Aрpellant, Eileen Fischer Marden, appeals from an order of the Butler County Court of Cоmmon Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, finding appellee, Dan A. Marden, in contempt of сourt for failure to comply with the terms of the parties’ divorce decree. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
The parties, who were married in 1979, filed a petition for dissolution in 1989. A final decree of dissolution incorporating the parties’ separation agreemеnt was granted on January 20, 1990. Under the terms of the separation agreement, appellеe was to pay spousal support of $1,000 per month for a period of seven years.
Appellant’s sole assignment of error on appeal is as follows:
“The trial court committed reversible error in modifying the terms of the spousal support order.”
Appellаnt argues that the trial court’s order modified the terms of the spousal support award by direсting that appellee pay support in an amount other than $1,000 per month and that the сourt lacked jurisdiction to do- so. We disagree.
A decreeing court does not have continuing jurisdiction to modify spousal support unless that court .expressly reserves jurisdiction to modify.
Ressler v. Ressler
(1985),
“Civil contempt” is defined as that which exists in failing to do something оrdered by the court in a civil action for the benefit of the opposing party.
Beach v. Beach
(1955),
Appellant’s contempt motion sought the court’s enforcement, not modificatiоn, of the original decree of dissolution and invoked the trial court’s inherent power to еnforce its judgment, not its limited continuing jurisdiction in divorce actions. See
Quisenberry v. Quisenberry
(1993),
The language of the trial court’s order does not change thе amount of appellee’s current support obligation, which is $1,000 per month. The order only stays appellee’s jail sentence if he pays something each month towards that сurrent obligation. By its plain meaning, and we hold accordingly, the trial court’s order is an enforcement of the terms of the original dissolution decree, not a modification thereof. See
Quisenberry,
We note, however, that in the case of a civil contempt, where the primary рurpose of the punishment is remedial or coercive, the sanction must provide the сontemnor with the opportunity to purge himself of his contempt.
Tucker v. Tucker
(1983),
The trial court’s contempt order in this case attempts to regulate appellee’s future conduct to the extent that it conditions suspension of appellee’s jail sentence upon timely future payments towards his monthly support obligation. We therefore hold that this portion of the trial court’s order does not allow appellee the opportunity to purge himself of his contempt and is void. Our holding does not affect that portion of the trial court’s order grаnting judgment to appellant for $33,646.14 in back support.
The judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Judgment accordingly.
Notes
. R.C. 2705.02 provides in pertinent part:
"A person guilty of any of the following acts may be punished as for a contempt:
"(A) Disobedience of, or resistance to, a lawful writ, process, order, rule, judgment, or command of a court or an officer[.]”
