Timothy Register v. Angel Dixon

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 3, 2022
Docket2019-000854
StatusPublished

This text of Timothy Register v. Angel Dixon (Timothy Register v. Angel Dixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timothy Register v. Angel Dixon, (S.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Timothy J. Register, Appellant,

v.

Angel M. Register Dixon and Lee Dixon, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2019-000854

Appeal From Richland County Michelle M. Hurley, Family Court Judge

Opinion No. 5938 Heard March 9, 2022 – Filed August 10, 2022

REVERSED AND REMANDED

Carrie Ann Warner, of Warner Law Firm, LLC of Columbia for Appellant.

Angel M. Register Dixon and Lee Dixon, pro se.

GEATHERS, J.: In an appeal from the family court following a contempt proceeding, Appellant Timothy Register ("Register") asks this court through its de novo review authority to find that Respondent Angel Dixon ("Angel") did not meet her burden of proof regarding child support payments. Further, Register argues that Angel should be required to reimburse him for all his attorney's fees and costs in connection with the contempt proceedings. We reverse and remand for further contempt proceedings consistent with this opinion. FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Register and Angel were formerly husband and wife, and they are the biological parents of one minor child (E.R.). Register and Angel obtained a Decree of Divorce on February 19, 2014, and Angel is now married to Respondent Lee Dixon ("Lee," collectively, "the Dixons"). On November 24, 2015, Register was the subject of a finding of a substantial risk of sexual abuse upon E.R. from the Department of Social Services ("DSS") based upon allegations made by Angel. Register appealed the finding within DSS on December 28, 2015, and was subsequently notified that DSS was suspending his right to file an appeal due to a contested action it had filed in the family court.1

On April 26, 2016, Register filed an action against Angel and DSS for post- divorce modification of custody and/or visitation, seeking an order for custody of, or in the alternative, liberal visitation with, E.R., child support, attorney's fees and costs, and related relief. Angel never filed a responsive pleading. DSS filed a Complaint for Intervention against Register that included two hearing notices for hearings scheduled in June and July 2016. On June 17, 2016, a Temporary Order was issued by Judge Michelle Hurley continuing the DSS hearings regarding Register and ordering DSS to grant Register an administrative hearing on his appeal. Pending the disposition of Register's appeal, the Temporary Order granted him supervised visitation with E.R., utilizing an independent supervisor, 2 and appointed Jacqueline Draper as Guardian ad Litem. On July 8, 2016, Register filed a Motion for Joinder of Third Party Defendant seeking to add Lee Dixon as a party to his custody action.

Following a hearing before an Administrative Officer, a Final Administrative Order was issued on October 18, 2016, dismissing the DSS case against Register and questioning Angel's credibility in light of the contradictory reports made by E.R.

In the custody action, Judge Dorothy M. Jones issued an order on April 20, 2017, that required the immediate transfer of custody of the minor child to Register, granted Angel supervised visitation for a period of 30 days, added Lee as a party, and granted Register attorney's fees and costs totaling $2,455.00.

1 The record does not specify the nature of that contested action. 2 The parties were ordered to equally divide the cost of the supervisor. Following a two-day hearing, a Final Order was issued by Judge Jones on January 16, 2018. That order granted continued sole custody to Register and required Angel to pay him $239.00 per month for child support. Angel was granted supervised visitation as well as limited unsupervised visitation, provided that "Lee Dixon shall not be present or in the vicinity of Ms. Dixon's visitation," and such visits last no longer than five consecutive hours. The order stated that "both [Angel and Lee Dixon] engaged in conduct intended to alienate E.R.'s trust and affection with [Register]," and discussed the "impropriety of Defendant Lee Dixon's conduct . . . and controlling behavior along with Defendant Angel Dixon's conduct," which "adversely affected the child's affection for her father." Moreover, the order granted Register an attorney's fee award of $17,500.00,3 to be paid in a lump sum by the Dixons no later than March 2, 2018, by and through Register's counsel, Carrie A. Warner. On November 8, 2018, Register commenced an action seeking a court order to hold Angel in willful contempt for failure to pay child support totaling $2,390.00 as of the date of filing. He also sought a court order to hold the Dixons in willful civil contempt for failing to pay his attorney's fees and costs totaling $17,500.00, as ordered in the January 16, 2018 Final Order. A hearing was held in front of Judge Michelle Hurley on January 22, 2019, and judicial notice was taken of the January 16, 2018 Final Order. At that hearing, Register testified that since the Final Order was issued requiring Angel to pay child support, she did not make any payments toward her child support obligation. He also testified that he sought the payment of total attorney's fees plus judgment interest, alleging that the Dixons failed to pay the attorney's fees award. Register introduced into evidence a summary of the judgment interest owed on his attorney's fees, making the total amount of attorney's fees plus interest $18,841.03.

Prior to the hearing, Angel submitted to the court a financial declaration indicating that she had no income. During the hearing, Angel stated that she made

3 Judge Jones found that the total fees and costs incurred by Register were "made necessary as a result of the actions of the [Dixons]" and "exceeded $40,000.00." However, she awarded Register only $17,500.00 in attorney's fees and costs, noting that "[w]hile this amount is not sufficient to adequately compensate [Register], it does take into consideration that the financial abilities of [the Dixons] are limited." During the pendency of this appeal, the Dixons satisfied the attorney's fees awarded in the original order by Judge Jones. cash 4 payments totaling $2,315.00 towards the satisfaction of her child support obligation but indicated that she did not ask Register to sign receipts for the transactions. Angel further testified that she had no proof of the payments she allegedly made to Register and conceded the nonexistence of any supporting bank statements, cash withdrawals, or checks.5 Angel did, however, testify that she created a list of the alleged cash payments made to Register, including the amounts, dates, and locations of the transactions. The Dixons both testified that neither Angel nor Lee made any payments towards the attorney's fees as ordered. At the conclusion of the hearing, the family court determined that Angel had made cash payments to Register totaling $2,315.00 and found that Angel owed Register only $553.00 in unpaid child support. As a result, the family court required Angel to pay $15.00 per month to Register, in addition to her court ordered child support amount, until the outstanding $553.00 was satisfied. The family court also found the Dixons in willful contempt for not paying the attorney's fees award of $17,500.00, and sentenced them each to thirty days in jail, which could be purged upon their payment of $400.00 per month consecutively until the $17,500.00 was paid in full.6 The Dixons were also ordered to pay $701.057 toward Register's attorney's fees and costs for the contempt proceeding ($1,402.01). Register's request for judgment interest was denied.

Register filed a Motion to Reconsider on March 12, 2019, which was subsequently denied. This appeal followed.

4 At the hearing, Angel testified that she used cash from odd jobs to pay child support.

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Timothy Register v. Angel Dixon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-register-v-angel-dixon-scctapp-2022.