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Krystal D. Ruemker A/K/A Krystal D. Stanley v. Raymond Ruemker
339 Ga. App. 680
Ga. Ct. App.
2016
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Background

  • Ward is an incapacitated adult; parents (mother Krystal Ruemker/Stanley and father Raymond Ruemker) sought appointment as co-guardians/conservators after probate proceedings and appeal to superior court.
  • Superior court appointed an emergency guardian pending the superior-court proceedings and later reappointed the same emergency guardian, vesting visitation decision-making in her.
  • Father, who lives in Missouri, alleged mother refused to produce the ward for his December 18, 2015 holiday visitation; court issued a December 21, 2015 show-cause order directing mother and stepfather to appear Dec. 22 and produce the ward, warning immediate incarceration for failure to appear.
  • Mother and stepfather did not appear as ordered; court on Dec. 22 ordered their immediate incarceration. Stepfather was released same day after cooperating; mother later arrested on a kidnapping warrant and subsequently released.
  • Superior court later dismissed contempt proceedings and found there was no further action it could take; ward was residing with father. Appeals by mother and stepfather of the Dec. 21 and Dec. 22 orders were consolidated on appeal.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether Dec. 21 show-cause order was directly appealable Mother: order affected custody/was reviewable State/Respondent: order was interlocutory, not final contempt or custody order Dismissed for lack of jurisdiction — not directly appealable under OCGA §5-6-34(a)(11)
Whether Dec. 22 order (ordering immediate incarceration) was a directly appealable contempt order Mother: Dec. 22 order was criminal contempt under OCGA §15-6-8(5) and thus directly appealable Father: order was analogous to a bench warrant to secure appearance, not a final contempt adjudication Appeal moot — mother released and subsequent order dismissed contempt, so no live controversy
Whether Dec. 22 order was in substance a bench warrant vs. contempt Mother: characterizes it as contempt imposing punishment Father: characterizes it as bench warrant to secure presence; moot once party appears Court treated substance over form but found mootness/absence of final contempt determination; dismissed appeal
Whether appellants could challenge emergency guardian appointment on these appeals Appellants: trial court erred in appointing emergency guardian and failing to meet statutory prerequisites Respondent: appointment of emergency guardian under OCGA §29-4-70(d) is not appealable Court noted statute expressly makes emergency-guardian appointment nonappealable; appeals otherwise dismissed/mooted

Key Cases Cited

  • American Med. Security Group, Inc. v. Parker, 284 Ga. 102 (2008) (distinguishes criminal contempt as unconditional punishment for past contumacy)
  • Collins v. Davis, 318 Ga. App. 265 (2012) (procedural rules on appeals to Court of Appeals)
  • Brabant v. Patton, 315 Ga. App. 711 (2012) (application of direct-appeal provision in guardianship context)
  • Cagle v. PMC Dev. Co., 233 Ga. 583 (1975) (appeal from contempt is moot once contempt judgment complied with or vacated)
  • Brochin v. Brochin, 294 Ga. App. 406 (2008) (dismissal of appeal as moot where contempt finding vacated or complied with)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Krystal D. Ruemker A/K/A Krystal D. Stanley v. Raymond Ruemker
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Georgia
Date Published: Nov 2, 2016
Citation: 339 Ga. App. 680
Docket Number: A16A1200, A16A1201; A16A1202, A16A1203
Court Abbreviation: Ga. Ct. App.