¶ 2. The facts in this case are largely uncontested. Husband and wife were married for twenty years. The family court finalized their divorce in 1996 and ordered husband to pay child support. In 2005, when their youngest son graduated from high school at age eighteen, the child-support obligation converted to an arrears-only order; аt that point husband owed wife over $29,000. In 2007, to avoid a contempt hearing on this still unpaid obligation, the parties, along with the Office of Child Support (OCS), entered into a stipulation under which husband agreed to make а “good faith monthly payment” of at least $400 towards the more than $39,000 he then owed wife. This stipulated agreement expressly did not alter husband’s obligation to pay the outstanding arrears, but rather was in exchange for resolving the outstanding contempt motion. Under the agreement, husband’s failure to make the good faith payments would result in OCS filing an affidavit of noncompliance and moving the court to hold a contempt sаnctions hearing “to determine any and all remedies available, including the possibility of imposing a term of incarceration in order to coerce payment and compliance.”
¶ 3. After several successful months of this arrangement, husband made his last payment on December 10, 2007, for the month of November. On December 12, the Real Estate Commission of the Vermont Secretary of State’s Office of Professiоnal Regulation suspended husband’s real estate broker’s license based on an allegation of unprofessional conduct. Husband later entered into a stipulation and consent order with the Commission in whiсh he admitted to some unethical conduct and agreed to a series of conditions under which the State would consider reinstating his license. These conditions included a forty-hour broker’s course and periodic review of his client trust accounts. His license would remain suspended until completion of the broker’s course, at which point husband could petition to have his license reinstated.
¶ 4. As realtor feеs were his major source of income, husband filed a motion to modify child support on January 10, 2008, based on his changed circumstances. At the same time, because he had violated the terms of their stipulatеd agreement, OCS filed a motion for contempt. The family court heard both motions at a hearing on May 27, 2008.
¶ 5. At the hearing, husband testified to the fact that he had received almost no income from his real estate business since September 2007 and had virtually no assets or money. The lone real estate commission he had received — from the same transaction that brought about the embezzlement allegation — wаs for $4000 in February 2008. In addition, he inherited $4300 from his mother in the spring of 2008, but he stated that, because these two sums amounted to his entire income for
¶ 6. Beyond the commission and inheritance income, husband testified that he was incapable of physical labor, having suffered three heart attacks, two angioplasty procedures аnd a quintuple bypass, and, owing to his age and experience, was “over qualified” for many other jobs. He stated that he expected to receive around $3000 in June as part of a regular side job he had writing articles for various golfing magazines, but he planned to spend much of this money on other late bills.
¶ 7. Following the hearing, the court found husband had chosen to remain unable to pay the child support obligation and held him in contempt of court. The court ruled that husband’s suspended license did not justify relieving him of child support payments. The court reasoned that because he had willfully and intentionally created this inability tо pay (by engaging in unprofessional conduct), he should not benefit from it. The court additionally found that husband was choosing to remain underemployed by not seeking alternative employment on the theory that hе was “over qualified” and would not be hired. Accordingly, on June 25, 2008, the court issued a purge order requiring husband to pay $2800 by July 31, 2008, to avoid the contempt charge. Upon his failure to pay this amount by the date due per the family court’s order, OCS filed an affidavit of noncomplianee and the court issued a mittimus on August 18,2008, ordering husband incarcerated until he paid the purge amount. Husband timely appealed.
¶ 8. Husband claims the family court erred by: (1) issuing a purge of contempt order without finding husband had a present ability to pay the purge amount; (2) refusing to stay the purge order; (3) issuing a mittimus without holding a hearing to determine whether husband’s noncompliancе with the purge order was justifiable; and (4) citing a public policy justification for incarcerating husband to coerce payment of child support even after the supported children had reachеd the age of majority. Because we agree the court erred in ordering incarceration without a finding that husband had a present ability to pay a purge order, we reverse.
¶ 9. When reviewing a contempt order, this Court will not disturb a trial court’s finding of contempt unless discretion was “entirely withheld or was exercised on grounds clearly untenable.”
Mayo v. Mayo,
¶ 11. The “decisive characteristic of [incarceration for] civil contempt” is the ability of the eontemnor to “purgef] himself of such contempt by complying with the order.”
Id.
(citing Maggio
v. Zeitz,
Only compensatory fines or coercive sanctions may be impоsed on a civil eontemnor, and these must be purgeable, i.e., they must be capable of being avoided by defendants through adherence to the court’s order. Thus, it is commonly said that the eontemnor holds the keys to the jail and stands committed only until the act required by the court is performed.
Russell v. Armitage,
¶ 12. In ordering the mittimus, the family court relied on the principle that “an obligor, who by his own wrongful conduct places himself in a position that he is no longer available for gainful employment, is not entitled to relief for his child support obligation.” The court reasoned that “[i]t was foreseeable that [husband’s real estate] license cоuld be suspended when he engaged in the voluntary [unprofessional] conduct at issue” and the loss of his license should thus not provide him with a justification for noncompliance with the underlying child support order. In support of this “no justification rule,” the family court cited various eases from sister jurisdictions, all of which deal with parties who owed child support, but had become unable to pay due to their own
incarcerаtion or criminal misconduct.
*
This analysis is not appropriately applied to the circumstances of this case, nor would it support the actions taken by the family court. Regardless of husband’s previous аctions, the law is clear that a court cannot order incarceration if husband has no present ability to purge himself of contempt. There was no evidence before the court to suppоrt a finding husband had the ability to purge the contempt. Rather, the court relied on testimony offered more than two months earlier
¶ 13. Based on our above-cited precedent and reasoning, we find that the family court exercised its discretion on clearly untenable grounds. Apparently assuming husband’s anticipated earnings had been received, the court found money available to pay his arrears. However, because it failed to give husband a hearing, there was no basis upon which the court could find a present ability to pay. Without an ability to purge his contempt, no mittimus should have issued.
We thus reverse the family cоurt’s finding of contempt, vacate the mittimus and, remand,.
Notes
All of the Connecticut cases cited in support were overruled by statute. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 17b-745(a)(5)(B); see
Ballinger v. Wingate,
No. FA970541718,
