Cancino v. Cancino ( 2019 )


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  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed February 13, 2019.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D17-601
    Lower Tribunal No. 13-12474
    ________________
    Rhody Cancino,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    Fernando Cancino,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Pedro P.
    Echarte, Jr., Judge.
    Alvarez | Gonzalez | Menezes, LLP, and Ignacio M. Alvarez and Carlos F.
    Gonzalez, for appellant.
    Lourdes M. Fernandez, P.A., and Lourdes M. Fernandez, for appellee.
    Before SALTER and FERNANDEZ, JJ., and LAGOA, Associate Judge.
    LAGOA, Associate Judge.
    Rhody Cancino (the “wife”) appeals from an Order of Probation for
    Respondent/Former Wife Rhody Cancino for Intentional Violations of the Court’s
    Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage and Final Order Ratifying Post
    Judgment Mediation Agreement (the “Probation Order”). The Probation Order
    finds the wife guilty of indirect criminal contempt for refusing to exercise shared
    parental responsibility. We reverse the Probation Order in its entirety.
    I.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The wife and Fernando Cancino (the “husband”) were married in 2002. The
    husband and wife have three minor children from the marriage. On May 6, 2013,
    the husband filed his petition for dissolution of marriage and other relief. On
    October 3, 2013, the husband and wife entered into a Mediated Marital Settlement
    Agreement (the “MSA”). The MSA included the following provision:
    1. PARENTING PLAN, TIME SHARING AND
    SHARED PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY OF
    MINOR CHILDREN: The parties shall have time
    sharing with the minor children as set forth in Schedule
    “A” which is attached hereto, incorporated herein, and
    captioned “Schedule A”. Both parties shall share
    parental responsibility for the children consistent with
    Florida Statute.
    (emphasis added). On October 21, 2013, the trial court entered a Final Judgment
    of Dissolution of Marriage (the “Final Judgment”), which approved and
    incorporated the MSA into the Final Judgment.
    The parties subsequently engaged in post-judgment mediation proceedings
    and on December 14, 2015, entered into a Second Post Judgment Mediation
    Agreement, which provided that any provision of the MSA not in conflict with the
    2
    Second Post Judgment Mediation Agreement shall remain in full force and effect.
    On December 28, 2015, the trial court entered an Order Ratifying Second Post
    Judgment Mediation Agreement Dated December 14, 2015.
    On May 5, 2016, the husband filed his Amended Verified Motion/Affidavit
    for Sanctions and for Order to Show Cause for Indirect Criminal Contempt Against
    Respondent/Wife Rhody Cancino for Intentional Violations of the Court’s Final
    Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage and Final Order Ratifying Post Judgment
    Mediation Agreement. The husband asserted that the wife acted in contravention
    of the Final Judgment and MSA by exercising unilateral decision-making with
    regard to the healthcare and general welfare of their children. Specifically, the
    husband alleged that the wife obtained a diagnosis of attention deficit disorder for
    one of the parties’ children from their pediatrician on February 5, 2015, without
    telling him prior to the appointment, and that she did not notify him of the
    diagnosis. The husband also alleged that the child had been screened for an
    accommodation plan at school based upon a consent form signed by the wife. The
    husband stated the wife failed to provide him with prior notification of non-
    emergency medical and dental appointments for the children. Finally, the husband
    alleged that “in October of 2015, [wife] made an appointment for [the parties’
    child] to enroll in a visual therapy program, and only gave [the husband] an
    approximately 45-minute notice of the appointment. [The husband] objected to the
    3
    making of the appointment, and, after conducting thorough independent research,
    also objected to the visual therapy program.”
    Based upon the husband’s allegations, on September 7, 2016, the trial court
    entered an Order to Show Cause for Indirect Criminal Contempt Against
    Respondent/Former Wife Rhody Cancino for Intentional Violations of the Court’s
    Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage and Final Order Ratifying Post
    Judgment Mediation Agreement (the “Order to Show Cause”). The trial court
    conducted a hearing on the Order to Show Cause on December 5, 2016, and made
    the following findings:
    I find that the [husband] has proven beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the [wife] has on at least 3
    occasions intentionally violated the father’s shared
    parental responsibility.
    I find that you’re guilty of indirect criminal
    contempt with respect to taking your child to the doctor
    for a fever. He gets to know before you do it.
    The eyeglass incident, he gets to know, participate
    in the decision, before you do it.
    The consent that you signed at the school for the
    screening and the assessment, you did it without his
    knowledge, without his consent. He didn’t find out for
    months, so I find that you’re guilty of indirect criminal
    contempt.
    After finding the wife guilty of indirect criminal contempt, the trial court
    permitted the wife to present evidence of mitigating circumstance before
    sentencing. The following day, December 6, 2016, the trial court held a sentencing
    hearing, and found the wife guilty of indirect criminal contempt, withheld
    4
    adjudication of guilt, and placed the wife on six months of non-reporting
    probation. The trial court also orally pronounced special conditions of probation.
    On February 17, 2017, the trial court entered the Probation Order. The trial
    court found that the wife “has willfully refused to exercise shared parental
    responsibility by exercising unilateral decision-making with regards to the non-
    emergency healthcare of the minor children in direct contravention to the Final
    Judgment and MSA beyond a reasonable doubt on at least three (3) separate
    occasions.” The Probation Order further stated:
    8.     Specifically, on February 5, 2015, [the child’s
    pediatrician] diagnosed one of the minor children . . .
    with Attention Deficit Disorder (“ADD”); at no time
    prior did Former Wife notify Former Husband that an
    appointment was scheduled on February 5, 2015, nor did
    Former Wife inform Former Husband of said diagnosis.
    Instead, Former Wife took or transmitted the diagnosis to
    the minor child’s school, which caused a process toward
    the creation and implementation a Section 504
    Accommodation Plan to begin. . . . Additionally, Former
    Husband learned the minor child had been screen[ed]
    based on a form signed unilaterally by Former Wife
    when the Former Husband and Former Wife attended a
    meeting regarding the diagnosis on April 23, 2015.
    Former Wife deliberately concealed both the screening
    and the diagnosis from the Former Husband thereby
    depriving Former Husband of exercising shared parental
    responsibility and being involved in the health care
    decisions relative to the minor child in a meaningful and
    integral way.
    9.    Former      Wife   violated   shared    parental
    responsibility beyond a reasonable doubt by failing to
    notify Former Husband of the minor children’s medical
    5
    appointments, in advance, on at least three (3) non-
    emergency occasions, inclusive of the ADD diagnosis as
    set forth above. Former Wife did not provide Former
    Husband with prior notification of a January l0, 2015,
    non-emergency appointment for [the child] at the
    pediatrician for a fever and a sore throat and further
    failed to timely inform Former Husband of an
    experimental visual therapy program appointment for
    [the child] by providing Former Husband with only a
    couple hours’ notice for the appointment in Fort
    Lauderdale.
    The wife’s appeal from the Probation Order ensued.1
    II.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Generally, “[a] judgment of contempt comes to the appellate court clothed
    with a presumption of correctness and will not be overturned unless a clear
    showing is made that the trial court either abused its discretion or departed so
    substantially from the essential requirements of law as to have committed
    fundamental error.” DeMello v. Buckman, 
    914 So. 2d 1090
    , 1093 (Fla. 4th DCA
    2005). However,        “[w]hen a trial court holds a party in contempt based on that
    party’s failure to follow an order that does not ‘clearly and definitely’ make the
    party aware of what the party must do, the standard of review is legal error.” Kane
    v. Sanders, 
    232 So. 3d 1107
    , 1111 (Fla. 3d DCA 2017) (quoting Rojo v. Rojo, 
    84 So. 3d 1259
    , 1261 (Fla. 3d DCA 2012)); see also Ford v. Ford, 
    153 So. 3d 315
    ,
    318 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014) (“[W]here the trial court bases contempt upon
    1   The Probation Order was stayed pending the wife’s appeal in this Court.
    6
    noncompliance with something an order does not say, ‘the standard of review is
    legal error, not abuse of discretion.’” (quoting Harris v. Hampton, 
    70 So. 3d 747
    ,
    749 (Fla. 4th DCA 2011))); Wilcoxon v. Moller, 
    132 So. 3d 281
    , 286 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 2014).
    III.   ANALYSIS
    We begin our analysis by addressing the written Probation Order’s failure to
    conform to the trial court’s oral pronouncement of the factual basis for the finding
    of contempt. To the extent a written contempt order fails to conform to the trial
    court’s oral pronouncements, the contempt order must be reversed.2 Romero v.
    Romero, 
    916 So. 2d 952
    , 954 (Fla. 3d DCA 2005); see also Glick v. Glick, 
    874 So. 2d 1238
    , 1241 (Fla. 4th DCA 2004). This is so because of the well-established
    principle that a trial court’s oral pronouncement controls over its written order.
    Cajuste v. Herlitschek, 
    204 So. 3d 80
    , 83 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016); Hampton Manor,
    Inc. v. Fortner, 
    141 So. 3d 1260
    , 1262 (Fla. 5th DCA 2014); Glick, 874 So. 2d at
    1241; see also Shacker v. State, 
    106 So. 3d 36
    , 36 (Fla. 3d DCA 2013) (reversing
    order revoking probation to the extent the order did not “correctly reflect the oral
    pronouncement” regarding commission of violations of probation); Ulano v.
    2 Although not relevant here because the trial court withheld adjudication, we note
    that a judgment of indirect criminal contempt need not contain written findings of
    fact where oral findings are made on the record. Gidden v. State, 
    613 So. 2d 457
    ,
    460 (Fla. 1993); Sandelier v. State, 
    238 So. 3d 831
    , 835 n.1 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018).
    7
    Anderson, 
    626 So. 2d 1112
    , 1112 (Fla. 3d DCA 1993) (“Reversal is required
    where a final judgment is inconsistent with a trial court’s oral pronouncements.”).
    Here, the trial court’s oral ruling that the wife was guilty of indirect criminal
    contempt was based upon three specific incidences: (1) “taking your child to the
    doctor for a fever” without the husband knowing before she did so; (2) “the
    eyeglass incident, he gets to know, participate in the decision, before you do it”;
    and (3) signing the consent form permitting the school to institute a
    screening/assessment of the parties’ child.3 With regard to the “eyeglass incident,”
    however, the Probation Order does not conform to the trial court’s oral
    pronouncement. Specifically, the Probation Order finds the wife in contempt for
    failing to timely notify the husband of the appointment “by providing Former
    Husband with only a couple hours’ notice for the appointment in Fort Lauderdale,”
    whereas the trial court’s oral pronouncement found the wife guilty of indirect
    criminal contempt for not permitting the husband to “participate in the decision,
    before you do it.” Given this conflict, the oral pronouncement controls.
    Additionally, the Probation Order significantly expands upon the trial
    court’s oral pronouncement by finding the wife in contempt for failing to notify the
    husband prior to a February 5, 2015, pediatrician appointment at which the wife
    3 During the wife’s testimony in support of mitigating circumstances subsequent to
    the trial court’s finding of guilt, the trial court reiterated that its finding of indirect
    criminal contempt was based upon “[e]yeglasses, fever, consent at school.”
    8
    obtained a diagnosis of attention deficit disorder for one of the parties’ children,
    and for failing to inform the husband of the attention deficient disorder diagnosis.
    The trial court’s oral ruling, however, did not contain a finding of guilt on these
    bases, and was instead limited only to the wife’s signing of the consent form for
    screening/assessment of the parties’ child. We therefore confine our analysis to
    the remaining oral pronouncements—taking the child to a doctor because of a
    fever, the “eyeglass incident,” and the wife’s signing of the consent form. See,
    e.g., Cajuste, 204 So. 3d at 83-84 (conducting analysis based on trial court’s oral
    pronouncement where conflict existed between oral pronouncement and written
    orders).
    Turning to the issue on appeal, the wife argues that the Probation Order
    must be reversed because the evidence failed to establish that she intentionally
    violated a clear and precise court order. We agree.4
    Unlike civil contempt, which is used to “obtain compliance on the part of a
    person subject to an order of the court[,] . . . [t]he purpose of criminal contempt . . .
    is to punish. Criminal contempt proceedings are utilized to vindicate the authority
    of the court or to punish for an intentional violation of an order of the court.”
    Bowen v. Bowen, 
    471 So. 2d 1274
    , 1277 (Fla. 1985) (emphasis in original).
    “Criminal contempt proceedings are either direct or indirect. Conduct committed
    4 Because we are reversing on this basis, we do not address the remaining issues
    raised by the wife.
    9
    outside the presence of the court is indirect criminal contempt.” Plank v. State,
    
    190 So. 3d 594
    , 606 (Fla. 2016) (citation omitted); accord Pugliese v. Pugliese,
    
    347 So. 2d 422
    , 425 (Fla. 1977) (“Where an act is committed out of the presence
    of the court, the proceeding to punish is for indirect (sometimes called
    constructive) contempt.”).
    Where a charge of criminal contempt “is based upon the violation of a court
    order, the contemnor’s intent to violate the order is a necessary element of the
    offense.” Haas v. State, 
    196 So. 3d 515
    , 523 (Fla. 2d DCA 2016). Intentional
    violation of court’s order must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.          
    Id.
    Furthermore, “[b]ecause criminal contempt is ‘a crime in the ordinary sense,’
    imposition of criminal contempt sanctions requires that a contemnor be afforded
    the same constitutional due process protections afforded to criminal defendants.”
    Parisi v. Broward County, 
    769 So. 2d 359
    , 364 (Fla. 2000) (quoting Int’l Union,
    United Mine Workers of Am. v. Bagwell, 
    512 U.S. 821
    , 826 (1994)). To that end,
    Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.840, which governs a prosecution for
    indirect criminal contempt, “requires that the court issue an order to show cause
    with reasonable time allowed for preparation of the defense and further provides
    that the defendant is ‘entitled to be represented by counsel, have compulsory
    process for the attendance of witnesses, and testify in his or her own defense.’”
    Plank, 190 So. 3d at 607 (quoting Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.840(d)).
    10
    “It is well established that a party cannot be sanctioned for contempt for
    violating a court directive or order which is not clear and definite as to how a party
    is to comply with the court’s command.”5 Ross Dress for Less Va., Inc. v. Castro,
    
    134 So. 3d 511
    , 523 (Fla. 3d DCA 2014); accord Smith v. State, 
    954 So. 2d 1191
    ,
    1194 (Fla. 3d DCA 2007) (“When a finding of contempt is based upon a violation
    of a court order, that order must be one which clearly and definitely makes the
    person aware of its command.”); Kranis v. Kranis, 
    313 So. 2d 135
    , 139 (Fla. 3d
    DCA 1975). For that reason, “when a final judgment or order is not sufficiently
    explicit or precise to put the party on notice of what the party may or may not do, it
    cannot support a conclusion that the party willfully or wantonly violated that
    order.” Keitel v. Keitel, 
    716 So. 2d 842
    , 844 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998).
    Moreover, because a finding of contempt must be based upon a violation of
    the clear terms of a court order, a provision which is merely inherent in the trial
    court’s order will not support a finding of contempt. 
    Id. at 844
     (“[I]mplied or
    inherent provisions of a final judgment cannot serve as a basis for an order of
    contempt.”); see Wilcoxon, 
    132 So. 3d at 287
     (“A court cannot base contempt
    upon noncompliance with something an order does not say, and we will not read
    implications into an order to justify contempt.”); Reder v. Miller, 
    102 So. 3d 742
    ,
    744 (Fla. 2d DCA 2012) (“While [appellant’s] acts may have violated the ‘spirit’
    5 This principle applies within the context of both civil contempt and criminal
    contempt. See Wilcoxon, 
    132 So. 3d at 286
    .
    11
    or ‘intent’ of the trial court’s orders, a finding of contempt requires the violation of
    the letter of an order—not its spirit.”).
    Relevant for our purposes, an order entered within the context of dissolution
    proceedings which is not sufficiently explicit and precise as to a party’s obligations
    will not support a finding of contempt. For example, in Kane v. Sanders, 
    232 So. 3d 1107
     (Fla. 3d DCA 2017), the parenting plan contained a “right of first refusal”
    clause, which stated: “‘To the extent the party entitled to access with the child is
    unable to enjoy access to the child for whatever reason, then the other parent shall
    be entitled to the right of first refusal to care for the child over any other third
    party.’” 
    Id.
     at 1109 n.1. The father filed a motion for contempt, alleging that he
    was deprived of his right of first refusal on five occasions when the mother left
    “the children at home with child care for a matter of hours.” 
    Id. at 1109
    . The trial
    court granted the father’s motion for contempt. 
    Id. at 1110
    . In reversing and
    vacating the trial court’s order finding the mother in contempt, this Court
    concluded that “the challenged order fails to contain a ‘clear and definite
    command’ sufficient to notify a party of his or her required conduct and is not
    enforceable via contempt.” 
    Id. at 1111
     (quoting Miranda v. Miranda, 
    566 So. 2d 16
    , 18 (Fla. 4th DCA 1991)); see also Wilcoxon, 
    132 So. 3d at 287
     (finding that
    trial court erred in holding wife in contempt of order which “instructed that ‘[t]he
    Former Wife’s current husband shall not be present anywhere that the Former
    12
    Husband is’” because the order “was not specific enough as to what Former Wife’s
    duties were in regard to her current husband”); Marcus v. Marcus, 
    902 So. 2d 259
    ,
    263 (Fla. 4th DCA 2005) (reversing order finding wife in contempt and concluding
    that the “temporary relief order was not specific enough to put the wife on notice
    of the conduct expected of her when one of the children simply refuses to stay with
    the husband and runs away when he is sent there”); Cooley v. Moody, 
    884 So. 2d 143
    , 145 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004) (reversing finding of contempt for mother’s failure
    to effectuate a transfer of custody where “there is no language in the trial court’s
    temporary custody order that directs the Mother to do so” even though “[i]t may
    have been the trial court’s intent” to so order); Keitel, 
    716 So. 2d at 884
     (holding
    that trial court erred in finding wife in contempt for violating provision that gave
    husband “reasonable visitation” when she relocated out of state and stating that
    “[a]lthough [husband’s] visitation rights are implicitly obstructed, implied or
    inherent provisions of a final judgment cannot serve as a basis for an order of
    contempt”); Lawrence v. Lawrence, 
    384 So. 2d 279
    , 280 (Fla. 4th DCA 1980)
    (“We find that the trial court’s order was not sufficiently explicit and precise with
    reference to the time for payment of arrearages to support a conclusion that
    appellant willfully or wantonly violated that order.”); Kranis, 
    313 So. 2d at 139
    (holding that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the wife’s motion to
    vacate contempt order because the final judgement’s provision for the husband’s
    13
    “reasonable rights of visitation” was not “‘explicit and precise’, as a command or
    judicial direction to the wife”).
    Given these principles, we find that the Final Judgment, which incorporated
    the terms of the MSA, was not sufficiently explicit and precise with regard to the
    wife’s obligations to exercise shared parental responsibility concerning the non-
    emergency health care of the parties’ children to support a finding of indirect
    criminal contempt.       Shared parental responsibility, as defined in section
    61.046(17), Florida Statutes (2012), “means a court-ordered relationship in which
    both parents retain full parental rights and responsibilities with respect to their
    child and in which both parents confer with each other so that major decisions
    affecting the welfare of the child will be determined jointly.” Here, the trial court
    found that the wife intentionally violated the father’s shared parental responsibility
    by taking the parties’ child to the doctor for a fever, taking the parties’ child to an
    eyeglass appointment where the husband did not “participate in the decision,
    before you do it,” and signing a consent form permitting the school to institute a
    screening/assessment of the parties’ child.
    The Final Judgment, however, provides only that “[b]oth parties shall share
    parental responsibility for the children consistent with Florida Statute.”        This
    provision is not so clear and definite as to instruct the wife regarding her obligation
    to confer with the husband concerning non-emergency medical treatment of the
    14
    parties’ children. Indeed, the provision fails to explicitly set forth the parties’
    obligation under the Florida Statues—to “confer with each other so that major
    decisions affecting the welfare” of the children will be determined jointly. §
    61.046(17), Fla. Stat. (2012). And although the provision references the “Florida
    Statute,” the provision does not direct the parties to the specific section at issue,
    section 61.046(17). Moreover, any contention that the statutory obligation of
    “shared parental responsibility” is inherent in the final judgment because it
    references the Florida Statues in general must fail because “implied or inherent
    provisions of a final judgment cannot serve as a basis for an order of contempt.”
    Keitel, 
    716 So. 2d at 844
    . In sum, there is nothing in the Final Judgment to put the
    wife on notice as to what she is required to do in order to comply with the trial
    court’s command to “share parental responsibility for the children consistent with
    Florida Statute.” The Probation Order finding the wife guilty of indirect criminal
    contempt therefore must be reversed.
    Our sister court’s opinion in Sabatini v. Wigh, 
    98 So. 3d 244
     (Fla. 1st DCA
    2012), serves as a useful comparison. In Sabatini, the wife was held in contempt
    for her failure to comply with the shared parental responsibility requirements in the
    parties’ final judgment of dissolution.        
    Id. at 244-45
    .   Specifically, the final
    judgment
    directed the parties to share parental responsibility and
    jointly determine major decisions affecting the welfare of
    15
    the child, such as her education. The judgment required
    the parties to work cooperatively to resolve any disputes,
    and if they were unable to do so on their own, they were
    required to consult with a reasonably qualified third party
    in an effort to resolve the dispute.
    
    Id. at 245
     (emphasis added). The parties agreed to enroll their child in a school
    near the husband’s home in Jacksonville. 
    Id.
     When the wife enrolled the child in a
    different school located in Palm Coast without consulting with the husband, the
    husband sought an order finding the wife in contempt. 
    Id.
     The trial court found
    that the wife “failed to comply with the shared parental responsibility requirements
    of the dissolution judgment by unilaterally enrolling the child in the Palm Coast
    school in contravention of the parties’ agreement that the child would be enrolled
    in the Jacksonville school near the former husband’s home.” 
    Id. at 245-46
    . In
    affirming the trial court’s finding of contempt, the First District stated that the final
    judgment contained a “clear directive,” and held that the trial court did not abuse
    its discretion in finding that the wife “willfully failed to comply with the
    requirement in the dissolution judgment that she jointly decide issues related to the
    child’s education with the former husband.” 
    Id. at 246
    . Unlike the circumstances
    in Sabatini, the Final Judgment in this case does not state that the parties shall
    “jointly determine major decisions affecting the welfare of the child[ren],” and we
    are unable to conclude that it sets forth a “clear directive” as to the wife’s
    requirements in exercising shared parental responsibility regarding nonemergency
    16
    medical treatment of the children. Cf. Ford, 
    153 So. 3d at 318
     (concluding that
    parenting plan included “sufficiently precise commands” such that the wife could
    be held in contempt for violating specific provisions).
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    Shared parental responsibility is a “court-ordered relationship,” §
    61.046(17), Fla. Stat., and the requirements of that relationship must be stated
    explicitly in order to support a finding of contempt on the basis of a party’s willful
    refusal to follow its dictates. See Cooley, 
    884 So. 2d at 145
     (“[T]he law also
    imposes upon the court the requirement to be explicit and precise in its commands
    if strict compliance is to be exacted in the form of a contempt sanction.”). Here,
    the provision that the parties “shall share parental responsibility for the children
    consistent with Florida Statute” fails to set forth a sufficiently precise command so
    as to “put the [wife] on notice of what the [wife] may or may not do.” Keitel, 
    716 So. 2d at 844
    .
    As a result, the Probation Order finding the wife in indirect criminal
    contempt for intentionally refusing to exercise shared parental responsibility
    cannot stand. Accordingly, we reverse the Probation Order in its entirety.
    Reversed.
    17