterminate term. In response, the appellant-father filed a
motion to dismiss and strike the appellee-stepfather’s petition for adjudication of indirect
civil contempt based on the fact that the appellee-stepfather had not been granted
permission to intervene so was not a party in the case. The appellant-father contended
that the appellee-stepfather could not file any motions or pleadings requesting relief in 6 this case until the court determined whether he had standing and was permitted to
intervene.
¶ 11 That same day the trial court held a hearing on the matters. The appellee-
stepfather’s counsel contended that he had alleged facts that would support intervention,
that the appellee-stepfather fit the qualifications necessary to be a party to claim
parenting time and parental responsibility, that E.S. had spent the majority of her time
with the appellee-stepfather and Aimee P. before Aimee P.’s death, that E.S. wanted to
remain with the appellee-stepfather, and that it was in her best interests to remain with the
appellee-stepfather. He believed that E.S. was in Tennessee but did not know her exact
location as the appellant-father had not been allowing her any contact with her family
members in Illinois. Counsel contended that the court had authority to order the
appellant-father to return E.S. to Illinois because the appellant-father submitted himself to
the court’s jurisdiction by filing a petition to allocate parental time and responsibilities.
¶ 12 In response, the appellant-father’s counsel requested that the argument of
opposing counsel be stricken because the appellee-stepfather was not a party to the case.
Counsel argued that the appellant-father currently had custody over E.S. pursuant to the
trial court’s previous joint parenting order, and the court could not reach the best interest
issue until the standing issue was resolved. After hearing arguments, the court stated that
it was denying the appellant-father’s motion to strike and motion to reconsider but that it
was granting the appellee-stepfather’s petition for adjudication of indirect civil contempt.
In making this decision, the court noted that it was entering a temporary order to get back
to the status quo before E.S. was taken out of the state. The court then asked the 7 appellant-father’s counsel if she knew where E.S. was located, but she indicated that she
did not.
¶ 13 Also, on that same day, the trial court entered a written order, denying the
appellant-father’s motion to reconsider and motion to dismiss and strike. The order
stated that the appellant-father had again failed to return E.S. to Illinois and that his
counsel did not know where he was keeping E.S. The court found the appellant-father in
willful civil contempt of the court’s previous order and ordered him to return E.S. to the
appellee-stepfather on or before August 12, 2020. The court indicated that if the
appellant-father failed to return E.S. as ordered, then a body attachment would issue for
him to be remanded to the custody of the Madison County Sheriff’s Department, and he
would be held until he complied with the order. The court also ordered the appellant-
father to report E.S.’s location to his attorney, who was then directed to report the address
to opposing counsel within 24 hours. The court indicated that all prior matters remained
as previously set.
¶ 14 On August 11, 2020, the appellee-stepfather filed a motion for immediate setting
on the motion to intervene and other relief, requesting that the trial court hold a hearing
on August 12 and require the appellant-father to appear with E.S. That same day, the
appellant-father filed a motion for stay of enforcement of the court’s order pursuant to
Illinois Supreme Court Rule 305 (eff. July 1, 2017). Contemporaneously with the
motion, the appellant-father filed a notice of appeal pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court
Rule 304(b)(5) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016). On August 12, 2020, the court held a hearing on the
motion for immediate setting and motion to stay enforcement of its order. At the hearing, 8 the appellee-stepfather’s counsel argued that the petition for leave to appeal was
premature because the orders that the appellant-father appealed were not final orders and
a contempt finding, by itself, was not appealable under Rule 304(b)(5) without an
imposition of penalties or sanctions. The court stayed the proceedings, stating that the
decision as to whether the appeal was premature was “one that [was] going to be left up
to the [a]ppellate court.” The court then indicated that any other motions would be
addressed when the time was ripe. The court also entered a written order, granting the
appellee-stepfather’s motion to stay and indicating that a stay would be in effect until
there was a ruling on the appeal. On August 27, 2020, the appellant-father filed an
amended notice of appeal pursuant to Rule 304(b)(5) and Rule 304(b)(6). Ill. S. Ct. R.
304(b)(5), (b)(6) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016).
¶ 15 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 16 In both his brief and motion that we ordered taken with the case, the appellee-
stepfather contends that we lack jurisdiction to consider the merits of the appeal under
Rule 304 because the trial court did not make a special finding allowing for immediate
appeal; that although the court found the appellant-father in indirect civil contempt, it did
not impose a penalty for the contempt findings; and that the court’s orders were not final
orders allocating parental responsibilities. In response, the appellant-father contends that
this court should strike the appellee-stepfather’s motion and brief because the appellee-
stepfather has not been granted leave to intervene in the case and is therefore not a party. 1
1 The appellant-father filed a motion to strike the motion to dismiss or, in the alternative, deny the motion to dismiss, which was also ordered taken with the case by this court. 9 Alternatively, the appellant-father, acknowledging that this court may consider the
appropriateness of its jurisdiction at any time, argues that we have jurisdiction over his
appeal. The appellant-father first contends that we have jurisdiction under Illinois
Supreme Court Rule 304(b)(5) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016) because the court imposed two
sanctions with the contempt finding, i.e., a body attachment and the order requiring the
appellant-father to tender his address to the court. The appellant-father also argues that
we have jurisdiction under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(b)(6) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016)
because, by ordering the appellant-father to return E.S. to the appellee-stepfather, the trial
court’s orders modified the previously entered joint parenting plan and allocated parental
responsibilities of the minor children to the appellee-stepfather.
¶ 17 As acknowledged by the appellant-father, we have a duty to sua sponte determine
whether we have jurisdiction to decide issues presented on appeal. Cangemi v. Advocate
South Suburban Hospital, 364 Ill. App. 3d 446, 453 (2006). In his amended notice of
appeal, the appellant-father states that we have jurisdiction over his appeal pursuant to
Rule 304(b)(5) and Rule 304(b)(6). Rule 304 governs appeals from final judgments that
do not dispose of an entire proceeding. Ill. S. Ct. R. 304 (eff. Mar. 8, 2016). Rule
304(b)(5) makes immediately appealable, despite the pendency of other matters,
“[a]n order finding a person *** in contempt of court which imposes a monetary or other
penalty.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(b)(5) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016). However, for an appellate court to
assume jurisdiction under Rule 304(b)(5), the contempt order must impose sanctions
upon the contemnor. In re Marriage of Gutman, 232 Ill. 2d 145, 153 (2008). Until the
contempt order imposes a penalty, there is no basis for obtaining immediate appellate 10 jurisdiction under Rule 304(b)(5). Id. A “penalty” is a “[p]unishment imposed on a
wrongdoer, [usually] in the form of imprisonment or fine.” Black’s Law Dictionary
(11th ed. 2019); see also In re Marriage of Schwieger, 379 Ill. App. 3d 687, 689 (2008)
(using the same definition contained in an earlier edition).
¶ 18 Here, the trial court’s August 10, 2020, order found that the appellant-father was
in willful contempt of the court for his failure to return E.S. to the appellee-stepfather’s
care. The court stated that if the appellant-father failed to produce E.S. as ordered, then a
body attachment would issue to remand him to the custody of the Madison County
Sherriff’s Department, and he would be held until he complied with the order. The court
also ordered the appellant-father to provide the address where E.S. was staying to his
counsel, so it could be provided to the appellee-stepfather’s counsel.
¶ 19 First, the trial court’s announcement that it would issue a body attachment if the
appellant-father failed to comply with its order was not the issuance of a penalty.
Instead, the court merely announced the penalty that would be imposed in the future for
the appellant-father’s continued noncompliance with the court’s order. Further
proceedings would have been necessary to determine the appellant-father’s compliance
with the court’s orders and whether a body attachment should issue.
¶ 20 Additionally, ordering the appellant-father to provide the address where E.S. was
currently living was not a penalty as it was not a punishment meant to ensure his future
compliance with the trial court’s orders. See In re M.S., 2015 IL App (4th) 140857, ¶ 35
(the purpose of a civil contempt order is to compel future compliance with a court order).
E.S., who was the subject of the pending petitions for allocation of parenting time and 11 parental responsibilities, was living with the appellant-father in another state. However,
her location was unknown because the appellant-father refused to give her address to the
court and refused to allow her any contact with her Illinois family. The court asked the
appellant-father’s attorney if she knew where E.S. was living, and she said that she did
not. Thus, it was necessary for the court to order the appellant-father to provide E.S.’s
address to determine her location. Then, the court could have held further proceedings on
the pending petitions seeking a determination on the allocation of parental
responsibilities. Disclosure of the address of minor children subject to a pending
allocation of parental responsibilities petition would be generally required and a routine
matter, not a punishment designed to compel future compliance with court orders.
Therefore, because the trial court never actually imposed a penalty against the appellant-
father, there was no final order entered in accordance with Rule 304(b)(5) in the
contempt proceeding. See Fidelity Financial Services, Inc. v. Hicks, 267 Ill. App. 3d
887, 890 (1994) (“A contempt order is interlocutory and, thus, nonappealable, unless the
court imposes a sanction for any contemptuous act.”).
¶ 21 The appellant-father next contends that we have jurisdiction under Rule 304(b)(6).
As noted above, Rule 304 governs appeals from final judgments that do not dispose of
the entire proceeding. Ill. S. Ct. R. 304 (eff. Mar. 8, 2016). Rule 304(b)(6) allows for the
immediate appeal from any “custody or allocation of parental responsibilities judgment
or modification of such judgment entered pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act [citation] or Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 [citation].” Ill. S.
Ct. R. 304(b)(6) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016). An allocation of parental responsibilities judgment 12 is a judgment that allocates both parenting time and significant decision-making
responsibilities with respect to the minor children. In re Marriage of Fatkin, 2019 IL
123602, ¶ 29. Thus, Rule 304(b)(6) extends to final orders that allocate parenting time
and significant decision-making responsibilities and orders modifying those judgments.
See In re Marriage of Harris, 2015 IL App (2d) 140616, ¶ 16 (finding that Rule
304(b)(6) is limited to final orders of custody or allocation of parental responsibilities
judgments); see also Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(b)(6), Committee Comments (adopted Feb. 26,
2010) (Rule 304(b)(6) is limited to “permanent determination[s] of custody”). “ ‘An
order is final and appealable if it terminates the litigation between the parties on the
merits or disposes of the rights of the parties, either on the entire controversy or a
separate part thereof.’ ” In re Marriage of Gutman, 232 Ill. 2d 145, 151 (2008) (quoting
R.W. Dunteman Co. v. C/G Enterprises, Inc., 181 Ill. 2d 153, 159 (1998)).
¶ 22 Here, the trial court’s orders entered on August 7 and August 10, which required
the appellant-father to return E.S. to the home that she lived in before her mother’s death,
were not final orders. First, we note that the August 7 order specially stated that it was a
temporary order and that the appellee-stepfather, in his brief, acknowledges that this was
a temporary order. Also, the August 10 order, which gave a future compliance date of
August 12, was not a final order allocating parental responsibilities. At the hearings
where these orders were entered, the court made clear its reasoning for entering the two
orders. On August 7, the court stated that it wanted E.S. back in the home that she had
lived for five years before the appellant-father relocated her. Then, the court indicated
that a subsequent hearing on the petitions for allocation of parenting time and parental 13 responsibilities would be held at a later time. The court further stated that it was
attempting to defuse a situation that had suddenly come up by ordering the appellant-
father to return E.S. back to the appellee-stepfather and then it would set a further hearing
on the pending petitions at an appropriate time.
¶ 23 At the August 10 hearing, the trial court again noted that it was attempting to enter
a temporary order to return to the status quo before E.S. was removed from Illinois.
Based on the above, the court’s August 7 and August 10 orders were short-term,
temporary orders meant to return E.S. to the home where she had been living before her
mother passed away; these were not final orders allocating parental responsibilities.
Thus, we conclude that Rule 304(b) does not provide a basis for this court’s jurisdiction
to consider the merits of the appeal. Moreover, the court’s orders did not contain Rule
304(a) language to make them immediately appealable. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(a) (eff.
Mar. 8, 2016). Accordingly, we conclude that the appellant-father’s notice of appeal was
premature and that we therefore lack jurisdiction to consider this appeal.
¶ 24 Because we find that we lack jurisdiction, we grant the appellee-stepfather’s
motion to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction, and we deny the appellant-father’s
motion to strike and for sanctions that were taken with the case. We also deny the
appellee-stepfather’s motion to dismiss appeal for mootness, 2 which argued that the
appeal was moot because E.S. was returned to appellee-stepfather after the appellant-
father was arrested for aggravated domestic assault.
2 This motion was also ordered taken with the case by this court. 14 ¶ 25 In his brief, the appellee-stepfather requested this court award him sanctions
pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 375(b) (eff. Feb. 1, 1994) because the appellant-
father’s appeal was frivolous and for the purpose of delaying the enforcement of the trial
court’s order to return E.S. to Illinois. However, “[t]he imposition of Rule 375 sanctions
is left entirely to the discretion of the reviewing court.” Parkway Bank & Trust Co. v.
Korzen, 2013 IL App (1st) 130380, ¶ 87. Because we do not find that sanctions are
appropriate here, we deny the appellee-stepfather’s request.
¶ 26 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 27 For the foregoing reasons, we grant the appellee-stepfather’s motion to dismiss
appeal that was taken with the case and dismiss this appeal for a lack of appellate
jurisdiction.
¶ 28 Motion granted; appeal dismissed.