¶ 1. Wifе Karen Aither appeals a family court decision denying her motion to enforce an initial temporary order barring husband Jeffrey Aither from disposing of any marital asset during the pendency of their divorce. Husband replaced wife as beneficiary of his life insurance policy in violation of the order, and then died before a final divorce decree was entered. The
¶ 2. The following facts are not disputed. On February 11, 2005, wife filed for divorce from husband. On February 14, the family court issued an initial temporary order barring both parties from selling, conveying, concealing, or encumbering “any marital asset,” which was defined to include “whole life insurance policies,” among other things. When the order wаs issued, husband had a universal life insurance policy in the amount of $100,000 that named wife as primary beneficiary. The parties do not dispute that the universal life policy was subject to the order’s prohibition; universal life insurance is a type of whole life insurance. Cf.
Gleed v. Noon,
¶ 3. The family court issued a decision on wife’s enforcement motion in June 2005. The court concluded that the life insurance policy was an “asset of the parties” and therefоre subject to the initial order’s prohibition on transfer, but that under
Estate of Ladd v. Estate of Ladd,
¶ 4. On appеal, wife argues that husband’s death did not divest the family court of all jurisdiction to enforce its order. She contends that the court retained authority to enforce the order by contempt or, in the alternative, based on more general equitable principles. Whether the family court — аfter a divorce proceeding is abated by a party’s death — retains residual jurisdiction to enforce an order it issued before the death is a question of first impression for this Court. We review the family court’s dismissal for lack of jurisdiction de novo.
Jordan v. State,
¶ 5. The family court is a creature of statute, 4 V.S.A. §§ 451-459, and consequently has only the limited jurisdiction established thereby. See
Allen v. Allen,
¶ 6. The question of whether the death of a party strips the family court of all jurisdiction over matters relating to the abated divorce, even violations of its own pre-abatement orders, is not a simple one. As appellant argues, there are two theories under which the family court could enforce the order: (1) under that court’s contempt power, established by statute, 4 V.S.A. § 453(a), 12 V.S.A. § 122, and further expounded by Rule 16 of the Vermont Rules for Family Proceedings; or (2) through the court’s inherent equitable power over matters in its jurisdiction. Although we agree with the family court that contempt is not available against a deceased contemnor, we conclude that the family court did have the equitable power to award the insurance proceeds to wife, the party protected by the court’s initial order.
I.
¶ 7. Wife first argues that the family court could have exercised its contempt powers to remedy husband’s change of beneficiaries. Wife argues that the family court could, pursuant to the family court cоntempt statutes, 4 V.S.A. § 453(a) and 15 V.S.A. § 603, and the general contempt statute, 12 V.S.A. § 122, made applicable by § 603, cause this case to be brought back onto the family court docket despite its earlier abatement. However, wife has cited no authority for the proposition that the ensuing contеmpt proceeding could go forward against a dead person, nor can we find any such authority. See
Hackler,
¶ 8. Other courts are divided on the question whether a divorce proceeding’s abatement also divests the trial court of equitable jurisdiction to enforce orders entered befоre the abatement. Several states follow the rule that abatement also divests the trial court of the equitable power to enforce its pre-abatement orders. See, e.g.,
Am. Family Life Ins. Co. v. Noruk,
¶ 9. We conclude that the latter line of cases represents the better reasoning. Although the death of one party to a divorce does abаte the divorce action itself, we agree with the
Schwalbe
court that “a mechanistic application” of that rule would frustrate the larger purpose of ensuring that courts have the power to enforce their own valid orders to avoid unjust results.
Schwalbe, 755
P.2d at 805. We have previously declined to striсtly apply the abatement rule where doing so would have led to unjust results.
Ladd,
¶ 10. In the instant case, the family court’s initial restraining order was an exercise of its equitable power. 4 V.S.A. § 453(a) (family court has “all of the equitable and other powers of the superior court аs to civil matters within its jurisdiction, except as specifically limited by statute”); see
Soucy v. Soucy Motors, Inc.,
¶ 11. As the
Lindsey
court noted, “[i]t is axiomatic that a court must have the power to enforce its own orders.”
¶ 12. We draw further support for our holding from Rule 16 of the Vermont Rules for Family Proceedings, which was prоmulgated in recognition of the fact that “[efficient enforcement [of court orders] is critical to Family Court proceedings and ultimately must depend upon the court’s most effective weapon, the contempt sanction.” Reporter’s Notes, V.R.F.P. 16. While contempt may be the fаmily court’s “most effective” enforcement tool,
id.,
it is not the only tool available, as the explicit statutory grant of “all of the equitable and other powers of the superior court as to civil matters within its jurisdiction” makes clear. 4 V.S.A. § 453. If the family court’s interim orders in divorce proceеdings are to have meaningful force with respect to life insurance beneficiary changes — and thereby contribute to the efficient enforcement “critical” to family
¶ 13. Because husband’s change in the beneficiaries of his life insurance policy was in violation of the family court order, wife may be entitled to a return to the status quo the order was intended to preserve. The record before us, however, is insufficient to make that detеrmination. On remand, in order to facilitate the development of an adequate factual record and to ensure that all interested parties are before the court in a properly adversarial process, the family court should provide notice to the current named beneficiaries of husband’s life insurance policy.
¶ 14. We conclude that the family court erred in dismissing wife’s motion for enforcement, and therefore reverse the family court’s decision on that motion and remand for the family court to determine whether wife is entitled to equitable relief.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Husband’s life insurance carrier filed an action for interpleader to obtain judicial determination of the rightful beneficiary or beneficiaries of the policy; after depositing the full amount due under the pоlicy into the court, husband’s insurer was dismissed as a party. The policy proceeds remain on deposit pending this appeal.
One federal circuit court holding that the trial court had no power to enforce a preabatement order expressly rested that holding on the fact that the putative violator of the order had no knowledge of it; this, the court noted, distinguished the case from
Webb, Candler,
and their ilk.
Briece v. Briece,
