Robert Donewald v. Ann Donewald

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 2022
Docket356611
StatusUnpublished

This text of Robert Donewald v. Ann Donewald (Robert Donewald v. Ann Donewald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Donewald v. Ann Donewald, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

ROBERT DONEWALD, KATHLEEN DONEWALD, UNPUBLISHED and ROBERT DONEWALD JR., May 26, 2022

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

V No. 356611 Barry Circuit Court ANN DONEWALD LC No. 2018-000692-NO

Defendant-Appellant,

and

EVE’S ANGELS INC., NFP,

Defendant.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and BOONSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant Ann Donewald appeals by right the trial court’s order finding her in contempt of court, and awarding attorney fees to plaintiffs in the amount of $5,000 pursuant to MCL 600.1715. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

Defendant Ann Donewald1 is the president, CEO, and founder of defendant Eve’s Angels, a nonprofit entity dedicated to combatting sex trafficking. Plaintiffs are Ann’s parents and one of Ann’s brothers. According to the complaint, Ann and her children resided with her parents, and her brother and his family lived next door. Ann moved out after her parents confronted her about her “treatment of her daughter.” Following her departure, Ann and Eve’s Angels made allegations to the police and in public presentations on social media that plaintiffs had sexually abused her

1 Also referred to as Anny Donewald.

-1- minor son, her brother’s minor son, and another grandchild. She also accused plaintiffs of involvement in sex trafficking or money laundering schemes. Criminal investigations ensued, resulting in no charges. Ann’s daughter eventually informed plaintiffs that Ann had instructed her to confirm Ann’s accusations for the purpose of “extract[ing] a pay-off” from her parents. Plaintiffs sued defendants for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Plaintiffs were unable to effectuate personal service, so they were granted alternate service by publication. Defendants never responded, and on February 19, 2019, the trial court entered an order of default judgment in favor of plaintiffs in the amount of $33,481 plus $10,329 in attorney fees.

Defendants moved to set aside the default judgment, but they failed to appear for the attendant April 24, 2019 hearing, and the trial court denied the motion. The trial court issued a subpoena on February 12, 2020, directing Ann to appear and produce financial documents for a debtor’s examination set for March 25, 2020, but that proceeding was subsequently adjourned as a result of the Covid-19 health crisis. The trial court issued another subpoena for a debtor’s examination requiring Ann to appear and produce certain financial documents, set for July 23, 2020. No proceeding took place on the latter date, however, and the record includes a July 22, 2020 proof of service for notice to appear on August 7, 2020. The latter proceeding was then put off until later in the month at the request of defendants’ newly retained attorney, who informed plaintiffs that defendants were not prepared to provide the requested financial documents, asked that the debtor’s examination be re-noticed for a later date, and indicated that defendants wished to settle the matter. The debtor’s examination was then adjourned to August 28, 2020.

On August 28, 2020, defendants produced a partial set of documents responsive to the court’s subpoena, and they requested that the debtor’s examination be postponed again in order for defendants to prepare a complete set of documents. The debtor’s examination was then adjourned to September 18, 2020, on which date both parties informed the court that they needed an adjournment in order to work through a settlement, and so the matter was adjourned to October 9, 2020. Defendants requested yet another adjournment on October 6, 2020, as of which time they still had not produced a full set of documents responsive to the court’s subpoenas. The debtor’s examination was thus postponed to October 20, 2020, then adjourned yet again to October 30, 2020.

Ann failed to appear personally for the October 30, 2020 proceeding, and she did not provide any supplemental documents responsive to the court’s subpoenas. At this hearing, plaintiffs explained to the court that “[t]here’s been a number of adjournments,” and that the parties had been “working on a repayment agreement with a corresponding pocket judgment” for “many months.” Plaintiffs stated that they believed Ann might be in the hospital, so they were “not asking for a warrant at this time,” but noted that “it’s the third time that I’ve heard that over the course of the intervening months.” Plaintiffs asked the court to “set a Show Cause for [Ann] to explain why she’s not here this morning,” rather than “continue to clog up the Court’s docket with numerous Debtor’s/Creditor’s Exams and adjournments.” Defendants’ attorney in turn explained that defendants had sent him an e-mail two nights earlier expressing the desire to terminate his representation and either seek new counsel or resort to self-representation, and that the night before he received an e-mail stating that Ann was in the hospital. Counsel further stated that he did not “really know what’s going on,” or “what [his] role is here” because he had been “fired,” but that he would continue to act as the attorney of record until the appropriate order had been entered. The trial court expressed its frustration with defendants:

-2- [W]e’ve got a March subpoena, we’ve got May, . . . we had March 15th, May 29th, July 23rd, August 7th, August 28th, September 18th, October 9th, October 20th, and now October 30th. I have heard each time that there have been attempts made to resolve, that the parties had provided some information but not everything and they were working on making sure they provided everything. But it’s been one excuse after another on behalf of the Defendants. So, the motion . . . for an Order to Show Cause is granted.

* * *

[I]f [defendants’ attorney] remain[s] in the case, [he] can notify [his] clients that they are on an extremely short leash with me, because it appears to me that they have been doing nothing but laying up obstacles to get this matter resolved. And saying we’re going to resolve it and then not resolving it, saying we’re [going to] comply and then not comply.

A show-cause hearing was set for November 18, 2020. Defendants’ prior attorney initially appeared because he had not received a copy of the order permitting his withdrawal, but he left after the court advised him that it had in fact signed the order. Ann thereafter represented herself.2 Plaintiffs requested a contempt order and an award of attorney fees of $5,000 “related to all of these multiple missed and deficient debtor’s exams.” Ann explained that she had been hospitalized for much of the summer and suffered complications since then, including passing out the night before the October 30 debtor’s examination. She offered medical records in support. She further stated that she believed the various adjournments were because the parties were working out a settlement agreement, and the settlement process had stalled because she could not “sign something that isn’t true.” Plaintiffs acknowledged Ann’s illness and that it should be taken seriously, but they pointed out that her medical difficulties began late in the proceedings, she never provided any explanation for why she could not appear by Zoom, she still had not provided all required documents, and she had proved to be “a moving target.”

2 It appears that Ann also represented Eve’s Angels, or Eve’s Angels was treated as also proceeding in propria persona. Although no one appears to have objected below, possibly because Eve’s Angels was also regarded as a mere alter ego of Ann, we note that doing so is improper.

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Robert Donewald v. Ann Donewald, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-donewald-v-ann-donewald-michctapp-2022.