The superior court adjudged fourteen persons (defendants) in contempt for actions, protesting abortion, taken at a women’s health clinic in violation of the court’s temporary restraining order (TRO). The court ordered defendants to pay damages and attorneys’ fees to plaintiffs, the Vermont Women’s Health Center and certain of its staff members and patients, and subjected defendants to prospective coercive fines. They appeal, claiming that (1) because only one defendant was properly served with the TRO, the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hold the nonserved individuals in contempt; (2) the court’s findings that defendants had actual notice of the TRO and violated its terms were erroneous; and (3) the court incorrectly assessed damages and fees and improperly imposed prospective fines. We affirm.
In November 1988, the superior court issued a TRO directed to Operation Rescue, an anti-abortion organization; defendant Michael McHugh; and “all other persons, groups and organizations acting in concert with either Operation Rescue or Michael McHugh.” The TRO, which was extended by the court in December 1988 and remains in effect by stipulation of the parties, prohibits the following conduct:
1. Blocking any doorway, entrance, driveway or parking lot at the Vermont Women’s Health Center . . .
2. Entering or attempting to enter the building . . .
3. Directing bullhorns, shouting, yelling or otherwise verbally directing sounds to the interior of the Vermont Women’s Health Center . . .
4. Physically blocking the entry of any persons to the Vermont Women’s Health Center ....
On October 24, 1989, a group led by defendant McHugh of more than fifty persons, including the remaining defendants, physically invaded the grounds and building of the health center. They blocked doorways and exits of the building and positioned a ten-wheel truck to block the driveway. Many of them *144 locked themselves to one another in the hallways of the building; they made a great deal of noise singing and chanting. As a result, health services for women scheduled for that day, including cancer-related examinations and other tests, as well as abortions, were cancelled. Two police officers were injured as they attempted to enter the building through doors pulled shut by protesters. The use of mace and tear gas was ultimately required to gain entry and control. Once inside, the chief of police read the face sheet of the injunction, listing the prohibited activities, in a loud and clear voice, in each of the two main wings of the building. Police then arrested defendants and the other protesters for unlawful trespass and removed them from the building.
Plaintiffs subsequently brought a civil contempt action against defendants for violation of the TRO, serving each with copies of the court’s order and the motion for contempt. Following evidentiary hearings held December 20,1989, and January 17, 1990, the court found defendants in contempt, held them liable to plaintiffs for certain fees, costs, and damages, and subjected them to prospective coercive fines to be assessed in the event of future violations of the court’s order. This appeal followed.
We address first defendants’ claim that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hold any of them, other than Michael McHugh, in contempt because they were not parties named in the TRO and were not properly served with the order, as required by 12 V.S.A. § 122. While service of the order was made on McHugh and the organizational defendant prior to October 24, 1989, the order was not served, prior to its violation, upon the remaining defendants other than by police officers at the health center at the time the protest was taking place.
Defendants’ argument is based on the wording of 12 V.S.A. § 122, which allows-for the commencement of contempt proceedings against a party for violation of a court order only if there has been “service of the order upon that party.” In defendants’ view, the failure to effect personal service of the TRO on defendants prior to the alleged violation deprives the court of jurisdiction to find them in contempt.
Plaintiffs’ position is based on V.R.C.P. 65(d), which provides that a restraining order or injunction is binding “upon the par
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ties to the action ... and upon those persons in active concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of the order by personal service or otherwise.” The relevant language is identical to that of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d). Decisions under the federal rule and similar state rules have uniformly allowed the enforcement of injunctive decrees against unnamed parties with actual notice, where they meet the other criteria of Rule 65(d), despite the absence of formal service. See, e.g.,
NOW v. Operation Rescue,
While we are cognizant of the statutory language, the service requirement of 12 V.S.A. § 122 “is merely a procedural prerequisite to the institution of contempt proceedings.”
Socony Mobil Oil Co. v. Northern Oil Co.,
It is reasonable for Rule 65(d) to define service on aiders and abettors, like the defendants in this case, in terms of actual notice by “personal service or otherwise.” A more formal service requirement would render Vermont courts uniquely unable to enforce their orders against unnamed parties, enabling “any groups bound on violating the rights of others ... to effectively defeat the power of the courts” by continually changing the persons acting against the injunction.
Bratton,
Defendants’ next argument is that the court’s findings, on which its contempt adjudication was predicated, were erroneous. V.R.C.P. 65(d) sets forth the elements necessary for enforcement of an injunction against persons unnamed in the order. Plaintiffs must show that defendants acted in concert or participation with named parties, that the order was specific and unambiguous, and that they violated the order with actual knowledge of its mandate. V.R.C.P. 65(d); 11 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2956 (1973). All defendants have stipulated that, in their actions on October 24, 1989, they acted in concert and participation with defendants McHugh and Operation Rescue in an effort to stop abortion procedures that they believed were to take place that day. The clarity of the court’s order is undisputed. Defendants claim, however, that except for McHugh they lacked actual notice of the TRO on that day. Certain of the defendants further argue that their actions did not amount to a violation of the TRO’s provisions.
We first set out the standards for review of contempt orders. It is plaintiffs’ burden to prove the elements of civil contempt by clear and convincing evidence. See
Martin v. Trinity Industries, Inc.,
In this case, there was no direct evidence that a number of the defendants had personal knowledge of the injunction prior to their arrest, and many testified that they were unaware of the existence of the order until after they had been arrested and no longer- had an opportunity to comply. The trial court determined that the circumstantial evidence put on by plaintiffs on the issue of notice was more credible than the claims and denials made by defendants. The following is a summary of evidence in the record supporting the trial court’s findings.
In addition to Michael McHugh, defendant Mary Alexander admitted in her testimony to having known of the order prior to her participation in the October 24, 1989 protest. As for the other defendants, all but four — Kathryn Trudell, Richard Trudell, Ann Kenney and Jennifer Rock — were present in a part of the building in which the police chief read the order aloud. The court found that if those who were present for the reading did not hear and understand the injunction, it was because they sang and chanted in an attempt to drown out the officer’s voice. In addition, each of these defendants was handed a copy of the injunction and offered a chance to leave before being arrested. *148 When they refused to take the copy of the injunction, a copy was placed on their person.
Kathryn Trudell was on the porch during the readings and could not hear them. She testified that she had been in court for contempt proceedings earlier in 1989 against defendant McHugh and others for a prior violation of the same injunction. The court found that her assertion that she did not understand the nature of those proceedings and remained unaware of the order was not credible.
The remaining defendants did not attend earlier court proceedings enforcing the court’s order and were not present in the parts of the building where the chief read the injunction. Police witnesses testified, however, that all of the defendants were told, after the locks had been removed and defendants were free to move about, that their trespassing was in violation of a court order and that they could leave without being arrested. In addition, police placed a copy of the injunction on the person or nearby each of these defendants when they refused to take it. The court found that this was done with respect to all persons who were arrested.
This Court has not had occasion to examine the kind of notice required under V.R.C.P. 65(d). Courts in other jurisdictions operating under the same rule have held, however, that actual notice can be found based on the kind of evidence that was presented here. See, e.g.,
Roe v. Operation Rescue,
We also concur with the court that it could consider the actions of defendants in attempting to drown out the reading of the injunction. Such conduct is probative that they were already aware of the content of the order and were trying to pre
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vent the formality of notice. In any event, we do not accept that the concerted actions to defeat notice can be effective for that purpose. See
New York State National Organization for Women v. Terry,
We find that there was substantial, credible evidence to support the trial court’s findings that each defendant knew of the terms of the order. At a minimum, the findings are supported by testimony that police officers informed each protester, prior to making an arrest, that the protester was violating a court order and could leave without being arrested and placed a copy of the order on or near each protester. It is true that the evidence was conflicting. But “[i]t is the province of the trial court to determine the credibility of witnesses and weigh the persuasive effect of the evidence.”
Bruntaeger v. Zeller,
For the same reason, we uphold the court’s findings that each defendant violated the terms of the order. Certain of the defendants, for example, claim only to have stood beside the door to the health center, not directly in front of it. Evidence showed, however, that they were holding a banner over the approach to the door that would block passage to it. While it is true that persons attempting to enter could walk around those defendants or crawl under their banner, such participation in an overall effort to physically impair the ability of persons to enter the health center was violative of the order’s prohibition on “blocking any . . . entrance.” Moreover, all defendants stipulated that they were acting in concert with defendant McHugh and the others to prevent abortions from taking place at the center that day. Jurisdictions uniformly hold that those who, with knowledge of a court order, act in concert to aid and abet others in its violation are subject to being found in contempt of the court. See, e.g.,
Roe v. Operation Rescue,
Next, defendants challenge the trial court’s decision to hold them jointly and severally liable for plaintiffs’ damages of $3,738, the cost of service of the TRO and the new injunction imposed by the court in the amount of $5,000, and the award of more than $14,000 in attorneys’ fees. We reiterate that orders of contempt are discretionary and we will not reverse unless the court’s discretion was withheld or exercised in an untenable fashion.
Persons v. Lehoe,
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Defendants claim that the court should not have held them jointly and severally liable for plaintiffs’ damages, because they did not equally share fault and responsibility for those damages, emphasizing that the point at which each defendant began to be in contempt of court varied, depending upon when each gained actual knowledge of the court order. Generally, those who act in concert to violate a court order are jointly and severally liable for resulting damages. See
National Labor Relations Board v. Laborers’ International Union of North America,
Defendants’ challenge to the award of attorneys’ fees is also without merit. Attorneys’ fees are ordinarily awarded in contempt actions as part of the compensation due complainants for defendants’ actions, which have put the complainants in the position of having to seek the assistance of the courts to enforce a judgment. See 11 Wright
&
Miller,
supra,
§ 2960, at 584-85; see also, e.g.,
National Labor Relations Board,
Vermont follows the “American Rule” with respect to attorneys’ fees,
In re Gadhue,
The appropriateness of fees in a contempt case follows directly from Gadhue. We do not accept defendants” argument that Gadhue does not apply as to defendants who were not named parties in the underlying order. They knew by its terms that the order applied to them and that they were violating it when they participated with Michael McHugh and Operation Rescue in the entry into the center. Nor do we accept the argument that the fees could not include amounts incurred in connection with plaintiffs’ plan to develop an attempt for personal service of the TRO. The court found that defendants participated in an overall scheme to evade service and should be responsible for plaintiffs’ expenses in trying to serve them. The award fell within the court’s discretion.
Finally, defendants argue that the court erred in imposing prospective coercive fines of $10,000 per day for the first violation of the order and $20,000 per day for further violations. Although purely prospective fines are not favored in Vermont,
State v. Pownal Tanning Co.,
Both requirements imposed by
Pownal Tanning Co.
are met here. The fine will be due only upon a further violation of the injunction by one of the class of persons to which it is directed, with service or actual notice of its provisions. See
Roe v. Operation Rescue,
Further, the circumstances present here are extreme and extraordinary. In concluding that prospective fines were needed, the court emphasized the “violent tendencies” of defendants and the magnitude of the harm. It found that defendants’ acts were “willful, outrageous, and presented a clear and present danger to the public health and safety.” It also found that defendants claimed to act under “higher law” and did not feel bound by the injunction. This latter finding supports the conclusion that some coercive sanction is necessary in this case to deter repetition. We conclude that the imposition of a prospective coercive fine is reasonable in this case. See
New York State National Organization for Women v. Terry,
Affirmed.
