In re the MARRIAGE OF Judy DIDIER, Respondent, and
Michael Didier, Appellant.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.
*608 Chеryl D. Aza, Houston, TX, Gregory Charles Link, Washington Appellate Project, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.
Dennis B. Casey, Attorney at Law, Tacoma, WA, for Respondent.
QUINN-BRINTNALL, C.J.
¶ 1 Michael Didier appeals an order holding him in contempt for failing to pay past due child support. Michael[1] maintains that (1) the commissioner erred in imputing his income to calculate the child support award; (2) the child support obligations violate his right to free exеrcise of religion; and (3) the contempt sanction violated his constitutional rights because it was punitive in nature. We uphold the child support award *609 but reverse the trial court's punitive contempt order.
FACTS
¶ 2 Michael and Judy Didier married in 1981 and had three children. Judy petitioned for legal separation in 2004 and sought child support. Michael opposed the court action in its entirety, asserting that the state lacked personal jurisdiction because he was a member in the "Embassy of Heaven Church" and served only Jesus Christ. Report of Proceedings (RP) (May 16, 2005) at 4-5. Michael also opposed child support payments because, as a church "missionary," he did not have an income and had taken a "vow of poverty" that precluded him from accepting paid employment. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 104; RP (May 16, 2005) at 5. According to Michael, the church provided for his needs.
¶ 3 Judy disputed Michael's assertion, maintaining that the churсh was a sham and that he charged people $3,000 to $4,000 to advise them on establishing themselves as a "church" or "trust" in order to avoid paying taxes. CP at 37.[2] According to Judy, before she filed for legal separation, Michael was bringing home a "couple thousand dollars a month." RP (Jan. 27, 2005) at 7.
¶ 4 Michael refused to submit financial declarations and wrote "[r]efused for Fraud F.R.C.P. 9(b) I am not a member of your body politic" across the statutory child suрport schedule worksheet. CP at 123. The commissioner found Michael to be healthy, intelligent, and capable of obtaining employment and concluded that, although Michael was "a man of strong religious beliefs," he "owe[d] an ultimate duty and obligation" to support his children. RP (Jan. 27, 2005) at 16. She then imputed income to Michael as a 50-year-old male and ordered him to pay $942.30 in monthly child support.
¶ 5 Michael did not pay any child support in the more than two months after the award. He was served with a show cause order but failed to appear at the hearing. A bench warrant issued for his arrest. After another month and a half without child support, Judy filed a motion for contempt. Michael appeared at the contempt hearing and the commissioner quashed the warrant but found Michael in contempt of court.
¶ 6 The commissioner found that Michael had the аbility to comply with the child support order but remained voluntarily unemployed. The commissioner entered the following order of contempt:
Michael Didier is hereby sentenced to thirty days in Pierce County Jail beginning June 17, 2005 unless he pays the judgment costs and attorney fees in full prior to June 17, 2005. If Mr. Didier makes substantial payments toward the amount above, the court may entertain a motion to modify this Order.
CP at 118. Michael appealed and the trial court stayed its contempt order pending this appeal.
¶ 7 We answer two questions: (1) Is the order requiring Michael to pay $942 in child support enforceable? (2) Is the order on contempt criminal (punitive) or civil (remedial)?
¶ 8 If the order is remedial, then the proceeding is civil and does not offend Michael's due process rights. However, if the order is punitive, then the proceeding is criminal and due process affords Michael the same rights as a criminal defendant, including the right to a jury trial. See In re Pers. Restraint of King,
ANALYSIS
CALCULATION OF CHILD SUPPORT
¶ 9 Under RCW 26.19.071(6), a court imputes income to a parent who is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed in order to prevent a parent from avoiding his or her child support obligation.
*610 The court shall determine whether the parent is voluntarily underemployed or voluntarily unemployed based upon that parent's work history, education, health, and age, or any other rеlevant factors. A court shall not impute income to a parent who is gainfully employed on a full-time basis, unless the court finds that the parent is voluntarily underemployed and finds that the parent is purposely underemployed to reduce the parent's child support obligation.
RCW 26.19.071(6).
¶ 10 Michael maintains that the commissioner erred in imputing his income because she did not find that he was unemployed or underemployed in an attempt tо avoid paying child support as required under RCW 26.19.071. We disagree.
¶ 11 RCW 26.29.071 does not require a finding that an unemployed parent is purposely attempting to reduce the parent's child support obligation. The portion of the statute on which Michael relies limits the imputation of income to a parent who is gainfully employed on a full-time basis and provides:
A court shall not impute income to a parent who is gainfully employed on a full-time basis, unless the court finds that the parеnt is voluntarily underemployed and finds that the parent is purposely underemployed to reduce the parent's child support obligation.
RCW 26.29.071(6).
¶ 12 Michael relies entirely on In re Marriage of Peterson,
¶ 13 Peterson is inapplicable. A court is required to find that a parent is purposely underemployed to reduce his or her child support obligation only if the parent is "gainfully employed on a full-time basis." RCW 26.19.071(6). Title 26 RCW does not define "gainful employment," but its common legal definition is "[w]ork that a person can pursue and perform for money." BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 566 (8th ed.2004); cf. State v. Christensen,
¶ 14 We next address whether substantial evidence supports the commissioner's finding that Michael's unemployment is voluntary. See In re Marriage of Mattson,
¶ 15 In In re Marriage of Dodd,
¶ 16 This case parallels Dodd. The court did not find credible Michael's statement that he had no income. See Morse v. Antonellis,
FREE EXERCISE OF RELIGION
¶ 17 Michael next contends that the child support award violates his right to the free exercise of religion because it requires him to obtain gainful employment in contradiction to the tenets of his churchin order to avoid potential civil and criminal sanctions. We disagree.
¶ 18 Religious free exercise under the First Amendment embraces two concepts: "the freedom to believe and the freedom to act. The first is absolute while the second, by the nature of our democracy, cannot be." State v. Balzer,
¶ 19 There is no dispute here, nor could there be, that Washington's child support laws are neutral and of general applicability. Those laws embody the state's compelling interest of seeing that parents provide for their children. Childers v. Childers,
CONTEMPT ORDER
¶ 20 If a parent fails to comply with a child support order, then a court may hold *612 that parent in contempt. RCW 7.21.010, 26.18.050; Rhinevault v. Rhinevault,
¶ 21 A sanction is remedial and "imposed for the purpose of coercing performance when the contempt consists of the omission or refusal to perform an act that is yet in the person's power to perform." RCW 7.21.010(3). RCW 7.21.010(1) defines the acts constituting contempt: "`Contempt of court' means intentional: . . . (b) [d]isobedience of any lawful judgment, decree, order, or process of the court." RCW 7.21.030-.050 provide general guidelines for civil (remedial), criminal (punitive), and summary contempt of court, respectively.
¶ 22 There is a well-recognized distinction between criminal and civil contempt proceedings and any judgment rendered thereon. While criminal contempt looks to punishment, civil contempt looks to remedy by coercing an action and compel compliance with an order or judgment requiring performance of some act by the contemnor. In re Application for Writ of Habeas Corpus of Parent,
¶ 23 A court has civil contempt power in order to coerce a party to comply with its lawful order or judgment. See RCW 7.21.020; M.B.,
¶ 24 Criminal contempt is punitive. RCW 7.21.010(2). With few exceptions (e.g., civil сommitment, compelling testimony), confinement is punitive. See, e.g., King,
¶ 25 "An order of remedial civil contempt must contain a purge clause under which a contemnor has the ability to avoid a finding of contempt and/or incarceration for non-compliance." In re Interest of Rebecca K.,
A contempt sanction involving imprisonment remains coercive, and therefore civil, if the contemnor is able to purge the contempt and obtain his release by committing an affirmative act. In other words, the contemnor "carries the keys of his prison in his own pocket" and can let himself out simply by obeying the court order. As lоng as there is an opportunity to purge, the fact that the sentence is determinate does not render the contempt punitive.
M.B.,
¶ 26 Undisputedly, Michael did not receive the procedural safeguards necessary for the imposition of a punitive sanction fоr his contempt of court. The issue here is whether the commissioner's sanction was remedial in that it purported to give Michael the opportunity to purge his contempt. We conclude that the contempt order was punitive, though not for the reasons Michael asserts.
¶ 27 Michael asserts that the commissioner's sanction was punitive per se because a contemnor has no ability to collect income from a jail cell. According to Michael, the appropriate purge condition was to give him "an opportunity to devise and submit a plan to allow him to make an income so that he could comply with the child support order." Br. of Appellant at 23. But Washington courts have repeatedly approved the use of jail time as a remedy to obtain a parent's good faith compliance with child support obligations.[6] Jail can be a particularly useful coercive tool when the contemnor has repeatedly demonstrated his unwillingness to comply after having been given the benefit of the doubt in the past. See M.B.,
¶ 28 For four months, Michael did not abide by the commissioner's order to pay child support. Michael even failed to pay child support after the court served him with a show cause order, held a hearing (that he neglected to attend), and issued a warrant for his arrest. When Michael did appear at the contempt hearing, he continued to advance the positiondisputed by his wife and found not credible by the commissioner that he did not have an income. This evidence is sufficient to support a finding of contempt.
¶ 29 But in her order finding Michael in contempt, the commissioner stated that she was imposing a 30-day jail sentence:
Michael Didier is hereby sentenced to thirty days in Pierce County Jаil beginning June 17, 2005 unless he pays the judgment costs and attorney fees in full prior to June 17, 2005. If Mr. Didier makes substantial payments toward the amount above, the court may entertain a motion to modify this Order.
CP at 118 (emphasis added).
¶ 30 The use of the term "sentenced" suggests the court's punitive thinking here.[7] Nevertheless, we look to the specific provisions of the order to determine whether the order is punitive or coercive. Judy argues that the order is civil and coercive because it contains a provision that allows Michael to avoid incarceration if he pays his outstanding obligations, approximately $4,900, or makes a substantial payment thereto. She argues that if Michael is found in contempt *614 and put in jail, he could gain his release simply by making a substantial payment toward his obligation. But the language of the court's order does not support Judy's argument.
¶ 31 The order contains an adequаte purge provision for the period of time prior to June 17, 2005; if Michael pays $4,900 before June 17, 2005, he will have satisfied his obligation and avoided incarceration. But if he does not pay before June 17, 2005, the order requires that he serve 30 days incarceration (as failure to timely pay) and that, even if he pays while incarcerated, he is not entitled to immediate release, but he is merely permitted to file a motion to modify the order imposing the 30-day sentence, which the court may (or may not) grant.
¶ 32 At the hearing on Michael's motion to revise, the reviewing judge likewise interpreted the court's order as requiring a likely successful motion to modify before Michael could obtain his release.[8]
¶ 33 The punitive nature of the court's order here becomes clear when we compare it with the coercive jail time imposed in other cases. See, e.g., Penfield Co. of California v. Sec. & Exch. Comm'n,
Michael Didier must pay the judgment costs and attorney fees in full no later than the close of business, June 17, 2005. In the event that he fails to satisfy the judgment by that date, he must report to the Pierce County Jail on June 18, 2005, and must remain in the custody of the Pierce County Jail until July 18, 2005, or until the judgment is paid in full, whichever occurs first.
¶ 34 Under the court's order here, after June 17, 2005, Michael could nоt purge his contempt and be immediately released solely by paying the money owed. Thus, as to that portion of the court's contempt order after June 17, 2005, the 30-day jail term was a penalty. It was not wholly coercive, it was punitive and was, therefore, not a sanction lawfully available to the trial court in a civil contempt action.
¶ 35 Michael contends that, because he is unemployed, he lacks the ability to рurge his contempt and his failure to support his children is not willful. But his reasoning is circular. Substantial evidence supports the trial court's finding that Michael is voluntarily unemployed and thus has the ability to obtain employment to pay child support and purge his contempt.
¶ 36 We affirm the trial court's award of child support and finding of contempt, but we vacate the court's order on contempt and remand for further proceedings consistеnt with this opinion.
We concur: ARMSTRONG and PENOYAR, JJ.
NOTES
Notes
[1] We use the parties' first names for clarity.
[2] It is not clear whether Judy's allegation concerns "Remedies at Law," an affiliate of the Embassy of Heaven Church that a local federal district court judge recently found to be engaged in the promotion and marketing of a "fraudulent tax scheme using corporations sole and ministerial trusts in an attempt to fraudulently evade income and employment tax." United States v. Stoll,
[3] Chapter 26.19 RCW requires a court to use the child support schedule, guidelines, and state-approved worksheets. In re Marriage of Sievers,
[4] Specifically, during proceedings in front of the commissioner, Judy's counsel explained that prior to the separation, Michael contributed "a couple thousand dollars a month toward the household expenses." RP (Jan. 27, 2005) at 7.
[5] This conclusion makes it unnecessary to address Michael's assertion that because of his allegiance to the Embassy of Heaven Church, the commissioner erred in finding that he had the ability to, and intentionally chose not to, comply with the child support award.
[6] See, e.g., Boatman,
[7] In addition, during the contempt hearing the commissioner made statements suggesting that she was concerned with detеrrence: "[W]hen you don't support the children, even if you do follow these beliefs right into the jailhouse, if nothing else, the other folks in this courtroom will get the idea that people have to support kids." RP (May 16, 2005) at 11.
[8] The commissioner stated, "If within the 30 days, the next 30 days there's a change of attitude and a change of position, and Mr. Didier does start paying, or somebody does start paying on his behalf, I would suspect that the Court at that point might entertain modification of that jail time." RP (May 16, 2005) at 11.
