Lead Opinion
On 4 January 1994, the trial court granted plaintiffs motion for alimony pendente lite. Seeking to enforce this order, plaintiff filed a motion for contempt on 25 March 1998. On 31 March 1998, the trial court entered an order for defendant to show cause, if any, as to why he should not be adjudged in willful contempt. Defendant filed a motion on 1 April 1998 to terminate or modify his obligation to pay alimony pendente lite to plaintiff. On 4 November 1998, the trial court entered an order which denied defendant’s motion to terminate or modify temporary alimony, found defendant in contempt for failing to comply with the temporary alimony order, and awarded plaintiff legal fees and costs to defray her expenses in the action.
The trial court’s findings in its 4 November 1998 order included the following:
3. Through September 3, 1998 the defendant was in arrears $4,760.00 in alimony. The defendant paid an amount of ad val-orem taxes in 1996 to offset his obligation to pay the 1997 and 1998 ad valorem taxes on the real estate where the plaintiff’s residence is located . . . and to offset his alimony arrearage by $204.00. The total amount necessary to bring the mortgage loan to a current status as of September 1998 is $12,038.67.
5. . . . The defendant’s accountant furnished financial statements he prepared for the defendant’s business, Shumaker Body Repair, Inc. The only information the accountant had available to him to use in preparing the financial statements was information furnished by the defendant, and the only verification of this information was bank statements. The defendant changed accountants some time in 1997. Detailed information is available from only August 1997 onward from which the accountant testified to the gross income, expenses, net income, and cash on hand of the corporation for 1998 but he did not do an audit of the defendant or his corporation. The accountant admitted that some of the defendant’s financial statements presented in evidence through his accountant were in error, and the errors had to be corrected during the course of the accountant’s testimony.
6. The accountant testified that the defendant took no salary during 1998.
7. The defendant is in arrearage on federal income taxes. The defendant is making monthly payments to the Internal Revenue Service (hereinafter “IRS”) for income tax arrearage for taxes that go back to 1987, 1990, 1992, 1993, and 1994. The tax arrear-age may be in excess of $20,000.00 but the arrearage arose from the defendant’s failure to pay taxes when due in those years.
8. . . . The defendant states that he has gotten as much as $21,000.00 in “loans” from “a friend” who was identified under cross-examination as his girlfriend who is “retired.” The defendant does not know the exact amounts of such loans or when they were made. They were made without any promissory notes or terms of repayment. The defendant testified that he “couldn’t keep up with” the large sums of money he paid to the Internal Revenue Service such as his $11,000.00 payment to the Internal Revenue Service in February 1998. He was not sure if he got the money in cash or otherwise. The defendant was unclear as to whether he deposited as much as $10,000.00 in cash to bank accounts at any one time.
9. The defendant drives a vehicle which is registered in his son’s name to avoid seizure by the IRS.
10. The defendant did not provide information as to his personal checking account although such documents were subpoenaed. He only furnished documents regarding the corporate account.
11. The defendant did not furnish an affidavit of financial standing as did plaintiff.
12. The defendant is in the business of painting trucks and trailers. Since the entry of the previous temporary alimony order, the defendant incorporated his business with the defendant as a sole stockholder. The business conducted by the corporation is the same as the defendant’s sole proprietorship before the prior order. The defendant has been in business manyyears in the same business regardless of whether acting through a corporation or as a sole proprietor.
13. The defendant was vague on his efforts to supplement his income with business from other than his regular customers. The defendant is also a certified mechanic. He made no efforts to supplement his income with mechanic work. Although the defendant is not found to have intentionally depressed his income, he is indifferent to fluctuations in the income of his truck painting business, if in fact, such fluctuations [exist].
14. Based on the financial information for years from 1993 to 1998, the defendant has essentially the same earning capacity as when the previous order was entered. Considering the testimony and exhibits of the defendant and observing his demeanor, especially considering his ability to obtain large sums of cash, supposedly from his girlfriend, and his inability to accurately recall the details of these “loans” or provide any documentation of them, the court simply does not believe the defendant’s assertions that his income and earning capacity have decreased. The defendant has the burden of proof on his motion to modify alimony.
20. Mr. Rodden devoted 46.25 hours to representing the plaintiff on the contempt and modification proceeding. This amount of time is reasonable and the activities of Mr. Rodden were reasonably required for representation of the plaintiff in this matter.
21. The reasonable value of legal services rendered by plaintiffs counsel to plaintiff in this matter is $4,625.00. Associated costs total $59.06.
Based on these findings, the trial court concluded that the “defendant failed to show by the greater weight of the evidence that there has been a change in circumstances related to the factors that the court must consider in setting or modifying alimony.” The trial court further concluded that defendant is “sufficiently able to comply with the temporary alimony order, but he has wilfully, deliberately, and without justification failed to comply with the order, and is [in] contempt of this court.”
Based on its findings and conclusions, the trial court ordered that defendant be held in contempt until he paid certain sums of money, including plaintiffs attorney fees.
Defendant sets forth two assignments of error: (1) that the trial court erred in determining that defendant was sufficiently able to comply with the temporary alimony order but willfully, deliberately, and without justification failed to comply with the order; and (2) that the trial court erred in awarding plaintiff attorney fees.
“Civil contempt proceedings are initiated by a party interested in enforcing the order by filing a motion in the cause.” Plott v. Plott,
Defendant cites this Court’s decision in Goodson v. Goodson,
When reviewing a trial court’s contempt order, the appellate court is limited to determining whether there is competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings and whether the findings support the conclusions. Adkins v. Adkins,
In Frank v. Glanville,
The trial court further noted in its findings that defendant did not provide any information as to his personal checking account although the documents were subpoenaed and that he failed to furnish an affidavit of financial standing. While defendant’s accountant furnished financial statements he had prepared for defendant’s business, defendant failed to provide any detailed information for the time period prior to August 1997, and the accountant admitted that some of defendant’s financial statements were erroneous. Therefore, defendant failed to meet his burden of proof of establishing that he lacked the means to pay or that his failure to pay was not willful.
The case of Lamm v. Lamm,
Defendant next contends that the trial court erred in awarding plaintiff attorney fees, since it was required to consider defendant’s estate and ability to defray legal costs under Perkins v. Perkins,
A trial court is authorized to award attorney’s fees to a party who has shown that she is entitled to the relief demanded, is a dependent spouse, and lacks sufficient means upon which to live during the prosecution of the suit and to defray her necessary legal expenses. Once fees are authorized, a trial court must consider several factors in determining the amount of the award, including but not limited to: each party’s estate and ability to defray legal costs; the nature and scope of the legal services rendered the dependent spouse; and the skill, time, and labor expended during such representation.
Id. at 668,
Here, the trial court found that plaintiff had an interest in enforcing the temporary alimony order, acted in good faith in pursuing her motion for contempt and defending the defendant’s modification request, and had inadequate funds to defray the expense of the suit. The trial court also found that plaintiff’s attorney devoted 46.25 hours to representing plaintiff in this matter and that this amount of time was reasonable. Further, the reasonable value of plaintiff’s attorney’s legal services in this matter was $4,625.00, and the associated costs totaled $59.06. Although the record before this Court does not contain explicit findings as to the value of defendant’s estate, in Plott,
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting in part.
I disagree with the majority that the party alleged to be delinquent in an action for civil contempt has the burden of proving his failure to make payments in compliance with a court order was not willful. I, therefore, respectfully dissent on this issue.
Civil or Criminal Contempt
Because of differences in “ ‘procedure, punishment, and right of review’ ” in actions for civil and criminal contempt, this Court must first determine when reviewing a contempt order whether the order evidences an adjudication of civil or criminal contempt. Bishop v. Bishop,
Burden of Proof in Civil Contempt
In McBride v. McBride, the North Carolina Supreme Court stated civil contempt proceedings are criminal in nature because a civil contempt hearing may “result in the incarceration of a[] . . . [contemnor] who is without the means to procure his release and who, absent those means, may be incarcerated for an indeterminate period of time.” McBride v. McBride,
Even if a civil contempt proceeding is not to be treated like a criminal contempt proceeding, I do not read the case law in this State to place the burden of proof on the alleged contemnor in a civil contempt proceeding. The trial court is required, prior to the entry of an order of civil contempt, to “find as a fact that the [alleged contem-nor] presently possesses the means to comply [with the underlying order].” Henderson v. Henderson,
I acknowledge there are several cases, relied on by the majority, stating the alleged contemnor has the burden of proof in a civil contempt proceeding. Those cases, however, are inconsistent with the unequivocal teachings
In this case, the trial court consolidated for hearing defendant’s motion to modify temporary alimony and plaintiff’s motion for contempt. The trial court’s order combines its findings of fact and conclusions of law for both motions, and it is impossible to determine from the trial court’s order on which party it placed the burden of proof for plaintiff’s motion for contempt. I, therefore, would remand this case to the trial court for a new hearing on plaintiff’s motion for contempt, with the burden of proof on the movant plaintiff.
Notes
. Although this Court is able to review proceedings in the trial court to determine whether an action was for civil or criminal contempt, it is the better practice for the trial court to require the movant to provide an alleged contemnor with notice of whether an action is for civil or criminal contempt. See Hartsell v. Hartsell,
. If the duty to present evidence was placed on the alleged contemnor and he failed to present any evidence, there would be no evidence in the record to support the entry of an order of contempt.
If the issuance of a show cause order in a civil contempt proceeding gave rise to a presumption, the alleged contemnor would have the burden of producing evidence “sufficient to permit reasonable minds to conclude that the presumed fact [did] not exist.” N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 301 (1999). If he failed to meet his burden of producing evidence, “the presumed fact [would] be deemed proved.” Id. Although there is no case law addressing the existence of a presumption in the context of civil contempt, the Henderson case implicitly rejects its existence. That court specifically held evidence was necessary to support the order of contempt and, had the movant been entitled to the benefit of the presumption, no evidence would have been required to support the order.
. In addition to opinions from the Court of Appeals, the majority also cites McBride in support of its holding that the alleged contemnor has the burden of proof in a civil contempt proceeding. McBride does not reach the issue of who has the burden of proof in a civil contempt proceeding.
