Sickler v. Sickler

878 N.W.2d 549, 293 Neb. 521
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 2016
DocketS-15-594
StatusPublished
Cited by180 cases

This text of 878 N.W.2d 549 (Sickler v. Sickler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sickler v. Sickler, 878 N.W.2d 549, 293 Neb. 521 (Neb. 2016).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 05/13/2016 09:06 AM CDT

- 521 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 293 Nebraska R eports SICKLER v. SICKLER Cite as 293 Neb. 521

M adeline Loretta Sickler, now known as M adeline Loretta Schmitz, appellee, v. Steven Dale Sickler, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed May 13, 2016. No. S-15-594.

1. Contempt: Appeal and Error. In a civil contempt proceeding where a party seeks remedial relief for an alleged violation of a court order, an appellate court employs a three-part standard of review in which the trial court’s (1) resolution of issues of law is reviewed de novo, (2) factual findings are reviewed for clear error, and (3) determinations of whether a party is in contempt and of the sanction to be imposed is reviewed for abuse of discretion. 2. Contempt. Civil contempt proceedings are instituted to preserve and enforce the rights of private parties to a suit when a party fails to com- ply with a court order made for the benefit of the opposing party. 3. Contempt: Words and Phrases. Willful disobedience is an essential element of contempt; “willful” means the violation was committed intentionally, with knowledge that the act violated the court order. 4. Contempt: Proof: Presumptions. Outside of statutory procedures imposing a different standard or an evidentiary presumption, the com- plainant must prove all elements of contempt by clear and convinc- ing evidence. 5. Contempt. Contempt proceedings may both compel obedience to orders and administer the remedies to which a court has found the parties to be entitled. 6. Courts: Restitution: Contempt. Through its inherent powers of con- tempt, a court may order restitution for damages incurred as a result of failure to comply with a past order. 7. Courts: Jurisdiction: Divorce: Contempt. A court’s continuing juris- diction over a dissolution decree includes the power to provide equitable relief in a contempt proceeding. 8. Courts: Equity. Where a situation exists which is contrary to the principles of equity and which can be redressed within the scope - 522 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 293 Nebraska R eports SICKLER v. SICKLER Cite as 293 Neb. 521

of judicial action, a court of equity will devise a remedy to meet the situation. 9. Constitutional Law: Debtors and Creditors. With the passage of Neb. Const. art. I, § 20, Nebraska put an end to the ancient practice of seizing the person of a debtor as a means of coercing payment of a debt. 10. Debtors and Creditors: Words and Phrases. Whether an obligation is a “debt” depends on the origin and nature of the obligation and not on the manner of its enforcement. 11. ____: ____. “Debt,” as stated in state constitutional prohibitions of imprisonment for debt, is generally viewed as an obligation to pay money from the debtor’s own resources, which arose out of a consensual transaction between the creditor and the debtor. 12. Divorce: Property Division: Constitutional Law: Contempt: Debtors and Creditors. Contempt for noncompliance with a property division award in a dissolution decree does not originate in an action for the col- lection of debt, or from an obligation, through a consensual transaction between the creditor and the debtor, to pay money from the debtor’s own resources. Therefore, enforcement, through contempt, of a property division does not violate Neb. Const. art. I, § 20. 13. Courts: Criminal Law. A court can impose criminal, or punitive, sanc- tions only if the proceedings afford the protections offered in a crimi- nal proceeding. 14. Contempt: Sentences. A civil sanction is coercive and remedial; the contemnors carry the keys of their jail cells in their own pockets, because the sentence is conditioned upon continued noncompliance and is subject to mitigation through compliance. 15. Criminal Law: Contempt: Sentences. A criminal sanction is punitive; the sentence is determinate and unconditional, and the contemnors do not carry the keys to their jail cells in their own pockets. 16. Contempt. The ability to comply with a contempt order marks a divid- ing line between civil and criminal contempt. 17. ____. In order for the punishment to retain its civil character, the con- temnor must, at the time the sanction is imposed, have the ability to purge the contempt by compliance and either avert punishment or, at any time, bring it to an end. 18. Contempt: Sentences. A present inability to comply with a contempt order is a defense, not necessarily to contempt, but to incarceration. 19. Constitutional Law: Criminal Law: Contempt: Sentences. An incor- rect decision on the ability to comply with a contempt order—the critical factor dividing civil from criminal contempt—increases the risk of wrongful incarceration by depriving the defendant of the pro- cedural protections that the Constitution would demand in a criminal proceeding. - 523 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 293 Nebraska R eports SICKLER v. SICKLER Cite as 293 Neb. 521

20. Contempt: Sentences: Due Process. Prospectively, a court that imposes incarceration as part of civil contempt proceedings shall make express findings regarding the contemnor’s ability to comply with the purge order, in order to avoid inadvertent violations of due process rights and for consistency of procedure for both represented and nonrepresented indigent contemnors. 21. Contempt: Sentences: Proof. It is the contemnor who has the burden to assert and prove the inability to comply with the contempt order to avoid incarceration or to purge himself or herself of contempt. 22. Contempt: Sentences: Evidence. A contemnor may defend against incarceration under a civil contempt order, but only upon a showing of such inability by a preponderance of the evidence; that showing entails attempts to exhaust all resources and assets or borrow sufficient funds and the inability to thereby secure the funds to comply with the purge order. 23. Contempt: Evidence. The contemnor is in the best position to know whether the ability to pay is a consideration, and he or she has the best access to the evidence on the issue. 24. Appeal and Error. Plain error is error plainly evident from the record and of such a nature that to leave it uncorrected would result in damage to the integrity, reputation, or fairness of the judicial process. 25. Criminal Law: Contempt: Sentences: Time. When a contemnor is required to serve a determinate sentence after a specified date if compli- ance has not occurred by that date, and there is no provision for dis- charge thereafter by doing what the contemnor had previously refused to do, then the sentence is punitive as of that date. 26. Contempt: Sentences: Time. In the case of civil contempt involving the use of incarceration as a coercive measure, a court may impose a determinate sentence only if it includes a purge clause that continues so long as the contemnor is imprisoned.

Appeal from the District Court for Buffalo County: M ark J. Young, Judge. Affirmed as modified. Kent A. Schroeder, of Ross, Schroeder & George, L.L.C., for appellant. Marsha E. Fangmeyer, of Knapp, Fangmeyer, Aschwege, Besse & Marsh, P.C., for appellee. Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, and K elch, JJ. - 524 - Nebraska A dvance Sheets 293 Nebraska R eports SICKLER v. SICKLER Cite as 293 Neb. 521

Wright, J. I. NATURE OF CASE Steven Dale Sickler appeals from an order of contempt sanc- tioning him with a determinate period of 90 days’ incarceration if, within 17 days, he did not pay $37,234.84 to his ex-wife, Madeline Loretta Sickler, now known as Madeline Loretta Schmitz. The sum in question stems from the property divi- sion awarding a percentage of Steven’s individual retirement account (IRA) to Madeline. Madeline’s percentage had not been transferred to her in the 14 years since the decree.

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Bluebook (online)
878 N.W.2d 549, 293 Neb. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sickler-v-sickler-neb-2016.