Nicola Weaver v. David Weaver

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJune 1, 2018
Docket2017-402
StatusPublished

This text of Nicola Weaver v. David Weaver (Nicola Weaver v. David Weaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicola Weaver v. David Weaver, (Vt. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2018 VT 56

No. 2017-402

Nicola Weaver Supreme Court

On Appeal from v. Superior Court, Addison Unit, Family Division

David Weaver April Term, 2018

Helen M. Toor, J.

Nicola Weaver, Pro Se, North Ferrisburgh, Plaintiff-Appellant.

Wanda Otero-Weaver, Lincoln, for Defendant-Appellee.

PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Eaton and Carroll, JJ., and Grearson, Supr. J., Specially Assigned

¶ 1. SKOGLUND, J. Mother appeals an order of the family court holding her in

contempt for willful failure to comply with a ruling that placed the parties’ minor son in his father’s

physical custody and temporarily suspended mother’s contact with the child. We affirm the

contempt order, but remand the matter for the family court to consider whether father’s attorney,

who is also his wife, should be disqualified from further representing father in this case.

¶ 2. In May 2017, the court temporarily suspended all contact between mother and the

parties’ son N.W., who was then sixteen years old, after mother repeatedly violated prior parent-

child contact orders issued by the court that gave father legal and physical rights and

responsibilities for N.W.1 Despite the order, N.W. remained at mother’s home. Father moved to

1 We recently affirmed the May 2017 order in Weaver v. Weaver, 2018 VT 38, __Vt.__, __A.3d__. A detailed history of the parties’ custody dispute is set forth in that decision. hold mother in contempt. See 15 V.S.A. § 603(a); Wells v. Wells, 150 Vt. 1, 6, 549 A.2d 1039,

1043 (1988) (noting “obstruction of court-ordered visitation can be redressed by means of

contempt proceedings”). Following a hearing, the court found mother in contempt for willfully

failing to comply with the May 2017 order. It ordered mother to pay $100 for each day that N.W.

remained at mother’s home after October 31, 2017. The court stated that the fine was intended to

compensate father for lost contact with his son. It therefore permitted father to deduct any fines

incurred from his maintenance payments to mother.2 Mother appealed.

¶ 3. We review an order of contempt solely for abuse of discretion. Hunt v. Hunt, 162

Vt. 423, 436, 648 A.2d 843, 853 (1994). We find none here. The family court found by clear and

convincing evidence that mother had willfully violated the May 2017 order by failing to do

anything to ensure that N.W. lived with father. Instead of complying with the order, she wrote to

the parties’ three older sons to ask them to intervene in the dispute, telling them that father was

trying to make them homeless, lying about her in court, and bullying and abusing N.W. She also

attempted to sign school forms for N.W. that she had no right to sign, threatened to ruin the

reputations of father and his wife in the community, told father to “enjoy your piece of paper”

when the May 2017 order was issued, and said that he would never come between her and her

sons. Although mother wrote to father that she could not force N.W. to go to father’s and that she

was going to call the police to have them take N.W. to father’s home, there was no evidence that

she ever did so. The court found that she was “merely making a record and bluffing.” The record

supports these findings, and the findings in turn support the court’s conclusion that mother

2 The amount of father’s maintenance obligation has been the subject of three prior appeals to this Court. Weaver v. Weaver, No. 2017-414, 2013 WL 2106377 (Vt. May 4, 2018) (unpub. mem.), https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/sites/default/files/documents/eo17-414.pdf [https://perma.cc/9GHU-MRKA]; Weaver v. Weaver, 2017 VT 58, __Vt.__, 171 A.3d 374; Weaver v. Weaver, No. 2015-326, 2016 WL 562907 (Vt. Feb. 11, 2016) (unpub. mem.), https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/sites/default/files/documents/eo15-326.pdf [https://perma.cc/V3TB-NBCH]. 2 willfully violated the parent-child contact order.3 See 15 V.S.A. § 603(f)(3) (providing that

violation of court order is willful if person “had the ability to comply with the order and failed to

do so”).

¶ 4. Moreover, the court did not exceed its discretion by ordering mother to pay a

compensatory fine to father. Such a sanction is expressly permitted by law. See V.R.F.P. 16(c)(3)

(providing that person found in contempt may be ordered to pay fine to aggrieved party to

compensate for loss or injury caused by contemnor). While “purely prospective fines are not

favored in Vermont,” we have upheld the imposition of prospective civil contempt fines when

necessary to compensate complainants or as a coercive sanction. Vt. Women’s Health Ctr. v.

Operation Rescue, 159 Vt. 141, 151, 617 A.2d 411, 417 (1992). The record supports the family

court’s determination that prospective fines were warranted by the “extreme and extraordinary”

circumstances of this case, namely, mother’s continual and unrepentant disregard of the court’s

custody orders and by extension, her son’s best interests, and the resulting harm to father’s

relationship with N.W. The sanction was not impermissibly punitive because mother could avoid

the fines by complying with the May 2017 order and returning N.W. to his father. See DeGrace

v. DeGrace, 147 Vt. 466, 471, 520 A.2d 987, 991 (1986) (affirming $10,000 fine imposed by court

for father’s contempt in interfering with visitation rights; fine was not punitive sanction because it

was reducible to judgment only if father failed to comply with visitation rights in future). Nor was

3 We do not find Hancock v. Hancock, 471 S.E.2d 415, 420 (N.C. Ct. App. 1996), the case cited by mother in her brief, to be persuasive. In Hancock, North Carolina’s intermediate appellate court reversed a trial court decision holding a mother in contempt for interfering with the father’s visitation with the parties’ minor child because the evidence showed that the mother had prepared the child to go, encouraged the child to visit his father, and told him that he had to go, but the child “simply refused.” Id. at 419. The court held that the mother’s actions did not rise to the level of willful contempt of the visitation order where she “did everything possible short of using physical force or a threat of punishment to make the child go with his father.” Id. Here, by contrast, there was no evidence of any efforts by mother to get N.W. to comply with the parent-child contact schedule. Rather, mother has repeatedly told her children that father is trying to make them homeless and that he only sought custody of N.W. to reduce his child support obligations and to get tax deductions. Having deliberately alienated N.W. from father, she cannot now use N.W.’s alleged refusal to see father as a shield in this contempt proceeding. 3 it improper for the court to order that any fines accrued by mother be offset from father’s

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Related

Hancock v. Hancock
471 S.E.2d 415 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1996)
Lumbra v. Lumbra
394 A.2d 1139 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1978)
Hunt v. Hunt
648 A.2d 843 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1994)
DeGrace v. DeGrace
520 A.2d 987 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1986)
Schwartz v. Haas
739 A.2d 1188 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1999)
Wells v. Wells
549 A.2d 1039 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1988)
Cody v. Cody
2005 VT 116 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2005)
Vermont Women's Health Center v. Operation Rescue
617 A.2d 411 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1992)
In re L.H., L.H. and L.H., Juveniles
2018 VT 4 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2018)
Nicola Weaver v. David Weaver
2017 VT 58 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2017)
Nicola Weaver v. David Weaver
2018 VT 38 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2018)
Kennedy v. Eldridge
201 Cal. App. 4th 1197 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)
Attorney Grievance Commission v. O'Leary
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Bluebook (online)
Nicola Weaver v. David Weaver, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicola-weaver-v-david-weaver-vtsuperct-2018.