State of Tennessee, ex rel. Kathy D. Flores v. Lawrence Ralph

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 12, 2008
DocketM2007-00881-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee, ex rel. Kathy D. Flores v. Lawrence Ralph (State of Tennessee, ex rel. Kathy D. Flores v. Lawrence Ralph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Tennessee, ex rel. Kathy D. Flores v. Lawrence Ralph, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs February 8, 2008

STATE OF TENNESSEE, EX REL. KATHY D. FLORES v. LAWRENCE RALPH

Appeal from the General Sessions Court for Warren County No. 6373 Larry G. Ross, Judge

No. M2007-00881-COA-R3-CV - Filed March 12, 2008

The State filed a petition for contempt against a man who had fallen far behind in his child support obligation, in part because he was incarcerated for a large portion of the time. The trial court reduced the arrearage to judgment in the amount of $28,632, found the father in contempt for failing to pay while he was not in jail, and sentenced him to serve 90 days in jail. Because the State did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the father had the ability to pay child support during the periods in question, we vacate the sentence for criminal contempt. We also vacate the arrearage judgment and remand this case to the trial court for reconsideration of arrearage.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the General Sessions Court Vacated

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR. and RICHARD H. DINKINS, JJ., joined.

C. Brent Keeton, Manchester, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lawrence Ralph.

Robert E. Cooper, Attorney General and Reporter, Warren A. Jasper, Assistant Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee, ex rel. Kathy D. Flores. OPINION

This case began when the State of Tennessee, on behalf of Kathy D. Flores, filed a Petition for Contempt against Lawrence Ralph asking the court to enforce an existing child support order under which Mr. Ralph was to pay support for his two minor children. The petition alleged that Mr. Ralph had failed and refused to pay as ordered and was in willful contempt. The petition requested: (1) that Mr. Ralph be found in criminal or civil contempt and “punished accordingly;” (2) that a judgment for arrears be entered against Mr. Ralph; (3) that an income assignment be entered; and (4) that the court direct that all of Mr. Ralph’s licenses be revoked, suspended, or denied renewal.

The trial court granted much of the relief requested. For purposes of this appeal, most relevant are the trial court’s (1) finding that Mr. Ralph was in willful contempt and sentencing him to 90 days in jail for that contempt and (2) reducing arrearages to a judgment of $28,632 and holding that Mr. Ralph was to “remain responsible for any arrearages that have accumulated during periods of time where [Mr. Ralph] was incarcerated,” in effect denying an earlier filed motion to reduce child support.

I. BACKGROUND

Lawrence Ralph is a divorced father of two children who was ordered to pay child support of $40 per week.1 On October 9, 1996, Mr. Ralph’s attorney filed a motion to reduce child support on the ground that he was incarcerated in the Warren County Jail, and had no present ability to meet his child support obligations. That motion was never heard, and no order was ever filed reducing the obligation.2

On December 7, 2006, the State filed a petition for contempt against Mr. Ralph in the General Sessions Court of Warren County. The petition declared that he had failed to comply with the support order and asked the court to find that he was guilty of willful civil and/or criminal contempt and to punish him accordingly. Mr. Ralph filed a uniform affidavit of indigency and asked the court to appoint an attorney for him, which it did.

Mr. Ralph’s attorney filed an answer in which he stated that his client had been incarcerated a number of times since the support order was entered, that he was not currently employed, that he had problems obtaining employment because of his criminal record, and that he had filed an application for Social Security Disability benefits due to a number of medical and psychiatric conditions. The answer asserted that Mr. Ralph should not be forced to pay child support for the

1 The record on appeal does not include a copy of the child support order upon which the contempt petition was based. The petition alleges that the amount due under the previous support order was $50 per week, but the witness who testified about the history of payment and nonpayment stated the original amount was $40 per week, but that at some unidentified time an amount for payment of arrearage had been added, bringing the weekly obligation to $55. 2 The copy of the hand-written motion found in the record is stamped as filed on October 9, 1996. It is signed by Bernard Smith as Mr. Ralph’s attorney of record, but does not include Mr. Smith’s BPR number, nor a Certificate of Service. At the hearing on the contempt petition, there was no dispute as to Mr. Smith’s status.

-2- time he was incarcerated because he had no income and no ability to pay and also that he should not be liable for full support during other times when he could not find regular employment.

The hearing on the petition was conducted on April 2, 2007. Mr. Ralph was brought to court from the Warren County Jail, where he had been held for about a month on a pending charge of manufacture of methamphetamine. He testified, as did his former wife. Susan Miller, who was only identified by name with no description of her role, testified as to the amount of Mr. Ralph’s arrearage. The 25 page transcript of the hearing indicates that it was quite brief.

The proof showed that during the years between the entry of the child support order and the contempt hearing, Mr. Ralph spent most of his time behind bars, either pre-trial or serving time for a variety of offenses including theft, burglary, and drug sales. When he got out, he applied for jobs at several businesses, but a background check usually resulted in rejection of his application. He worked occasional odd jobs when he could, and he made child support payments from time to time. The State acknowledged a total of $2,585 in such payments, but calculated a total arrearage from October 20, 1995, through March 31, 2007, of $28,632.

During closing arguments, the State argued that while the trial court could not hold Mr. Ralph in contempt for failing to pay child support during his incarceration, it should hold him in contempt for every payment of child support he missed while he was free. Mr. Ralph’s attorney argued that a finding of contempt was not appropriate against an individual who was unable to find work because of his criminal record. In its ruling from the bench and its subsequent order, the court held that despite Mr. Ralph’s difficulties finding work after his release, a holding that he should be thereby be excused from his obligation could set a dangerous precedent, for, “[i]f we ever start that, no one will ever pay any child support, anybody that has ever been in jail.”

The court accordingly reduced Mr. Ralph’s arrearage of $28,632 to judgment and ordered that it be repaid at a rate of $15 per week, increasing his total weekly obligation to $55.3 The court also found Mr. Ralph to be “in willful and deliberate criminal contempt” because of his failure to pay child support and sentenced him to serve 90 days in jail, with the sentence to run consecutively to any sentences stemming from the pending criminal charges against him. This appeal followed.

II. CRIMINAL CONTEMPT

In its final order, the trial court held that Mr. Ralph “is in willful and deliberate criminal contempt in that [he] is able-bodied and has had the ability to comply with the court’s orders and has willfully refused to do so.” Statements by the trial court at the close of the hearing demonstrate that the contempt holding was not based on any failure to pay while Mr. Ralph was incarcerated.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee, ex rel. Kathy D. Flores v. Lawrence Ralph, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-ex-rel-kathy-d-flores-v-lawrence-ralph-tennctapp-2008.