Thomasson v. Thomasson ( 1998 )


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  • CONNIE LEWIS THOMASSON                )
    (PAGE),                               )
    )
    Plaintiff/Appellee,             )   Appeal No.
    )   01-A-01-9706-CV-00273
    v.                                    )
    )   Coffee Circuit
    JOSEPH RICHARD THOMASSON,             )   No. 22,238
    )
    Defendant/Appellant.            )
    )            FILED
    July 10, 1998
    COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    Cecil W. Crowson
    Appellate Court Clerk
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR COFFEE COUNTY
    AT MANCHESTER, TENNESSEE
    THE HONORABLE GERALD L. EWELL, SR., JUDGE
    W. DAVID KELLEY
    Haynes, Hull, Rieder, & Ewell, P.A.
    214 North Atlantic Street
    Tullahoma, Tennessee 37388
    RANDALL W. MORRISON
    115 West Lincoln Street
    P. O. Box 467
    Tullahoma, Tennessee 37388
    ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE
    ROGER J. BEAN
    MARK W. BELL
    Henry, McCord, Bean &
    Miller, P.L.L.C.
    300 North Jackson Street
    P. O. Box 538
    Tullahoma, Tennessee 37388
    ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE
    OPINION
    Appellant Joseph Richard Thomasson, Jr. appeals a judgment of the
    trial court holding him to be in criminal contempt for refusal to comply with
    court ordered visitation relative to his two minor sons and his former wife,
    appellee Connie Lewis Thomasson.
    Because of failure to comply with the safeguards of Rule 42(b) of the
    Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure, the judgment of the trial court must be
    reversed.
    The parties, formerly husband and wife, are the parents of Joseph
    Richard Thomasson, now seventeen years of age, and Mark Lewis Thomasson,
    now fifteen years of age.
    The parties were divorced December 21, 1988 under a court approved
    Marital Dissolution Agreement whereby custody of the minor children was
    vested in the appellee with respect to the school year, with two weekends per
    month visitation of the children with appellant. This arrangement was reversed
    in the summer months with appellant having physical custody of the minor
    children and appellee having visitation every other weekend. The exchange of
    the children was to take place in Waverly, Tennessee, which is approximately
    halfway between the home of the appellee in Cordova, Tennessee, and the home
    of the appellant in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
    In March of 1992, the court entered an order granting custody of the
    two minor children to the appellant, Mrs. Page, with appellee, Dr. Thomasson
    having the children during the summer. The court then returned custody to Mrs.
    Page on January 1, 1993.
    For the summer of 1995 the children came to stay with their father for
    summer visitation and Mrs. Page agreed to allow the children to remain with Dr.
    Thomasson when school started in the fall of 1995. Dr. Thomasson refused to
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    file a petition for change of custody, so Mrs. Page ultimately filed a petition
    advising the court of the custody arrangement in November of 1995. One of the
    purposes of filing this petition was to set up specific visitation privileges for Mrs.
    Page.
    In July of 1996 this petition came on for hearing and resulted in an
    agreed order entered July 17, 1996, containing in relevant part, the following
    provisions:
    1. Custody of the minor children, JOSEPH
    RICHARD THOMASSON AND MARK LEWIS
    THOMASSON, shall be vested jointly in the parties, with the
    primary physical custody being vested in the Respondent,
    JOSEPH RICHARD THOMASSON, JR.
    2. During the vacation of the children from school
    in the summer, the children shall reside with the Petitioner,
    beginning the first Sunday evening after school is out. The
    Respondent shall have visitation the weekend of Father's Day
    in June and the first two (2) weeks in July. JOSEPH will be
    returned to the Respondent in time for band camp and
    MARK will be returned the              Sunday prior to the
    commencement of Petitioner's in-service.
    During the school year, the Petitioner shall have
    visitation with the minor children every other weekend
    beginning the second weekend after Mark's return to the
    Respondent before the start of school. Visitation will com-
    mence on Friday afternoon at 7:30 p.m. until 5:00 p.m. on
    Sunday (6:00 p.m. if the children do not attend school the
    following Monday). All exchanges will continue to be made
    in Waverly, both during the school year and during the
    summer as the parties have previously done. Allowances
    shall be made for football games at which Joseph plays in the
    band either by commencing visitation for both children at
    10:00 a.m. on Saturday morning or by bringing Joseph to
    Waverly on Sunday at the time of the exchange when mark
    is returned so that Joseph may also visit with the Petitioner
    at that time.
    3. The Petitioner shall have visitation from the time
    the children are out of school for Christmas vacation until
    6:00 p.m. on Christmas Day. The [c]hildren shall then be
    with the Respondent until they return to school.
    4. The major holidays of Easter and Thanksgiving
    shall continue to be alternated. The Petitioner shall have the
    children for visitation on Mother's Day weekend. The
    holiday schedule will take precedence over the every other
    weekend visitation schedule. If a holiday weekend deprives
    either party of a regularly scheduled weekend, then that
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    person shall have visitation with the children the following
    weekend and every other weekend thereafter.
    On December 31, 1996, appellee filed her petition seeking to hold the
    appellant in contempt for refusing to honor the visitation schedule set out in the
    agreed order entered July 17, 1996.
    Appellant answered the petition for contempt by denying the
    allegations thereof and on June 5, 1997 filed a counter-petition seeking
    modification of the previous visitation schedule.        In this counter-petition
    appellant alleged:
    1. Counter-Petitioner adopts the history of this
    cause as outlined and described in the Petition as filed herein.
    2. Your Counter-Petitioner would show that since
    the entering of the previous orders of this Court there has
    been a significant and substantial change of circumstance in
    that the parties' minor sons to wit: Joseph Richard
    Thomasson 16 years of age and Mark Lewis Thomasson 14
    years of age have established themselves in the "Tullahoma
    area," [sic] have acquired numerous friends and social
    relationships, are currently involved in school activities and
    otherwise and that it is not their desire, nor is it in their
    manifest best interest, to be required to spend almost all of
    their school vacation time during the summer months in
    Memphis, Tennessee with their mother, Counter-Respondent
    herein.
    Your Counter-Petitioner would show that he in no way
    wishes nor desires to interfere with the visitation as
    previously ordered by this court and does not discourage
    visitation between the parties' minor sons and Counter-
    Respondent. In fact, your Counter-Petitioner would show
    that he encourages the parties' minor sons to visit with the
    Counter-Respondent but it is not their desire to spend almost
    all of their summer vacation with Counter-Respondent in
    Memphis, Tennessee.
    3. Your Counter-Petitioner would show that the
    parties' minor sons have attempted, over the past several
    months, to contact Counter-Respondent and express their
    desire to Counter-Respondent of matters concerning
    visitation however, on more occasions than most, Counter-
    Respondent refuses to accept their telephone calls, facsimiles
    or e-mails. In fact, your Counter-Petitioner would show that
    the Counter-Respondent has had very little contact with the
    parties' minor sons over the past several months.
    4. Your Counter-Petitioner would show that it
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    would be in the interest of justice and in the manifest best
    interest of the parties' minor sons (and the parties' minor sons
    ar[e] both desirous) and Counter-Petitioner so moves this
    Honorable Court to allow said minor sons of the parties to
    testify in the Court's chambers, or otherwise, to express their
    desires to the Court with absolutely no intention to offend
    either Counter-Petitioner or Counter-Respondent by
    expressing their desires toward visitation with Counter-
    Respondent.
    Both the petition and the counter-petition came on for hearing before
    the trial court and resulted in an opinion and decree of June 20, 1997 whereby
    the trial court held appellant to be in civil contempt of court, ordered him
    confined to the Coffee County Jail for a period of ten days, and to pay a $50.00
    fine with all but 48 hours of the ten day sentence being suspended, and the
    appellant ordered to jail for a period of 48 hours, commencing June 27, 1997.
    Appellant was also ordered to pay attorney's fees to counsel for the appellee.
    Reviewing the record leading up to the civil contempt finding of June
    20, 1997, it is not difficult to understand why the learned trial judge took a dim
    view of the conduct of the appellant during the eleven months that elapsed
    between the agreed order of July 17, 1996 and the hearing in June 1997, which
    resulted in the finding of civil contempt.
    The assertion by the appellant in his counter-petition of June 5, 1997
    that: "Your counter-petitioner would show that he in no way wishes nor desires
    to interfere with the visitation as previously ordered by this court and does not
    discourage visitation between the parties' minor sons and counter-respondent,"
    is an affront to the court and completely without support in the record.
    Far more revealing is the letter written by the appellant to the appellee
    on October 4, 1996, over two months after the entry of the agreed order. In this
    letter appellant attempts to obtain through condescension what he should have
    obtained through judicial process. Says the appellant:
    . . . . We have tried to work this out and you continue to be
    difficult. This can not continue in this manner. The boys
    need to be able to have a real life. They have sent you their
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    schedules and you persist in saying that their plans are
    unimportant. Mark is part of the band program. You have
    always known that he was in the band. Why is it so difficult
    for you to accept that he is doing this?... Both boys would
    like a better visitation situation. Every other weekend is not
    going to work for them. They have never agreed with that.
    I realize that you and I agreed to that schedule but they did
    not and they do not want to be forced to cancel all of their
    activities just to satisfy our agreement.
    They both have serious conflicts with every other
    weekend. They say it is too far to go that often. They would
    much prefer being able to have the freedom to be able to call
    you up and plan visits to suit all of your needs. You have the
    school schedule and they would like to be able to tell about
    all of the other things they are doing. You could all then sit
    down a[n]d plan visits that would be pleasant for all and they
    would not feel "forced" to visit you.
    Flexibility should be applied to visits.... Let's face it,
    the boys are no longer children. They live a different life
    than they did two or three years ago. The same rules do not
    apply to teenagers as they did with 10 and 12 year olds. It
    would stand to reason that the visitation rules would also
    have to change.... Can you really say that it is in their best
    interest to have to give all this up? Don't you want the best
    for your boys? Of course you do....
    I do realize that we signed an agreement for these
    every other weekend visits. Would you be willing to change
    that agreement so that the boys will feel like they can have a
    life? They would prefer an agreement that did not specify
    certain weekends. How would you feel about that? If the
    agreement merely stated "liberal visitation". The summer is
    also going to be an issue. That will need to be changed also.
    Joseph has already expressed his intent to work this summer.
    I know you are aware of this as well. He will not be able to
    live with you the summer months as stated in the agreement.
    He wants to visit as he can arrange it. Mark of course will
    not be working but he too has expressed concerns about
    being away all summer. He is older now and does not want
    to miss all of his friends. This is another area in which you
    can not simply reverse what we did in the past. I realize that
    the boys did come and stay here all summer. They were
    younger and did not have activities as they do now. Please
    realize that this has nothing to do with you or me as their
    parents. They love us equally but we are no longer the center
    of their lives. This is a normal part of growing up. We
    would be very foolish to attempt to force them away from
    their friends and to concentrate on us. This is the time for us
    to take a back seat and watch and be proud.
    ....
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    The foregoing is but a part of the evidence heard by the trial court
    which led to the June 20, 1997 judgment of the court finding Dr. Thomasson to
    be in willful civil contempt of the agreed order of the court entered on July 17,
    1996. As said by the trial court:
    It can be gleaned from this record by implication on
    the one hand and on the other hand by statement of the oldest
    son that their father allowed these children to enroll in
    programs that he knew would interfere and in effect prevent
    the implementation of his agreement with his former wife
    and with the Court. Mrs. Page has accurately stated "I have
    had to take what I have been given and tried to make it go,"
    and as thanks for her efforts in trying to accommodate these
    wonderful young men she is in effect cast by defendant
    Thomasson as the "bad guy" from the very, very first
    weekend visitation which she did not get. Defendant
    Thomasson calls Mrs. Page's efforts to be agreeable "on-
    going negotiations" between her and the children - the Court
    does not think so. She had to take what she could get, and as
    stated by one or maybe both of the boys there were times
    when "we just could not go." They were both wrong - they
    could have gone and should have gone, and the only
    impediment to them going was their father's failure and
    refusal to insist that they do go to visit their mother.
    Up to this point, the record in this case amply supports the action of the
    trial court in finding the appellant to be in civil contempt.
    The problem starts with the sentence imposed by the court. The
    judgment provides:
    Accordingly the court finds that defendant Thomasson is in
    willful civil contempt of the agreed order entered July 17,
    1996 in that he has failed, neglected and willfully refused to
    comply therewith when he had the ability to do so, and the
    court holds and finds beyond a reasonable doubt that
    defendant Thomasson is in contempt of the agreed order of
    July 17, 1996, and orders that he be incarcerated in the
    Coffee County Jail for a period of ten (10) days and that
    appellant pay a fine of fifty dollars ($50.00) together with the
    costs of this proceeding. All but forty-eight (48) hours of
    this contempt sentence will be suspended and the defendant
    Thomasson is ordered to report to the sheriff of Coffee
    County to begin serving the aforesaid forty-eight (48) hours
    consecutively at 6:00 p.m. Friday June 27, 1997. (emphasis
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    added)
    If this is indeed a finding of civil contempt it contains no provision
    whereby the appellant may purge his contempt by compliance with the order.
    If the order finding the defendant in contempt ". . . beyond a reasonable
    doubt . . ." is intended to be criminal contempt then the safeguards of the Tenn.
    R. of Cr. P. 42(b) must have been accorded to the appellant.
    This court has held in a similar context:
    [2] The contempt of which the appellant was accused
    is clearly criminal contempt. Criminal contempts are
    punitive in nature and the purpose of criminal contempt
    proceedings is to vindicate the authority of the law and the
    court as an organ of society. Shiflet v. State, 
    217 Tenn. 690
    ,
    
    400 S.W.2d 542
     (1966). A civil contempt is one where a
    person refuses to obey a court order and punishment is
    inflicted to compel obedience; when the party has obeyed he
    or she will be discharged. In effect the contemner "carries
    the keys to the jail in his or her own pocket." Shillitani v.
    United States, 
    384 U.S. 364
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1531
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 622
    (1966).
    Crabtree v. Crabtree, 
    716 S.W.2d 923
    , 925 (Tenn. App. 1986).
    Following the entry of the June 20, 1997 order, appellant filed his
    notice of appeal.
    On June 26, 1997, without further hearing, the trial court filed its
    Supplemental Opinion as follows:
    By explanation of the Opinion and Decree entered
    herein on June 20, 1997, the Court files this Supplemental
    Opinion to clarify the holding contained in the original
    document:
    While there is a finding that the defendant Thomasson
    is in a willful civil contempt of the Agreed Order of July
    1996, in that he has failed, neglected and willfully refused to
    comply therewith when he had the ability to do so, it is
    deemed pertinent to point out at this point that holding the
    defendant in civil contempt to require him to comply with
    something which was time related, concerning which the
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    time has already past, is not appropriate. However, in
    addition the Court holds the defendant in criminal contempt
    by said Opinion and Decree pursuant to Rule 42(b) Tenn. R.
    Crim. P. for the "willful disobedience or resistance of any
    officer of the said courts, party, juror, witness, or any other
    person, to any lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or
    command of said courts," (sic) T.C.A. 29-2-102(3). Criminal
    Contempt "is intended to preserve the power and vindicate
    the dignity and authority of the court, and the court as an
    organ of society." Black v. Blount, Supreme Court No. 02-
    S01-9604-CV-00044 (Tenn. 1996). (emphasis added)
    The June 20, 1997 order unconditionally incarcerating the appellant
    imposes a punishment not available in a civil contempt proceeding.
    In the leading case of State ex rel. Anderson v. Daugherty, 
    137 Tenn. 125
    , 
    191 S.W. 974
     (Tenn. 1917), it is said as to civil contempt proceedings:
    To this class of contempt belong such an act as the refusal to
    pay alimony, as ordered . . . . If imprisonment be ordered it
    is remedial and coercive in character, having a relation to the
    compelling of the doing of something by the contemnor
    which when done will work his discharge. As has been said,
    in such case the one imprisoned "carries the keys to his
    prison in his own pocket . . . ." In Re Nevitt, 117 Fed. 451, 54
    C.C.A. 622.
    If the trial court at bar intended the contempt finding to be civil the
    unconditional sentence of incarceration must be vacated.
    This flaw in the June 20, 1997 order is implicitly recognized by the
    Supplemental Opinion entered June 26, 1997 specifically finding that civil
    contempt ". . . is not appropriate." In the Supplemental Opinion the trial court
    relying on Black v. Blount, 
    938 S.W.2d 394
     (Tenn. 1996) converts the finding
    of civil contempt into a finding of criminal contempt.
    As to criminal contempt the Supreme Court of Tennessee has held:
    . . . [T]here are two species of contempt, direct and indirect,
    which differ, among other ways in the minimal procedure
    that will satisfy the requirements of due process in the case
    of each. Direct contempt is based upon acts committed in the
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    presence of the court, and may be punished summarily.
    Indirect contempt is based upon acts not committed in the
    presence of the court, and may be punished only after the
    offender has been given notice, and the opportunity to
    respond to the charges at a hearing.
    State v. Maddux, 
    571 S.W.2d 819
    , 821 (Tenn. 1978).
    Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 42(a) deals with direct contempt
    and Rule 42(b) deals with indirect contempt. Since the contempt of the appellant
    at bar did not occur in the presence of the court the proceedings to impose
    indirect criminal contempt must comply with Rule 42(b) which provides as
    follows:
    (b) Disposition upon Notice and Hearing. -- A
    criminal contempt except as provided in subdivision (a) of
    this rule shall be prosecuted on notice. The notice shall state
    the time and place of hearing, allowing a reasonable time for
    the preparation of the defense, and shall state the essential
    facts constituting the criminal contempt charged and describe
    it as such. The notice shall be given orally by the judge in
    open court in the presence of the defendant or, on application
    of the district attorney general or of an attorney appointed by
    the court for that purpose, by an order to show cause or an
    order of arrest. The defendant is entitled to admission to bail
    as provided in these rules. If the contempt charged involves
    disrespect to or criticism of a judge, that judge is disqualified
    from presiding at the hearing except with the defendant's
    consent. Upon a verdict of finding of guilt the court shall
    enter an order fixing the punishment.
    The petition for contempt filed by the appellee and the procedure
    followed by the trial court cannot be reconciled with Rule 42(b) of the Tennessee
    Rules of Criminal Procedure. First of all the petition itself never asserts that the
    appellee was seeking a criminal contempt holding against the appellant. The
    most that the petition asks is incarceration but incarceration is compatible with
    either civil or indirect criminal contempt. The order of June 20, 1997 designates
    a civil contempt finding but contains language finding the appellant guilty
    "beyond a reasonable doubt" of contempt and imposing an unconditional
    sentence of incarceration that is only consistent with criminal contempt. As far
    as the record before this court discloses, the first notice the appellant had that he
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    was being charged with criminal contempt came with the supplemental opinion
    of the trial court on June 26, 1997, a week after all proceedings had been
    completed.
    Adding to the confusion is certain of the language used in the June 26,
    1997 order. After holding that the civil contempt requiring the appellant to
    comply with something which was time related and concerning which the time
    had already passed was "not appropriate" the trial court went on to say "however,
    in addition the court holds the defendant in criminal contempt . . . ." (emphasis
    added).
    A finding that civil contempt ". . . is not appropriate" seems
    incompatible with the ". . . in addition . . ." holding of criminal contempt.
    In summary it may be said:
    1.    The conduct of the appellant as disclosed by this
    record is unacceptable.
    2.    If civil contempt was intended by the trial court,
    unconditional incarceration cannot be imposed.
    3.    If criminal contempt was intended by the trial court the
    proceedings below were in violation of the requirements of
    rule 42(b) of the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure.
    The appellant further asserts that the trial court erred in denying the
    appellant's counter-petition to modify the existing visitation schedule to
    accommodate the realities of the lives of the parties' sons. In this counter-
    petition the appellant had asked the trial court to allow the sons of the parties to
    express their desires regarding visitation and to ". . . . modify the previous orders
    as entered herein as concerns visitation between the parties' minor sons and
    counter-respondent as the court deems equitable under the circumstances."
    Since the case must be reversed and remanded on the contempt finding,
    the trial court should be free to address again the merits of the counter-petition
    in such manner as the trial court deems proper. Indeed, this court is saddened not
    only by a Father who would claim to advocate a child's interest in a situation
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    which strongly suggests ulterior motives, but also by individuals who would
    enter an agreed order regarding the visitation and custody of mature minor
    children without considering the children's best interest and without consulting
    the children themselves. The part of the order denying the counter-petition will
    be vacated and the case remanded also as to the counter-petition.
    The trial court in the case awarded attorney's fees to the appellee. In
    view of the reversal of the contempt findings which this court feels is compelled
    by law, the award of attorney's fees to the appellee is vacated, subject to further
    consideration by the trial court on remand.
    The case is reversed and remanded to the trial court for further
    proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    Acting in its discretion the court taxes all costs of appeal against the
    appellant, Dr. Joseph Richard Thomasson.
    _____________________________
    WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE
    CONCUR:
    _________________________________
    HENRY F. TODD, PRESIDING JUDGE
    _________________________________
    WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
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