This case presents three appeals by the defendant that were consolidated for the purposes of oral argument. In appeal No. 10785, the defendant appeals a contempt order and a $1000 fine, the award to the plaintiff of counsel fees in connection with the contempt, the granting of a $3000 allowance to the plaintiff to defend this appeal, and the denial of the defendant’s motion to reargue, modify, and order. In appeal No. 10870, the defendant appeals the denial of his motion for order, the award to the plaintiff of counsel fees for defense of that motion, and the granting of a $3500 allowance to the plaintiff to defend this appeal. In appeal No. 11456, the defendant appeals a denial of his motion for order, the award to the plaintiff of counsel fees for defense of that motion, and a subsequent contempt order.
Immediately after the decree a barrage of litigation between the parties ensued, only some of which is relevant here. On March 17, 1972, the court granted the plaintiff’s motion that the defendant’s visitation rights be exercised at a place other than the premises of 33 Lolly Lane. On August 30, 1972, the plaintiff sought to clarify the defendant’s rights with respect to 33 Lolly Lane and moved that the court specifically prohibit “the defendant from entering upon the land or building at 33 Lolly Lane, Stamford.” On September 8,1972, the court granted the motion, stating “Defendant forbidden to go on land or in building at 33 Lolly Lane, Stamford, Conn.” It is this order, not appealed by the defendant, that is the crux of all three appeals.
Appeal No. 10785
The defendant continued to enter the land and premises of 33 Lolly Lane. As a result, between 1975 and 1980 the plaintiff filed and was granted a series of contempt motions, none of which the defendant appealed. Despite these findings of contempt, on October 25, 1980, the defendant went to the house for an unscheduled visit with his sons. An altercation ensued which resulted in the plaintiff’s calling the police. The
On the same day, the defendant filed a motion to reargue, modify, and order in which he requested the vacation of the March, 1972 modification order, the September, 1972 modification order, the November, 1980 contempt order, and the January, 1981 allowance of counsel fees as well as the reinstatement of his rights as determined by the original 1971 decree. In addition, he requested counsel fees. This motion 2 was denied on February 2, 1981, for failure to conform to the rules of practice. On February 18, 1981, the defendant included in his preliminary statement of issues the denial of this motion.
This court’s role in reviewing a contempt order is very limited. “An adjudication of contempt is final and may be reviewed only on questions of jurisdiction such as whether the court had authority to impose the punishment inflicted and whether the act or acts for which the penalty was imposed could constitute a contempt.”
We first address two challenges that can be dismissed summarily, the defense of laches and the claim that the September, 1972 order was vague and ambiguous. “Laches consists of an inexcusable delay which prejudices the defendant.”
Danaher
v.
C. N. Flagg & Co.,
Equally disingenuous is the defendant’s claim that his conduct was innocent because the September, 1972 order was vague. The defendant premises this argument on an insistence that the word “land” does not
Because no person ought to be entrapped by vague and general orders;
Rogers Mfg. Co.
v.
Rogers,
“The inability of the defendant to obey an order of the court, without fault on his part, is a good defense to a charge of contempt. 17 Am. Jur. 2d, Contempt, § 51.”
Tobey
v.
Tobey,
The defendant next challenges the imposition of $300 in counsel fees and a $1000 fine as arbitrary and capricious and excessive. We do not agree. The court has the power to fine one who has been found in contempt. See, e.g.,
Board of Education
v.
Shelton Education Assn.,
Similarly, it was not an abuse of discretion for the judge to award the plaintiff an allowance of $3000 to defend this appeal. The “inherent” power of the court to award such an allowance is well settled. See
Krasnow
v.
Krasnow,
“The basis of the allowance is that she [the wife] should not be deprived of her rights because she lacks funds . . . .”
Steinmann
v.
Steinmann,
Finally, the defendant claims that it was error for the court on February 2,1981, to dismiss his “Motion to Reargue, Modify and Order” which sought to vacate the contempt order and all other orders on the basis of allegedly new evidence. The defendant also sought counsel fees. The court dismissed the motion for failure to conform to the rules of practice and denied the defendant counsel fees. Since the issues raised in that motion were not properly before the trial court, we cannot consider them here. Practice Book § 3063. 6
Appeal No. 10870
On May 8, 1981, the defendant filed a motion for order for an immediate hearing “to complete action on several matters currently unresolved in this Court . . . .” Included as “unresolved” were four motions the defendant had previously filed: a motion for contempt (denied October 22, 1979); a motion for order regarding Christmas visitation (filed December 13, 1979, never acted on presumably because it became moot); a motion to compel withdrawal of the plaintiff’s
On June 8, 1981, the defendant appealed the denial of the motion and the award of counsel fees. 8 On July 6, 1981, the court ordered the defendant to pay the plaintiff a $3500 allowance for counsel fees to defend this appeal. The defendant appealed this order. 9
In challenging the denial of his omnibus motion, the defendant focuses on the denial of the motion to compel withdrawal of counsel, which had been initially denied on January 12,1981.
10
Both parties have briefed the substantive issue of whether the court has such power. In finding no error in the court’s dismissal of the omnibus motion, however, we need not discuss the merits. “Parties cannot be permitted to waste the time of courts by the repetition in new pleadings of claims which have been set up on the record and overruled at an earlier stage of the proceedings.”
Hillyer
v.
Winsted,
Appeal No. 11456
On May 5, 1982, the defendant filed a motion for order to cancel all modifications of the original (1971) judgment and restore him to “his original visitation and ancillary rights” until his younger son reaches majority. On May 17,1982, the motion was denied and the plaintiff was awarded counsel fees for defense of that motion.
On May 24,1982, the plaintiff filed a contempt motion claiming that the defendant again violated the September, 1972 order forbidding him to enter the land and premises at 33 Lolly Lane. The motion was granted with counsel fees. On May 28, 1982, the defendant appealed both decisions.
Similarly, the court did not err in granting the plaintiff’s contempt motion and in awarding the plaintiff counsel fees. The sole testimony at the May 24, 1982 hearing was that of the defendant’s sixteen-year-old son. He testified that while the plaintiff was away, the defendant entered the house, announced, “[djon’t tell your mother, but I want to have a look around the place,” and proceeded from room to room. The defendant admits to having entered the house but denies it was contemptuous because the son “readily acquiesced” to his entrance. As discussed earlier, and as has been reiterated to the defendant by various trial judges, the September, 1972 order is starkly clear. The trial court was fully justified in adjudicating the defendant in contempt.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The defendant filed his appeal in the Appellate Session of the Superior Court which transferred it to this court on May 4, 1981.
This motion and order are not in the printed record, but they are in the file, of which this court may take judicial notice.
Krawiec
v.
Kraft,
Throughout the appeal, the defendant challenges a number of rulings that excluded his repeated attempts to introduce evidence that he termed “background . . . facts.” The excluded evidence includes various provisions of the 1971 separation agreements; “flaws” in the March 17, 1972 order, in the September 8, 1972 hearing, and in the 1975 and 1979 contempt orders (none of which the defendant ever appealed); the plaintiffs conduct dating back to 1966, that the defendant claims proves unclean hands on her part; the plaintiffs conduct since 1974, that the defendant claims proves consent to his conduct; and the conduct of the police when they responded to the plaintiff’s call on October 25, 1980. The record reveals that the defendant, a member of the Connecticut Bar, did not object or except to any of these rulings as required by Practice Book § 288. As a result they are not subject to our review.
Kavanaugh
v.
Lewis,
The defendant argues throughout that the September, 1972 order could not totally preclude him from entering the house and land because the separation agreement, which contains an anti-merger clause, grants him access for various purposes. We do not address that issue as a defense to a contempt order. The defendant’s recourse is in a suit for breach of contract. See, e.g.,
Marcus
v.
Marcus,
The defendant also challenges the evidentiary rulings at the January 12, 1981 hearing on the motion on many of the same grounds as in the November 17,1980 contempt hearing. In fact, in his brief, the defendant incorporates by reference his earlier arguments. Since, as before, the defendant did not object or except to these rulings, we will not consider them here. Practice Book § 288.
We will not address the defendant’s list of allegations of misconduct against the plaintiff’s counsel. As the defendant, a lawyer, should know, merely submitting a list of alleged misconduct to this court will not invoke its jurisdiction. See
Bartha
v.
Waterbury House Wrecking Co.,
It should be noted that on November 21, 1977, Judge Melville denied a series of the defendant’s motions as “frivolous, repetitious and not filed in good faith” and ordered that counsel fees would be ordered if any further motions were found “frivolous,” “not filed in good faith,” or repetitive.
The defendant filed his appeal in the Appellate Session of the Superior Court which transferred it to this court on June 25, 1981.
The defendant’s revised statement of appeal includes additional claims of error with respect to the previous motion and is not solely limited to the motion for allowance.
The defendant claims that in denying the motion on January 12,1981, the court invited him to submit a memorandum on whether the court had the power to entertain the motion. Our reading of the transcript reveals that this is patently untrue. Despite the fact that the defendant did not prepare a memorandum of law, the court patiently heard the defendant on the issue of jurisdiction. The defendant makes reference to the hearing on March 23, 1981, at which the court did tell the defendant to resubmit a totally different motion. This cannot be construed, as the defendant has chosen to do, to constitute an invitation to resubmit all of his previously adjudicated motions.
The defendant challenges the court’s various rulings excluding certain evidence at the June 1,1981 hearing. The transcript reveals that the defendant did not object or except to
one
of these rulings. Practice Book § 288. When the court issued its order at the end of the hearing, the defendant did take an exception. This exception to the order will not suffice as a proper objection to the previous evidentiary ruling. Cf.
Putnam, Coffin & Burr, Inc.
v.
Halpern,
The transcript of the July 6, 1981 hearing on the allowance reveals that the defendant did not properly object and except to any of the court’s rulings. Practice Book § 288. As before, we cannot consider them here.
