CHAMPAIGN COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS v. JEANINE R. FANSLER
Appellate Case No. 2015-CA-4
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT CHAMPAIGN COUNTY
January 22, 2016
2016-Ohio-228
HALL, J.
Trial Court Case No. 14-MS-15; (Civil Appeal from Common Pleas Court)
OPINION
Rendered on the 22nd day of January, 2016.
KEVIN S. TALEBI, Atty. Reg. No. 0069198, by JANE A. NAPIER, Atty. Reg. No. 0061426, Champaign County Prosecutor’s Office, 200 North Main Street, Urbana, Ohio 43078 Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellee
STEVEN R. FANSLER, Atty. Reg. No. 0000644, 212 North Detroit Street, Post Office Box 764, West Liberty, Ohio 43357-0764 Attorney for Defendant-Appellant
HALL, J.
{¶ 1} Jeanine Fansler appeals from an order finding her in contempt for disobeying
I. Background
{¶ 2} Fansler worked as a court reporter for the Champaign County Court of Common Pleas for around 15 years. Fansler, like all court reporters in Champaign County, was paid a certain amount to record proceedings in cases. The recording was done with handwritten notes or electronically or both. If a transcript of a proceeding was later requested, Fansler was paid on a per-page basis to transcribe her notes and electronic recording of the proceeding. The page rate varied depending on the type of case. In September 2012, while Fansler was working for Judge Wilson, the administrative judge of the court’s general division, the page rate in a criminal case with an indigent defendant was raised from $4.80 to $8 per page.
Fansler and Judge Selvaggio
{¶ 3} Judge Wilson retired at the end of 2012, and Judge Nick Selvaggio replaced him on January 1, 2013. Fansler began working for Judge Selvaggio and the court on a contract basis. She completed an “OPERS Independent Contractor Acknowledgement” form in February 2013, which the county auditor required before she could be paid for recording proceedings. Judge Selvaggio terminated Fansler’s contract on July 24, 2013. When she left, Fansler took from the court offices all her notes and all the electronic recordings of all the actions that she had recorded for the court over the past 15 years. On July 26, 2013, Judge Selvaggio informed Fansler that the court had obtained for her the “OPERS Independent Contractor/Worker Acknowledgement” form that he said she had to complete before she could receive payment for her transcription services.
{¶ 4} After Fansler left, Judge Selvaggio, and the Champaign County Common
{¶ 5} On September 2, 2013, Steven Fansler, Fansler’s husband and her attorney, wrote to the Champaign County Auditor demanding payment for transcription services that Fansler had already performed. The auditor had not paid Fansler because she had not filed the OPERS form for those transcription services.
Judge Selvaggio’s orders
{¶ 6} Fansler had recorded two hearings in 2010 in the case of Pasko v. Cheney. After she left the court in 2013, the parties in the case agreed to let the magistrate decide the outstanding issues based on the testimony and exhibits presented to the court during the two hearings. The magistrate issued a journal entry stating that the court “will have transcripts of those proceedings and costs would not be assessed to the parties.” On August 15, 2013, Fansler was notified about the magistrate’s request and was told about the new reduced page rate for transcriptions. November came and Fansler had not responded, nor had she produced the transcripts requested by the court. On November 21, Fansler’s husband delivered a letter to the court from Fansler saying in part:
I am happy to provide a transcript. It was my belief that the last several months that I was at the court I was in a capacity more akin to that of an employee than an independent contractor. However, at the time the Court’s page rate was $8.00 per page. The Court has not notified me of any change of that page rate.
Without question I now am an independent contractor. The page rate set by the Court at the time I last worked for the Court matches the charge that I have as a page rate now as an independent contractor. Accordingly, I will be happy to provide this transcript at a page rate of $8.00 per page. In my work as an independent court reporter, I have taken the position that if any clients in the past have been slow with pay or have not paid my bills in what I determine to be a timely fashion, then I will only do additional work upon having money submitted in advance of the work. I have scoped my work and believe that there will be approximately 40 pages of transcript. At a page rate of $8.00 per page, that will be a fee of $320.00. Upon receipt of $320.00, I will have the transcript to you within ten business days. Please send me some official notification from the Court as well that this is being requested by the Court.
Decision and Order, 4-5 (Dec. 18, 2014). In response, on December 4, 2013, Judge Selvaggio entered an order directing Fansler to make a transcript of one of the Pasko hearings. The order states that the court, not Fansler, has the authority, given by statute, to set the compensation for making transcripts, which the court had set at $5.25 per page in civil cases. Fansler finally produced the transcripts in April 2014. But she did so only because the plaintiff’s attorney finally paid her up front the amount she wanted, despite the court having ordered that the parties would not bear the cost. The attorney said that he finally paid Fansler himself because his clients had become very frustrated with him.
{¶ 7} Fansler had also recorded proceedings in the case of State v. Cook. In December 2013, she was notified that defense counsel had requested transcripts in the case for an appeal. Fansler never responded. Sometime in February 2014, Judge Selvaggio was told by the current court reporter that Fansler had said in emails that she could not produce the requested transcripts and would not do them for $4 a page. On February 21, 2014, defense counsel moved this Court for an extension of time in which to file the appellant’s brief because of a problem getting transcripts from the court reporter. Granting the motion, we noted that if there is non-compliance with a trial court order, counsel could ask the trial court to invoke its contempt powers to compel preparation of the transcripts. We also noted that the defendant’s prison time expired on August 10, 2014, so the transcript issue needed to be resolved quickly for an effective appeal. We suggested that counsel determine whether the court reporter’s notes had been preserved under
{¶ 8} On March 20, 2014, on defense counsel’s motion to compel, Judge Selvaggio entered an order directing Fansler to produce the requested appellate transcripts, noting that it did not have her notes or the electronic recordings. The judge also ordered her to return all her notes and the electronic recordings from all the criminal and civil actions that she had recorded in the court as a court reporter. He gave Fansler until March 31, 2014, to return the materials to the court. The order was emailed to Fansler. She responded by email the same day saying that she had been in California
I have not been paid for previous transcripts prepared since March of 2013. The Champaign County Auditor at the direction of Prosecutor Jane Napier refuse to do so because I won’t sign a PERS form stating I was a contract employee when everyone I. [sic] The courthouse knows my role changed as soon as Mr. Selvaggio took the bench.
In conclusion, I don’t have my paper notes. I will not transcribe my paper notes at the new rate Mr. Selvaggio set after my departure.
I will not do any more transcripts period until I am paid for all previous transcripts transcribed and filed until U [sic] am paid in full at the date that was set during my tenure at $8.00 a page.
I am still in California and am not planning to return any time soon due to new developments here.
Plaintiff’s Exhibit 15.
{¶ 9} In response, on March 21, 2014, Judge Selvaggio entered another order. The judge rejected her demand for $8 per page and again ordered her to produce the Cook transcripts. The judge noted that the court reporter had found Fansler’s paper notes for the 2008 hearing, but they were illegible. And no paper notes for the 2013 hearing were found. Judge Selvaggio ordered Fansler to send the computer disk containing the Cook hearings to the court. This order was emailed to Fansler. She responded by email the same day:
The notes can be mailed to Belinda Wolford, RPR, Logan County Common Pleas Court.
I will forward her my notes from my discs from these hearings to produce transcripts.
I don’t have the equipment I need out here to file transcripts, ie, machine to rewrite notes, binders, transcript covers.
I cannot send the court my discs because I have other work product on them from depositions, etc.
Belinda Wolford is a Registered Professional Reporter. Champaign County will need to pay her directly.
As for the notes being faded, that does happen sometimes when they sit in boxes for years. Floppy discs can also go bad over a period of time.
As for some of the statements made in the journal entry, again not completely accurate.
So to be clear, Belinda will transcribe my transcripts and I cannot forward my discs to the court.
Plaintiff’s Exhibit 19. That evening, Fansler sent an email with some of her notes from the 2013 Cook hearing. In the email she says that her husband “will drop all of my floppy discs off at the court Monday. It’s not the SD discs just the floppy discs. Since you can’t read the notes, you will have the discs to transcribe and that’s what the court ordered me to do.” Plaintiff’s Exhibit 20. Fansler also says that “[r]egarding any other transcripts, Belinda Wolford will prepare them for me.” Id.
{¶ 10} The next day, March 22, Fansler sent an email with the rest of her notes for the 2013 Cook hearing. She said again that she was in California, that she did not have the necessary equipment to complete the transcripts, and that her husband would bring the disks that she had at home to the court so that another court reporter could complete the transcripts. Fansler also said that she had her SD cards, so if transcripts were ordered in other cases, she could forward her notes to another court reporter. Belinda Wolford, Fansler said, would do any transcripts that were requested in hearings that she recorded. Fansler ended her email by saying, “Since I am still not receiving payment for transcripts that I did a year ago, I will not do any more transcripts for this court.” Id.
{¶ 11} The defendant in State v. Ward was also having trouble getting transcripts from Fansler. Consequently, on March 24, 2014, Judge Selvaggio entered an order directing Fansler to send the electronic recordings of several hearings in the case. The judge noted that in March 2014 the court reporter had sent Fansler several text messages about the defendant’s request for transcripts, but Fansler had never responded. Judge Selvaggio noted the difficulties that parties in several different cases had in getting transcripts from Fansler. The judge said that he had reached the limit of his patience with her and that by ignoring his orders the appellate review of criminal cases with incarcerated defendants and of the relief sought in civil actions was inhibited. He reiterated his order that she return all her notes and all the electronic recordings in her possession of proceedings in the Champaign County Court of Common Pleas by March 31, 2014. Judge Selvaggio clarified that this order included all electronic medium, including “SD discs,” “SD cards,” or any similar medium.
{¶ 12} When Fansler did not return the material by the deadline, Judge Selvaggio, on April 7, 2014, filed a “complaint” against her asking the court to find her in criminal or civil contempt for failing to comply with his orders. Judge Selvaggio recused himself from hearing the matter, and a visiting judge was appointed. After a contempt hearing at which Judge Selvaggio, Fansler, and others testified, the visiting judge issued a written decision finding Fansler in contempt. The judge found beyond a reasonable doubt that Fansler failed to file the transcripts in the Pasko case in a timely manner and that she failed to produce any notes or recordings as ordered. And the judge found Fansler in civil contempt for removing her notes and the electronic recordings from the court house.
{¶ 13} Fansler appealed.
II. Analysis
{¶ 14} Fansler assigns four errors to the trial court. The first assignment of error challenges the contempt complaint based on the fact that she was not properly served with any of the orders that she is accused of disobeying. The second assignment of error challenges the complaint based on the fact that the Champaign County Common Pleas Court is named as the plaintiff. The third assignment of error challenges the complaint based on the fact that Judge Selvaggio signed it as the representative of the common pleas court. The fourth assignment of error challenges the contempt findings themselves.
A. Notice of the orders
{¶ 15} The first assignment of error alleges that the contempt complaint was inappropriate and premature because none of the orders that Fansler is accused of
{¶ 16} What is necessary is notice. “[I]t is essential to the punishment of a person for contempt for the violation of a court order that he have notice of the order, either actual or by service of the same upon him.” Ullmer v. Ullmer, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 8715, 1984 WL 5377, *4 (July 13, 1984). Accord Juhas v. Juhas, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 26186, 2014-Ohio-5364, ¶ 17 (saying that “[a] contempt finding * * * requires ‘that the offending party had knowledge of the order’ alleged to have been violated”), quoting Polk v. Polk, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 24882, 2012-Ohio-2968, ¶ 10.
{¶ 17} It is undisputed here that none of the orders that Fansler is accused of disobeying were served on her consistent with
{¶ 18} The first assignment of error is overruled.
B. The court as plaintiff, the judge as counsel
{¶ 19} The second assignment of error alleges that the trial court erred by allowing the Champaign County Common Pleas Court to be named as the plaintiff. And the third assignment of error alleges that the trial court erred by allowing Judge Selvaggio to sign
{¶ 20} A contempt proceeding is not an “action.” “An action is an ordinary proceeding in a court of justice, involving process, pleadings, and ending in a judgment or decree, by which a party prosecutes another for the redress of a legal wrong, enforcement of a legal right, or the punishment of a public offense.”
{¶ 21} An accusation of contempt under
{¶ 22} Here, Fansler was given the rights to which she was entitled in a plenary contempt proceeding—“the basic rights of an adversary proceeding, including the right to notice of the charges and an opportunity to present evidence to rebut them,” In re Davis, 77 Ohio App.3d 257, 263, 602 N.E.2d 270 (2d Dist.1991). Fansler does not dispute that Judge Selvaggio filed a written notice of the contempt charges against her. And she does not dispute that she had an opportunity to be heard, to present evidence to rebut the charges.
{¶ 23} It is immaterial that the Champaign County Common Pleas Court is named as the plaintiff in this case or that Judge Selvaggio signed the written notice. Although the form of the written notice of contempt is that of a complaint in an action, its substance makes clear that a contempt proceeding is being initiated. We agree with the trial judge that “[r]egardless of the caption, it is clear that Judge Selvaggio initiated [a] contempt action to vindicate the interests of the public and the Champaign County Common Pleas Court, the nominal plaintiff in this matter. The caption could have read In re: Jeanine Fansler. It matters not.” Decision and Order, 14 (Dec. 18, 2014). Judge Selvaggio was not representing the common pleas court as its attorney but rather notifying Fansler of the contempt charges against her.
{¶ 24} The second and third assignments of error are overruled.
C. The contempt findings
{¶ 25} The fourth assignment of error alleges that the trial court erred by finding Fansler in contempt.
{¶ 26} “In reviewing a finding of contempt, an appellate court must determine whether the trial court abused its discretion.” (Citation omitted.) Polk v. Polk, 188 Ohio App.3d 809, 2010-Ohio-3355, 937 N.E.2d 124 (2d Dist.), at ¶ 86. As the Ohio Supreme Court has said, “[b]ecause we review the contempt order for an abuse of discretion—a highly deferential standard of review—we will not lightly substitute our interpretation for that of the issuing court.” (Citations omitted.) State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Hunter, 138 Ohio St.3d 51, 2013-Ohio-5614, 3 N.E.3d 179, ¶ 29. See Denovchek, 36 Ohio St.3d at 16 (saying that “the primary interest involved in a contempt proceeding is the authority and proper functioning of the court, [and therefore] great reliance should be placed upon the discretion of the [court]”).
{¶ 27}
{¶ 28}
{¶ 29} Fansler contends that because she was an independent contractor, not an appointed court reporter, her notes and the electronic recordings belong to her. The visiting judge rejected this contention, citing
{¶ 30} Lastly, Fansler contends that as an independent contractor Judge Selvaggio did not have the authority to order her to produce a transcript. She says that she was never officially appointed as a court reporter under
Although the defendant was not designated the Common Pleas Court’s Official Court Reporter, she surely understood that she might be called upon after her termination to transcribe records that she had recorded. Her move
to California did not relieve her of that responsibility. The reduction in compensation took place before she was required to provide the transcripts requested. She had no right to hold the litigants hostage to her intransigence. In short, the defendant used poor judgment in the manner in which she addressed the Common Pleas Court’s concerns.
Decision and Order, 15 (Dec. 18, 2014). We agree.
{¶ 31} One who disobeys a lawful court order may be punished for contempt.
{¶ 32} The fourth assignment of error is overruled.
III. Conclusion
{¶ 33} We have overruled each of the assignments of error presented. Therefore the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
FAIN, J., and WELBAUM, J., concur.
Copies mailed to:
Kevin S. Talebi
Jane A. Napier
Steven R. Fansler
Hon. James A. Brogan, sitting by assignment
