Peyton Pettit Greene Versus Landon Ronald Greene ( 2019 )


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  • PEYTON PETTIT GREENE                                 NO. 19-CA-37
    VERSUS                                               FIFTH CIRCUIT
    LANDON RONALD GREENE                                 COURT OF APPEAL
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA
    NO. 751-262, DIVISION "O"
    HONORABLE DANYELLE M. TAYLOR, JUDGE PRESIDING
    December 11, 2019
    FREDERICKA HOMBERG WICKER
    JUDGE
    Panel composed of Judges Fredericka Homberg Wicker,
    Jude G. Gravois, and John J. Molaison, Jr.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND RENDERED
    FHW
    JGG
    JJM
    COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT,
    PEYTON PETTIT GREENE
    Phillip A. Wittmann
    Brooke C. Tigchelaar
    Matthew S. Almon
    Bryant S. York
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE,
    LANDON RONALD GREENE
    Terri M. Miles
    WICKER, J.
    Appellant, Ms. Peyton Pettit Greene (“Ms. Greene”), seeks review of a
    September 26, 2018 judgment of the 24th Judicial District Court, which resulted in
    the involuntary dismissal of Ms. Greene’s Expedited Motion for Contempt and
    Amended Request for Injunctive Relief Prohibiting Harassment, which she filed
    against her former husband Landon Ronald Greene (“Mr. Greene”). The trial court
    not only dismissed both motions, but also ordered that the parties “were not
    precluded” from recording custody exchanges of their children and, further, that a
    third party—Ms. Greene’s current boyfriend—could not be present during
    exchanges.
    Ms. Greene argues that the trial court erroneously applied incorrect burdens
    of proof to the evidence offered in support of each motion. She further asserts that
    she would have prevailed on both motions had the correct burdens been applied,
    and thus that this Court should review the facts de novo in light of the trial court’s
    legal error. Finally, she asserts that the latter two orders—pertaining to custody
    exchanges of the parties’ children—should not have been included in the
    Judgment, given that neither party had officially moved for such “relief.” For the
    following reasons, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and render.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The parties were married in 1997. Ms. Greene filed for divorce from Mr.
    Greene on July 6, 2015. On August 11, 2015, the parties entered into the first of
    three consent judgments governing issues of custody, support, and property. In the
    first consent judgment, the parties agreed to share joint custody of their three minor
    children, with Ms. Greene serving as domiciliary parent. They also agreed to
    develop a 50/50 visitation schedule and to abide by the co-parenting guidelines
    found in the Hearing Officer's Recommendations form. Regarding partition of the
    19-CA-37                                   1
    parties' community and co-owned property, the judgment included the following
    provision:
    IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND
    DECREED that the parties have discussed resolving any
    property issues or claims by LANDON RONALD
    GREENE. LANDON RONALD GREENE has agreed
    that once the property is identified, he will sign over his
    interest of any co-owned property unto PEYTON
    PETTIT GREENE.
    The judgment of divorce was granted on September 15, 2016. Thereafter, a
    dispute arose when Mr. Greene failed to sign over a Louisiana state income tax
    refund check made payable to both parties. The parties met with the Hearing
    Officer on October 25, 2016, after Ms. Greene filed a Rule for Contempt. The
    parties agreed to a second consent judgment, which ordered:
    . . . PEYTON PETTIT GREENE shall immediately receive full
    ownership and possession of . . . all federal tax refunds already received
    by PEYTON PETTIT GREENE, [and] any federal tax credits which
    may be claimed by PEYTON PETTIT GREENE in 2016 or future tax
    years.
    . . . LANDON ROBERT GREENE1 shall promptly endorse any
    remaining or future additional checks which are made payable to both
    parties, and those funds shall be promptly received and owned by
    PEYTON PETTIT GREENE.
    The final consent judgment, dated March 22, 2017, acknowledged that all financial
    issues were resolved between the parties, with the understanding that if any
    additional tax refunds were paid for a year in which the parties filed a joint return,
    “LANDON RONALD GREENE, shall promptly endorse said funds over to
    Plaintiff, PEYTON PETTIT GREENE.”
    On September 20, 2017, Ms. Greene filed an “Expedited Motion for
    Contempt,” alleging that Mr. Greene was in contempt for violating the prior
    Consent Judgments by “receiving a refund check and/or credit” stemming from
    Ms. Greene’s overpayment towards the parties’ 2015 joint federal income tax
    1
    Mr. Greene’s name is incorrect. It should be Landon Ronald Greene.
    19-CA-37                                            2
    return. On October 5, 2017, she also filed a “Request for Injunctive Relief
    Prohibiting Harassment Pursuant to La. R.S. 9:372.1.”
    Mr. Greene filed exceptions to the Request for Injunctive Relief, on the basis
    of Vagueness, No Cause of Action, and No Right of Action. On November 13,
    2017, the Domestic Commissioner denied Mr. Greene’s “Peremptory Exception of
    No Right of Action,” granted Mr. Greene’s “Dilatory Exception of Vagueness” and
    “Peremptory Exception of No Cause of Action,” and gave Ms. Greene leave to
    amend her pleading.
    Ms. Greene timely filed her “Amended Request for Injunctive Relief
    Prohibiting Harassment” on November 27, 2017, and again Mr. Greene filed
    peremptory exceptions of No Right of Action and No Cause of Action claiming
    that La. R.S. 9:372.1 only offers injunctive relief prior to the judgment of divorce.
    On March 14, 2018, the trial court denied both exceptions.
    The trial took place over three days—August 17, September 4, and
    September 11, 2018. On September 11, 2018, at the conclusion of Ms. Greene’s
    case-in-chief, counsel for Mr. Greene orally moved for involuntary dismissal on
    both motions. The Court granted Mr. Greene’s motion, dismissing both Ms.
    Greene’s “Amended Request for Injunctive Relief Against Harassment” and her
    “Expedited Motion for Contempt.”
    In its Judgment signed on September 26, 2018, the trial court included not
    only its denial of both motions, but also an order for the parties to put their drop-
    off and pick-up schedule in writing and to only communicate through Our Family
    Wizard from the point of trial forward unless there was an emergency. In addition
    the court ordered that Mr. Coates, Ms. Greene’s boyfriend with whom she lived,
    should not be present during the custody exchanges of the children. Finally, the
    court decreed that neither party was precluded from video-taping custody
    19-CA-37                                   3
    exchanges. Ms. Greene moved the court to grant a suspensive appeal of its
    judgment, which it did on October 11, 2018.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    On Appeal, Ms. Greene raises several assignments of error:
    1. Whether the District Court erred in issuing a Declaratory Judgment that was
    not sought by either party and on which no evidence was presented.
    2. Whether the District Court erred in issuing an Injunctive Order against a
    nonparty, who is not subject to the Court’s jurisdiction, that was not sought
    by either party and on which no evidence was presented.
    3. Whether the District Court committed legal error in applying an incorrect
    burden of proof to the Appellant’s Motion for Contempt.
    4. Whether the District Court committed legal error in relying on an
    inapplicable statute when adjudicating Appellant’s injunction request in
    direct contradiction of the District Court’s earlier judgment in the litigation.
    5. In light of legal error, Appellant is entitled to de novo review of the evidence
    relating to her Motion for Contempt.
    6. In light of legal error, Appellant is entitled to de novo review of the evidence
    relating to her Injunction Request to prohibit harassment.
    FACTS
    Motion for Contempt
    Additional facts relating to Ms. Greene’s motion for contempt are as
    follows:
    Ms. Greene was entitled to a $93,600 federal income tax credit for the 2015
    tax year. The Greenes filed a joint federal income tax return for the 2015 tax year.
    According to that return, Ms. Greene had, to that point, personally overpaid a total
    of $93,600 towards the couple’s tax liability, and the couple would be owed a
    19-CA-37                                  4
    credit in that amount, which they could either apply towards their 2016 tax
    liability, or elect to have refunded to them in cash. Because the Greenes divorced
    on September 15, 2016, however, they each filed separate tax returns for the 2016
    tax year. In filing his individual return, Mr. Greene made no attempt to claim the
    credit for $93,600 that he and Ms. Greene had been owed as a couple. Ms. Greene
    did claim the credit on her 2016 individual tax return, as was her right per the
    consent judgments mentioned above, and applied it towards her tax liability for
    that year.
    In late July of 2017, Ms. Greene received a notice from the IRS marked
    “Third Reminder” which informed her that she owed over $93,600 in taxes. On or
    about August 8, 2017, Ms. Greene contacted Mr. Greene seeking his help in
    retrieving the funds for her. Ms. Greene’s CPA and tax attorney had accurately
    surmised that the credit had been assigned to Mr. Greene’s account instead of Ms.
    Greene’s—IRS policy is to assign such credits to the social security number of the
    person listed as the “taxpayer” on the return, and Ms. Greene was listed as the
    “spouse.” Ms. Greene’s tax attorney, Laura Plunkett, also contacted Mr. Greene
    on that date asking that he reach out to the IRS to confirm their suspicions and seek
    instructions on how to transfer the credit to Ms. Greene.
    After several subsequent conversations with Ms. Plunkett regarding the
    issue, Mr. Greene attempted to call the IRS directly on September 13, 2017. Mr.
    Greene explained that he was unable to navigate the automated phone tree to speak
    with an actual person that day. On September 15, 2017, Ms. Greene contacted the
    IRS. She claimed that she was told by an agent during that phone call that the
    credit was “gone,” and that her only course of action was to take Mr. Greene to
    court to obtain the funds.
    Four days later, on September 19, 2017, Mr. Greene emailed Ms. Plunkett to
    alert her that his attempt to resolve the issue by speaking with the IRS personally
    19-CA-37                                  5
    had failed. In the same email, Mr. Greene indicated that he had contacted his CPA,
    Mr. Tommy Doussan, about the issue, that Mr. Doussan had already contacted Ms.
    Plunkett, and that Mr. Doussan had provided a different telephone number to try.
    On September 20, 2017, Ms. Greene filed an Expedited Motion for
    Contempt stating that Mr. Greene was “in violation of this Court’s Consent
    Judgment, by receiving a refund check and/or credit associated with the income tax
    refunds or credits owed to Ms. Greene.” Mr. Greene was served with the motion
    for contempt on September 25, 2017.
    On September 27, 2017, Mr. Doussan sent a Power of Attorney to Mr.
    Greene, which he filled out and promptly returned. Mr. Doussan was thereafter
    able to speak with the IRS on Mr. Greene's behalf. He learned that the IRS had
    sent several notices to Mr. Greene regarding the allocation of the tax credit without
    receiving a response. Given that the deadline for directing the credit had passed,
    the IRS would be issuing a refund check to Mr. Greene by October 9, 2017. The
    IRS instructed Mr. Doussan that Mr. Greene would have to wait for the check to
    arrive, write “VOID” on it, and send it back to the IRS with a signed statement
    directing that the credit be assigned to Ms. Greene.
    Mr. Greene then emailed Ms. Plunkett a redacted version of his
    communications with Mr. Doussan (primarily leaving out the fact that numerous
    notices had been sent regarding the tax credit), and requested that Ms. Plunkett
    prepare the statement for the IRS that he needed to sign. On October 11, 2017, Mr.
    Greene received the refund check from the IRS. He immediately voided it, signed
    a statement prepared by Ms. Plunkett, and provided the documents to Ms. Greene.
    Request for Injunction Against Harassment
    Additional facts relative to Ms. Greene’s request for an injunction
    prohibiting harassment are as follows:
    19-CA-37                                  6
    Ms. Greene alleges that since before the divorce was finalized, Mr. Greene
    has “consistently engaged in harassing and threatening behavior towards Ms.
    Greene.” At trial, Ms. Greene attempted to establish a pattern of harassment on the
    part of Mr. Greene occurring over two years—beginning with their July 6, 2015
    separation and ending with her October 5, 2017 filing of her Request for Injunctive
    Relief. Ms. Greene presented documentation of about a dozen specific episodes in
    the form of email or text correspondence and video recordings taken by both
    parties. Most of these episodes occurred during custody exchanges.
    The parties never reduced a custody arrangement or schedule into writing,
    beyond merely agreeing to share custody 50/50. However, Ms. Greene relayed
    what she believed to be the parties set custody schedule during her direct
    examination at the injunction proceedings. Since the beginning of their separation
    in July of 2015, the parties adhered to a regimen of daily morning custody
    exchanges of their three minor children. One of their daughters attended school in
    Metairie, while the other children went to school uptown. The parties developed a
    routine whereby every morning Ms. Greene would drive their daughter to school in
    Metairie, while Mr. Greene would take the uptown group, regardless of where the
    children had spent the night before. As for where the children would spend each
    night, the parties agreed to have the children stay with Mr. Greene on Sundays,
    Mondays, and Tuesdays, and with Ms. Greene on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and
    Fridays. Saturdays alternated on a weekly basis.
    As previously stated, most of the episodes Ms. Greene cites as harassment
    occurred during these daily custody exchanges. The first cited episode of alleged
    harassment occurred on August 27, 2015, within a month of the couple’s
    separation. Ms. Greene had by then required Mr. Greene to abide by strict
    “boundaries” that she set and informed Mr. Greene of via text message and email.
    Ms. Greene instructed Mr. Greene, when picking up his children, to park his
    19-CA-37                                 7
    vehicle no closer than across the street from the former family home at 1409
    Homestead Avenue and to remain in his vehicle for the duration of the exchange.
    Mr. Greene admitted to ignoring these boundaries on occasion. Ms. Greene
    produced a video recording of the August 27, 2015 incident that Mr. Greene had
    taken with his cell phone, unbeknownst to her at the time. The video captures a
    conversation between Mr. Greene and Ms. Greene in the foyer of the Homestead
    residence while Mr. Greene waits for the children to finish getting ready to leave.
    Mr. Greene is heard saying that he is trying to tell Ms. Greene how he feels. Ms.
    Greene explained, at trial, that she was uninterested in Mr. Greene’s attempts to
    reconcile.
    Evidence of several other episodes was introduced to prove that Mr. Greene
    did not adhere to Ms. Greene’s demands to remain in his vehicle across the street
    during custody exchanges. Nor did Mr. Greene obey a further demand to cease
    recording the exchanges once Ms. Greene became aware that he was doing so.
    Ms. Greene produced video documentation of one of the custody exchanges
    at the Homestead residence from January 9, 2017. The footage was originally
    taken by a security camera that Mr. Greene had installed at the Homestead
    residence years prior. The video shown in court was a recording Ms. Greene had
    taken with her phone of the raw footage as she narrated what was going on. The
    video showed Mr. Greene standing on the front porch of the Homestead residence,
    waiting for his children to come outside, with his car parked on “Ms. Greene’s”
    side of the street. Ms. Greene alleged in her testimony that as he stood there, Mr.
    Greene engaged in “threatening” behavior—“waiving at us, flipping us off,
    saying—mouthing something. I have no idea what. Videoing.” Jonathan Coates,
    Ms. Greene’s boyfriend who lived in her home, testified that he was inside the
    house that day and that the waiving, winking, and shooting the bird was directed at
    19-CA-37                                  8
    him. He also claimed that the silent video captured Mr. Greene saying the words,
    “[s]ue, motherfucker” to Mr. Coates.2
    Ms. Greene testified that a second incident allegedly occurred at some other
    point on that same day of January 9, 2017, this time while she was dropping the
    children off at Mr. Greene’s home. The second incident was not recorded, though
    Ms. Greene referred to it in an email to Mr. Greene after the fact. Ms. Greene
    testified that during this incident, Mr. Greene came out to her vehicle, opened the
    passenger-side door, leaned in, and called her a “whore.”3 Mr. Greene admitted to
    these allegations during discovery.
    Ms. Greene also presented second-hand security camera footage from March
    19, 2017, showing Mr. Greene standing on the front porch of the Homestead
    residence during a custody exchange. On this occasion, Mr. Greene allegedly
    engaged in ringing the doorbell repeatedly, video-recording Ms. Greene as she
    answered, and “making fun” of Ms. Greene’s demands that he not record her. One
    cannot see the door or the doorbell from the video, and the surveillance footage
    does not reproduce sound.
    On May 11, 2017, Mr. Greene allegedly engaged in similar behavior. On
    this occasion, Ms. Greene alleged that Mr. Greene crossed the threshold of the
    front door to enter the house while waiting for the children during a custody
    exchange. The trial court noted for the record that the video introduced was a
    “video of a video,” which obviously left out parts of the exchange and did not
    actually show Mr. Greene inside the house.4
    2
    Ms. Greene narrated as she recorded the video of the security footage with her phone saying, “looks like
    he is waiving to a kid.”
    3
    Requests for admissions propounded on Mr. Greene used the singular word “whore,” while Ms. Greene
    testified in court that Mr. Greene used more profane language, including the word “whore.” Mr. Coates
    also testified to the event using the language in Ms. Greene’s direct testimony although he was not a
    witness to the incident.
    4
    The security camera that captured the footage of this incident is allegedly mounted on Ms. Greene’s
    porch facing down onto the stoop, not into the house. Ms. Greene claimed during her direct examination
    that Mr. Greene admitted to entering her house on this occasion during a prior deposition. The portions of
    Mr. Greene’s deposition that were made part of the record do not include such an admission.
    19-CA-37                                            9
    From the time of the parties’ separation, Ms. Greene was especially keen
    that Mr. Greene not be allowed to enter or even view the inside of the home she
    occupied. In this effort, she prohibited the children from using FaceTime to video
    chat with their father while inside the house. Ms. Greene opined that Mr. Greene
    was “obsessed with my life, with accessing my home, trying to access my home.”
    As evidence of his intentions, Ms. Greene relayed an incident that occurred on a
    Saturday in June of 2016.
    Ms. Greene cited this incident as the first of two wherein Mr. Greene had
    attempted to “use[] her children to gain access to her house.” Mr. Greene had
    taken the children out to celebrate a birthday, and on the way home, they made an
    unscheduled stop by Ms. Greene's Homestead residence to put some leftover cake
    in the refrigerator. Ms. Greene and her boyfriend were at her home at the time.
    The children knocked on the door, but it was locked, and no one came to answer.
    None of the children were allowed to have a key because, according to Ms.
    Greene, “I know he [Mr. Greene] wants nothing more than to get into my house.”
    However, Ms. Greene’s car was in the driveway, and the children knew the code to
    the keyless entry. Mr. Greene showed the children how to use the code to enter
    Ms. Greene’s vehicle and get to the garage door opener. Ms. Greene rarely locked
    the door between the house and the garage, so by raising the garage door, the
    children were able to get inside and drop the cake off.
    The second incident Ms. Greene cites as evidence of Mr. Greene’s desire to
    use her children to enter her home occurred after Ms. Greene moved to a new
    residence in Savannah Ridge in May of 2017. Ms. Greene reiterated that the same
    boundaries applied to Mr. Greene regarding the new house. Ms. Greene was away
    from home when she received a call from her oldest daughter, Levin, who at the
    time was with Mr. Greene. Levin had left something she needed inside the house
    and, not having a key, asked her mother for the combination to the home’s garage
    19-CA-37                                 10
    entry system so she could get inside through the back door. Ms. Greene was
    surprised that Levin was even aware of the garage entry system, given that she had
    never told her children about it and it was “camouflaged” against the home’s
    stucco outer-wall.5 She refused to give Levin the combination, and lied that the
    system was broken, again out of a professed fear that Mr. Greene would love
    nothing better than to use that information to gain entry to her house.
    Ms. Greene recalled another incident in which Mr. Greene failed to abide by
    her rules that Mr. Greene remain in his designated area across the street from the
    house at Savannah Ridge. On September 27, 2017, Mr. Greene had picked Levin
    up from Ms. Greene’s Savannah Ridge residence to bring her to an event. Ms.
    Greene called Mr. Greene to come back because Levin had forgotten an article of
    clothing that she needed. Mr. Greene allegedly harassed Ms. Greene this time by
    walking to the front door himself to retrieve the items —as opposed to sending
    Levin—and ringing the doorbell multiple times. Ms. Greene called the police on
    this occasion, and installed security cameras sometime afterward. Ms. Greene
    described this event as “a last straw . . . It was just one more event where he
    ignored the boundaries.”
    As to Ms. Greene’s allegation that even when Mr. Greene remained in his
    vehicle, he persisted in video-taping custody exchanges despite Ms. Greene’s
    demands that he stop, at trial, she produced a seventeen second video clip from the
    morning of October 24, 2017. The video was taken by Mr. Greene and produced
    in response to a discovery request from Ms. Greene. It showed that Mr. Greene
    was stationed outside the Savannah Ridge residence during a morning custody
    exchange when Mr. Coates walked across the home’s front lawn. Mr. Greene’s act
    of harassment on this occasion was allegedly the recording of the video, given that
    Ms. Greene had ordered him to stop and he had once again defied her.
    5
    Ms. Greene testified that Levin had learned about the existence of the entry system from Mr. Greene.
    19-CA-37                                             11
    Mr. Greene engaged in this particular form of alleged harassment multiple
    times, as he admitted that he recorded custody exchanges regularly. Another of
    Mr. Greene’s videos from January 4, 2018 was introduced which captured Mr.
    Coates on the front lawn of the Savannah Ridge residence before a morning
    custody exchange.
    Three episodes of alleged harassment involved Ms. Greene receiving
    unwanted gifts. The first occurred during Christmas of 2015, five months into the
    parties’ separation. Ms. Greene received a bundle of products from Victoria’s
    Secret—including “So Sexy” shampoo and conditioner, “Love Spell” lotion, and
    “Tease” body spray—gifted to her by her oldest daughter, Levin, aged 13 at the
    time. Knowing that Mr. Greene had purchased the items for the children to give to
    their mother, Ms. Greene was offended by the gift and confronted Levin, who in
    turn confronted Mr. Greene. Mr. Greene explained in his testimony that he
    completed his Christmas shopping online that year while recovering from an
    injury. He was purchasing gifts for his daughters from PINK, by Victoria’s Secret,
    and at the same time, he purchased the bath and body kit that Levin eventually
    gave to Ms. Greene for Christmas. Mr. Greene denied ever seeing what was
    written on the individual bottles before his daughter informed him of Ms. Greene’s
    angry response to the gift.
    Second and third, Ms. Greene received a bouquet of flowers for her birthday
    in June 2016, and then for what would have been the parties’ eighteenth wedding
    anniversary in February 2017. Ms. Greene testified that, though she did thank Mr.
    Greene for the flowers on her birthday in June of 2016, she also promptly
    contacted her attorney, who formally threatened Mr. Greene with legal action if he
    sent Ms. Greene gifts again. Mr. Greene explained that the flowers were sent due
    to the fact that he had neglected to timely cancel a subscription to a flower delivery
    service that he had arranged for years earlier, which automatically sent flowers to
    19-CA-37                                  12
    Ms. Greene at their Homestead address on her birthday and their wedding
    anniversary.
    Ms. Greene and Mr. Coates also testified to various miscellaneous examples
    of alleged harassment by Mr. Greene. Both testified that Mr. Greene had carried a
    weapon during custody exchanges6 and that Mr. Greene had taunted Mr. Coates on
    numerous occasions and had “shoulder checked” him once. Ms. Greene testified
    that Mr. Greene’s physical presence threatened her and that Mr. Greene was an
    angry person.
    We now address Ms. Greene’s assignments of error on appeal.
    Jurisdiction of the Court to Order that Neither Party is Precluded from
    Video Taping
    (Appellant’s Assignment of Error No. 1)
    Ms. Greene’s first assignment of error stems from the trial court’s order that
    “neither party is precluded from videotaping, photographing, or recording the
    custody exchanges for his/her own protection against false accusations.” Ms.
    Greene characterizes this portion of the order as a declaratory judgment issued by
    the court sua sponte and alleges that the court exceeded its jurisdiction by
    “granting relief that neither party requested” and “decid[ing] a controversy that the
    litigants had not raised.”
    Courts lack the authority to decide controversies which the litigants have not
    raised. See Tassin v. Setliff, 
    470 So.2d 939
    , 41 (La. App. 3rd Cir. 1985).
    However, “when issues not raised by the pleadings are tried by express or implied
    consent of the parties, they shall be treated in all respects as if they had been raised
    by the pleading[s].” La. C.C.P. art. 1154. Furthermore, when a party is entitled to
    relief based on the “averments contained in the pleadings and the evidence,” the
    final judgment of the court must grant the appropriate relief, even if the party has
    6
    Both Ms. Greene and Mr. Coates admitted at trial that they had never actually seen a gun but only an
    imprint of something inside Mr. Greene’s pocket that they believed was a gun.
    19-CA-37                                           13
    not demanded such relief or included a prayer for general and equitable relief in
    the pleadings. La. C.C.P. art 862; Tassin, 470 So.2d at 940–41.
    A declaratory judgment is a form of relief, the purpose of which is to
    alleviate uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, status, and other legal
    relations. La. C.C.P. art. 1881. Declaratory judgments may function to express the
    opinion of the court on a legal question without ordering anything to be done.
    Williams v. City of Baton Rouge, 02-0339 (La. App. 1 Cir. 2/14/03), 
    848 So.2d 9
    ,
    13. A party is entitled to relief by declaratory judgment when “his rights are
    uncertain or disputed in an immediate and genuine situation, and the declaratory
    judgment will remove the uncertainty or terminate the dispute.” Spicer v. Spicer,
    2010-1577 (La. App. 1 Cir. 3/25/11), 
    62 So.3d 798
    , 800.
    In support of her position, Ms. Greene points to Gibson v. Gibson, a third
    circuit case reversing an award of permanent spousal support which had not been
    requested by the former wife at the time the trial court granted final judgment of
    divorce. 
    592 So.2d 855
    , 857 (La. App. 3rd Cir. 1991). The court found that the
    relief was neither requested, nor “tried by express or implied consent” of both
    parties. Gibson, 592 So.2d at 857–58. While the issue of each spouse’s fault was
    litigated, questions of the claimant spouse’s means and expenses where merely
    “glossed upon.” 
    Id.
     Since there was a lack of sufficient evidence in the record
    upon which the trial court could have fairly adjudicated all elements of a claim for
    final support, the grant of relief was not warranted.
    The fourth circuit in Hyman v. Puckett found that when an issue has been
    fully tried on the merits, a declaratory judgment can be necessary and proper
    despite not having been prayed for. 15-0930 (La. App. 4 Cir. 5/4/16); 
    193 So.3d 1184
    , 1191. The Hymans sought a permanent injunction to prevent the Pucketts
    from constructing a fence on a strip of property adjoining their lands, the
    ownership of which was uncertain. 
    Id.
     The court held that although the Hymans
    19-CA-37                                   14
    did not request that the court adjudicate the issue of ownership, the determination
    was necessary to properly consider the request for permanent injunction. 
    Id.
    In this case, the issue that the order in question sought to address—whether
    or not the parties enjoyed the right to record custody exchanges—was raised and
    tried at length during the proceedings. Ms. Greene first raised the issue in her
    Amended Request for Injunctive Relief Prohibiting Harassment by listing
    recording without Ms. Greene’s permission among specific examples of Mr.
    Greene’s harassing behavior. A great deal of the evidence presented at the
    hearings focused on the fact that “Ms. Greene has told Defendant not [to] record
    her,” and despite that admonishment, Mr. Greene recorded calls and video
    conversations he was a party to and videoed custody exchanges with his cell phone
    prior to installing a dash cam in the rear side window of his vehicle. The evidence
    presented did not contradict Mr. Greene’s contention that he only videotaped on
    occasions when the parties’ children were being exchanged.7
    Also, though the parties have routinely recorded each other during custody
    exchanges, all uncertainty as to their mutual right to do so seems to lie solely with
    Ms. Greene. Her testimony revealed that, although she has security cameras which
    capture exchanges, she has routinely and adamantly objected to Mr. Greene’s
    recording of the exchanges since the beginning of their separation, even claiming it
    was illegal at one point. In doing so, she betrayed clear confusion as to Mr.
    Greene’s rights under state and federal law. This confusion seems to have partially
    motivated her request for injunctive relief which asserts that Mr. Greene records
    the exchanges specifically to “torment Ms. Greene by defying her wishes.” Mr.
    7
    Ms. Greene’s pleadings accused Mr. Greene of videotaping her, her guests, and her property, and Mr.
    Coates testified that Mr. Greene would sometimes show up early to pick the kids up and have the camera
    trained on the house or Mr. Coates while he was in the yard. The parties exchanged children every day,
    and the trial judge did not abuse her discretion in accepting Mr. Greene’s version of the events.
    19-CA-37                                          15
    Greene claimed, however, that he records the exchanges to protect himself against
    false allegations.
    This Court finds that the legal right of both parties to videotape, photograph,
    or otherwise record the custody exchanges was necessarily decided by the trial
    court when considering whether Mr. Greene should be enjoined from recording per
    Ms. Greene’s request. The time and vigor devoted to arguing the issue merited
    more than a mere denial of injunctive relief to remove the uncertainty about Mr.
    Greene’s rights and to terminate the dispute. Therefore, Mr. Greene was entitled to
    the declaratory judgment allowing both parties to videotape exchanges for their
    protection, and that portion of the judgment is affirmed.
    Jurisdiction of the Court to Restrict Mr. Coates’ Presence at Custody
    Exchanges
    (Appellant’s Assignment of Error No. 2)
    Ms. Greene’s second assignment of error disputes the legality of a portion of
    the judgment of the trial court which states, “Mr. Coates, Peyton Greene’s
    boyfriend, shall not be present during any custody exchanges at any location.” Her
    concern with this particular portion of the judgment is two-fold: she claims first,
    that the relief was neither requested nor litigated, and second, that the court had no
    legal authority to issue an injunctive order against a person who was not a party to
    the litigation.
    The same rules cited above apply. Courts cannot decide issues not raised by
    the parties, but the pleadings may be expanded, in a sense, by issues that are
    actually litigated at trial. La. C.C.P. art. 1154; See Tassin, 470 So.2d at 41. When
    a party is entitled to relief based on the pleadings and the evidence, the final
    judgment of the court shall grant appropriate relief. La. C.C.P. art 862; Tassin, 470
    So.2d at 940–41.
    Ms. Greene is correct that “[n]either party filed a motion seeking to enjoin
    Mr. Coates from being present at the location of custody exchanges.” However,
    19-CA-37                                  16
    the bulk of the alleged harassment for which Ms. Greene was seeking an injunction
    took place during exchanges of the parties’ children, and the evidence suggests
    that, on those occasions, Mr. Coates, who played no apparent role in the actual
    exchange, was frequently unnecessarily present.
    In her petitions and at trial on the motion to enjoin Mr. Greene, Ms. Greene
    used examples of behavior directed at or witnessed solely by Mr. Coates in an
    attempt to prove that Mr. Greene harassed her. According to Ms. Greene’s
    Amended Request for Injunctive Relief:
    Mr. Greene has also similarly harassed Ms. Greene, through her
    boyfriend Jonathan Coates, by repeatedly and persistently ringing the
    doorbell, by calling attention to the fact that Mr. Greene is filming his
    interactions with Mr. Coates and carrying a weapon, by silently
    mouthing vulgarities at Mr. Coates, by making vulgar hand gestures at
    Mr. Coates, and by taunting Mr. Coates by making "kissing" noises
    with his mouth.8
    Mr. Greene did admit that there was tension between himself and Mr. Coates, but
    suggested that Mr. Coates made a point to be outside the house when Mr. Greene
    came to pick up the children in an attempt to goad Mr. Greene into a physical
    altercation. Mr. Greene also suggested at trial (though not in his pleadings) that if
    an injunction was needed, it should be directed at Ms. Greene and Mr. Coates,
    “especially Mr. Coates, who has been told not to be present at the exchanges, but
    makes it a point to be present and harass Mr. Greene.”
    Additionally, Ms. Greene’s request for injunction presented the question for
    the trial court to consider an appropriate course of action which would make
    custody exchanges run more smoothly for the benefit of the children when Ms.
    Greene claimed, “Due to the fact that Mr. Greene has so harassed Ms. Greene and
    8
    Both Mr. Coates and Ms. Greene admitted that they never actually saw Mr. Greene carrying a weapon
    during custody exchanges, and the court noted that with the exception of one video showing Mr. Greene
    “flipping the bird” and waiving, the evidence introduced by Ms. Greene did not show Mr. Greene
    engaging in the other behavior complained of. Furthermore, when Ms. Greene introduced the prior
    mentioned video into evidence, it was discovered that Ms. Greene could not personally attest to what was
    being said in the video because she did not hear it. Mr. Coates was the only one who was personally
    present at the time.
    19-CA-37                                           17
    Mr. Coates during changes in custody of the parties' minor children, the children
    have been forced to witness some or all of these instances of harassment.”
    It is clear that the trial court’s order that Mr. Coates be kept away from the
    exchanges was responsive to the “averments of the pleadings and the evidence.”
    See Buchert v. Buchert, 93-1819 (La. App. 1 Cir. 8/26/94), 
    642 So.2d 300
    , 303.
    The next issue is whether the order is proper as written.
    Ms. Greene argues that the order is an impermissible adjudication of a non-
    party’s rights. Mr. Greene defends the order by construing it as requiring Ms.
    Greene to ensure that Mr. Coates is not present at the site of custody exchanges,
    wherever they might occur.
    According to La. C.C.P. art. 2002, a judgment rendered against a defendant
    who has not been served and who has not waived objection to jurisdiction is an
    absolute nullity. It is a settled notion that a judgment rendered against an entity
    which is not a party to the suit is an error of law requiring reversal of the judgment.
    Reed v. La. Bd. of Pharmacy, 96-1792 (La. App. 1 Cir. 9/19/97). 
    700 So.2d 926
    ,
    928. See In re Succession of Banks, 11-26 (La. App. 5 Cir. 6/29/11); 
    71 So.3d 1086
    , 1097 (“a judgment cannot determine the rights or award relief to persons or
    entities who are not parties to the litigation”).
    No petition or third-party demand names Mr. Coates as a party to the
    litigation. Therefore, Ms. Greene’s interpretation of the order as enjoining Mr.
    Coates would render the order unlawful, given that Mr. Coates is not a party.
    However, Ms. Greene’s interpretation provides only one reasonable reading of the
    order’s language. The order is not sufficiently clear as to totally foreclose the
    reasonableness of Mr. Greene’s interpretation of the order’s language as enjoining
    Ms. Greene from allowing Mr. Coates to be present at custody exchanges.
    Louisiana jurisprudence provides the following guidance regarding how to
    construe the language of a judgment when it is unclear:
    19-CA-37                                    18
    In construing a judgment, the entire context must be considered, and in
    the event of doubt or ambiguity, it is proper to consider the pleadings,
    subject matter of the suit, reasons for judgment, and other matters of
    record in order to arrive at an interpretation consistent with a proper
    decree on the facts and law presented. Dodd v. Dodd, 
    568 So.2d 1134
    ,
    1138 (La. Ct. App. 1990) (emphasis added); In re Succession of Beard,
    13-1717 (La. App. 1 Cir. 6/6/14), 
    147 So.3d 753
    , 760 (citing Williams
    La Firm v. Board of Supervisors of Louisiana State University, 03-0079
    (La. App. 1 Cir. 4/2/04), 
    878 So.2d 557
    , 565; State, Dep't of Transp. &
    Dev. v. Sugarland Ventures, Inc., 
    476 So.2d 970
    , 974 (La. App. 1 Cir.
    1985), writ denied, 
    478 So.2d 909
     (La.1985).
    A provision in a judgment should also be interpreted so that it is “consistent with
    the other (unambiguous) provisions in the same judgment, and such that the
    judgment as a whole is consistent with the evidence in the record.” Palermo v.
    Port of New Orleans, 04-1804 (La. App. 4 Cir. 1/19/07), 
    951 So.2d 425
    , 433, writ
    denied, 07-0363 (La. 6/13/07), 
    957 So.2d 1289
    . Also, interpretations of
    judgments, like interpretations of statutes, should avoid a construction that would
    lead to absurd results. “The ruling should be interpreted in such a manner as to
    render its meaning rational, reasonable, and logical.” State v. 
    Thompson, 16
    -0409
    (La. App. 4 Cir. 11/23/16), 
    204 So.3d 1019
    , 1030.
    Construed as directing Ms. Greene, rather than Mr. Coates, to take action,
    the order would be an appropriate exercise of the court’s jurisdiction, given that
    Ms. Greene is a party to the litigation. The fact that Mr. Greene’s interpretation of
    the order is the only one under which the order would be legally “proper” favors
    selecting that interpretation over the alternative. In light of the record as a whole,
    construing the order as being directed toward Ms. Greene would be more
    consistent with the proceedings because, up until the judgment, only Mr. Greene’s
    and Ms. Greene’s rights had been subject to adjudication. It makes little sense to
    suppose that the court, in rendering the order, was attempting, for the first and only
    time in the course of litigation, to adjudicate the rights of Mr. Coates. Therefore,
    Mr. Greene’s interpretation of the order is the more rational and logical of the two
    choices as well.
    19-CA-37                                  19
    Common sense would suggest the trial court obviously meant for the order
    to be understood as directive to Ms. Greene, given that Louisiana courts have
    routinely placed similar requirements on parties to a divorce when the presence of
    a party’s non-party significant other has proved disruptive to the best interest of the
    parties’ children.
    For example, in Howard v. Oden the Second Circuit heard a mother’s appeal
    of a trial court order holding her in contempt for her repeated failure to follow the
    court’s order disallowing contact between her children and her then boyfriend.
    44,191 (La. App. 2 Cir. 2/25/09); 
    5 So.3d 989
    , writ denied, 09-0965 (La. 6/26/09)
    
    11 So.3d 496
     (Mem). The requirement: “Mother shall allow no contact
    whatsoever between the children and her current boyfriend, Chad Smith. He is not
    to be allowed in the home if any of the children are present. He is not to speak to
    the children by phone or in writing” fell within the purview of the court to issue
    given that the penalty for the order’s violation was imposed against the mother, not
    the third party. Likewise, if the order in this case was clearly directed toward Ms.
    Greene, and Mr. Coates continued to be present at custody exchanges in violation
    of the order, Mr. Greene would be able to file a motion for contempt against Ms.
    Greene.9
    In State ex rel. H.H., a mother assigned error to a juvenile court judgment
    which barred all contact between the children and the mother’s former husband
    (C.K.) based on substantiated allegations that he had sexually abused the children.
    
    2009 WL 3447389
    , 09-0073 (La. App. 1 Cir. 10/27/09). The mother also assigned
    error to the juvenile court’s extension of the no-contact order to forbid contact of
    the children with J.K., C.K.’s mother, following C.K.’s death. The Mother argued
    that the juvenile court abused its discretion in both imposing the no-contact order
    9
    This Court recognizes that if the order’s language were upheld as written, any attempt to enforce the
    order by filing a motion for contempt against Mr. Coates would be futile because he is not a defendant in
    the litigation at issue.
    19-CA-37                                           20
    against C.K., given that hearsay evidence against him was improperly considered;
    and also by extending the order to J.K., given that she was never accused of
    harming or posing any danger to the children whatsoever.
    In upholding the no-contact order against C.K., the court explained that,
    even if the trial court improperly heard hearsay evidence, the order could not be
    disturbed because “after considering all of the other admissible testimony and
    evidence presented in this case . . . we [could not] conclude that the juvenile
    court’s ruling was manifestly erroneous.” 
    Id.
     Likewise, with regard to its decision
    to uphold the order’s extension to J.K., the court explained that it could not find
    that the ruling was “unreasonable or not in the best interest of the children, and [the
    court was] unable to say that [the lower court’s ruling] was clearly wrong.” 
    Id.
     In
    that neither C.K. nor J.K. were parties to the litigation, State ex rel. H.H. could be
    interpreted as affirming the proposition that, when the best interest of children is
    involved in the dispute, the trial court is vested with jurisdiction to issue orders that
    “determine the rights” of non-parties, if only indirectly.
    Another fairly common order in divorce cases restrains both parties to the
    divorce from having any sexual partner in the house while the children are present.
    See e.g., Morris v. Morris, 04-676 (La. App. 5 Cir. 11/30/04); 
    889 So.2d 1048
    ,
    1050, writ denied, 2004-3185 (La. 3/11/05); 
    896 So.2d 68
    .
    Because the law supports an order directing Ms. Greene to ensure that Mr.
    Coates is not present at custody exchanges of the parties’ children, this Court does
    not find that the trial court was without jurisdiction to issue the order. However,
    because the order is improper as written, the portion of the order stating, “Mr.
    Coates, Peyton Greene’s boyfriend, shall not be present during any custody
    exchanges at any location” is hereby vacated. This Court renders judgment as
    follows: It is hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed that both LANDON
    RONALD GREENE and PEYTON PETTIT GREENE shall ensure that only
    19-CA-37                                   21
    Landon Ronald Greene, Peyton Pettit Greene, and the children are present at
    custody exchanges except as necessary in the case of an emergency situation or in
    extraordinary circumstances.
    Motion for Contempt
    (Appellant’s Assignments of Error Nos. 3 & 5)
    Ms. Greene further argues that the trial court committed legal error when it
    determined that Ms. Greene sought to have Mr. Greene held in criminal contempt
    of court, as opposed to civil contempt, for his failure to immediately take
    affirmative action to assist in retrieving the $93,600 tax credit from the IRS or
    having it re-assigned to Ms. Greene. In doing so, Ms. Greene argues that the trial
    court examined the facts under the more stringent burden of proof beyond a
    reasonable doubt when the correct burden should have been by a preponderance of
    the evidence. This Court finds that the trial court applied the wrong burden of
    proof to the facts, but a de novo review of the facts results in no change to the
    verdict.
    Appellate Jurisdiction
    First, Mr. Greene questions whether an appeal from the dismissal of the
    motion for contempt is proper. Mr. Greene cites Legrand v. Legrand, 
    455 So.2d 705
     (La. App. 5 Cir. 8/28/1984), for the proposition that the trial Court’s refusal to
    hold Mr. Greene in contempt of court is a non-appealable judgment. Mr. Greene is
    mistaken in his reliance on Legrand for the following reasons.
    The court in Legrand did not hold that an appeal from a contempt judgment
    was per se non-appealable. Prior to 1999, a contempt judgment was generally
    considered an interlocutory decree which would only be subject to review using
    the procedure of application for supervisory writ. See In re Jones, 10-66 (La. App.
    5 Cir. 11/9/10), 
    54 So.3d 54
    , 57 citing Stiltner v. Stiltner, 00-79 (La. App. 4 Cir.
    11/8/00), 
    772 So.2d 909
    , 910; Leblanc v. Leblanc, 
    404 So.2d 530
    , 532 n.4 (La.
    19-CA-37                                  
    22 App. 4
     Cir. 09/15/81). However, the 1999 amendments to La. C.C.P. art. 1915
    designate certain types of judgments as final and appealable. La. C.C.P. art.
    1915(A)(6); See In re Jones, 
    54 So.3d at 57
    . Among the enumerated judgments are
    “when the court imposes sanctions or disciplinary actions pursuant to Article 191,
    863, or 864 or Code of Evidence Article 510(G).” La. C.C.P. art. 1915(A)(6).
    Article 191 describes the inherent power of the court, including the power to
    punish for contempt. In re Jones, 
    54 So.3d at 58
    . Articles 863, 864 and 510(G)
    also refer to contempt or sanctions. 
    Id.
     Thus, courts have relied upon Article
    1915(A)(6) as a basis for determining that a contempt judgment is a final judgment
    under La. C.C.P. art. 2083(A). See 
    id.
    A judgment that determines the merits in whole or in part is a final
    judgment. La. C.C.P. art. 1841. Courts have held that direct appeals from
    contempt proceedings are appropriate when the purpose of the proceedings is to
    hold someone in contempt for violating the orders of the court because, in that
    case, the judgment would be final. 
    Id.,
     Pittman Const. Co., Inc. v. Pittman, 96-
    1079 (La. App. 4 Cir. 3/12/97), 
    691 So.2d 268
    , 269, writ denied, 97-0960 (La.
    5/16/97), 
    693 So.2d 803
    ; see Thibodeaux v. Thibodeaux, 99-618 (La. App. 5 Cir.
    11/10/99), 
    748 So.2d 1180
    , 1181.
    The object of the proceedings in this case was to determine whether Mr.
    Greene should be held in contempt for violating a consent judgment entered into
    by the parties upon dissolution of marriage. Once the consent judgment was
    signed by the trial judge it became a valid order of the court, the violation of which
    is punishable by contempt. In re Jones, 
    54 So.3d at 68
    ; Parish of Jefferson v.
    Lafreniere Park Foundn., 98-345 (La. App. 5 Cir. 9/15/98), 
    720 So.2d 359
    , 363–
    64, writ denied, 98-2598 (La.10/28/98), 
    723 So.2d 965
    . The trial court’s dismissal
    of the motion for contempt was actually a determination on the merits as to
    19-CA-37                                  23
    whether Mr. Greene had violated a court order. Therefore, the judgment on the
    motion for contempt is appealable as a final judgment.
    Standard of Review
    The following rules have been established for the review of contempt
    judgments. The Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure defines contempt of court as
    “any act or omission tending to obstruct or interfere with the orderly administration
    of justice, or to impair the dignity of the court or respect for its authority.” La.
    C.C.P. art. 221. A trial court is vested with great discretion when deciding whether
    a party should be held in contempt of court. State v. Mitchell, 15-169 (La. App. 5
    Cir. 10/28/15), 
    178 So.3d 203
    , 206. The trial court’s decision “to hold a party or
    an attorney in contempt of court is subject to review under the abuse of discretion
    standard.” 
    Id. at 205
    .
    However, when the trial court’s decision is based on an erroneous
    application of law, its decision is not entitled to deference on review. Lawrence v.
    Lawrence, 02-1066 (La. App. 3 Cir. 3/5/03), 
    839 So.2d 1201
    , 1202. If the trial
    court makes a reversible error of law, the reviewing court must examine the record
    de novo for the facts and render a judgment on the merits. 
    Id.
     at 1202–03. The
    applicable burden of proof is a question of law. See Barnett v. Barnett, 15-766
    (La. App. 5 Cir. 5/26/16), 
    193 So.3d 460
    , 466, writ denied, 16-1205 (La.
    10/10/16), 
    207 So.3d 406
    .
    Burden of Proof
    Contempt may be either direct or constructive, criminal or civil. Direct
    contempt is committed in the presence of the court while constructive contempt is
    conducted outside the presence of the court and includes willful disobedience of
    any lawful judgment, order, mandate, writ, or process of the court. La. C.C.P. arts.
    222 & 224(2). Mr. Greene was accused of violating orders of the court contained
    19-CA-37                                   24
    within the consent judgments governing the parties’ divorce. As mentioned above,
    the consent judgment is a judgment of the court which is punishable by contempt.
    Therefore, Ms. Greene’s motion asked the court to find Mr. Greene guilty of
    constructive contempt.
    A contempt proceeding may be either civil or criminal in nature depending
    on the court’s purpose when imposing sentence. Billiot v. Billiot, 01-1298 (La.
    1/25/02), 
    805 So.2d 1170
    , 1173 (citing Shillitani v. United States, 
    384 U.S. 364
    ,
    370 (1996)). If the purpose of the court is to force compliance with an order, the
    contempt proceeding is a civil matter, but if the purpose is to punish the
    disobedience of a court order, the proceeding is criminal. Id.; Mitchell, 
    178 So.3d at 206
    . Both parties point to Trost v. O’Connor for instructions on how to
    determine whether a contempt proceeding is civil or criminal:
    “If it is for civil contempt the punishment is remedial, and for the
    benefit of the complainant. But if it is for criminal contempt the
    sentence is punitive, to vindicate the authority of the court.” The
    character of the relief imposed is thus ascertainable by applying a few
    straightforward rules. If the relief provided is a sentence of
    imprisonment, it is remedial if “the defendant stands committed unless
    and until he performs the affirmative act required by the court’s order,”
    and is punitive if “the sentence is limited to imprisonment for a definite
    period.” If the relief provided is a fine, it is remedial when it is paid to
    the complainant, and punitive when it is paid to the court, though a fine
    that would be payable to the court is also remedial when the defendant
    can avoid paying the fine simply by performing the affirmative act
    required by the court’s order. 06-1281 (La. App. 3 Cir. 4/4/07), 
    955 So.2d 246
    , 254 n.3, citing Hicks v. Feiock, 
    485 U.S. 624
    , 631–32; 
    108 S.Ct. 1423
    ; 
    99 L.Ed.2d 721
     (1988).
    Ms. Greene’s Expedited Motion for Contempt asked the court to
    “punish [Mr. Greene] by a fine and imprisonment until he complies” and
    “order him to refund Ms. Greene all funds owed to her, including all fines
    and penalties until paid in full.”10 Strictly considering the nature of the
    10
    Practically speaking, if the trial court found Mr. Greene in contempt of court and ordered that he be
    imprisoned until he complied with the consent judgment, his sentence would have been completed before
    it began. At the time of the hearing on the motion, Mr. Greene had done everything he was required to do
    to comply with the orders of the judgment. Also, any fines or attorney fees awarded would look like
    19-CA-37                                          25
    remedy asked for in Ms. Greene’s motion for contempt, the proceeding and
    the punishment sought was civil in nature because monetary relief was to be
    paid to the complainant and any confinement was to last only until Mr.
    Greene performed as ordered.11
    The burden of proof for civil contempt is by a preponderance of the
    evidence. In re Jones, 
    54 So.3d at 67
    . Having determined that the trial
    judge erred in determining that Ms. Greene asked the court to hold Mr.
    Greene in criminal contempt, this Court reviews the evidence de novo under
    the appropriate standard of proof.
    Discussion
    A judgment of constructive contempt must be based on a finding that
    there was an intentional, knowing, and purposeful violation of a court order
    by the accused without a justifiable excuse. Torres v. Torres, 11-156 (La.
    App. 5 Cir. 10/25/11), 
    77 So.3d 423
    , 425, writ denied, 11-2591 (La. 3/2/12),
    
    83 So.3d 1045
    . A litigant should not be held in contempt of court unless he
    has been given a direct order by the court and has willfully disobeyed or
    refused to honor it, even if the litigant’s acts tend to frustrate the opposing
    litigant. In re Jones, 54 So.3d at 67–68. This is true whether the proof is by
    a preponderance of the evidence or beyond a reasonable doubt. A review of
    the record reveals that Ms. Greene failed to prove this element of contempt
    under the correct burden.
    Ms. Greene’s motion for contempt states, “[t]he act of Defendant
    taking credit or receiving a refund check to which he knows he is not
    punitive remedies at the time of the hearing but might have been aimed at forcing compliance at the time
    the contempt motion was filed.
    11
    While at least one Louisiana court has found that the evidence was required to satisfy the burden of
    proof for criminal contempt based on the fact that the “defendants’ obvious purpose in seeking to hold
    Ms. Rogers and her counsel in contempt was to punish them,” Rogers v. Dickens, 06-0898 (La. App. 1
    Cir. 2/9/07), 
    959 So.2d 940
    , 947, the instruction of Hicks v. Feiok requires looking at the character of the
    remedy itself rather than the underlying purpose behind it. 485 U.S. at 635-36.
    19-CA-37                                             26
    entitled and thereafter failing to promptly resolve the issue is prohibited by
    the Consent Judgment.” But the record reveals that the credit that was
    applied to Mr. Greene’s social security number was not applied as a result of
    any “act” on the part of Mr. Greene. Mr. Greene specifically informed the
    accountant who was going to prepare his 2016 taxes that the entire credit
    belonged to Ms. Greene, and his taxes were filed as he instructed, with no
    attempt to claim the credit.
    The only “act” that resulted in Mr. Greene being credited with the tax
    overage was the act of the IRS in accordance with its policy of allotting any
    such tax credits to the person listed as “taxpayer” on the joint return, which
    happened to be Mr. Greene. In fact, the record shows that neither party was
    aware that the credit had not been assigned to Ms. Greene until Ms. Greene
    received notice from the IRS that she owed money in an amount equal to the
    credit she tried to claim.12
    Also, at the time the motion for contempt was filed, Mr. Greene had
    not “received” a refund check. Tommy Doussan’s emails summarizing a
    conversation he had with the IRS on Mr. Greene’s behalf confirm that the
    IRS, having received no instruction from Mr. Greene regarding the money,
    held onto it until October 11, 2017, when they issued a refund check to Mr.
    Greene. By that time Mr. Greene had already received instructions from the
    IRS on how to have the credit transferred to Ms. Greene’s account. He
    followed those instructions.
    12
    While Ms. Greene points out that Mr. Greene had received prior notices from the IRS seeking
    directions from him regarding the refund, Ms. Greene simultaneously argues that the notice she received
    at the end of July, also marked the third notice, marked the first time she became aware of the
    discrepancy. This Court is not in a position to judge a witnesses’ credibility. On the face of the record,
    Mr. Greene’s explanation that he had moved and was not accustomed to checking the mail that arrived at
    his physical address, in light of the fact that he gave out a P.O. Box as his mailing address, is as
    reasonable as Ms. Greene’s explanation that she had not received prior notices from the IRS due to the
    fact that she moved to a new residence in May of 2017.
    19-CA-37                                            27
    This Court finds that the language declaring that Mr. Greene “shall
    promptly endorse” future additional checks made payable to both parties or
    for tax refunds that belong to Ms. Greene is a direct order such that, had Mr.
    Greene been in possession of a check from the IRS for the tax credit at issue
    at the time the contempt motion was filed, he would be guilty of contempt
    for not endorsing the check over to Ms. Greene.13 This Court also finds that
    language to the effect that Ms. Greene “shall immediately receive full
    ownership and possession” of any such funds is clear enough that, had Mr.
    Greene attempted in any way to negotiate those funds from the IRS with the
    intention of keeping them for himself (i.e., if he had claimed the credit on his
    taxes or, in the event that he received one of the IRS notices asking what to
    do with the funds, had directed the agency to send the check to him with no
    intention of handing it over to Ms. Greene), he could properly be held in
    contempt of court.
    However, Ms. Greene argues that Mr. Greene knowingly,
    intentionally, purposefully, and without excuse violated the order of the
    court that Ms. Greene “shall immediately receive full ownership and
    possession of all funds in question” by not acting as quickly as Ms. Greene
    and her counsel thought he should. Even if this Court were to find that the
    aforementioned language imposes a duty on Mr. Greene to call the IRS and
    attempt to retrieve or reassign the credit for Ms. Greene’s benefit, it is
    unlikely that the language is clear enough to charge Mr. Greene with
    knowing that the duty existed and making a conscious decision to disregard
    the order. However, assuming there was a duty and that Mr. Greene was
    aware, a de novo review of the record establishes that Ms. Greene did not
    13
    Mr. Greene did not promptly endorse the refund check he eventually received from the IRS because,
    according to the instructions he received from the IRS, doing so would result in fines and penalties
    against Ms. Greene.
    19-CA-37                                          28
    prove that Mr. Greene knowingly and purposefully defied the court order by
    a preponderance of the evidence.
    Ms. Greene contacted Mr. Greene on or about August 8, 2017, after
    receiving notice from the IRS that she owed an amount in excess of $93,600
    relating to her 2016 tax return. He assured her that he was not aware of any
    credit being applied to his social security number. On August 8, 2017,
    counsel for Ms. Greene contacted Mr. Greene by phone and email regarding
    the overpayment which should have been applied to Ms. Greene’s return.
    Counsel asked Mr. Greene to contact the IRS and inquire as to whether the
    credit had been applied to him and, if so, what needed to be done to have the
    credit transferred to Ms. Greene. Mr. Greene testified that he was out of
    town at the time of this conversation and advised Ms. Greene’s counsel that
    he would investigate the situation when he returned home.
    Ms. Greene argues that from August 8, 2017, when Mr. Greene
    received notice that the tax credit might inadvertently have been applied to
    his social security number, until September 25, 2017, when Mr. Greene was
    served with the motion for contempt, he did nothing to try to resolve the
    situation in Ms. Greene’s favor. The record does not support this contention.
    On August 22, 2017, Mr. Greene responded to an email from Ms.
    Greene’s counsel asking if he had had any luck resolving the situation. He
    told her that he planned to meet with an accountant the following Tuesday.
    On September 14, 2017, Mr. Greene emailed Tommy Doussan, the
    accountant who eventually helped him resolve the situation, asking Doussan
    to call him about an “IRS Refund Issue” and including the contact
    information for Ms. Greene’s counsel in the body of the email. On
    September 19, 2017, Mr. Greene emailed Ms. Greene’s counsel to give her
    an update. He mentioned that he had not been able to meet with his
    19-CA-37                                 29
    accountant “in the past few weeks due to the weather, his [the accountant’s]
    busy schedule and having to go to Florida due to my mother being placed in
    the hospital.” However, the email refers to the fact that Mr. Doussan had
    been in contact with Ms. Greene’s counsel about the issue and that Mr.
    Doussan had given Mr. Greene a different number to call because Mr.
    Greene had not been able to speak to anyone when he called the local IRS
    number.14
    Ms. Greene filed her expedited motion for contempt on September 20,
    2017, and Mr. Greene was served on September 25, 2017. A text message
    from Mr. Greene to Tommy Doussan on September 25, 2017 asked Mr.
    Doussan to call Mr. Greene. Mr. Doussan indicated he was not available to
    talk until the next day but that he would call Mr. Greene then. On
    September 27, 2017, Mr. Greene sent another email to Mr. Doussan seeking
    his help resolving the issue. At that point, Mr. Doussan sent a power of
    attorney for Mr. Greene to sign allowing Mr. Doussan to speak with the IRS
    personally on behalf of Mr. Greene. On September 28, 2017, Mr. Doussan
    sent an email to Mr. Greene summarizing his conversation with the IRS.
    Mr. Greene informed Ms. Greene’s counsel of the instructions he received
    from the IRS and asked them to send him the statement to sign indicating
    that the money should be credited to Ms. Greene’s account. On October 11,
    2017, Mr. Greene received the refund check and did exactly as instructed by
    the IRS.
    Conclusion
    The record does not support Ms. Greene’s contention that Mr. Greene
    waited “months” to perform any act calculated to reassign the tax credit to
    14
    This Court recognizes that Mr. Greene admitted to not calling the IRS between August 8, 2017 and
    September 13, 2017 in his answers to interrogatories propounded by Ms. Greene.
    19-CA-37                                          30
    Ms. Greene. Nor does the record support the contention that Ms. Greene
    was forced to file a motion for contempt before Mr. Greene took any steps to
    resolve the problem. While there is evidence that a solution to the problem
    was reached within days of Ms. Greene filing her Expedited Motion for
    Contempt, it does not follow that Mr. Greene did not attempt to resolve the
    situation until he received notice that the contempt motion had been filed.
    The record shows that approximately seven weeks passed between the date
    Mr. Greene received a request to contact the IRS to have the credit
    reassigned and the date Mr. Greene received instructions from the IRS about
    how to perfect the reassignment.
    The consent judgment ordered Mr. Greene to “promptly endorse”
    refund checks he received and contained language that Ms. Greene “shall
    immediately receive full ownership and possession” of such funds. Mr.
    Greene acted promptly once he received a refund check from the IRS.
    Furthermore, Ms. Greene’s ownership of the funds was never in question as
    far as Mr. Greene was concerned, and her possession was admittedly
    delayed but never denied. This Court is not prepared to interpret the word
    “immediately” so literally as to characterize a few weeks delay as an
    intentional, knowing, and purposeful violation of the court order at issue.
    The judgment dismissing/denying the motion for contempt is affirmed.
    Request for Injunction Against Harassment
    (Appellant’s Assignments of Error Nos. 4 & 6)
    Finally, Ms. Greene alleges that the trial court committed legal error in its
    adjudication of her “Amended Request for Injunctive Relief Prohibiting
    Harassment Pursuant to La. R.S. 9:372.1,” by requiring that Ms. Greene satisfy the
    burden of proof for injunctive relief under La. C.C.P. art. 3601. Finding no error in
    19-CA-37                                 31
    this portion of the trial judgment, this Court affirms the dismissal of the request for
    injunctive relief.
    Ms. Greene filed her request for injunctive relief citing La. C.C.P. art. 3944
    in conjunction with La. R.S. 9:372.1. Pursuant to La. C.C.P. art. 3944, “[e]ither
    party to an action for divorce may obtain injunctive relief as provided in Part V of
    Chapter 1 of Code Title V of Code Book I of Title 9 (R.S. 9:371 et seq.) of the
    Revised Statutes without bond.” La. R.S. 9:372.1 provides, “[i]n a proceeding for
    divorce, a court may grant an injunction prohibiting a spouse from harassing the
    other spouse.” Ms. Greene suggests that the injunctions referenced in La. C.C.P.
    art. 3944 are issued as a matter of law and require no showing of irreparable injury,
    loss, or damage: the standard for seeking an injunction pursuant to La. C.C.P. art.
    3601.15 At least while the divorce is pending, Ms. Greene’s premise is true. For
    example, La. R.S. 9:371 allows for an injunction to prevent alienation and
    encumbrance of community property, and the party seeking an injunction is not
    required to prove that alienation or encumbrance is contemplated or imminent.
    Ms. Greene cites, Hendrick v. Hendrick, to argue that Article 3944 “contemplates
    allowing injunctive relief as long as the necessity for it continues, regardless of
    whether it was requested prior to or after the judgment of divorce.” 
    470 So.2d 449
    ,
    457 (La. App. 1 Cir. 5/29/85).
    However, Mr. Greene correctly argued that La. R.S. 9:372.1 does not grant
    the trial court authority to issue an injunction against harassment after the
    15
    Ms. Greene argues on appeal that the trial court, having twice denied Mr. Greene’s peremptory
    exception of no right of action, in which he claimed that La. R.S. 9:372.1 was only applicable during the
    pendency of a divorce proceeding, the court was restrained by the “law of the case” doctrine from holding
    Ms. Greene to the higher burden of proof required by La. C.C.P. art. 3601. An exception of no right of
    action is a peremptory exception which, if granted, declares the plaintiff’s claim legally non-existent due
    to the fact that the plaintiff is not included within the class of persons to which the law grants a cause of
    action. See Hershberger v. LKM Chinese, L.L.C., 14-1079 (La. App. 4 Cir. 5/20/15), 
    172 So.3d 140
    , 143.
    The “law of the case” doctrine does not prevent a trial court from reconsidering a decision to overrule a
    peremptory exception. Med. Review Panel Proceedings v. Ochsner Clinic Found., 17-488 (La. App. 5
    Cir. 3/14/18), 
    241 So.3d 1226
    , 1229, writ denied sub nom. In re Med. Review Panel Proceedings, 18-
    0594 (La. 6/1/18), 
    244 So. 3d 435
    ; see La. C.C.P. art. 928. However, the court did not grant an exception
    of no right of action. The trial court considered whether Ms. Greene’s facts met the applicable burden of
    proof set out in La. C.C.P. art. 3601.
    19-CA-37                                             32
    judgment of divorce is entered. When Hendrick was decided in 1985, La. C.C.P.
    art. 3944 read, “[e]ither party to an action for separation from bed and board or
    divorce may obtain injunctive relief without bond prohibiting the other party from
    disposing of or encumbering community property.” The court in Hendrick
    considered only whether an injunction preventing alienation or encumbrance of
    community property could be issued subsequent to the judgment of divorce. 470
    So.2d at 457. The court found that the injunction remained necessary because the
    community property had not yet been inventoried or partitioned. 
    Id.
    Injunctions issued pursuant to La. R.S. 9:372 and 9:372.1 are incidental to
    proceedings for divorce or separation. See Walters v. Walters, 
    540 So.2d 1026
    ,
    1029 (La. App. 2 Cir.2/22/89); Steele v. Steele, 
    591 So.2d 810
    , 812 (La. App. 3
    Cir. 12/18/91); Lawrence v. Lawrence, 02-1066 (La. App. 3 Cir. 3/5/03), 
    839 So.2d 1201
    , 1203. Therefore, injunctions issued during the pendency of the
    proceeding, but not specifically continued or ordered in the later judgment,
    terminate by operation of law at the time of the final judgment. Walters, 540 So.2d
    at 1029; Steele, 591 So.2d at 812.
    Additionally, the statute’s plain language applies to spouses involved in a
    proceeding for divorce. See Lawrence, 839 So.2d at 1203. Because other statutes
    dealing with divorce specifically state that a party can act “[i]n a proceeding for
    divorce, or thereafter,” the Lawrence court concluded that the legislature intended
    that the injunctive relief provided for in La. R.S. 9:372 was not available to the
    plaintiff years after the judgment of divorce was entered.
    In the context of community property, the issuance of an injunction to
    prevent alienation or encumbrance after the final judgment of divorce may still be
    necessary, and it still makes sense to impose little to no burden on the spouse
    seeking the injunction. The parties are in the same position post-divorce as they
    were prior to the judgment when the property remains unseparated. More
    19-CA-37                                  33
    importantly, the window for the application of La. R.S. 9:371 (injunctions against
    alienation and encumbrance of community property) is not indefinite. The same
    justifications are not present in the context of injunctions against abuse and
    harassment.
    Ms. Greene seeks to avail herself of La. R.S. 9:372.1 based on the fact that
    there are still unresolved issues in her divorce: the motion for contempt relates to
    community property, and the alleged harassment began before the divorce was
    final. However, Mr. Greene and Ms. Greene are parties to consent judgments
    which govern their post-divorce relationship. The final consent judgment states
    that all property issues are resolved between the parties and assigns duties going
    forward to deal with any other issues that may arise. The judgment of divorce was
    entered in this case over three years ago. The “necessity” contemplated in
    Hendrick is not present in this case. There is no reason why Ms. Greene should be
    entitled to an injunction against harassment without satisfying the burden of proof
    required under La. C.C.P. art. 3601 three years after the divorce judgment. The
    trial court was correct in finding that Ms. Greene could seek an injunction against
    Mr. Greene but only if she did so under the appropriate statute, La. C.C.P. art.
    3601.
    To obtain an injunction pursuant to La. C.C.P. art. 3601, a plaintiff must
    typically prove by a preponderance of the evidence that irreparable injury, loss, or
    damage will likely result if the injunction is not granted. La. C.C.P. art. 3601;
    Lassalle v. Daniels, 96-0176 (La. App. 1 Cir. 5/10/96), 
    673 So.2d 704
    , 708, writ
    denied, 96-1463 (La. 9/20/96), 
    679 So.2d 435
    . Irreparable injury or loss is that
    which cannot be compensated by money damages or measured by pecuniary
    standards. See Guilbeaux v. Guilbeaux, 08-17 (La. App. 3rd Cir. 4/30/08), 
    981 So.2d 913
    , 917–18. For that reason, courts often refuse to issue an injunction
    when there is another adequate legal remedy. Id.; Lassalle, 673 So.2d at 709. A
    19-CA-37                                   34
    civil action in tort for damages is usually an adequate remedy that prevents courts
    from issuing injunctions against torts such as defamation and harassment. See
    Lassalle, 673 So.2d at 709–10 (upholding an injunction against defendant based on
    a showing that his defamatory and insulting speech toward plaintiff was
    accompanied by real and imminent threats to her person, but observing that the law
    would require a reversal of an injunction if the defendant’s calling the plaintiff a
    “whore” and a “slut” had merely been unfavorable, distasteful, injurious to her
    reputation, or defamatory); Guilbeaux, 981 So.2d at 917–19 (finding that plaintiff
    was not entitled to an injunction preventing her son and daughter-in-law from
    invading her privacy by continuing to come to her house asking her to drop a
    lawsuit against them after she expressed a desire to be left alone).
    However, Ms. Greene argues that the trial court erred in requiring a showing
    of irreparable injury because Mr. Greene’s behavior toward her constitutes a direct
    violation of a prohibitory law: namely, stalking, a violation of La. R.S. 14:40.2.
    Courts have held that “[a] plaintiff is entitled to injunctive relief without the
    requisite showing of irreparable injury when the conduct sought to be restrained is
    unlawful, as when the conduct sought to be enjoined constitutes a direct violation
    of a prohibitory law.”16 Louisiana State Bar Ass'n, 15 So.3d at 168; Lafreniere
    Park Found. v. Friends of Lafreniere Park, Inc., 97-152 (La. App. 5 Cir. 7/29/97),
    
    698 So.2d 449
    , 452, writ denied, 97-2196 (La. 11/21/97), 
    703 So.2d 1312
    .
    As Ms. Greene failed to object to the District Court’s statement of the
    burden at the hearing and also failed to argue a violation of La. R.S. 14:40.2 at any
    time prior to this appeal, her argument is not properly before this Court.
    Nevertheless, it is evident that the trial court considered whether Ms. Greene
    16
    Some case law suggests that a prima facie showing that the conduct is prohibited by law also results in
    the plaintiff not having to show an absence of other adequate remedies at law, another typical requirement
    for obtaining an injunction. See Louisiana State Bar Ass'n v. Carr & Associates, Inc., 08-2114 (La. App. 1
    Cir. 5/8/09), 
    15 So.3d 158
    , 168, writ denied, 09-1627 (La. 10/30/09), 
    21 So.3d 292
    .
    19-CA-37                                           35
    proved the act of harassment, as defined by Louisiana law, by a preponderance of
    the evidence and determined that she did not.
    Stalking is “the intentional and repeated following or harassing of another
    person that would cause a reasonable person to feel alarmed or to suffer emotional
    distress.” La. R.S. 14:40.2(A). It includes, as Ms. Greene quotes in her brief, “the
    intentional and repeated uninvited presence of the perpetrator at another person's
    home . . . which would cause a reasonable person to be alarmed, or to suffer
    emotional distress as a result of verbal, written, or behaviorally implied threats . . .
    bodily injury. . .” 
    Id.
     “Harassing” is defined in the statute as “the repeated pattern
    of verbal communications or nonverbal behavior without invitation which includes
    but is not limited to making telephone calls, transmitting electronic mail, sending
    messages via a third party, or sending letters or pictures.” 
    Id.
    Although Ms. Greene did not argue that Mr. Greene’s conduct constituted
    stalking during the proceedings on the request for injunctive relief, it is evident
    from the record that the judge was aware of the definition of stalking and its
    qualification as harassment under several statutes. During a hearing on Mr.
    Greene’s renewed exception of no right of action, the judge dealt directly with Mr.
    Greene’s assertion that “the actions that were stated in the petition do not rise to
    the level of harassment.” The court disagreed, stating that the actions alleged in
    Ms. Greene’s petition, if true, “may even rise to the level of . . . stalking . . . under
    the Domestic Abuse Protection Act.”
    The Domestic Abuse Assistance section (La. R.S. 46:2131 et. seq.) of the
    Protection from Family Violence Act defines “domestic abuse” as including “any
    offense against the person, physical or non-physical, as defined in the Criminal
    Code of Louisiana, except negligent injury and defamation.” La. R.S. 46:2132(3).
    Stalking is included in the list of offenses against the person in the criminal code.
    Furthermore, the language used in the District Court’s reasons for judgment
    19-CA-37                                    36
    suggest an understanding that a requirement for recovery on a claim of stalking or
    harassment is that a reasonable person would be alarmed or distressed by the
    conduct at issue.
    After Ms. Greene presented her case, the trial court made a factual
    determination that “[n]one of the evidence presented showed that Mr. Greene had
    threatened or harassed Ms. Greene in any way. The facts presented would, at best,
    be characterized as petty bickering between the parties.” Using language strongly
    correlative of the reasonable person standard, the court found that Ms. Greene’s
    subjective feelings of being threatened would not satisfy the burden of proof for an
    injunction because the law imposes an objective standard. The trial court went on
    to say of Ms. Greene, “[h]er perceived feelings of being threatened and harassed by
    Mr. Greene are not substantiated by any actual, objective evidence she presented.”
    Much of the court’s opinion is based on credibility determinations. The trial
    judge was presented with testimony from three witnesses on the issue of
    harassment. When there is conflicting testimony, “reasonable evaluations of
    credibility and reasonable inferences of fact should not be disturbed upon review,
    even though the appellate court may feel that its own evaluations and inferences
    are as reasonable.” Morris v. Morris, 04-676 (La. App. 5 Cir. 11/30/04), 
    889 So.2d 1048
    , 1054–55, writ denied, 04-3185 (La. 3/11/05), 
    896 So.2d 68
    . Only where
    “documents or objective evidence so contradict a witness’s story, or the story itself
    is so internally inconsistent or implausible on its face that a reasonable factfinder
    would not credit the witness’s story,” may the appeals court find manifest error in
    the fact determined. 
    Id.
     We find no such error in the trial judge’s choice to give
    credit to Mr. Greene’s explanations for his actions or her decision to grant less
    weight to Ms. Greene and Mr. Coates’ versions of events. Nor do we find error in
    the denial of the request for injunctive relief.
    CONCLUSION
    19-CA-37                                   37
    For the foregoing reasons, this Court finds that the trial court properly
    considered the question of whether Mr. Greene had the right to record custody
    exchanges. Based on the record, Mr. Greene was entitled to the trial court’s
    judgment declaring that neither party is precluded from recording custody
    exchanges. That portion of the judgment is affirmed.
    Likewise, the Court finds that the issue of Mr. Coates’ presence at custody
    exchanges was properly addressed by the trial court because the best interest of the
    parties’ children was necessarily at issue. However, the trial court improperly
    addressed the judgment to Mr. Coates instead of to Ms. Greene. Therefore, the
    portion of the order that reads, “Mr. Coates, Peyton Greene’s boyfriend, shall not
    be present during any custody exchanges at any location” is hereby vacated. It is
    hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed that both LANDON RONALD GREENE
    and PEYTON PETTIT GREENE shall ensure that only Landon Ronald Greene,
    Peyton Pettit Greene, and the children are present at custody exchanges except as
    necessary in the case of an emergency situation or in extraordinary circumstances.
    Regarding Ms. Greene’s motion for contempt, this Court finds that Ms.
    Greene had the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that Mr.
    Greene willfully, knowingly, and without excuse violated a direct order of the
    court declaring that Ms. Greene was to receive ownership and possession of the tax
    credit in question and that Mr. Greene was to endorse any refund checks he
    received over to Ms. Greene. Since, the trial court seemingly applied the burden of
    proof for criminal contempt, which is proof beyond a reasonable doubt, we
    reviewed the record de novo for facts demonstrating that Mr. Greene was in
    contempt of the consent judgments regarding the tax credits and refunds. The
    consent judgment did not directly order Mr. Greene to contact the IRS or take any
    affirmative action to have the tax credit reassigned to Ms. Greene once he was
    made aware of the problem. However, assuming that the duty existed, Ms. Greene
    19-CA-37                                 38
    failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that Mr. Greene intentionally
    and knowingly defied the court order by failing to accomplish the task within the
    first few days or weeks of being notified of the issue. Accordingly, the judgment
    dismissing/denying the motion for contempt is affirmed.
    Lastly, this Court finds that the trial court appropriately dismissed/denied
    Ms. Greene’s request for injunctive relief against harassment. The trial court was
    correct in determining that Ms. Greene’s request for an injunction should have
    been brought under La. C.C.P. art. 3601. Pursuant to Article 3601, Ms. Greene
    was required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that irreparable harm
    was likely to result unless the injunction was granted. The trial court’s findings of
    fact were reviewed for abuse of discretion, and the ruling stands.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND RENDERED
    19-CA-37                                  39
    SUSAN M. CHEHARDY                                                            CURTIS B. PURSELL
    CHIEF JUDGE                                                                  CLERK OF COURT
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    ROBERT A. CHAISSON                                                           SUSAN BUCHHOLZ
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Document Info

Docket Number: 19-CA-37

Judges: Danyelle M. Taylor

Filed Date: 12/11/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/21/2024