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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
KATHERYN M. HOY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
v.
WILLIAM R. WHEELER,
Appellant No. 1871 EDA 2016
Appeal from the Order Entered May 12, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County
Domestic Relations at No(s): No. 01181N 2014 PACSES No. 943114856
LAURIE ANN WHEELER IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
v.
WILLIAM R. WHEELER,
Appellant No. 1872 EDA 2016
Appeal from the Order May 12, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County
Domestic Relations at No(s): No. 2078N 2008 PACSES No. 55110476
BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., BOWES AND SHOGAN, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 21, 2017
In these consolidated child support appeals, William R. Wheeler
(“Father”) appeals, pro se, the orders finding him in contempt of child
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support orders relating to two sons by different women, Laurie Ann Wheeler
and Katheryn M. Hoy (collectively Appellees). We affirm.1
Father married Ms. Wheeler on September 30, 2006 and separated
during November 2008. One son was born of the brief marriage. Several
years later, during April 2014, Father had a son with Ms. Hoy. Father’s
financial support of his two sons has been abysmal. As of the May 1, 2015
interim child support orders that form the starting point for our review,
Father had accrued arrears of $3,499 and $3,169 for Ms. Wheeler and Ms.
Hoy, respectively. The May 2015 interim orders set Father’s ongoing
monthly support obligations at $451 for Ms. Hoy and $512 for Ms. Wheeler.2
These cases share a tortuous procedural history, which we set forth as
follows. On June 17, 2015, Father filed petitions to modify the monthly
support obligations that were established in the interim orders. Father
alleged that he suffered a shoulder injury during October 2014, which he
reinjured on February 4, 2015, that prevented him from obtaining
employment without surgical intervention. The shoulder was repaired
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1
The appeals flow from identical orders based on similar facts, and the
arguments Father levels in the respective briefs are virtually
indistinguishable. Accordingly, we consolidated the appeals for review and
disposition.
2
The interim order relating to Ms. Hoy included an additional $400 per
month for daycare. However, the additional obligation was deleted from the
final order entered during August 2015 because the child no longer attended
daycare.
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surgically on July 21, 2015. The matter was assigned to Judge Katherine
B.L. Platt, who was presiding over the then-pending exceptions filed by Ms.
Hoy and Ms. Wheeler to the report and recommendations that the support
master submitted during March and April of 2015. While Father also leveled
exceptions to the master’s recommendations, he subsequently withdrew
those objections.
On August 27, 2015, Judge Platt denied Appellees’ exceptions and
entered final support orders setting Father’s monthly child support
obligations at $451 and $531 for Ms. Hoy and Wheeler, respectively.3 As it
relates to the argument Father presents herein, Judge Platt imposed monthly
support obligations totaling $982 without addressing the merits of Father’s
unresolved petition to modify or referencing the alleged shoulder injury that
formed the basis of Father’s petition. In fact, Judge Platt did not confront
Father’s petition for modification until February 22, 2017, nineteen months
after it was filed, when she ultimately reduced Father’s combined monthly
obligation by $132, from $982 to $850.4
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3
None of the parties appealed the final child support order.
4
The modification order is not included in the certified record. The parties
described the order during oral argument before this Court. It is unclear
whether Judge Platt applied the modification retroactive to June 17, 2015,
the date Father filed his motion to modify.
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Meanwhile, on October 7, 2015, approximately one-and-one-half
months after the August 2015 order, Ms. Hoy filed a petition for contempt
against Father asserting that he failed to comply with the final support order
directing him to pay $451 per month in child support. A different judge, the
Honorable Patrick Carmody, was assigned to preside over the contempt
petition.
Thereafter, Father was imprisoned between December 10, 2015 and
February 5, 2016, after he pled guilty to misdemeanor harassment and a
violation of the Wiretap Act in relation to his interactions with Ms. Wheeler
and her attorney.5 Judge Carmody also presided over the criminal matters.
Upon Father’s release from confinement, Judge Carmody granted Father a
continuance in the contempt proceeding so that Father could obtain counsel.
The hearing was rescheduled for May 12, 2016.
In the interim, during March 2016, Ms. Wheeler filed with Judge
Carmody a petition for contempt similar to Ms. Hoy’s. Like her counterpart,
Ms. Wheeler alleged that Father failed to comply with the court-ordered
support obligations outlined in the August 2015 order. Father objected to
both petitions due to the fact that, inter alia, Judge Platt had yet to address
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5
Father’s release from confinement was subject to a detainer for a violation
of a prior contempt order due to non-payment of child support. The detainer
was lifted on February 5, 2016, after Father satisfied the $411 purge
condition.
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his then-pending petition for modification. He also asserted that he was
entitled to a credit from an October 2015 overpayment and noted that he
made partial support payments in October, November, and December 2015.
On March 31, 2016, Ms. Wheeler agreed to consolidate her contempt
petition with Ms. Hoy’s for the purpose of the May 12, 2016 evidentiary
hearing. As a result of that concession, Judge Carmody entered an order
directing Father to pay Ms. Wheeler child support in the amount of $531.00
for each of March and April 2016. Father consented to the consolidation and
agreed to submit the required payments to Ms. Wheeler.
Despite receiving additional time to obtain counsel, Father represented
himself during the May 2016 contempt hearing. At the outset of the
proceeding, Father noted that his petition to modify was still pending before
Judge Platt and requested a continuance of the contempt proceedings so
that all three matters could be consolidated and heard together. Judge
Carmody denied Father’s request, and rejected Father’s ensuing motion for
recusal. N.T., 5/12/16, at 8.
Jennifer Benfield, the Chester County support enforcement specialist,
and Ms. Wheeler testified during the contempt hearing. Ms. Benfield
outlined Father’s support obligations and delineated his sporadic partial
payments to both mothers since August 2015. Ms. Benfield presented
evidence to demonstrate that, in the nine months between August 2015 and
April 2016, Father paid Appellees the court-ordered amounts only once. On
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three occasions he paid approximately sixty percent of his child support
obligations, and on one month he paid roughly forty-two percent. Most
frequently, however, Father failed to pay anything. Indeed, during four
separate months, August and September of 2015 and January and March of
2016, Father paid $0 of $982 monthly child support owed to Appellees.
In addition to the evidence presented by Ms. Benfield, Ms. Wheeler
testified about Father’s non-compliance with the March 31, 2016 consent
order wherein he agreed to pay her $531 per month for each of March and
April 2016. See N.T., 5/12/16, at 42-43; Plaintiff’s Exhibit M-3. As noted,
supra, Father paid her little more than half of what was owed for that two-
month period. Id. at 44-45.
Father did not testify during the hearing or attempt to explain why he
could not comply with any of the court orders. However, over Appellees’
objections, he introduced physician verification forms outlining the treatment
that he received on his injured shoulder. Father neglected to expound upon
the information in the exhibits, however, nor did he explain how the
shoulder injury or the resulting surgery, both of which preceded the August
2015 order, affected his ability to comply with support orders or reduce the
escalating arrears, which had ballooned to $15,382.18 by the date of the
hearing.
At the close of the proceedings, the trial court entered the above-
referenced orders finding Father in contempt for nonpayment of the
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respective child support orders. The contempt orders directed Father to
comply with his monthly support obligations and specified that his failure to
fulfil those obligations would result in six months imprisonment, subject to
the purge condition of satisfying the missed payments. These timely
appeals followed.6
Both appeals assert identical issues, which we restate for clarity as
follows:
1. Whether the trial court erred in finding Father in contempt
without first addressing his June 17, 2015 motion to modify child
support.
2. Whether the trial court erred in overruling his requests to
continue the contempt petitions until the trial court addresses his
June 17, 2015 motion to modify.
3. Whether the trial court erred in refusing Father’s motion
for recusal when the court “[was] extremely biased in [its]
decision regarding both contempt . . . and [an unrelated] felony
wiretap conviction.”
Father’s brief(s) at 6-8. Neither Appellee filed a brief.
While Father leveled three individual issues in his statement of
questions presented, he submits one inter-related argument for our review.
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6
The thirty-day appeal period normally would have expired on June 11,
2016; however, since that date was a Saturday, Father had until Monday,
June 13, 2016, to file his appeals. See 1 Pa.C.S. § 1908 (“Whenever the
last day of any such period shall fall on Saturday or Sunday, or on any day
made a legal holiday by the laws of this Commonwealth or of the United
States, such day shall be omitted from the computation.”).
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The collective assertion assails Judge Platt’s delay in addressing the merits
of Father’s petition to modify his support obligation.
As it relates to all three components of Father’s argument, we review
the trial court’s decisions for an abuse of discretion. See e.g. Scampone v.
Grane Healthcare Company, 2017 PA Super 257 at *21 (“An appellate
court presumes judges are fair and competent, and reviews the denial of a
recusal motion for an abuse of discretion.”); Ferko–Fox v. Fox, 68 A.3d
917, 925 (Pa.Super. 2013) (“This Court reviews a trial court's decision to
grant or deny a continuance for an abuse of discretion.”); and Orfield v.
Weindel, 52 A.3d 275, 278 (Pa.Super. 2012) (“Our scope of review when
considering an appeal from an order holding a party in contempt of court is
narrow: We will reverse only upon a showing of an abuse of discretion”). “An
abuse of discretion is more than just an error in judgment and, on appeal,
the trial court will not be found to have abused its discretion unless the
record discloses that the judgment exercised was manifestly unreasonable,
or the results of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill-will.” Ferko–Fox, supra at
925.
First, we address Father’s assertion that the trial court improperly
denied his motion for recusal. As noted previously, we presume the trial
court to be fair and competent. Scampone, supra. Instantly, Father
claims that Judge Carmody was biased, vexatious, and obdurate because he
refused Father’s request for a continuance, and he also asserts that the
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jurist could not be impartial after he presided over Father’s wiretapping and
harassment convictions. See Father’s brief at 7-8.
Father’s initial claim fails because he neglected to identify anything in
the certified record to demonstrate that Judge Carmody was predisposed to
rule against him. Preliminarily, we observe that Father did not assail the
court’s partiality during the hearing based upon the unrelated criminal
proceedings. Thus, that aspect of his argument is waived. More
importantly, Judge Carmody permitted Father to develop a record of his
objection to the court’s ruling on the continuance, explained that he did not
view the adverse ruling as a basis to recuse, and noted that his demeanor,
which Father had called into question, was the product the court’s
interactions with Father during the hearing. We cannot discern an abuse of
discretion from the foregoing circumstances. Father neglected to support his
bare allegations of bias with evidence of prejudice and, without more, the
facts that the trial court denied Father’s request for a continuance and
previously presided over an unrelated criminal matter are not tantamount to
partiality or incompetence. Thus, no relief is due.
Father’s remaining arguments fare no better. As noted, Father asserts
that, absent resolution of his petition for modification, Judge Carmody lacked
authority to impose a sanction for contempt. For the following reasons, we
disagree.
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“The principal goal in child support matters is to serve the best
interests of the children through the provision of reasonable expenses.”
R.K.J. v. S.P.K., 77 A.3d 33, 37 (Pa.Super. 2013). As we stated in Orfield,
supra, at 278, “[t]he purpose of a civil contempt order is to coerce the
contemnor to comply with a court order.” In this scenario, civil contempt is
governed by 23 Pa.C.S. § 4345, which provides:
(a) General rule.—A person who willfully fails to comply with
any order under this chapter, except an order subject to section
4344 (relating to contempt for failure of obligor to appear), may,
as prescribed by general rule, be adjudged in contempt.
Contempt shall be punishable by any one or more of the
following:
(1) Imprisonment for a period not to exceed six months.
(2) A fine not to exceed $1,000.
(3) Probation for a period not to exceed one year.
(b) Condition for release.—An order committing a defendant
to jail under this section shall specify the condition the fulfillment
of which will result in the release of the obligor.
23 Pa.C.S. § 4345.
Presently, Father argues that Judge Carmody erred in refusing to
continue the Appellees’ contempt proceedings against him until after Judge
Platt resolved the petition for modification. Father alludes to his financial
status in order to extrapolate the notion that the trial court could not
conceivably determine whether he was in contempt of the August 2015
support orders without first addressing the motion to modify. The
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implication of Father’s premise is that, without addressing his financial
status, Judge Carmody could not possibly find him in contempt. There is
some merit in Father’s unstated assertion, and it is accurate insofar as a
contemnor’s ability to pay child support is particularly relevant as it relates
to the imposition of imprisonment as a sanction, and to lesser degree, in
forming an affirmative defense. However, this is not the crux of Father’s
complaint.
In order to prevail on their respective petitions for contempt, Misses
Wheeler and Hoy were required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence
that Father violated the terms of the child support orders. Orfield, supra at
279. Thereafter, Father was entitled to adduce evidence to establish his
present inability to comply with the orders or make up the arrears. Id. To
the extent that Father could meet that evidentiary threshold, the trial court
was required to fashion a purge condition commensurate with Father’s ability
to pay. As we stated in Orfield, supra, “When the alleged contemnor
presents evidence that he is presently unable to comply, the court, in
imposing coercive imprisonment for civil contempt, should set conditions for
purging the contempt and effecting release from imprisonment with which it
is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, from the totality of the evidence
before it, the contemnor has the present ability to comply.” Id. quoting
Hyle v. Hyle, 868 A.2d 601 (Pa.Super. 2005). This latter principle is rooted
in due process concerns regarding the imposition of confinement as a
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coercive sanction that is impossible to fulfill. As the Hyle Court explained,
“a court may not convert a coercive sentence into a punitive one by
imposing conditions that the contemnor cannot perform and thereby purge
himself of the contempt.” Id. at 606; see also Childress v. Bogosian, 12
A.3d 448 (Pa.Super. 2011) (when alleged contemnor presents evidence of
present inability to comply with court order the court, trial court is required
to consider ability to satisfy purge condition to effect release from
imprisonment).
While the relevance of Father’s ability to pay flows directly from due
process concerns relating to the imposition of imprisonment as a sanction,
the obligor’s ability to pay may also form a defense to a finding of contempt.
In Calloway, supra, this Court extended this sanction-related principle to
summarily affirm a trial court’s decision to dismiss a contempt petition
without discussing the pertinent due process concerns, despite an otherwise
contumacious violation of the support order. After referencing § 4345 and
its attendant rule of civil procedure, Pa.R.C.P. 1910.21, the Calloway Court
reasoned that, since the obligor in that case was not capable of satisfying
any purge condition, “the court was unable to impose a contempt [o]rder[.]”
Id. at 710. We reasoned, “Civil contempt by its nature is curative and not
punitive; therefore, the inability to impose an Order which the appellee could
fulfill required that the petition for civil contempt be dismissed.” Id. As the
trial court in Calloway found that the obligor could not satisfy any purge
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conditions, our abridged analysis avoided the crucial question concerning the
relevance of the ability to pay when a trial court finds an obligor in contempt
for non-payment but foregoes imprisonment as a corrective sanction,
imposes a nominal sanction, or fashions a reasonable purge condition as
described in Orfield. As the predicate due process concern is absent in
those situations, presumably, so too is the concomitant consideration of the
obligor’s financial status.
Nevertheless, the upshot of Calloway is that support obligors who are
unable to comply with support obligations through no fault of their own may
assert financial inability as a defense to a finding of contempt. However, to
invoke that defense, the obligor must demonstrate that he or she made a
good faith effort to comply with such orders despite the financial impediment
that forms the basis of the defense. Hopkinson v. Hopkinson, 470 A.2d
981, 986 (Pa.Super. 1984) (defense of financial inability was inapplicable
where husband, inter alia, failed to demonstrate good faith effort to comply
with obligations) (overruled on other grounds by Sonder v. Sonder, 549
A2d 155 (Pa.Super. 1988) (en banc).
Instantly, Father neglected to assert during the evidentiary hearing his
financial inability to pay child support as a defense to the Appellees’
contempt petitions, and the trial court did not consider it. First, as it relates
to his request for continuance, Father’s reliance upon the aforementioned
legal principle is misplaced. In denying Father’s request, the trial court
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acknowledge Father’s frustrations with Judge Platt’s delays in resolving his
motions to modify, but determined that it was imperative for the court to
avoid compounding the mistake with additional delays in the contempt
proceedings which had been pending since October 2015. Accordingly, the
trial court proceeded with the two contempt petitions that were before it and
left the pending modification for Judge Platt to resolve in due course. While
Father’s ability to comply with the support orders may be relevant, contrary
to Father’s protestations, his motions to modify the support order were not
indivisible components of the contempt issue. To be clear, notwithstanding
the open status of Father’s motions to modify the support obligations, Judge
Carmody afforded Father the opportunity to introduce evidence concerning
his ability to comply with the underlying orders. Under these facts, we
cannot conclude the trial court's denial of Father’s continuance was
manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill-will.
Furthermore, even if we deemed Father’s preoccupation with Judge
Platt’s delay in disposing of the petitions for modification as an implicit
invocation of a defense based upon his inability to pay, that claim fails
because the certified record establishes that Father never demonstrated a
good-faith effort to comply with his financial obligations to his two sons.
Stated plainly, for the majority of these support proceedings, Father willfully
violated the trial court's orders to pay child support. This is not a case
where Father fell behind on his support payments due solely to his physical
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injury and Judge Platt’s failure to confront the ensuing petition for
modification in a timely manner. If that were the case, we would be more
sympathetic to Father’s stated struggle to comply with the August 2015
orders. In reality, however, Father’s pre-injury history of support is sub-
standard at best. When Father filed the June 17, 2015 petitions for
modification, he had already accrued at least $6,668 in support arrears for
his two sons. Thus, while Father may insinuate that he would have complied
with his support obligations but for Judge Platt’s delay, the certified record
belies that proposition and reveals Father’s record of compliance for what it
is, inadequate. Hence, the trial court did not err in finding that Appellees
proved by a preponderance of the evidence that Father violated the child
support orders.
Finally, as it relates specifically to Ms. Wheeler’s petition for contempt,
we observe that, in addition to violating the August 2015 support order,
Father failed to comply with the March 31, 2016 stipulation to pay Ms.
Wheeler the monthly sum of $531 for March and April 2016. As noted,
supra, Father paid approximately one-half of the total owed under the March
accord. Thus, even if Father’s underlying complaint regarding Judge Platt’s
delays had formed a basis to reverse the finding of contempt relating to the
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August 2015 orders, which it does not,7 the trial court properly determined
that Father is in contempt of the stipulated order that he assented to six
weeks earlier. Accordingly, we affirm the contempt order relating to Ms.
Wheeler on that basis also.
Orders affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 11/21/2017
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7
Although we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
finding Father in contempt of the governing child support orders, we must
emphasize that the one-and-one-half-year delay between the June 2015
petition for modification and its resolution on February 22, 2017 is
inexcusable. While we appreciate that Father requested at least one
continuance due to his two-month incarceration, we stress the importance of
prompt resolution of modification petitions in order to avoid situations where
the support obligor becomes overburdened with the obligation, falls
hopelessly behind cascading arrears, and potentially abandons his or her
commitments entirely. In that situation, an eventual finding of contempt
would be a hollow victory for the child who had been denied financial
support.
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