delivered the opinion of the court:
Following a lengthy jury trial in the circuit court of Cook County, Deborah Griffith was found guilty of abducting her daughter, Rebekah Ford, from the child’s father, Bruce Ford. 1 Griffith was represented at trial by James P. Paese and Beryl Zerwer, whom the record indicates were then affiliated with the public defender’s office. Following argument of Griffith’s post-trial motion, the trial court found Paese and Zerwer in direct criminal contempt of court. Paese and Zerwer now appeal.
The record on appeal indicates the following facts. After the jury found Griffith guilty of child abduction, Paese and Zerwer sought a free transcript of proceedings from which to prepare a post-trial motion. The trial court denied this request; the record does not indicate why this request was denied. Paese and Zerwer filed a 109-point post-trial motion, supplemented with 200 pages of supporting documents. Argument on the post-trial motion lasted G1/2 hours. During a hearing on the motion, the trial court found the two defense attorneys guilty of contempt because they argued in the post-trial motion that the trial court was not impartial and acted as a “functionary of the State, or a third prosecutor.” After the trial court denied Paese’s and Zerwer’s motions to reconsider, they filed timely notices of appeal.
A court has the inherent power to punish as criminal contempt conduct that is calculated to embarrass, hinder or obstruct a court in its administration of justice or to derogate from its authority or dignity or to bring the administration of law into disrepute. (See People v. Ernest (1990),
In this case, there does not appear to be a written contempt order that fully, clearly and specifically explains the contumacious acts. Tomashevsky suggests both that a direct criminal contempt commitment cannot exist without a written order and that it is possible that a record could reflect oral findings and an order adequate to support the charge of direct contempt. (Tomashevsky,
Nevertheless, assuming arguendo that the record clearly and sufficiently indicates the acts upon which the charge of contempt was based, the finding of contempt must be reversed. Both elements of criminal contempt, an intent and an act, must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. (City of Chicago v. Hart Building Corp. (1969),
In this case, the trial court based its contempt order upon defendant’s post-trial motion, in which contemnors alleged, at the end of a list of rulings with which they disagreed, that the trial court engaged “in conduct to lead one to believe that the court was a functionary of the State or a third prosecutor.” The record indicates that the trial court interpreted this statement as stating that the trial judge was a functionary of the State and a third prosecutor. Whether this interpretation equates to proof beyond a reasonable doubt of contempt is questionable.
This court has considered on more than one occasion the allegation that a trial judge abandoned his or her judicial role and adopted the role of a prosecutor. (E.g., People v. Murray (1990),
For all of the aforementioned reasons, we reverse the finding of contempt entered by the circuit court of Cook County.
Reversed.
MANNING, P.J., and O’CONNOR, J., concur.
Notes
See People v. Griffith (1993),
