Shiver v. Hudmon

718 So. 2d 1, 1998 Ala. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 8, 1998
Docket1961338
StatusPublished

This text of 718 So. 2d 1 (Shiver v. Hudmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shiver v. Hudmon, 718 So. 2d 1, 1998 Ala. LEXIS 128 (Ala. 1998).

Opinion

SEE, Justice.

This petition for a writ of mandamus arises from the refusal of an attorney, Thomas Rountree, to appear in the Circuit Court of Chambers County to answer a charge of contempt. The attorney petitioned the Court of Civil Appeals for a writ of prohibition, challenging the trial court’s jurisdiction to hold him in contempt. That court issued the writ. Ex parte Rountree, 694 So.2d 13 (Ala.Civ.App.1997). The trial judge then petitioned this Court for a writ of mandamus directing the Court of Civil Appeals to set aside its writ. Rule 21(e), Ala. R.App. P. Because we conclude that the trial court had jurisdiction to hold contempt proceedings concerning the attorney, we grant the trial judge’s petition for the writ of mandamus.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Underlying this proceeding is a claim in the Circuit Court of Chambers County filed against Kenneth Hudmon by his ex-wife for payments, including delinquent child support payments, she alleges were due under a divorce judgment. On October 2, 1996, Hud-mon asked Rountree, an attorney in Lee County, to represent him at a hearing that was scheduled for October 3.1 Rountree told Hudmon that he could not represent him on that day because of a scheduling conflict, but Rountree advised Hudmon that if Hudmon could obtain a three- to four-week continuance then Rountree would represent him at that time.

On the same day, October 2, 1996, Roun-tree contacted the attorney for Hudmon’s ex-wife to discuss a continuance. Rountree offered to have Hudmon pay $1,000 of the delinquent child support payments if the ex-wife would agree to a three- to four-week continuance. When Rountree was advised that Hudmon’s ex-wife would not agree to a continuance, he wrote a letter, dated October 2, explaining to the trial court that he was willing to represent Hudmon if the court would grant a continuance for three or four weeks. The letter stated in pertinent part:

“ While this is not a notice of appearance, I would represent Mr. Hudmon if the matter is continued for three to four weeks.”

Rountree gave the letter to Hudmon, asking him to hand deliver it to the trial court at the hearing scheduled for the next day, October 3.

On the morning of October 3, 1996, before the delivery of Rountree’s letter to the trial court, Hudmon’s ex-wife agreed to a continuance. Her attorney prepared a proposed order granting the continuance, but left blank the date of the next hearing. The proposed order listed Rountree as Hudmon’s current attorney. The trial court, believing that Rountree was Hudmon’s attorney, and unaware that Rountree had requested a three- to four-week continuance, completed and issued the order, rescheduling the hearing for October 8.

On Saturday, October 5, 1996, Rountree received a copy of the order granting the five-day continuance. On Monday, October 7, Rountree contacted the ex-wife’s attorney and told him that he could not represent Hudmon at that time and that he could not attend the hearing scheduled for October 8. Rountree also informed Hudmon that Hud-[3]*3mon either would have to find another attorney or would have to represent himself at the October 8 hearing. Rountree did not, however, inform the trial court that he would not appear for the October 8 hearing.

At the hearing on Tuesday, October 8, 1996, Hudmon gave the trial court Roun-tree’s October 2 letter requesting a three- to four-week continuance. The trial court expressed surprise at Rountree’s absence and at his failure to inform the court on Monday, October 7, that he would not attend. Under questioning from the trial court, Hudmon admitted that he still did not have the funds to meet his delinquent child support obligations. Hudmon also stated that Rountree was familiar with numerous details regarding Hudmon’s inability to make the child support payments. The trial court entered a judgment against Hudmon for the amounts past due, but was unwilling to punish Hudmon with a jail sentence for nonpayment, because Hudmon was not represented by an attorney at that hearing. Because the trial court was unsatisfied with the reasons for Rountree’s absence and with his failure to contact the trial court, it cited Rountree for contempt and ordered him to appear at the next hearing. The trial court continued the ease until October 29 (27 days after Rountree’s October 2 request for a three- to four-week continuance).

When Rountree learned that he had been cited for — charged with — contempt, he telephoned the trial judge and informed him that he did not represent Hudmon. Nonetheless, the trial judge orally ordered Rountree to appear on October 29, 1996, to explain why he had not attended the October 8 hearing. In a letter dated October 17, Rountree explained to the trial judge that he did not represent Hudmon. The trial judge responded with' a written order dated October 22, withholding judgment on the October 8 contempt citation, but directing Rountree to appear on October 29 to explain why he should not be held in contempt of court.

On October 28, 1996, Rountree mailed to the Court of Civil Appeals a petition for a writ of prohibition directing the trial court not to proceed on the contempt citation at the hearing scheduled for October 29. Roun-tree did not attend the October 29 hearing. At the October 29 hearing, Hudmon was represented by another attorney; at that .hearing he reached a settlement with his ex-wife, which prevented his being jailed for noncompliance with the trial court’s previous order to pay the child support.

The trial court contacted the Court of Civil Appeals, confirmed that it had not received a petition for a writ of prohibition from Roun-tree, and then cited Rountree a second time for contempt and issued a warrant for Roun-tree’s arrest. The trial court did not, however, enter a judgment of contempt.

Later on the day of October 29, 1996, the Court of Civil Appeals ordered a stay of the contempt proceeding. With an opinion dated April 25, 1997, the Court of Civil Appeals issued a writ of prohibition directing the trial court to withdraw its order requiring Roun-tree to appear and respond to the contempt citations. The Court of Civil Appeals concluded that because Rountree did not represent a party to the proceeding, had not filed an appearance in the trial court, and was not an official attorney of record in the case, the trial court’s inherent contempt powers were not broad enough to reach Rountree. See Rountree, 694 So.2d 13. The trial judge then filed in this Court this petition, styled as a petition for the writ of prohibition, but which we treat as a petition for the writ of mandamus, asking this Court to direct the Court of Civil Appeals to set aside its writ.

II. Procedure for Obtaining Review of Jurisdictional Issue

The attorney general, on behalf of the trial judge, first asserts that a writ of prohibition is not available to address anticipated errors in a contempt proceeding where those errors may be remedied on appeal. Specifically, he asserts that we should order Roun-tree to appear at a contempt hearing, allow him to complete the proceedings on the contempt citations, and then on appeal review the judgment, or judgments, if he is found in contempt. Rountree responds by arguing that a writ of prohibition is appropriate because he challenges the trial court’s jurisdiction over him. The Court of Civil Appeals held that a writ of prohibition was the proper [4]

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Bluebook (online)
718 So. 2d 1, 1998 Ala. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shiver-v-hudmon-ala-1998.