We first note that the contempt order states the court “concludes that Plaintiff is in willful,
criminal
contempt of this court” (emphasis added). Criminal contempt orders are properly appealed from district court to the superior court, not to the Court of Appeals. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 5A-17 (1986). However, in civil contempt matters, appeal is from the district court to this Court. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 5A-24 (1986). In
Bishop v. Bishop,
I. Visitation
Plaintiff first argues there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that she willfully refused to allow defendant his visitation with the child. Plaintiff contends there must be a showing that the custodial parent deliberately interfered with or frustrated the noncustodial parent’s visitation before the custodial parent’s actions can be considered willful. We agree and reverse this portion of the contempt order.
“In contempt proceedings^] the judge’s findings of fact are conclusive on appeal when supported by any competent evidence and are reviewable only for the purpose of passing on their sufficiency to warrant the judgment.”
Clark v. Clark,
“Willful” has been defined as “disobedience ‘which imports knowledge and a stubborn resistance,’ and as ‘something more than an intention to do a thing. It implies doing the act purposely and deliberately, indicating a purpose to do it, without authority — careless whether [the contemnor] has the right or not — in violation of law ....’”
Jones v. Jones,
Plaintiff, her daughter, and the minor child all testified that plaintiff encouraged the child to go on his scheduled visitations with
Q. Okay. Has your mother, at any time, told you not to go and be with your father?
A. No.
Q. Has she always encouraged you to go see your father?
A. Yes.
Q. Has she physically restrained you or told you not to go visit your father?
A. No_
Q. Has your mother done anything to try to discourage your love for your father or discourage you visiting your father?
A. No.
The child also testified he loved his father and wished to spend time with him, but only if his father’s second wife and her children would not be there. Upon cross-examination the child testified as follows:
Q. If [plaintiff] tells you to go visit with your father, are you going to do that?
A. I don’t know.
Q. Well[,] has she told you to get in the car with your father and go home?
A. Yes.
Q. And you refused to do that?
A. Yes.
Q. Does she make you do it?
A. No. She tried to.
Q. How does she try to do it?
A. By telling me that I had to go, it was his weekend.
Q. And you didn’t do that?
A. No.
The child also testified on cross-examination that he did not visit with his father because he “didn’t feel comfortable” with defendant’s wife or at defendant’s house, that defendant’s wife had called him “a spoiled brat,” and that the beds at defendant’s house were “uncomfortable.” Plaintiff’s daughter testified she had néver heard her mother discourage the child from visiting his father and had instead always encouraged him to go. She said her brother refused to go because he “hated it down there” at his father’s home and because the child “hated” defendant’s wife’s son. Defendant testified he thought plaintiff should “at least make” the child go for his visitation in the same way she made the child attend school. He also testified he had never seen plaintiff tell the child he did not have to go, and on one occasion, he saw her encourage the boy and tell him he had to go. Defendant stated the child said his psychologist, Rodney Jones, had told him he did not have to go.
Nowhere in the record do we find evidence that plaintiff acted purposefully and deliberately or with knowledge and stubborn resistance to prevent defendant’s visitation with the child. The evidence shows plaintiff prepared the child to go, encouraged him to visit with his father, and told him he had to go. The child simply refused. Plaintiff did everything possible short of using physical force or a threat of punishment to make the child go with his father. While perhaps the plaintiff could have used some method to physically force the child to visit his father, even if she improperly did not force the visitation, her actions do not rise to a willful contempt of the consent judgment.
Willfulness in a contempt action requires either a positive action (a “purposeful and deliberate act”) in violation of a court order or a stubborn refusal to obey a court order (acting “with knowledge and stubborn resistance”).
See Dinsmore,
Defendant’s frustration over not being able to have visitation with his child is certainly understandable. Where, as here, the custodial parent does not prevent visitation but takes no action to force visitation when the child refuses to go, the proper method is for the noncustodial parent to ask the court to modify the order to compel visitation.
See Mintz v. Mintz,
[A trial judge has the power to enter an order of forced visitation,] but only when the circumstances are so compelling and only after he has done the following: afforded to the parties a hearing in accordance with due process; created a proper court order based on findings of fact and conclusions of law determined by the judge to justify and support the order; and made findings that include at a minimum that the drastic action of incarceration of a parent is reasonably necessary for the promotion and protection of the best interest and welfare of the child.
Mintz,
II. Coin Collection
Plaintiff next argues the trial court improperly found her in contempt for failing to return all of the coin- collection to defendant. Plaintiff testified she turned over all of the coins she had to defendant. Both the minor child and plaintiffs daughter testified they had seen the coin collection prior to their parent’s separation and that plaintiff had turned over all of the coins in the collection to defendant and had not disposed of any of the coins. Plaintiff contends the record fails to show she had the ability to return any more coins than she had already given the defendant, and therefore she cannot be held in contempt for failure to return the “complete” collection. We disagree.
The trial court found as a fact that: “The Plaintiff has failed to produce the complete coin collection as agreed in the [consent judgment], In fact, Plaintiff produced only bits and pieces of said very valuable coin collection and has refused to produce the complete collection.” As stated above, these findings of fact “are conclusive on appeal when supported by
any
competent evidence.”
Clark,
Defendant testified plaintiff gave him a paper sack which contained some, but not all, of the coins. He testified the value of the entire coin collection would be approximately two to three thousand dollars. However, defendant stated the value of the coins he received from plaintiff was only approximately ten to fifteen dollars. This evidence supports the trial court’s finding of fact and is therefore binding on this Court. This is so even if the weight of the evidence might sustain findings to the contrary.
Monds v. Monds,
III. Bias
Lastly, plaintiff contends the contempt order should be reversed because of bias on the part of the trial judge. Plaintiff argues the trial judge’s comments at the end of the evidence shows the judge exhibited bias and prejudice against the plaintiff in such a way that it cannot be said she had a fair trial. We disagree and allow the portion of the order holding plaintiff in contempt for failure to return the complete coin collection to stand.
After all witnesses had testified, the trial judge ordered the minor child to return to the front of the courtroom, accusing him of being “a spoiled brat” and of manipulating his mother, father, and sisters. To the plaintiff the court said:
[Manipulation] is exactly what’s going on and you don’t have the common sense to see what’s going on and [your daughters] probably don’t have the wisdom to see. But that little boy right there, eleven and a half years old, he got [sic] all of you jumping around like a puppet on a string. No punishment when he disobeys you in terms of going. You’ve not punished him one bit. You’ve not grounded him, you’ve not curtailed any of his privileges and I think you’ve beat this man out of his coin collection .... I don’t know what’s going on in your warped mind, but it ain’t right. I don’t think this Methodist Minister [the defendant] would come in here and swear on the bible, get up here and tell about a valued coin collection . . . and it not be in existence.
These and other statements made by the trial judge expressed his personal opinion as well as his decision in the matter. Trial judges are not barred from expressing their opinions in trials conducted without a jury, especially where the comments are consistent with the court’s role as finder of fact.
Smithwick v. Frame,
The judge’s comments came at the end of all of the evidence. After announcement of the order holding plaintiff in contempt, plaintiff’s attorney remarked that the trial judge had “heard something I haven’t heard.” In reply the judge said:
I’ve heard the evidence and I’ve watched the demeanor of the witnesses. ... I heard [the plaintiff] from the first three questions she was asked, she wouldn’t answer that question. It was a con tentiousness in her voice, contentiousness in her answers and it set the theme for the whole thing ....
Counsel then stated the judge had “drawn a lot of conclusions from evidence not before you.” The court replied: “I didn’t manufacture it, I saw it. I heard it. ... I synthesized it, I must admit.” The record shows the trial judge based his opinions and remarks upon the evidence presented at trial. Therefore, plaintiff has failed to show a personal bias or a prejudging of her case by the trial judge.
See Koufman v. Koufman,
Reversed in part, Affirmed in part.
Notes
. We note that plaintiff has purged herself of this contempt. The order allowed plaintiff to purge the contempt by turning over the collection to defendant “or otherwise consent to a search of her residence.” Plaintiff did in fact consent to this search in open court, thereby purging the contempt. Plaintiff points out in her brief that a search was conducted by deputies of the Lee County Sheriff’s Department and the search found no coins. However, this information is not part of the official record and has no bearing upon our decision.
