Gregory Crandell v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, Cabinet for Health and Family Services Ex Rel. Mary J. Dilke ( 2022 )


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  •                                                   RENDERED: MARCH 24, 2022
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2021-SC-0103-DG
    GREGORY CRANDELL                                                     APPELLANT
    ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                           NO. 2019-CA-1325
    BULLITT CIRCUIT COURT NO. 17-CI-00357
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,                                             APPELLEE
    CABINET FOR HEALTH AND FAMILY
    SERVICES EX REL. MARY J. DILKE
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE KELLER
    AFFIRMING IN PART, VACATING IN PART, & REMANDING
    Gregory Crandell appeals from a Court of Appeals decision affirming a
    Bullitt Family Court order of contempt. We affirm the factual findings of the
    trial court, as well as its finding of contempt. However, because the order seeks
    to punish future contempt rather than present contempt, the trial court
    abused its discretion. For the reasons stated below, we affirm in part, vacate in
    part, and remand the order of the family court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In July of 1997, the Superior Court in Contra Costa County, California
    ordered Gregory Crandell to pay $391 per month in child support for two minor
    children. The term of the order was June of 1997 to December of 2016. As of
    September 8, 2017, Crandell still owed $115,760.20 in arrearages on his child
    support. Crandell failed to appear following an initial summons regarding
    registering the California order in Kentucky. Upon his failure to appear,
    Kentucky registered California’s order on September 8, 2017 by default
    judgment. Crandell failed to appear after allegedly being served a summons,
    and failed again to appear at subsequent hearings in May and July of 2018
    regarding the California child support order and contempt. As a result, a bench
    warrant was issued for his arrest. Crandell was subsequently arrested on
    March 21, 2019. While in jail, Crandell moved for work release. He represented
    to the court that although he was disabled, he believed he could get a job.
    On March 26, 2019, the family court held an initial hearing. The court
    appointed a public defender to represent Crandell. Although Crandell was
    found indigent, he was also ordered to pay a $100 public defender fee before
    the next hearing. Crandell remained in custody and failed to pay the fee.
    Crandell’s contempt hearing was eventually held on July 16, 2019, at
    which he was still in custody. At that hearing, Crandell alleged that he could
    not pay the arrearage due to his physical disability. He offered as proof the
    testimony of two workers affiliated with the housing program in which he lived.
    Neither of these witnesses testified about his disability specifically. Instead,
    they testified regarding his qualification for the housing program they
    managed. Crandell’s housing was funded by a program under the Department
    of Housing and Urban Development. The housing program was restricted to
    individuals who have been homeless, have a professionally-verified disability of
    2
    long-lasting duration, and have sufficiently low income. Both witnesses
    confirmed that Crandell qualified for this housing.
    In addition to testimony asserting that he qualified for disability housing,
    the trial court observed that Crandell could not walk without his cane and
    could not stand without bearing all his weight on his walking aid. At one
    hearing, Crandell had to be given a chair due to his inability to support himself
    standing up. Crandell walked with a pronounced limp. His visible disability
    appeared unaltered between hearings, although neither his specific diagnosis
    nor accommodation needs were ever discussed.
    Testimony at his contempt hearing also revealed that Crandell had no
    record of having a job in Kentucky since at least 2016. Crandell had been living
    off the Kentucky Transitional Assistance Program and disability benefits,
    although what those benefits were was never discussed. He used these public
    benefits in part to support his two other minor children—children not parties to
    the California order—who lived with him.
    The Bullitt County Family Court ultimately held Crandell in contempt,
    found him to be $126,691.25 in arrears (after applying interest), and reduced
    his monthly payment to $251. The family court also noted that Crandell still
    owed a $100 public defender fee. Finally, the family court ordered that if
    Crandell failed to pay the stated amount by the 11th of each month, he must
    serve 20 days in the Bullitt County Detention Center. Crandell appealed the
    3
    family court’s finding of contempt, its ordered remedy,1 and the imposition of a
    public defender fee.
    The Court of Appeals reversed the family court’s imposition of a public
    defender fee.2 The Court of Appeals then affirmed the family court’s order of
    contempt but declined to review the remedy due to lack of preservation.
    Crandell moved for discretionary review, and this Court granted his motion.
    To this Court, Crandell argues that the finding of contempt was in error,
    and the remedy for contempt imposed by the family court was an illegal
    sanction. Crandell further argues that the issue is preserved, in spite of the
    Court of Appeals’ holding. On appeal to our Court, the Commonwealth has
    failed to supply a brief. Absent their brief, this Court is free to “accept
    [Crandell’s] statement of the facts and issues as correct,” including the issue of
    preservation. CR 76.12(8)(c). Furthermore, to fail to rule on the remedy
    imposed would “result in manifest injustice.” Lewis v. Lewis, 
    875 S.W.2d 862
    ,
    863 (Ky. 1993) (citations omitted). Accordingly, we review the order of contempt
    and its imposed remedy.
    1 Incarceration is one available remedy for civil contempt on a child support
    order. Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health & Fam. Servs. v. Ivy, 
    353 S.W.3d 324
    , 334
    (Ky. 2011). We acknowledge that this remedy functions more like a sanction in the
    present context. However, given the unique nature of civil contempt on a child support
    order, we continue to treat incarceration as a “remedy.”
    2 This issue was not cross-appealed to our Court, and so the Court of Appeals’
    reversal as to the public defender fee stands.
    4
    II. ANALYSIS
    “A trial court . . . has broad authority to enforce its orders, and contempt
    proceedings are part of that authority.” Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health &
    Fam. Servs. v. Ivy, 
    353 S.W.3d 324
    , 332 (Ky. 2011) (citing Lewis, 875 S.W.2d at
    864). We review contempt orders “for abuse of discretion, but we apply the
    clear error standard to the underlying findings of fact.” Id. (citations omitted).
    Although the trial court is the finder of fact as to whether an alleged contemnor
    is able to perform on the underlying judgment, “[t]he power of contempt cannot
    be used to compel the doing of an impossible act.” Clay v. Winn, 
    434 S.W.2d 650
    , 652 (Ky. 1968); Lewis, 875 S.W.2d at 864 (citing Rudd v. Rudd, 
    184 Ky. 400
    , 
    214 S.W. 791
    , 796 (1919)).
    Because the contempt order in the case at bar is civil, rather than
    criminal, the burden of proof initially lies on the party seeking sanctions to
    make a prima facie case. Ivy, 353 S.W.3d at 332; see also Roper v. Roper, 
    242 Ky. 658
    , 
    47 S.W.2d 517
    , 519 (1932). If the movant shows by clear and
    convincing evidence that the alleged contemnor has not met their obligation,
    the burden shifts to the alleged contemnor. Ivy, 353 S.W.3d at 332. The alleged
    contemnor must then show “clearly and convincingly, that he or she was
    unable to comply with the court’s order or was, for some other reason, justified
    in not complying.” Id. (citation omitted). After proof is offered by both the
    movant and the alleged contemnor, the court must weigh the totality of
    evidence. Id.
    5
    Based on this evidence, in the child support context, the court must
    make specific findings of fact concerning the obligor’s present ability to pay.
    Lewis, 875 S.W.2d at 865. These findings are required when ordering
    incarceration as a remedy for a finding of contempt. Id. No matter the family
    court’s finding on a present ability to pay, it must not threaten alleged
    contemnors with “coercive remed[ies]” for future conduct. Ivy, 353 S.W.3d at
    335. Thus, future contempt may not be the subject of the enforcement
    mechanism within a contempt order. Id. Similarly, a family court may not order
    the impossible to remedy contempt. Lewis, 875 S.W.2d at 864.
    In Lewis, an indigent father was found in contempt for failing to comply
    with a child support order. Id. at 863. At his contempt hearing, he was not
    given the opportunity to explain his inability to pay. Id. The family court
    ordered incarceration until he purged himself of contempt “without a specific
    finding of fact concerning the obligor’s present ability to pay.” Id. This Court
    held that the family court erred by ordering incarceration as a remedy without
    making a finding regarding the father’s present ability to pay. Id. at 865. We
    noted that while an unsatisfied child support obligation is not “discharged by
    mere indigence,” the trial court nonetheless erred by failing to note or consider
    facts in support of indigency prohibiting payment. Id.
    Almost twenty years later, this Court heard another child support
    contempt case in Ivy. 
    353 S.W.3d 324
    . There, as in the case at bar, a parent
    asserted that she was unable to perform her child support duties due to
    disability. 
    Id. at 326
    . To meet her burden of proof, Ivy presented evidence of her
    6
    Social Security benefits, which, after payment of bills and rent, provided her
    with only $25 to $50 each month. 
    Id. at 333
    . She received her SSI benefits due
    to a psychological disability. 
    Id.
     In spite of this, the family court ordered Ivy to
    pay $5 per month towards her arrearage and reduced her ongoing support
    obligation to $60 per month. 
    Id. at 327
    . Although the court did make a finding
    that Ivy was disabled, it also found Ivy “to be an able-bodied person capable of
    providing financial support to her child.” 
    Id.
     It further ordered that “any future
    failure to pay the new amount [of $60] plus $5 per month toward the arrears
    would result in her being placed in jail.” 
    Id. at 326
    .
    On review, this Court held that “Ivy’s inability to pay her child support
    precluded holding her in contempt for failing to do so.” 
    Id. at 332
    . Regarding
    the family court’s factually deficient order, the Court stated,
    The family court is not free, of course, simply to disregard the Social
    Security Administration’s determinations that an SSI recipient is
    disabled and needs the full amount of his or her award for subsistence. If
    earning capacity is to be attributed to the recipient, or if child support is
    to be demanded from the SSI benefit itself, there must be evidence
    clearly establishing the recipient’s ability to work or the recipient’s ability
    to afford the support payment. We agree with the Court of Appeals that
    there was no such evidence here.
    
    Id. at 333
    . This Court thus held that the family court’s finding of contempt was
    improper. Although the Cabinet had met its burden of showing a prima facie
    case for contempt, Ivy put on clear and convincing evidence of her own inability
    to pay. 
    Id.
     The family court erred by failing to consider that proof, and by
    failing to make any findings supporting its legal conclusion that Ivy was “able-
    bodied” and capable of paying. 
    Id.
    7
    This Court went further in its analysis. It held that even if the contempt
    order had been proper, the remedy imposed would itself have been improper.
    
    Id. at 335
    . The Court stated,
    The court’s attempt to fashion a coercive remedy, however, by
    threatening Ivy with [future] incarceration for future violations of her
    support order, did not provide her with a true opportunity for purging,
    and thus was invalid. As noted above, the purge condition of a coercive
    order must be something presently within the contemnor’s ability to
    perform. Ivy had no present ability to perform future obligations. By
    itself, moreover, a future failure to pay would not, in and of itself, the
    court’s order notwithstanding, justify Ivy’s incarceration. That future
    conduct was not, and could not be, the subject of the pending contempt
    motion because it had yet to occur. If Ivy did fail to pay, she would be
    entitled to notice, a new hearing, and a finding that at that future point
    in time she had the ability to comply.
    
    Id.
     (footnote and citation omitted). Considering this error, the Court vacated the
    contempt order and remanded for further proceedings. From Ivy, it is clear that
    contempt order remedies must thus pertain to present inability to pay. 
    Id.
     A
    family court may not use its current power to punish future contempt. 
    Id.
    The family court in the case at bar did make a factual finding that
    Crandell had the present ability to pay due to his assertions in pursuit of work
    release. While this finding is limited, we acknowledge that the family court was
    in a difficult position: after the burden shifted to Crandell to prove he was
    unable to pay due to disability, Crandell only put on evidence regarding his
    current housing development. None of the testimony was about his ability to
    work, or even about the accommodations he required beyond the implication
    that he needed a first-floor apartment for his mobility concerns. Instead, the
    testimony presented went to the qualifications one must meet to live in the
    8
    development, namely that you have a long-term disability, were previously
    homeless, and have a low enough income.
    Regarding Crandell’s disability, the family court had to weigh the
    evidence of Crandell’s earlier assertion that he believed he could get work
    presently against evidence all but amounting to vague hearsay and
    implications regarding the existence and nature of his disability. Further,
    unlike in Ivy, the family court did not even have the benefit of knowing
    anything regarding the type or amount of disability payments he received. After
    a thorough review of the record, we cannot say, given the circumstances, that
    the family court’s factual findings were erroneous. We thus affirm the family
    court’s finding of contempt.
    Because the factual findings of the family court were not erroneous, we
    shift our focus to the remedy portion of the order. Here, the family court’s order
    required that should Crandell fail in the future to meet his support obligation,
    he would be incarcerated. The order contains the same error written about in
    Ivy: the family court made future conduct “the subject of the pending contempt
    motion,” even though “it had yet to occur.” 
    Id. at 335
    . Doing so was improper.
    Just as in Ivy, here, Crandell should have been “entitled to notice, a new
    hearing, and a finding that at [the future points] in time, [he] had the ability to
    comply” for each new finding of future contempt. 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). Instead,
    the family court ordered that Crandell’s future failure to pay would be
    punishable by a 20-day period of incarceration each month he failed to meet
    his support obligation. There was no termination provision to the order—
    9
    presumably, for the rest of his life, Crandell was to be subject to monthly 20-
    day jail stays if he failed to pay.
    Because the family court sought to coercively punish Crandell’s future
    conduct, the order was an abuse of discretion. The family court may only purge
    present contempt in executing a remedy. We therefore remand the issue of the
    remedy for further findings or other proceedings as necessary and consistent
    with this Opinion.
    Having concluded the ordered remedy was erroneous, we find it
    instructive to further consider the practicality of the order itself. The order
    approaches impossibility. Technically, the $251 Crandell would owe each
    month amounts to roughly five full working days of minimum wage earnings.
    Logistically, however, the requirement is practically infeasible. The family court
    in this case had a clear and convincing showing of Crandell’s present lack of
    work. That means that Crandell, before the 11th of the next month, would need
    to find work. It takes time to apply and be accepted to work, then more time to
    receive your first check (assuming you find an employer willing to hire you with
    the knowledge that you may be either restricted by work release, or absent fully
    for almost three weeks at a time).3 In the likely event that Crandell fails to find
    3 The realities of pay schedules further tend to show just how impracticable the
    family court’s order was. The $251 was to be due on the 11th of each month. The
    Bureau of Labor Statistics found in 2020 that in the United States, pay schedules that
    are biweekly, semimonthly, and monthly make up 67% of all pay frequencies. Only
    33% of employees in the United States are paid on a weekly schedule.
    Let us assume, arguendo, that Crandell is lucky and finds a job in the time
    allotted between periods of incarceration that pays weekly. Typically, for any job,
    paychecks issue at the end of a pay period. That means that if Crandell starts in the
    middle of a pay period (for example, if Crandell is released on a Monday and begins
    10
    work and work enough to make the future payment amount, he will be put in
    jail. If released, he must try all over again with only 8, 10, or 11 days,
    depending on the month, before he had to report to jail again. This system of
    twenty days in, a bit over a week out—for the rest of Crandell’s life—is a
    Sisyphean cycle that will likely manage to both expend county resources and
    fail to accomplish the goal of satisfying Crandell’s outstanding arrearage. The
    order is completely impractical from a compliance perspective, and makes it
    less likely that Crandell will ever satisfy the arrearage.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we hold that the family court abused its
    discretion in executing a contempt order that punished future contempt.
    Accordingly, the portion of the Court of Appeals’ decision upholding the trial
    court’s finding of contempt is affirmed, and the portion of its decision
    upholding the contempt order’s remedy is reversed. The contempt order is
    therefore vacated in part, and this matter is remanded for further findings and
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    working on Tuesday), payment will be withheld until the end of the next pay period.
    For a weekly job whose pay period is Monday to Saturday, if Crandell starts working
    on Tuesday or Wednesday after a period of incarceration, it will be impossible for him
    to get paid before the 11th of the following month. If he starts working on a Thursday,
    he could only make a pay day in six out of twelve months. And this is in the best case
    scenario, assuming a weekly pay period.
    If Crandell manages to get a job that pays biweekly or semimonthly, then it
    becomes impossible for him to get paid in time to satisfy the obligation in the 8, 10, or
    11 days (depending on the month) he has in between the next period of release and
    incarceration. Crandell would require work release in either case, assuming he obtains
    work at all, and would still be required to serve at least one 20-day period in jail (albeit
    with work release) before even possibly earning enough money to satisfy the payment
    for the following month.
    11
    All sitting. All concur.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
    Karen Shuff Mauer
    Department of Public Advocacy
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:
    Daniel J. Cameron
    Attorney General of Kentucky
    Jeffrey Lane England
    Assistant County Attorney
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021 SC 0103

Filed Date: 3/22/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/24/2022