Lynch v. Lynch

677 A.2d 584, 342 Md. 509, 1996 Md. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 10, 1996
Docket55, Sept. Term, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 677 A.2d 584 (Lynch v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynch v. Lynch, 677 A.2d 584, 342 Md. 509, 1996 Md. LEXIS 56 (Md. 1996).

Opinion

BELL, Judge.

This case presents for our resolution the issue of the sufficiency of the evidence that Susan M. Lynch, the respondent, was unable to pay the court-ordered child support to comply with the purge provision set by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County 1 and the propriety of the trial court *514 holding the respondent in contempt of court. The Court of Special Appeals held, as to the former, that the evidence was insufficient to prove the respondent’s ability to comply, but as to the latter, that the court did not abuse its discretion. Lynch v. Lynch, 103 Md.App. 71, 80-82, 652 A.2d 1132, 1136-38 (1995). Accordingly, it affirmed the contempt finding, and reversed the sanction imposed, i.e., the incarceration of the respondent until she complied with the purge provision the court had set. We granted cross-petitions for certiorari. We shall affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.

The respondent and Robert D. Lynch, the petitioner, divorced in 1987. At that time, the respondent was awarded custody of the parties’ two minor children. Subsequently, however, the circuit court modified the decree, terminating the respondent’s custody of the children and transferring it to the petitioner. The court also ordered the respondent, who was then working as a receptionist for the United States Government, National Institutes of Health (NIH), earning $460 per week, 2 to pay $150 per month child support, initially through an earnings withholding order, payable through the court’s

*515 Child Support Enforcement Division. 3 The respondent immediately fell behind in the support payments. As a result, the support enforcement division initiated contempt proceedings, pursuant to which the court issued an order requiring the respondent to show cause why she should not be held in contempt. Over the course of the next two and one-half years, the show cause hearing was continued eight times, at the respondent’s request, and on one occasion, she failed to appear. When a hearing finally was held the respondent had made only one support payment and was, therefore, $5,680 in arrears.

The only testimony presented at the hearing was by the respondent. She admitted that she was working when she was ordered to make child support payments and that she continued in that employment for almost a year thereafter. She quit her job, she explained, to care for her mother, who “got very sick and because of personal problems at home, etc.” She continued to care for her mother until she died. Although testifying to having pursued some job opportunities, the respondent acknowledged that she had remained largely unemployed since August of 1991. She noted that she had a few miscellaneous jobs like yard work or flower delivery. The only applications for jobs to which she testified were to discount retail stores. The respondent maintained that she had no assets, and that she did not receive public assistance, social security, workers’ compensation, or any other such benefits. Moreover, she testified that she did not own a car, had no bank accounts or valuables of any kind and, except for the $20 that she had in her possession, she had no money. With respect to her living arrangements, the respondent advised the court that she lived rent free in the home of her deceased mother and received free food from a charitable organization called Mana. She also testified that she did not have title to her mother’s home, rather, it had been be *516 queathed to her children and “the parental guardian,” ie., the petitioner. Although she said she intended to contest the will, she recognized that, unless she was successful, she would not have title to the house.

The petitioner did not cross-examine the respondent, nor did he offer evidence in contradiction of the respondent’s testimony. Instead, he argued that the respondent presented a “classic involuntary impoverishment case,” observing:

She doesn’t work, she obviously doesn’t have to work. She can meet her needs by some other way. I can’t get to any of her assets because she doesn’t legally own anything. In terms of this piece of property, it would be nice if we had a judgment, we could go after the property, but she doesn’t own the property and she won’t do anything to get the estate moving along.

The trial court held the respondent in contempt and entered a judgment against her for $5,680. 4 It sentenced her to 20 days in the detention center, but ordered that she could purge herself of the contempt by paying $500. While recognizing that the respondent did not have $500 in cash or assets from which that amount could be acquired, the court nevertheless determined that she had the ability to purge herself of the contempt. The basis of that determination was its finding that she led a “discretionary lifestyle ... and in the process of it you don’t pay support that you have the ability to pay.” The court admonished the respondent about the importance of her obligation to make “support payments” and that she must “face” and “deal with” the fact that she has to “go out and make some money” to care for her children. The court also commented that the respondent at one time held “a job paying you $24,000 a year, that was a darn good job and you just left it.”

*517 The respondent moved for reconsideration. At that time, the trial court explained what it had meant by “discretionary lifestyle”:

many defendants in criminal cases are indigent and qualified for and are in fact represented by the Public Defender’s Office, but those are—not all, but many of them are people who live in a place or a home where somebody else pays their bills, and they actually physically show up in court— they either take a bus or they might borrow somebody’s car, some of them smoke, they can get cigarettes, they don’t live a luxurious lifestyle, but they are able to live, they stay alive, they have some discretion, they have—nobody else has any obligation to support them, but other people do. So, it allows people, some people, an option in their lives that other people don’t have, and they put this term “Discretionary lifestyle” on it. So that is where I got it from. It is not something that I thought up. I apply it to many people come in as URESA cases.
This is a woman who, as I remember, at one time [was paid] 30 or $40 thousand dollars,[ 5 ] working for the United States government, and for one reason or another she decided it wasn’t good—I think maybe she wanted to stop the job to come home and take care of her mother, when her mother was sick, and she did, and she lives in her mother’s home, who is now deceased, apparently there are some other matters going on. She lives rent-free. Regardless of whether she is going to have ownership in this property, she lives rent-free. She gave me a couple of letters from a couple of places that have supplied her food.

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Bluebook (online)
677 A.2d 584, 342 Md. 509, 1996 Md. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-lynch-md-1996.