Price v. Price
This text of 382 So. 2d 433 (Price v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
George Gerald PRICE and Dorothy Vail Price Garchinsky, Appellants,
v.
Hilda PRICE, Individually and As Executrix of the Estate of George L. Price, Deceased, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*434 Michael M. Hamlin and Michael B. Swindle, Orlando, for appellants.
Daniel C. Perri and W.H.F. Wiltshire of Harrell, Wiltshire, Stone & Swearingen, Pensacola, for appellees.
*435 LARRY G. SMITH, Judge.
Appellants, the adult children of deceased parents, appeal an order adjudging them in contempt of court for their failure to pay an award of attorney's fees entered against them in a declaratory judgment action. The issue is whether the attorney's fee award in this case falls within the category of debts for which "no person shall be imprisoned," Article I, § 11, Florida Constitution, or within the category of awards of alimony, child support, and suit money in domestic relations cases, which the courts of Florida have long since declared to be excluded from the constitutional prohibition. We reverse the trial court's contempt order because we find the money judgment here is subject to the constitutional provision, precluding the court's use of its contempt power and a sentence of imprisonment for enforcement.
The litigation between appellants and appellee grew out of the following circumstances: The 1962 divorce decree between the appellants' parents contained provisions incorporating agreements by their father, George L. Price, to pay to their mother certain sums of money for the support and education of appellants. The divorce decree provided, among other things, for appellants' father to provide security for his obligations to educate and support appellants by means of his Last Will and Testament, in event of his remarriage. Shortly after the divorce, the father married appellee, Hilda Price. Prior to the remarriage, the father satisfied the requirements of the decree by making the Will as agreed, and by entering into a prenuptial agreement with appellee, also required by the decree, in which she relinquished dower in his estate. Appellants' mother then died in 1968, subsequent to which their father and appellee cancelled the prenuptial agreement, and their father made a new Will, containing no provision for appellants. After the father, George L. Price, died in 1972, appellants initiated this litigation against their stepmother, Hilda Price, individually and as executrix of the estate of George L. Price, deceased, for a determination of their rights, if any, under the divorce decree and the Will made by their father prior to his remarriage. The trial court found that all obligations of appellants' father under the divorce decree had been satisfied prior to his death, since both appellants had reached their majority, appellant George Gerald Price had completed his education, and appellant Dorothy Vail Price Garchinsky had married. The trial judge entered an award of $18,000.00 attorney's fees against appellants, as the losing parties, and upon their failure to pay the first installment, entered the order which is the subject of this appeal, finding appellants in contempt of court and ordering their imprisonment.
We begin our discussion of the issues by observing that since appellants failed to timely perfect an appeal from the judgment awarding attorney's fees, we are foreclosed from considering whether the award of fees itself was proper. However, this limitation upon our review does not preclude our examination of the basis for the award to determine whether it falls into the narrow category in which enforcement by contempt is permissible.
The applicable statute, Section 61.16, Florida Statutes, provides:
The court may from time to time, after considering the financial resources of both parties, order a party to pay a reasonable amount for attorney's fees, suit money, and the cost to the other party of maintaining or defending any proceeding under this chapter, including enforcement and modification proceedings. The court may order that the amount be paid directly to the attorney, who may enforce the order in his name.
Appellee argues, in support of the contempt order, that since the proceeding below was for the enforcement of a divorce decree, it was a "proceeding under this Chapter," (Chapter 61, Florida Statutes). Therefore, according to appellee, the attorney's fees were awarded under Section 61.16. It follows, appellee argues, that appellants are subject to contempt punishable by imprisonment for nonpayment. We must reject these contentions.
*436 We first observe that a "party" entitled to an award of attorney's fees under the statute must, by its terms, be a party either obligated by the divorce or dissolution judgment to pay certain sums to the other party, or to receive payment from the other party.[1] The appellee, Hilda Price, was neither. It is unnecessary for us to decide whether the estate, under the facts of this case, or any case, would be a "party" within the provisions of the statute. Here, it is clear that the trial court based the award and the contempt order upon the erroneous assumption that Hilda Price was a party entitled to make a claim for attorney's fees under the statute. In this connection, although appellee was sued in a dual capacity both individually and as executrix neither the order awarding attorney's fees nor the contempt order contains any language indicating an intention to award fees to the estate of George L. Price. The contempt order contains the following finding:
... and the court further finds that because the defendant Hilda Price is presently suffering from an advanced stage of cancer and based on prior testimony that she is in financial distress and unable to pay her attorneys ... (emphasis supplied)
Thus, the court's contempt order refers only to the medical and financial condition of Hilda Price, making it obvious that the award of attorney's fees was based upon the financial needs of Hilda, not the estate.
We fail to see any justification for the contention that the suit involved any claim against Hilda Price within the purview of Section 61.16. Furthermore, although the case is not cited by either party, in our judgment appellee is not an "aggrieved party," one who "has succeeded to the rights of an aggrieved parties," or "has a pecuniary interest in the exact right protected by the order violated," so as to be entitled to maintain a proceeding for civil contempt, as in Plante v. Watson, 350 So.2d 1131 (Fla. 2nd DCA 1977). Hilda Price was not a party to the divorce proceeding, and she had no duty or obligation to appellants under the decree. As a beneficiary of her deceased husband's estate, she no doubt claimed rights to funds or property which constituted the estate.[2] This lawsuit against Hilda was actually filed in her deceased husband's probate proceeding, although a separate action was also filed, both cases being consolidated by order of the trial court. We think it is obvious that Hilda's rights and interests were determinable under the probate laws of Florida (Chapters 732-735, Florida Statutes), and not under Chapter 61, which deals exclusively with matters relating to dissolution of marriage.
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382 So. 2d 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-price-fladistctapp-1980.