Lentz v. Lentz

19 Ohio App. 329, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 38, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 103
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 19, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 19 Ohio App. 329 (Lentz v. Lentz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lentz v. Lentz, 19 Ohio App. 329, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 38, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 103 (Ohio Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

In a suit begun by John J. Lentz against his wife, Alta F. Lentz, in which each party was asking for a divorce and for the custody of their minor child, the Common Pleas Court, of [330]*330Franklin county, Ohio, on May 23, 1921, granted a divorce to Mr. Lentz, and in the divorce decree the court ordered ’that Mrs. Lentz should have the custody of the child until July 1, 1921, but subject to the right of Mr. Lentz to have the-child from 2 p. m., Saturday of each week, until 7:30 p. m., of the following Sunday, and that Mr. Lentz should have the custody of said child from July 1, 1921, to January 1, 1922, subject to the right of Mrs. Lentz to have the child for a like period on Saturday and Sunday of each week of said period, and that thereafter each party should have the custody of the child for -six months of each year, subject to the right of the one not in possession to have the child on Saturday and Sunday of each week.

Such order of the court as to the custody of the child has not been complied with by Mrs. Lentz, who, during all the time since said order was made, has had the custody of the child.

■ "Within a very few days after the order was made, Mr. Lentz paid to Mrs. Lentz $5,000, in accordance with the decree, and on the same day that she received the money Mrs. Lentz took the child out of Ohio and remained away until July, 1922, during which time Mr. Lentz did not know of her whereabouts; and during all the time since the divorce, Mrsi. Lentz has- kept the child concealed from Mr. Lentz.

In July, 1922, she was in court with the child to answer a charge in contempt for her disregard of the order as to the custody of the child, and in reference to motions filed by her, and also by Mr. Lentz, seeking a modification of the order as to the custody of the child, and at the time she was so in [331]*331court, presided over by Judge W. P. Stephenson, certain things transpired which will be hereafter referred to.

At said time, July, 1922, Mr. Lentz had filed a petition in an independent action against Mrs. Lentz, in which it was claimed, and assumed to be the fact, that he attacked the judgment in the divorce case because of fraud practiced therein upon him and the court by Mrs. Lentz.

Before that ease was disposed of, and on March 10, 1923, Mr. Lentz filed new charges of contempt against Mrs. Lentz for her disobedience of the order of the court, made when the divorce was granted, as to the custody of the child, and this proceeding in error grows out of the trial of said contempt charges filed March 10, 1923.

In her answer to the charges in contempt, Mrs. Lentz alleged that she should not be punished for contempt, for several reasons, among which was “because all of the matters and things involved in this said action and proceeding in contempt have been fully heard and determined and finally adjudicated by another court of concurrent jurisdiction with this said court.”

Evidence was' taken in reference to what transpired in July, 1922, when the parties were before Judge W. P. Stephenson, who was holding court in Franklin county, and to whom certain matters were submitted concerning the custody of said child.

The evidence consisted for the most part of a stenographic report of some things said by the attorneys and the judge, and of a written decision, denominated by the judge a ruling, signed by the [332]*332judge and sent to the clerk several days later, after the judge had reached a conclusion as to the matters which had been submitted to him.

This ruling, signed by the judge, recited that there had been submitted to him motions “by both parties seeking to modify former order of the court as to custody of their child,” and informations in contempt.

The judge in the ruling then called attention to the fact that Mr. Lentz had filed the independent suit hereinbefore referred to, attacking the judgment in the divorce case on the ground of fraud, and questioned what'would be the result if the original order as to the custody of the child was impeached for fraud, and then said, “The court has been in a quandary as to what it could do and should do under the circumstances,” and “It should be known whether or not the original judgment and decree is to stand or be vacated before either party is punished for contempt.” The ruling closed with the following: “The court is of the opinion that all these matters should be passed until the new suit to set aside the judgment is heard and disposed of, and that will be the order.”

What occurred before Judge Stephenson at the hearing is set forth in the bill of exceptions in this case as follows:

“Mr. Kams (attorney for Mr. Lentz): If the court please, I think inasmuch as Mr. Lentz has not seen that boy, or had the care and custody of it, or had it in his possession for over a year, I think there ought to be an order of this court now allowing this- boy to remain in Mr. Lentz’s [333]*333custody until the court disposes of this matter. He is entitled to it; it is his turn.

“The Court: Now, I will not do that, but I will do this: tomorrow is the visitation day, isn’t it? That order of visitation stands as originally, and the boy is in the jurisdiction of this court, and that will be enforced. You can have that boy from tomorrow until Sunday. I am making the order now. My suggestion is to deliver him at the Southern Hotel, and then they — she says the boy is here —then they com.e within the purview of the order. And the child must be delivered as per the former order of the court on the question of visitation. Right now will be the time of year, if I recall, when the child would he turned over to John J.. Lentz; hut I am not going to do that right now. There are some changed conditions the court must consider in connection with this case, but I am going to insist that you have the right to your boy from Saturday until Sunday — the right of visitation, and I will let that stand. It is set out in the petition when you may get the child, and when you may return' him, and where.”

The judge who tried the contempt charge in this ease now under review concluded not to punish Mrs. Lentz for contempt, and it is the claim of counsel for Mrs. Lentz that this court is without authority to review contempt proceedings in which the party charged has been found not guilty; that such proceedings being quasi criminal and resulting in the discharge of the accused are not reviewable on error.

There is much to be said in favor of the sound-. ness of this contention.

[334]*334Section 12146, General Code, provides that “the judgment and orders of a court * * * made in cases of contempt may be reviewed on error.”

But such proceedings are primarily for the vindication of the dignity and sovereignty of the state in the exercise of its judicial power, and when such proceedings are> invoked solely by persons aggrieved by disobedience of the orders of the court, a refusal to punish for contempt is largely, if not wholly, within the discretion of the court, and one who unavailingly invokes such punishment for another can complain, if at all, only of the abuse of the court’s discretion in refusing to so punish. MacKenzie v. MacKenzie, 17 C. C. (N. S.), 494.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio App. 329, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 38, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lentz-v-lentz-ohioctapp-1924.