New Georgia Family Law Family Law Blog | Remboldt Law Firm, LLC
  • New GA Court Opinions
  • Resources - Books
  • Resources - More
  • About
  • Contact

Criminal contempt order requiring Rhode Island resident to pay $5K fine and be imprisoned for 200 days for her failure to comply with terms of temporary modification of parental grandparents’ visitation rights to her two children REVERSED.

Posted Oct.07, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Contempt, Custody, Grandparents, Jurisdiction, Modification, UCCJEA, Visitation

 Contempt, Jurisdiction, Modification, UCCJEA, Uniform Child Custody Jurisdicton

Criminal contempt order requiring Rhode Island resident to pay $5K fine and be imprisoned for 200 days for her failure to comply with terms of temporary modification of parental grandparents’ visitation rights to her two children REVERSED; trial court had jurisdiction over grandparents’ modification action, since initial custody determination complied with OCGA 19-9-61, children’s father still lived in Georgia, and personal jurisdiction over mother was not necessary in order to address requested modification; trial court lacked personal jurisdiction under Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Enforcement Act (UCCJEA) over mother for contempt and personal service of mother outside Georgia was invalid under circumstances;  Court relied on Ashburn v. Baker, 256 Ga. 507 (1986), which held that Georgia courts did not have personal jurisdiciton over non-risident mother, who was served outside Georgia, under either now-repealed UCCJEA or long arm statutue, and found the UCCJEA required same result; UCCJEA specifically addresses continuing jurisdiction of cusotdy issues, but not contempt issues and it did not repeal any existing statutory provisions covering divorce, custody, alimony or child support procedures; mother did not admit personal jurisdiciton when she failed to respond to discovery served with complaint, since return of service only showed that she was served with summons and complaint, not discovery; contempt order was not enforceable in Rhode Island pursuant to UCCJEA, since applicable provisions referred to custody determinations and did not includ contempt orders.

Daniels v. Barnes,  A07A1719 (03/04/08), 08 FCDR 795

Fulton County Daily Report, 03/21/2008

Share/Save
Leave a Comment

GA judgment in contempt case AFFIRMED; 21.9 acres, which surrounded parties’ 5-acre residential parcel, was not encompassed in their final judgment and divorce decree, and thus remained joint property.

Posted Aug.26, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Contempt, Divorce, Equitable Division, Settlement Agreement

 Contempt, Divorce, Settlement Agreement, Title to Land

Judgment in this contempt case AFFIRMED; 21.9 acres, which surrounded parties’ 5-acre residential parcel, was not encompassed in their final judgment and divorce decree, and thus remained joint property; trial court did not improperly modify its decree, when it clarified that its reference in in decree to marital residence at stated address meant only 5-acre tract on which parties’ home sat, and not surrounding 21.9 acres, which parties also owned; appellant’s own actions belied his contention that marital residence described both tracts of land, since parties’ agreement provided that appellant would ‘
refinance the marital residence in his name only,”‘ which he did, refinancing debt on only 5-acre tract and its attendant house, appellant did not seek contempt citation until two years after appellee executed quitclaim deed to 5-acre tract, and he twice paid half taxes on 21.9-acre parcel, after appellant executed that deed; appellant’s contention that opinion in Messadi v. Messadi, 282 Ga. 126 (2007), stood for proposition that language, marital residence at stated address, required that term also encompass 21.9-acre tract on basis that it was never assigned street address different from that of lot upon which house sat, rejected, since fact that adjacent lot in Messaadi had separate address, and was not embraced by award of marital residence located at stated address, did not mean that use of term martial residence in concert with specific address would necessarily embrace separate lot when there not separate address.

Gonzales v. Crocket, S10A0452 (06/28/2010), 10 FCDR 2066

From:  Fulton County Daily Report (07/09/2010.

Share/Save
Leave a Comment

Denial of appellant’s motion for contempt and emergency change of custody, AFFIRMED, as some evidence supported trial court’s ruling that appellee was not in contempt.

Posted Jul.12, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Appeal, Child Support, Contempt, Custody, Modification, Transcripts

 Child Support, Civil Contempt; Child Custody, Transcript

Denial of appellant’s motion for contempt and emergency change of custody, AFFIRMED, as some evidence supported trial court’s ruling that appellee was not in contempt; though parties’ divorce decree did not award child support due to appellant’s then existing health problems, it did not debar appellee from exercising his legitimate right to seek child support at some future time and appellant failed to show that change in custody was necessary or in child’s best interest; absent transcript, evidence presumably supported trial court’s ruling, in any event; after trial court declined to award any child support in divorce action, appellee filed action for child support through Child Support Enforcement Office, which entered order granting support from appellant, though order was later temrinated to to appellant’s health problems.

Jones v. Foster, A10A0278 (05/03/2010), 10 FCDR 1527

From:  Fulton County Daily Report (05/14/2010)

Share/Save
Leave a Comment

GA trial court DID NOT abuse its discretion in awarding wife $50K in lump sum alimony, since evidence supported trial court’s findings regarding husband’s income level.

Posted Jun.30, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Attorney Fees, Contempt, Divorce, Equitable Division, Evidence

 Alimony, attorney's fees, Contempt, Evidence, marital property

Judgment AFFIRMED in parties’ divorce action; trial court DID NOT abuse its discretion in awarding wife $50K in lump sum alimony, since evidence supported trial court’s findings regarding husband’s income level; trial court DID NOT abuse its discretion in determining that home in Tattnall county was wife’s separate property, since husband quitclaimed any interest he had in property to wife prior to their second marriage; trial court DID NOT abuse its discretion in awarding wife her retirement account, given trial court’s diligent separation of parties’ assets and overall asset distribution; trial court DID NOT err in calculating child support; evidence of husband’s adulterous acts during parties’ second marriage revived his prior acts during their first marriage as admissible evidence; trial court DID NOT abuse its discretion in awarding wife attorneys’ fees; husband had reasonable notice that trial court would consider wife’s contempt claims based on unpaid child support at divorce trial.

Wood v. Wood, S07F1474 (01/08/08), 08 FCDR 66

From:  Fulton County Daily Report (01/25/08)

Share/Save
Leave a Comment

GA trial court has express authority to modify visitation rights in contempt proceedings and costs directly associated with visitation privileges.

Posted Jun.12, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Contempt, Visitation

 Contempt, Visitation

Order holding wife in contempt of parties’ divorce decree and declaring that wife would now pay 100 percent of costs associated with her supervised child visitation, AFFIRMED; trial court has express authority to modify visitation rights in contempt proceedings and cost in this case were directly associated with wife’s visitation privileges.

Carlson v. Carlson, S08A0704 (07/07/08), 08 FCDR 2286

From:  Fulton County Daily Report (07/18/2008)

Share/Save
1 Comment

GA Father loses custody of children because he brought contempt action too late.

Posted May.22, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Contempt, Custody, Modification, Parental Rights

 Contempt, Custody, Modification

Denial of father’s motion to hold mother, father’s ex-wife, in contempt for failing to comply with couple’s 2005 divorce decree, which awarded father legal and primary physical custody of couple’s children, AFFIRMED; grant of mother’s petition for change in custody and award of joint legal an primary physical custody of children to mother, AFFIRMED; consolidation of father’s motion for contempt and mother’s custody petition was not prohibited by O.C.G.A. § 19-9-23, because custody action was filed as separate action in father’s county, not as responsive pleading; moreover, father cannot complain, because he did not object to consolidation and acquiesced in joint hearing; trial court DID NOT ERR in denying father’s contempt motion, because there was no evidence of willful disobedience of court order; trial court DID NOT ERR in granting mother’s custody petition on grounds that material change of condition affecting welfare of children had occurred since last order, because evidence showed that father failed to provide financially for his children, was uninvolved in their lives and did not enforce original custody order despite being awarded primary physical custody of children.

Saravia v. Mendoza, A10A0391, A10A0392 (03/31/10), 10 FCDR 1173

From:  Fulton County Daily Report, (04/16/2010).

Share/Save
Leave a Comment

Contempt judgment REVERSED because trial court had other effective means of enforcing divorce decree.

Posted Apr.28, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Contempt, Divorce

 Contempt, Divorce Settlement Agreement

Contempt judgment against appellant, REVERSED, to extent that it required sale of marital residence on basis that appellant did not remove his ex-wife’s name from mortgage within 30 days of remarrying as required in their 2007 divorce decree; trial court permissibly modified divorce decree by requiring appellant to sell marital residence, since such order modified property division provision of divorce decree; decree awarded exclusive ownership of home to appellant and nother in decree explicitly or implicitly required him to see house to satisfy condition that he remove appellee from mortgage; ruling did not mean that trial court was left with no effective means of enforcing divorce decree as trial court cold order appellant to pay appellee significant sum every day until he purges his contempt; evidence supported trial court’s ruling that  appellant willfully disobeyed divorce decree as appellant waited until five days before his weddng to inquire about possible avenues for removing appellee’s name from mortgage and complying with decree’s clear terms.

Darroh v. Willis, S09A1623 (03/01/10), 10 FCDR 518

From:  Fulton County Daily Report, 3/12/2010.

Share/Save
Leave a Comment

GA and UIFSA Statue of Limitation

Posted Mar.14, 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, Esq., under Alimony, Contempt, Jurisdiction, UIFSA

 Alimony, Choice of Law, Contempt, Jurisdiction, UIFSA

Dismissal of appellant’s petition to register and enforce 1995 Massachusetts support order against her ex-husband in principal amount of $421,465.84, REVERSED; trial court erred in ruling that order could not be enforced because it was dormant under Georgia law;  appellee’s contention that Massachusetts judgment did not constitute support order under Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (“UIFSA”) on basis that it was contempt order, AFFIRMED, since order included finding that appellee was in contempt of original judgment of divorce, but also established appellee’s arrearages for alimony and statutory interest; Massachusetts judgment was order and judgment for benefit of former spouse providing for arrearages and interest within definition of support order under O.C.G.A. § 9-11-101 (21); Massachusetts 20-year statute of limitation controlled over Georgia’s 7-year dormancy law, since choice of law provisions of UIFSA provide that law of jurisdiction, which issued support order, “governs the nature, extent, amount, and duration of current payments and other obligations of support and the payment of arrearages under the order;” ‘O.C.G.A. § 19-11-163 (b) provides that, ‘ “[i]n a proceeding for arrearages, the statute of limitation under the laws of Georgia or of the issuing state, whichever is longer, applies,” ‘ in any event.

Sussman v. Sussman, A09A2289 (12/02/09), 09 FCDR 3930

From:  Fulton County Daily Report, 12/18/2009.

Share/Save
Leave a Comment
Newer Entries »

Search

Categories

  • Adoption (7)
  • Alimony (16)
  • Appeal (26)
  • Articles (3)
  • Attorney Fees (28)
  • Capacity (3)
  • Child Support (51)
  • Common Law Marriage (1)
  • Contempt (18)
  • Custody (77)
  • Deprivation (28)
  • DFACS (2)
  • Divorce (49)
  • Equitable Division (23)
  • Evidence (20)
  • Grandparents (14)
  • Guardan Ad Litem (1)
  • Insurance Benefits (1)
  • Jurisdiction (26)
  • Legitimation (4)
  • Mediation (1)
  • Military (1)
  • Modification (21)
  • Parental Rights (27)
  • Paternity / Legitimation (8)
  • Prenuptial Agreement (5)
  • Property Settlement (4)
  • Service by Publication (1)
  • Service of Process (1)
  • Settlement Agreement (12)
  • Temporary Protective Order (TPO) (3)
  • Transcripts (10)
  • Trial Counsel (4)
  • UCCJEA (8)
  • UIFSA (2)
  • Uncategorized (7)
  • Visitation (15)

Archives

  • May 2012 (5)
  • April 2012 (7)
  • March 2012 (8)
  • February 2012 (7)
  • January 2012 (8)
  • December 2011 (8)
  • November 2011 (6)
  • July 2011 (4)
  • June 2011 (6)
  • May 2011 (9)
  • April 2011 (3)
  • March 2011 (8)
  • February 2011 (8)
  • January 2011 (7)
  • October 2010 (10)
  • September 2010 (7)
  • August 2010 (6)
  • July 2010 (10)
  • June 2010 (10)
  • May 2010 (11)
  • April 2010 (9)
  • March 2010 (9)
  • February 2010 (10)
  • January 2010 (11)
  • December 2009 (10)
  • November 2009 (10)
  • October 2009 (3)
  • September 2009 (7)
 
Powered by WordPress.   A CJ Remboldt Blog
The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult an attorney for individual advice regarding your own situation.
Copyright 2010 by Cynthia J. Remboldt, JD/MBA. All rights reserved. You may reproduce materials available at this site for your own personal use and for non-commercial distribution. All copies must include this copyright statement.