Szarzynski v. Szarzynski

732 N.W.2d 285, 2007 Minn. App. LEXIS 63, 2007 WL 1470328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 22, 2007
DocketA06-882, A06-1417
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 732 N.W.2d 285 (Szarzynski v. Szarzynski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Szarzynski v. Szarzynski, 732 N.W.2d 285, 2007 Minn. App. LEXIS 63, 2007 WL 1470328 (Mich. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*288 OPINION

SHUMAKER, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals in this post-dissolution dispute, appellant-father Thomas Szarzynski argues that the district court (a) should have implemented a particular parenting access schedule; (b) should have given him an evidentiary hearing on his motion to modify custody; (c) should not have removed a particular parenting consultant; (d) should not have ruled father to be a nuisance litigant; (e) improperly awarded respondent-mother Therese Szarzynski conduct-based attorney fees; (f) failed to give father and his former attorney adequate notice of a contempt hearing; and (g) should not have found father in contempt of court. Mother moves to dismiss as moot the portion of the consolidated appeals in which father challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to modify custody. We deny mother’s motion to dismiss, and affirm the district court on all issues, except its determination that father is a nuisance litigant. Because it is unclear whether the district court applied Minn. R. Gen. Pract. 9.01-.07 in making that determination, we reverse the determination that father is a nuisance litigant and remand for the district court to address, under Minn. R. Gen. Pract. 9.01-.07, whether father is a frivolous litigant.

FACTS

When the parties’ marriage deteriorated, mother obtained an April 2003 harassment restraining order against father. That order limited father’s access to the children. The parties’ April 2004 dissolution judgment awarded father the family business and awarded mother spousal maintenance, starting at $12,500 per month. The judgment included a parenting plan under then effective Minn.Stat. § 518.1705 (2004). Based partially on the April 2003 restraining order, that parenting plan (a) awarded mother sole legal and physical custody of the children; (b) awarded father supervised parenting time; (c) conditioned father’s obtaining unsupervised parenting time on father satisfying certain prerequisites, including his completing anger management therapy, to the satisfaction of the children’s therapist; and (d) directed the appointment of a parenting consultant.

The parties immediately started a series of ongoing disputes regarding maintenance, custody, and parenting time. In a November 2004 letter, a parenting consultant proposed an access schedule designed to “ramp up” father’s access to the children. While the schedule in the letter was supposed to become effective November 15, 2004, and culminate in father having overnight visits with the children by July 2005, the letter contained no explicit determination of whether father had satisfied ’the preconditions for unsupervised visitation. Also, the parties’ disputes resulted in, among other things, several motions by the parties to enforce obligations under the judgment as well as related contempt motions, each party having various attorneys representing them at different times (and father periodically proceeding pro se), and a number of parenting consultants being removed, resigning, or declining to work on the case.

In one motion, mother sought to have father held in contempt for not paying maintenance, but, on the day of the eviden-tiary hearing set for mother’s motion, the parties stipulated to allow father an opportunity to come current on his arrearages. As a result, the district court issued a September 2005 order indefinitely continuing mother’s contempt motion. Father, however, failed to come current on his maintenance arrearages.

*289 While these disputes were occurring, mother’s father, who had access to the children, was alleged to have sexually abused two of the children’s cousins. And a letter from one of the cousins referred to mother’s father abusing one of the parties’ children. Based on these events, father filed a February 2006 “emergency motion” to, among other things, modify custody and enforce his parenting time, which he alleged mother had denied him. Mother opposed these motions and moved, among other things, to replace the parenting consultant, for attorney fees, and to have father ruled a “nuisance litigant.” After a hearing at which no testimony was taken, the district court issued a March 8 order in which the district court denied father’s motion to modify custody, replaced the parenting consultant, awarded mother con-duet-based attorney fees, and ruled father to be a nuisance litigant. Also on March 8, mother moved to reinstate her contempt motion.

On March 22, the district court held a hearing on mother’s reinstated contempt motion. The attorney then formally representing father could not attend the March 22 hearing and sent an attorney with whom he shared an office. That attorney learned when he got to the courthouse that the hearing set for that day was an eviden-tiary hearing on mother’s contempt motion, rather than a non-evidentiary hearing on whether to reinstate mother’s contempt motion. For this reason, that attorney sought a continuance. The district court denied the continuance and the first portion of an evidentiary hearing occurred. A second day of testimony was set for, and occurred on, April 14.

On May 10 father appealed the March 8 order (A06-882), and on May 15, the district court issued an order finding father in contempt for not paying maintenance, stating father’s maintenance arrearages were $145,158.80, directed father’s incarceration, set purge conditions, and set a review hearing. When, on July 11, father failed to appear for the review hearing, that hearing was reset for July 28. Less than a week later, mother’s father died.

After the re-set July 28 review hearing, the district court’s July 31 order found that father had failed to purge his contempt, that father had failed to show an adequate reason for doing so despite the ability to make the payments, and that incarceration was likely to produce compliance. The July 31 order then directed father’s incarceration. Father appealed the July 31 order (A06-1417). On August 11, father obtained release from the workhouse by liquidating certain retirement accounts awarded to him in the dissolution judgment and using the proceeds to pay his maintenance arrears. This court consolidated father’s appeals from the March 8 order and the July 31 order, and, citing the death of her father, mother moved to dismiss as moot the portion of appeal A06-882 in which father challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to modify custody. 1

ISSUES

1. Did the district court erroneously fail to enforce the parenting-time schedule?

2. Should this court dismiss as moot the portion of appeal A06-882 in which father challenges the district court’s deni *290 al, without an evidentiary hearing, of his motion to modify custody?

3. Should the district court have held an evidentiary hearing on father’s motion to modify custody?

4. Did the district court abuse its discretion by removing the parenting consultant?

5. Did the district court abuse its discretion by ruling father to be a nuisance litigant?

6. Did the district court abuse its discretion by awarding mother attorney fees?

7. Did the district court abuse its discretion by denying father a continuance of the contempt hearing?

8.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
732 N.W.2d 285, 2007 Minn. App. LEXIS 63, 2007 WL 1470328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/szarzynski-v-szarzynski-minnctapp-2007.