Khalid Ataya Versus Nisa Suanphairin

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 2023
Docket22-CA-228
StatusUnknown

This text of Khalid Ataya Versus Nisa Suanphairin (Khalid Ataya Versus Nisa Suanphairin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Khalid Ataya Versus Nisa Suanphairin, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

KHALID ATAYA NO. 22-CA-228

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

NISA SUANPHAIRIN COURT OF APPEAL

STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 760-773, DIVISION "I" HONORABLE NANCY A. MILLER, JUDGE PRESIDING

February 01, 2023

JUDE G. GRAVOIS JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Fredericka Homberg Wicker, Jude G. Gravois, and Hans J. Liljeberg

CONTEMPT OF COURT JUDGMENT VACATED; MATTER REMANDED JGG FHW HJL COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, NISA SUANPHAIRIN Richard L. Ducote Victora McIntyre GRAVOIS, J.

Defendant/appellant, Nisa Suanphairin, appeals the domestic

commissioner’s written judgment of January 14, 2022, made final by the district

court’s written judgment of February 22, 2022, which found her in contempt of

court for failing to return the parties’ minor children to their father, plaintiff Khalid

Ataya, as ordered by the domestic commissioner on October 14, 2021. On appeal,

Ms. Suanphairin argues that the domestic commissioner’s contempt of court

judgment was rendered in violation of her due process rights because she was

never properly served nor noticed with Mr. Ataya’s Rule for Contempt, and

therefore could not be tried in absentia while represented by a curator ad hoc.

For the following reasons, we find merit to Ms. Suanphairin’s arguments on

appeal. Accordingly, we vacate the domestic commissioner’s written judgment of

January 14, 2022, made final by the district court’s written judgment of February

22, 2022, which found Ms. Suanphairin in contempt of court, and remand the

matter for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case involves dueling petitions for protection from domestic abuse filed

against each other by Mr. Khalid Ataya, plaintiff herein, and Ms. Nisa Suanphairin,

defendant herein, who were divorced and are the parents of two minor children.

The domestic abuse petitions were first filed in 2016.

Pertinent to this appeal, on October 14, 2021, in open court while both

parties and their counsel were present, the domestic commissioner, Hon. Reuben J.

Bailey, ordered Ms. Suanphairin to return the parties’ minor children—ages 6 and

4, respectively, at the time—to Mr. Ataya pursuant to a valid and in-force custody

order between the parties. A written order was entered to that effect, setting the

location for the custody exchange to be at the Kenner Police Station later that

22-CA-228 1 evening.1 Ms. Suanphairin failed to appear for the custody exchange as ordered.

The next day, October 15, 2021, Mr. Ataya filed a Request for Civil Warrant,

which the domestic commissioner granted that day, directing and authorizing the

Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office, or any other law enforcement agency in the state

of Louisiana, to locate said minor children, remove them from Ms. Suanphairin’s

custody, and immediately return them to their father, Mr. Ataya. On October 18,

2021, Mr. Ataya filed a Rule for Contempt against Ms. Suanphairin, arguing that

she should be held in contempt of court for violating the domestic commissioner’s

October 14, 2021 Order by intentionally and willfully not returning the children to

Mr. Ataya as ordered, and that she should be sanctioned to the fullest extent of the

law, including incarceration and payment of Mr. Ataya’s attorney’s fees and court

costs for the filing of the Rule for Contempt. The Rule for Contempt also prayed

for the appointment of an attorney to represent Ms. Suanphairin in connection with

the Rule for Contempt, who was alleged to have disappeared following the October

14, 2021 hearing.2 A hearing on the Rule for Contempt was set for January 6,

2022. The rule was served upon Tracy Sheppard, the attorney/curator ad hoc

whom the court appointed to represent Ms. Suanphairin since she was absent and

unrepresented.

Meanwhile, on October 19, 2021, Ms. Suanphairin, in proper person, filed

an objection to the domestic commissioner’s order of October 14, 2021. A hearing

on the objection was set before the district court for November 9, 2021. On

November 22, 2021, the district court signed a written judgment dismissing Ms.

Suanphairin’s objection to the domestic commissioner’s order of October 14, 2021

with prejudice for her failure to appear at the November 9, 2021 hearing thereon.

1 This Order was confirmed by the district court by Order dated October 28, 2021. 2 According to the Rule for Contempt, Ms. Suanphairin terminated her attorney following the October 14, 2021 hearing and told the court that she would be representing herself.

22-CA-228 2 The record indicates that several notes of evidence were filed on January 5,

2022 by Ms. Sheppard, the attorney/curator ad hoc appointed to represent Ms.

Suanphairin, including certified mailings addressed to Ms. Suanphairin at two

different addresses and emails to both her and her former counsel. In her filing,

Ms. Sheppard stated that Ms. Suanphairin did not respond to these notices and that

she was unable to locate her.

The scheduled hearing on the Rule for Contempt was held on January 6,

2022, in front of the domestic commissioner, Hon. Reuben J. Bailey. Present in

court were Mr. Ataya and his counsel; the curator ad hoc appointed for Ms.

Suanphairin appeared via Zoom. Mr. Ataya testified regarding Commissioner

Bailey’s order issued in open court on October 14, 2021, in the presence of Ms.

Suanphairin and her counsel, ordering her to return the children to Mr. Ataya that

evening at the Kenner Police Station. He testified that Ms. Suanphairin did not

appear as ordered, and that he had not seen the minor children since May of 2021,

nor had he been able to contact them or Ms. Suanphairin. At the conclusion of the

hearing, Commissioner Bailey found Ms. Suanphairin to be in contempt of court

and ordered her to pay a fine of $500.00. He also ordered that she be immediately

imprisoned at the Jefferson Parish Jail for a period of 90 days without the

possibility of parole, probation, or early release. Ms. Suanphairin was also ordered

to pay $125.00 in court costs and Mr. Ataya’s attorney’s fees, in the amount of

$1,386.00, associated with the filing of the Rule for Contempt. The curator ad hoc

objected to the ruling, which was duly noted. A written judgment to this effect was

signed by the domestic commissioner on January 14, 2022.

On January 12, 2022, the appointed curator ad hoc, on behalf of Ms.

Suanphairin, filed an objection to the domestic commissioner’s January 6, 2022

oral ruling which found Ms. Suanphairin in contempt of court. Therein, the curator

ad hoc revealed that on January 11, 2022, she had received an email from Ms.

22-CA-228 3 Suanphairin, the absent defendant, in response to her emails on December 10, 2021

and January 4, 2022, wherein Ms. Suanphairin stated that she “opposed all

matters.” Pursuant to the objection, a hearing de novo was set for February 9, 2022

in front of the district court. At that hearing, the district court dismissed Ms.

Suanphairin’s objection because she failed to appear at the hearing. Commissioner

Bailey’s oral ruling of January 6, 2022 was made a final judgment by the district

court by written judgment signed on February 22, 2022.

The following day, February 23, 2022, Ms. Suanphairin, through newly

enrolled counsel, filed a motion for appeal from the domestic commissioner’s

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