OPINION
Case Summary
Following dissolution of their marriage, Barbara (Rosario) Bessolo (“Mother”) and William Rosario (“Father”) were involved in disputes concerning their young daughter. In response to the many motions that followed, the trial court found that Mother failed to dismiss the protective order against Father as required by the dissolution decree, held her in contempt, and awarded compensatory damages and attorney’s fees to Father. While we conclude that these rulings were proper, we reach a contrary result regarding the ten-day suspended sentence imposed on Mother for future violations of any of the court’s orders. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Facts and Procedural History
Mother and Father have one child together, S.R., born December 4, 2005. In June 2010, Mother filed a petition for dissolution. During dissolution proceedings, Mother and Father reached a mediated
One incident is relevant to this appeal. On December 5, 2010, a parenting-time exchange was scheduled. Mother sent the parties’ former housekeeper, Vita, to pick up S.R. S.R. entered Vita’s car while Father was making a phone call. Mother was also in the car Vita was driving, though she did not make her presence known to Father and Father could not see her through the car’s tinted windows. Vita drove away with S.R. while Father was on the phone. Father followed the vehicle and contacted the Carmel Police Department. Mother also contacted the Carmel Police Department and informed a dispatcher that Father was following their car and that the parties’ divorce had recently been finalized, which made Father upset. She told the dispatcher a number of times that she had a protective order against Father. The dispatcher instructed Mother to go with Vita and S.R. to a public place, a nearby grocery store parking lot, instead of returning to Mother’s home. Meanwhile, the dispatcher speaking to Father told him to pull into the same grocery store parking lot and wait in his car for authorities.
Officers met Mother and Father in the parking lot. Mother told them that she had a protective order against Father. The officers confirmed that a protective order was still in place. Father was arrested and spent twenty hours in jail before being released on his own recognizance. No charges were filed against him. Mother filed a motion to dismiss the protective order two days later, which was granted. On December 21, Father filed a verified motion to show cause requesting that Mother be held in contempt for her actions on December 5. 2
The trial court heard evidence on Father’s contempt motion at a number of hearings with the final hearing held in June. At the hearings, both parties discussed the December 5 incident. Father stated that he spoke with Mother during the exchange but did not know Mother was in Vita’s car. He explained that he contacted authorities and followed the car because Vita left suddenly with S.R. without his consent and because he wanted to know that S.R. was being returned to Mother’s care. Father also said that he thought the protective order had been dismissed. Tr. p. 240. He testified that his arrest and imprisonment caused him to be absent from work for one day and lose $450 in income.
Id.
at 229. He also stated that he later had his record expunged, which cost $2500, and submitted evidence
Mother testified that she sent Vita to pick up S.R. because “there was a protective order in place and I didn’t want to have any trouble.” Id. at 287. When asked about the requirement that she dismiss that very order, the following exchange occurred:
MR. BENNER [Father’s Counsel]: It says right there when you are to dismiss the protective order, doesn’t it?
[Mother]: My understanding is that this is valid assuming that the divorce decree was signed on November 5, which it wasn’t.
MR. BENNER: Judge Campbell signed it on November 30, didn’t he?
[Mother]: Yes.
MR. BENNER: It went into [e]ffect on November 30, didn’t it?
[Mother]: I believe so.
MR. BENNER: Okay, I think you just testified just a few minutes ago you wanted it to go into [e]ffect immediately didn’t you?
[Mother]: Yes.
MR. BENNER: You wanted both yourself and [Father] to be bound by this immediately, didn’t you?
[Mother]: The minute it was signed.
MR. BENNER: And you knew what you signed, didn’t you?
[Mother]: Say that again, sorry?
MR. BENNER: You knew exactly what your obligations were under this agreement when you signed it, didn’t you? [Mother]: When I signed it on November 5, yes. But he signed it many days later.
Id. at 295-96.
Mother also confirmed that she spoke to Father by phone during the exchange but did not inform him of her presence. Mother implied, however, that Father knew she was in the car with Vita and S.R., and that after their car pulled away, Father began “speeding and chasing” the car. Id. at 290. Officer Bryan Martin, one of the officers at the scene, also testified about the exchange. Officer Martin stated that Mother indicated that there was a protective'order in place, and when the officers confirmed the validity of the order, he was required to arrest Father. Id. at 319-20.
In July 2011, the trial court ruled on the parties’ motions. In pertinent part, the court found Mother in contempt for failing to timely dismiss the protective order against Father, explaining that Mother “used the protective order as a way to have [Father] arrested,” despite knowing “she was obligated to dismiss the protective order pursuant to the divorce decree.” Appellant’s App. p. 10. Mother was ordered to pay Father a total of $10,000 in compensatory damages — $2500 to expunge his arrest record and $7500 for “[Father’s] arrest and time in jail ... for his inconvenience, embarrassment, and mental suffering.” Id. at 11. The court also “impose[d] a 10-day suspended jail sentence which may be served if [Mother] violates this Court’s orders in the future.” Id. The trial court awarded Father attorney’s fees in the amount of $10,000 for “bringing his motion for rule to show cause and for [Mother’s] contempt of court and incurred for successfully defending [Mother’s] mer-itless motion to restrict [Father’s] parenting time.” Id. at 12.
Mother now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
Mother raises three issues on appeal. First, she contends that the trial court erred by finding her in contempt. Specifically, Mother argues that the dissolution decree required her to dismiss the protective order by November 12, 2010, but the
I. Contempt
Mother contends that the trial court abused its discretion by finding Mother in contempt for failing to dismiss the protective order against Father on or before November 12, 2010. Mother also argues that the trial court erred by imposing on her a ten-day suspended jail sentence for future violations of the court’s orders.
“Uncontradicted evidence that a party is aware of a court order and willfully disobeys it is sufficient to support a finding of contempt.”
Evans v. Evans,
Mother and Father reached a settlement agreement that was approved by the trial court and incorporated into the dissolution decree. The agreement required Mother to dismiss the protective order against Father by November 12, 2010; however, a brief delay caused the agreement to be approved by the court after this date, on November 30. Mother correctly notes that the agreement’s terms were not binding until approved by the court; thus, she was not required to dismiss the protective order by November 12. Consequently, she cannot be held in contempt for failing to do so. However, the trial court did not find Mother in contempt for failing to dismiss the protective order by November 12. The contempt finding was based on Mother’s failure to dismiss the protective order after the parties’ dissolution was finalized on December 1 and for telling the police that the protective order was in place despite knowledge that she was required to dismiss it.
Mother’s additional challenges to the contempt finding — specifically, that Father delayed submission of the agreement and that after she received it she had a limited amount of time in which to file the motion to dismiss the protective order — are undercut by her actions and statements made to authorities on December 5.
3
As the trial court explained, Mother was aware that the court had dissolved the marriage and that the dissolution decree entered on December 1 required her to dismiss the protective order. By December 5, she had still not dismissed the order, and repre
II. Sanctions for Contempt
A. Compensatory Damages
Mother challenges the trial court’s award of compensatory damages to Father of $10,000 — $7500 for Father’s inconvenience, embarrassment, and mental suffering for being arrested and imprisoned, and $2500 for the cost of having his record expunged. The $7500 award was error, Mother claims, because it was not based on evidence or documentation. The $2500 award was also erroneous, Mother argues, because Father’s arrest was the result of his own delay of the submission of the settlement agreement and because Carmel police officers, not Mother, made the decision to arrest Father.
“Once a party has been found in contempt of court, monetary damages may be awarded to compensate the other party for injuries incurred as a result of the contempt.”
Phillips v. Delks,
Mother argues that the trial court’s $7500 award was error under
Phillips,
in which we reversed a damage award of $25,000 because no evidence was submitted to support the award.
Id.
at 721. However, in
Phillips,
we addressed a quantifiable loss — damage to an individual’s credit score. Financial loss was also at issue in
City of Gary v. Major,
Instead, we turn to cases involving an individual’s loss of freedom. We have discussed the impact of false imprisonment, stating, “The conduct of the defendant in such circumstances is characterized as being willful, callous, or malicious, which may produce a variety of reactions, such as fright, shock, humiliation, insult, vexation, inconvenience, worry, or apprehension.”
Conwell v. Beatty,
Though there are no allegations of false imprisonment here, we find the analogy an apt one. Mother failed to dismiss the protective order against Father even though she knew she had to do so. She then informed police of the order. As a result, Father was arrested. Officers handcuffed him in front of his young daughter, in a public parking lot. This was a humiliating experience. See Tr. p. 227. Father was held in jail for twenty hours and missed a day of work. There is sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s $7500 award. 4
Mother’s challenge to the trial court’s award of $2500 also fails. Here we reiterate our earlier conclusion — it matters not that it was the police, not Mother, who decided to arrest Father. It is undisputed that Mother knew she was required to dismiss the protective order. She did not do so. Instead, she informed authorities the order was still in place, which led to Father being arrested and imprisoned. After his release, Father spent $2500 to have his record expunged. The trial court did not err in awarding Father $2500.
B. Ten-day suspended jail sentence
Mother challenges the trial court’s imposition of a ten-day suspended jail sentence for future violations of the court’s orders. Mother argues that this sentence is punitive because she has already complied with the provision of the decree at issue by dismissing the protective order and cannot purge herself of future contempt because the trial court makes only a vague reference to future violation of court orders.
The principal purpose of a civil-contempt proceeding is not to punish the contemnor but rather to coerce action for the benefit of an aggrieved party.
Thompson v. Thompson,
Here, the sentence imposed by the court did not coerce compliance with a specific order of the court. Rather, the sentence
C. Attorney’s fees
Finally, Mother contends that the trial court erred by awarding Father attorney’s fees as the court did not consider the parties’ incomes or earning abilities. Mother also argues that the amount of attorney’s fees awarded to Father was error. We also address Father’s request for appellate attorrey’s fees.
In post-dissolution proceedings, the trial court may order a party to pay a reasonable amount for attorney’s fees.
Julie C. v. Andrew C.,
The basis for the award of attorney’s fees is Mother’s misconduct. This was a proper consideration for the trial court.
See Julie C.,
Indeed, the record shows that the trial court reviewed the parties’ financial data when considering child support for 5.R. We assume this information was considered when the court awarded attorney’s fees.
See MacIntosh v. MacIntosh,
Finally, Father requests that Mother pay his appellate attorney’s fees. Father states that Mother was ordered to pay his attorney’s fees at the trial level due in part to her contempt and “her misconduct in continuing to pursue a mer-itless request to restrict [Father’s] parenting time.” Bessolo v. Rosario, No. 29A02-1108-DR-789 (Ind.Ct.App. Feb. 10, 2012). Father claims that this misconduct increased his fees at the trial level and that Mother continues to increase these costs by pursuing this appeal.
Our appellate rules authorize us to “assess damages if an appeal, petition, or motion, or response, is frivolous or in bad faith. Damages shall be in the Court’s discretion and may include attorneys’ fees.” Ind. Appellate Rule 66(E). Damages will be assessed only where an appellant, acting in bad faith, maintains a wholly frivolous appeal.
Harness v. Schmitt,
Because Mother prevailed on appeal on one issue, we cannot say that Mother’s arguments are utterly devoid of all plausibility such that an award of appellate attorney’s fees would be appropriate.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
. The record does not indicate the reason for this delay. See Tr. p. 279.
. The parties also filed motions related to an unsubstantiated allegation of child abuse as well as personal property, which are not at issue here. Mother also filed a verified motion to show cause, requesting that Father be held in contempt for failure to pay child support. The trial court found Father in contempt and awarded Mother $2000 in attorney's fees for pursuit of that motion. Appellant's App. p. 12.
. Mother's arguments regarding ambiguity and invited error are not relevant to our analysis as we conclude that the trial court did not find Mother in contempt for failure to dismiss the protective order by November 12, 2010. Thus, any ambiguity or delay in submission of the agreement to the court has no bearing on the trial court’s finding that Mother failed to dismiss the protective order after entry of the decree and for representing to authorities that the 'protective order was in place despite knowledge that she was required to dismiss it. See Appellant's App. p. 10-11.
. Mother argues for the first time in her reply brief that Father failed to offer proof of mental anguish as required by
Lazarus Dep't Store,
. Both parties discuss
Bartlemay v. Witt
in this context.
. Because we resolve this issue as we do, we need not consider Mother's argument that the trial court erred by awarding attorney’s fees to Father under Indiana Code section 34-52-1-1, which pertains to frivolous actions. There is no evidence that the trial court based its determination on this section, and we have
