State ex rel. Lockard v. Lockard
This text of 816 P.2d 632 (State ex rel. Lockard v. Lockard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Husband appeals from a judgment against him for unpaid temporary spousal support pending appeal ordered under ORS 107.105(4). The judgment awarded wife $2,214.71, ordered husband to pay her $25 per month to satisfy that judgment, purged him of contempt for his failure to make timely support payments and ordered him to advise the clerk within three days after any change of residence. We vacate the judgment and remand.
Wife filed a dissolution petition in October, 1985. The dissolution judgment was entered in October, 1986, and husband appealed.1 In May, 1987, the trial court, pursuant to ORS 107.105(4),2 ordered husband to pay temporary spousal support during the pendency of the appeal. In March, 1988, after our decision and before the Supreme Court had acted on a petition for review, the parties, through counsel, agreed in open court that husband was in arrears on the temporary spousal support obligation in the amount of $2,214.71. The trial court concluded that husband had “significantly observed” the trial court’s orders after earlier having been held in contempt for failing to pay the support. It purged the contempt and entered judgment for the unpaid support. In his first assignment of error, husband argues that the trial court had no authority, statutory or otherwise, to enter a judgment for past due temporary spousal support under ORS 107.105(4). He claims that the court’s authority to enforce temporary spousal support under that statute is limited to contempt proceedings under ORCP 78. Wife contends that we should not address the merits of husband’s assignment, [391]*391because he consented to entry of the judgment that he now attacks.
Husband is correct that ORS 107.105(4) does not provide authority for entry of a judgment, even by consent. During an appeal, the circuit court’s authority to provide for spousal support is controlled by ORS 107.105(4), which requires that the court act by an “order” that “shall * * * be in effect only during the pendency of the appeal” and that “maybe enforced by contempt proceedings under ORCP 78.” There is no statute that gives a court authority to reduce that temporary spousal support to judgment.3
Nonetheless, husband is not correct that judgment may not be entered for the unpaid support. That could allow the payor to avoid the obligation simply by not paying during the pendency of the appeal.4 That possibility is foreclosed by the provision that enforcement of support orders under ORS 107.105(4) shall be through contempt proceedings pursuant to ORCP 78. Wife brought such a proceeding here.
ORCP 78 provides, in part:
“B. The court or judge thereof may enforce an order or judgment directing a party to perform a specific act by punishing the party refusing or neglecting to comply therewith, as for a contempt as provided in ORS 33.010 through 33.150.
“C. Section B. of this rule does not apply to an order or judgment for the payment of money, except orders and judgments for the payment of sums ordered pursuant to ORS 107.095 and 107.105(l)(i), and money for support, maintenance, nurture, education, or attorney fees, in:
[392]*392“C.(l) Actions for dissolution or annulment of marriage or separation from bed and board.
“C.(2) Proceedings upon support orders entered under ORS chapter 108, 109, 110 or 419 and ORS 416.400 to 416.470.” (Emphasis supplied.)
ORS 33.110 provides:
“If any loss or injury to a party in an action, suit or proceeding, prejudicial to the rights of the party therein, has been caused by the contempt, the court or judicial officer, in addition to the punishment imposed for the contempt, may give judgment that the party aggrieved recover from the defendant a sum of money sufficient to indemnify the party, and to satisfy costs and disbursements of the party, which judgment, and the acceptance of the amount thereof, is a bar to any action, suit or proceeding by the aggrieved party for such loss or injury.” (Emphasis supplied.)
ORCP 78 and ORS 33.110 together provide for the entry of a money judgment for support ordered under ORS 107.105(4). The trial court had authority to enter a money judgment here as a result of the continuing contempt proceeding in which husband was originally found in contempt for failure to pay that support.
The resolution of this issue has been complicated by the judgment from which husband appealed, the face of which purports to be a judgment for spousal support arising out of the dissolution judgment. See n 3, supra. The document is titled “Order and Judgment” and states, in part:
“Alma C. Lockard, Plaintiff-Petitioner, is hereby awarded judgment against James Vernon Lockard, Defendant-Respondent, in the sum of $2,214.71 for past due spousal support pursuant to the Decree of Dissolution of Marriage entered herein on the 14th day of October, 1986.”
Despite that language, both parties agree that the spousal support award is not based on the dissolution judgment but is, rather, support ordered pursuant to ORS 107.105(4). Although the trial court had authority to enter a money judgment, ORS 33.110 provides that the money judgment may be entered ‘ ‘in addition to the punishment imposed for the contempt * * *.” In order for a money judgment to be entered, there must have been a contempt. The document appealed from here purports to purge husband of contempt. [393]*393From the document, we cannot determine that the trial court would have purged the contempt if, by doing so, it would lose the authority to enter the money judgment. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment in its entirety and remand for entry of a judgment consistent with the trial court’s determination.
Because of our disposition of the appeal, we need not consider husband’s other assignments of error.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
816 P.2d 632, 108 Or. App. 388, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lockard-v-lockard-orctapp-1991.