Nnoli v. Nnoli

646 A.2d 1021, 101 Md. App. 243
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 31, 1994
Docket1253 and 1303, September Term, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 646 A.2d 1021 (Nnoli v. Nnoli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nnoli v. Nnoli, 646 A.2d 1021, 101 Md. App. 243 (Md. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

We have here two appeals. Emmanuel Nnoli and Nina Nnoli are husband and wife. Nina Nnoli appeals from her husband’s release from incarceration on his petition for habeas corpus. We shall reverse that judgment in number 1253. Emmanuel Nnoli appeals a trial judge’s refusal to abate a contempt order and to release him forthwith from incarceration in order to afford him the ability to comply with the *246 purging provision of the order. We shall affirm that judgment in number 1303.

I.

These parties have been here before. See Nnoli v. Nnoli, 96 Md.App. 803 [1993]. In our earlier opinion, we said:

The parties, both of whom are Nigerian nationals, married on 7 July 1980 in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Two children were born of the marriage, Audrey Nnoli (now eleven years of age), and Eileen Nnoli (now nine years of age). The children enjoy dual citizenship in the United States and in Nigeria.
In January 1987 the parties jointly decided to send the two children to Nigeria to stay with their maternal grandparents until the summer of 1987. In January of 1988, Mr. Nnoli traveled to Nigeria and, without Mrs. Nnoli’s consent, removed the children from the residence of her parents and placed them in his parents’ home in Nigeria. He then returned to Maryland and resumed marital cohabitation with Mrs. Nnoli until September 1988.
On or about 13 September 1988, Mrs. Nnoli traveled to Nigeria and attempted to remove the children from the care of her husband’s parents. Mrs. Nnoli was denied access to the children and was thus unable to remove the children. She returned alone to Maryland in October 1988, at which time she discovered that in her absence Mr. Nnoli had moved, sold the marital home, and discarded her possessions and clothing____
At the time Mrs. Nnoli instituted the divorce proceeding, the Nnoli children had been in Nigeria for a period of twenty-one consecutive months, and had been regularly enrolled in and had attended Nigerian schools. [Footnote omitted.]

Emmanuel was found in contempt of court on April 21,1992, for his failure to deliver custody of the parties’ minor children to his wife, precipitating the earlier appeal. The divorce *247 action, we are informed, is still pending. On May 7, 1993, this Court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. 1

On May 13, 1993, Emmanuel was apprehended upon a body attachment and brought before the court. The trial judge (Miller, J.) at that time ordered Emmanuel remanded to the custody of the sheriff and incarcerated until he complied with the purging provision of the court’s earlier contempt order, namely, the return of the children to Nina.

On June 11, 1993, Emmanuel filed several pleas including a motion for emergency hearing and a motion to abate the contempt order and to release him forthwith from incarceration in order to afford him the ability to comply with the purging provision of the order. A hearing was then held on June 30, 1993, before Judge Miller, the same trial judge who, on May 13, had remanded him to the custody of the sheriff and incarcerated him until he complied with the purging provision of the contempt order. He found that Emmanuel had conspired with his family to deprive Nina of ever seeing her children. He further found that Emmanuel was lying about his activities, both in Maryland and in Nigeria, both as to events in the past and the present. Incarceration was ordered to continue with the provision that Emmanuel would be released from custody when the minor children were produced. It is from that order that Emmanuel appeals.

On July 8, 1993, Emmanuel applied for a writ of habeas corpus before another Montgomery County circuit judge, Judge Ryan. The sole defendant named on that petition was Mrs. Nnoli. The hearing for that matter was held on July 13, 1993, before that judge. He ordered Emmanuel’s release, Nina appeals.

At the hearing before Judge Miller on June 30, Emmanuel and Nina both testified and were subject to cross-examination. The only other evidence received at that hearing was affidavits *248 of Thomas L. Heeney, Esq., relating efforts and investigation he had made on behalf of Emmanuel. These were received over objection. Nina’s counsel sought unsuccessfully to cross-examine Heeney.

At the conclusion of those proceedings Judge Miller said:

All right. In this case, I guess, since the children, I guess it was 1986, were voluntarily by the agreement of the parties sent to Nigeria, Mrs. Nnoli has not seen her children, and I think that’s close to seven years, as I understand it, and from shortly after the time they got to Nigeria, it seems clear to this Court that there was a conspiracy between his family and Mr. Nnoli to make sure that Mrs. Nnoli does not see her children and never see[s] her children. And that is clearly demonstrated from the past behavior from Mr. Nnoli and what’s happened in this case.
Mr. Nnoli now says in February of 1992 and July 1992 he went to Nigeria to try to retrieve the children to comply with this Court’s order. That’s just a complete fabrication. That’s not true. The fact is at that time they were trying to get custody in the Nigerian courts. To suggest that Daniel Mahone was trying to get him to comply with this Court’s order just is inconsistent with the actions of Daniel Mahone in this Court, where he tried to urge almost contemptuously the Nigerian law and that this Court had no jurisdiction.
Of course, as counsel points out, previous noncompliance does not make for a continued civil contempt. Let me make one observation. With respect to the law book standard of proof in this case, whether it’s the preponderance of the evidence, clear and convincing, or beyond a reasonable doubt, I am not going to hold somebody in jail unless I am thoroughly convinced that they’re in contempt, and [my] standard is going to be a standard beyond a reasonable doubt. [2]
*249 In this case, I’d give Mr. Heeney a lot of credit. He’s made great efforts to try to get these children back, and certainly his good faith is not in issue. The question is Mr. Nnoli’s good faith. In the Court’s opinion, he’s lied about what’s happened in the past and he’s lying about what’s happening right now. [Emphasis added.]

At one point in the July 13 proceedings before Judge Ryan, where no testimony was heard but the court merely reviewed the prior proceedings, Judge Ryan said, “This man is a liar, outright liar. He hasn’t told the truth totally about anything.” At the conclusion of the case, he said:

Well, having reviewed the record in this case, I find that Judge Miller had sufficient facts in the record to support his decision and finding that the defendant, or Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
646 A.2d 1021, 101 Md. App. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nnoli-v-nnoli-mdctspecapp-1994.