Susan C. Smith v. Carroll County Chancery Court

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 2005
Docket2005-CP-00415-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Susan C. Smith v. Carroll County Chancery Court (Susan C. Smith v. Carroll County Chancery Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan C. Smith v. Carroll County Chancery Court, (Mich. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2005-CP-00415-SCT

IN RE: SUSAN C. SMITH

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/11/2005 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. EDWARD C. PRISOCK COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CARROLL COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: PRO SE ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: JOHN R. HENRY NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 04/20/2006 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE SMITH, C.J., CARLSON AND DICKINSON, JJ.

CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Today’s case involves a pro se appeal from the incarceration of an attorney for direct

criminal contempt. The attorney was representing a mother and her daughter in the Chancery

Court for the First Judicial District of Carroll County, in Carrollton, in a divorce and a

paternity suit, respectively, when the attorney was held in direct criminal contempt by the

chancellor for comments she made in open court. The events that led up to the comments

are more complex, but the essential fact to this appeal is that the attorney openly insulted the

chancery court during a proceeding in which she appeared in her professional capacity. She

now appeals the order of the chancery court finding her in contempt. Finding no error, we

affirm. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶2. There is but one principal fact to this appeal: an attorney, Susan C. Smith, in open

court, on February 16, 2005, made disparaging remarks to the court by saying, inter alia, “I

believe that the actions of this Court have been so reprehensible as to disgust any court,” and

afterward, she refused to genuinely apologize, despite being given multiple opportunities by

the court to do so. (Emphasis in original). Because of this comment by the attorney, as well

as her other actions that day, the chancellor found Smith in direct criminal contempt and

incarcerated her for five days. A more detailed factual background is needed to explain

exactly what actions of the chancery court Smith found to be reprehensible and disgusting.

¶3. When these events transpired, Smith, a Greenville attorney, had been representing a

defendant in a divorce, and the defendant’s son in a paternity action. Smith was present in

chancery court on February 16, 2005, for a contempt hearing concerning her client. This

hearing was actually the second of two hearings in the cases in which Smith was one of the

attorneys. The first hearing, a temporary hearing on matters related to child custody, had

taken place on February 4, 2005, and neither Smith nor her clients were present. The

husband of Smith’s client in the divorce action had filed a complaint for divorce a few

months before the first hearing. At the time the divorce action was commenced, process was

issued by the clerk for service upon Smith’s client, who was directed to appear in court on

January 25, 2005, for a hearing on the issue of temporary child custody. Smith’s client was

served with the summons on January 12, 2005. Smith made an appearance in the case

2 representing the defendant. Both attorneys and the chancellor, through a telephone

conference, later agreed to reschedule the hearing for February 4, 2005. Smith claims she

was unable to attend the February 4 th hearing because her mother had been admitted into the

hospital shortly before she was to leave for the hearing. Smith argued at the second hearing

that her mother was admitted to the hospital the day before the hearing scheduled for

February 4 th . Smith’s paralegal1 apparently contacted the court by phone shortly before the

end of the work day on February 3 rd to request a continuance. The chancellor told this person

she should contact opposing counsel, and that he (the chancellor) required more information

before considering the request for a continuance. On the other hand, we find in the record,

including an affidavit submitted by Smith, evidence that Smith’s mother was actually

admitted to the hospital on February 2 nd . Smith never formally filed a motion for a

continuance with the chancery court, rather she simply had a copy of her mother’s hospital

admission papers faxed to the court.

¶4. During the hearing of February 4, 2005, in the absence of Smith and her client, the

chancellor granted temporary child custody to the husband because of concerns the court had

after hearing testimony from the husband about the child’s welfare during the times the child

was with the mother. Out of concern for the child’s physical safety, the chancellor also

issued a handwritten order the same day that the Carroll County Department of Human

1 Some confusion existed as to whether the person who contacted the court was Smith’s sister, working as her secretary. This has led Smith to point out more than once in her pleadings and her brief that she has no sister, but that her mother has worked in Smith’s office, and that the two are often confused as sisters.

3 Services go to the child’s home, investigate the child’s circumstances, and, if warranted, take

the child into custody. The husband, who owned the house, authorized the law enforcement

officials to do whatever necessary to enter the home to obtain the child. The mother

apparently refused to surrender custody of the child to the Carroll County Sheriff, so the

chancellor, believing the child to be in danger, issued an additional order on that same day,

this time ordering the Mississippi Highway Patrol to aid the sheriff’s department in procuring

custody of the child. Evidently, once the law enforcement officials gained entry into the

home, they found the mother without the child and arrested the mother on charges of reckless

endangerment and kidnaping. The mother was later released on bond. Because the mother

refused to obey the court’s order by not surrendering the child, or even disclosing the child’s

location, the husband filed a complaint for contempt against his wife, Smith’s client. Process

was issued and served on the mother to appear in court on February 16, 2005, for the

contempt hearing. The mother, Smith’s client, likewise did not attend this second hearing.

It was at this second hearing that Smith was found to be in direct criminal contempt for the

statements she made to the chancellor.

¶5. Exactly what had happened after the chancellor issued his several orders following

the February 4 th hearing is not entirely clear. Apparently Smith, despite being unable to

travel to court on the day of February 4, 2005, had maintained telephone contact that day

with both her client and the court, while law enforcement officials surrounded the mother’s

home in their attempts to locate the child. The chancellor understood Smith as trying to

4 procure an agreement that her client would come out of the home if she could be guaranteed

that she would not be arrested by the law enforcement officials. When the court demanded

to know the location of the child, Smith was non-responsive and evasive. Smith admits these

facts in her brief to this Court. Smith also admits that she understood the chancellor to

believe she was interfering in a police situation and was thus endangering her license to

practice law. The chancellor also warned Smith that the consequences may be even more

severe if she were helping to hide the child. Later, the mother was arrested on charges of

reckless endangerment and kidnaping, but she was thereafter bonded out of jail by her

parents.

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Susan C. Smith v. Carroll County Chancery Court, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-c-smith-v-carroll-county-chancery-court-miss-2005.