STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
In re MARY WILLIAMS.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN UNPUBLISHED
SERVICES, December 28, 2017
Petitioner-Appellee,
v No. 334460
St. Clair Circuit Court
Family Division
MARY WILLIAMS, LC No. 14-000171-NA
Respondent-Appellant.
Before: MURRAY, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and FORT HOOD, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Respondent, Mary Williams, appeals as of right the trial court’s order finding her in
criminal contempt of court. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This case arises out of respondent’s testimony during child welfare proceedings.
Respondent was a foster care worker for petitioner, the Department of Health and Human
Services (DHHS). At a permanency planning hearing (PPH) on June 27, 2016, she testified
regarding the status of AO, a 17-year-old temporary ward of the court. Specifically, respondent,
on behalf of DHHS, requested that the court dismiss the case and give permission to release AO
to the custody of her father, a military service member stationed in Hawaii.
Based on the request, the following exchange occurred between respondent and the court:
The Court: Ms. Williams, what is necessary for information for your
agency in order to have [AO] transferred to her father? I’m not going to dismiss it
because she’s not an adult, she’s still a minor and mom has custody of her. So,
once I dismiss this she goes back to mom not to dad because dad doesn’t have
legal custody – or physical custody. I can place her with father until she is
eighteen but I cannot dismiss it and send her there because he doesn’t have
custody of her.
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Ms. Williams: Okay, if we do the placement I think we have to go through
Interstate Compact.
The Court: Well then you have to get it done.
Ms. Williams: Okay.
The Court: She’s not going to be eighteen until September.
Ms. Williams: I’m sorry?
The Court: I think it’s September—
Ms. Williams: Yes, September 2nd.
The Court: So, I cannot dismiss this and send her to her dad unless he has
custody of her because she’s still a minor. So, in order for me to place her there
you have rules you have to follow and I expect you to work on it.
Ms. Williams: We’re working towards it.
The Court: What’s it going to take to get that done?
Ms. Williams: We’ll ask for an emergency Interstate Compact.
The Court: Has it been done?
Ms. Williams: It hasn’t been done yet because—
The Court: You haven’t made the request yet?
Ms. Williams: No, we have not.
The Court: Well, I met with you and your supervisor and told you that
that had to be done.
Ms. Williams: I was following the directions of my supervisor.
The Court: Instead of following the directions of the Court?
Ms. Williams: Sorry, yes, you’re right.
The Court: Get it done.
In the order entered after the PPH, the court directed DHHS to complete an Interstate Compact
for placement of AO with her father.
On July 1, 2016, Kristin Anderson, respondent’s supervisor at DHHS, filed an affidavit
with the court. In the affidavit, she acknowledged both that DHHS and the court had agreed on
June 13, 2016, to pursue an Interstate Compact, and that on June 23, 2016, she spoke with
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respondent about contacting a social worker on the military base to determine if the worker could
complete a home study for AO’s father in lieu of pursuing an Interstate Compact. Further, the
affidavit stated that following the PPH on June 27, 2016, respondent approached Anderson in the
DHHS hallway and stated that she threw Anderson under the bus by telling the court that her
supervisor told her not to complete the Interstate Compact, did not actually believe Anderson
instructed her not to do it, and was sorry for her actions in court. On the basis of the affidavit,
the court entered an order directing respondent to show cause as to why she should not be held in
criminal contempt for providing a false answer to a direct question from the court.
At the show cause hearing, Anderson testified that on June 13, 2016, DHHS and the court
agreed that an Interstate Compact should be completed to begin the process of placing AO with
her father. She then relayed the information to respondent and explained the importance of
starting the Interstate Compact.
According to Anderson, despite discussing with respondent the potential for bypassing
the Interstate Compact by working with the military to complete a home study, she never told
respondent to forget the Interstate Compact. Instead, she testified, “It was presented as a very
potential option, not a solid option, but we needed to look into it to see if it was an option but the
Interstate still needed to be done.”
Anderson further testified that when she spoke with respondent in the hallway of the
DHHS offices on June 27, 2016, following the PPH: “[Respondent] did approach and said, ‘I
need to self-disclose.’ And I said, what, and she said, ‘I threw you under the semi.’ ” Then, in
Anderson’s office, respondent explained “that she told the Judge that she had not done the
Interstate packet and she had told the Judge it is because I told her not too [sic].”
Three DHHS coworkers overheard the conversation between Anderson and respondent in
the hallway, and each testified, in varying terms, that respondent told Anderson she threw her
under the bus in court. One of the coworkers, Amber Jacobs, stated further, “I could hear
[respondent] tell [Anderson] something along the lines that she had told the Judge whatever
paperwork that was suppose [sic] to filed [sic] that her supervisor told her not to do it or she
wasn’t suppose [sic] to do it.”
Respondent testified last at the hearing. She said that she never told the court that
Anderson asked her not to work on the Interstate Compact. Instead, respondent insisted that by
saying she had followed the directions of her supervisor, she meant that she had begun looking
into a military home study, which turned her attention away from the Interstate Compact.
In his closing argument, petitioner’s counsel argued that the evidence presented proved,
beyond a reasonable doubt, that respondent lied to the court by implying that Anderson told her
to stop working on the Interstate Compact. In response, respondent’s counsel argued that the
evidence actually demonstrated that respondent never lied to the court—she never stated that
Anderson told her not to work on the Interstate Compact. Instead, the evidence showed that
respondent began the Interstate Compact, but then pursued other options at Anderson’s direction.
Ultimately, the trial court found respondent guilty, beyond a reasonable doubt, of
criminal contempt for misrepresenting “the status of the Interstate Compact when she indicated
that it had not been done because her supervisor told her not to do it.” In so doing, it
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acknowledged that respondent never explicitly said her supervisor told her not to do the
Interstate Compact, but stated, “[T]he context of questions and answers, and the statements and
answers by the Court and her response to it, make it clear to the Court that that’s what she was
telling me.” The order entered by the court adopted its ruling on the record, and sentenced
respondent to 30 days of community service and five days in jail if she failed to comply.
II. ANALYSIS
Respondent argues that the court abused its discretion when it convicted her of criminal
contempt because civil contempt would have been more appropriate, and because insufficient
evidence existed to support a finding that she willfully lied or made a false representation to the
court.
“Courts in Michigan have an inherent and statutory power to punish contempt of court by
fine or imprisonment.” In re Contempt of Dudzinski, 257 Mich App 96, 108; 667 NW2d 68
(2003), citing MCL 600.1701 et seq. Distinguishing between civil and criminal contempt is
important because criminal contempt proceedings require additional due process safeguards.
Porter v Porter, 285 Mich App 450, 456; 776 NW2d 377 (2009).1 “When a court seeks to
compel a contemnor to comply with its order requiring or forbidding some particular act, the
court may use the coercive sanctions permitted by civil contempt[.]” In re Contempt of Auto
Club Ins Ass’n, 243 Mich App 697, 711-712; 624 NW2d 443 (2000), citing MCL 600.1715, and
MCL 600.1721. In contrast, criminal contempt is used to punish a “contemnor for past conduct
that affronts the court’s dignity.” In re Contempt of Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 243 Mich App at 713.
Thus, “[a] court exercising its criminal contempt power is not attempting to force the contemnor
to comply with an order.” Id.
Respondent asserts that because civil contempt is used to coerce compliance, “[t]he
principled outcome would have been for the court to issue a civil contempt order for failure to
complete the [Interstate] compact.”2 However, upon review of the record, we are convinced the
trial court did not employ its contempt power to coerce respondent into complying with its order
to complete the Interstate Compact. Instead, it used its contempt authority to sanction
respondent for past behavior that affronted the court’s dignity – namely misrepresenting the
status of the Interstate Compact during the PPH – which, as described above, is a valid use of
such power.3 And the court’s order reflected this purpose, sentencing respondent to community
1
We note that respondent does not raise any procedural challenges to the court’s contempt order,
beyond arguing that civil contempt proceedings would have been more appropriate.
2
Respondent failed to make this argument below, in either her hearing brief or at the show cause
hearing. Generally, “ ‘[f]or an issue to be preserved for appellate review, it must be raised,
addressed, and decided by the lower court.’ ” Mouzon v Achievable Visions, 308 Mich App 415,
419; 864 NW2d 606 (2014) (citation omitted). However, any potential preservation issues do
not affect our analysis.
3
This Court has previously upheld a trial court’s finding of criminal contempt for lying to the
court. See, e.g., In re Contempt of Henry, 282 Mich App 656; 765 NW2d 44 (2009).
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service rather than imprisoning respondent until completion of the Interstate Compact. Thus, we
hold that the court did not abuse its discretion by using criminal, instead of civil, contempt
proceedings.
The question then becomes whether the court erred when it convicted respondent of
criminal contempt based on the finding that respondent misrepresented the status of the Interstate
Compact during the PPH. We review a trial court’s decision to enter a contempt order for an
abuse of discretion. In re Kabanuk, 295 Mich App 252, 256; 813 NW2d 348 (2012).
“[R]eversal is warranted only when the trial court’s decision is outside the range of principled
outcomes.” In re Moroun, 295 Mich App 312, 335-336; 814 NW2d 319 (2012) (opinion by K.
F. KELLY, J.) (quotation marks and citation omitted; alteration in original). “A trial court’s
findings in a contempt proceeding are reviewed for clear error and must be affirmed on appeal if
there is competent evidence to support them.” In re Contempt of Henry, 282 Mich App 656,
668; 765 NW2d 44 (2009). We cannot “weigh the evidence or the credibility of the witnesses in
determining whether there is competent evidence to support the findings.” Id. at 668-669.
“Clear error exists when this Court is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake
was made.” Id. at 669.
The elements of criminal contempt are “(1) a wilful disregard or disobedience of the
order of the court, and (2) that the contempt is clearly and unequivocally shown.” People v
MacLean, 168 Mich App 577, 579; 425 NW2d 185 (1988). “A wilful disregard consists of an
act, omission, or statement tending to impair the authority or impede the functioning of the
court.” Id. Further, the “contemptuous act must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” In re
Contempt of Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 243 Mich App at 714.
Respondent’s statement that she was following the directions of her supervisor, when
asked by the court if the Interstate Compact request had been made, formed the basis of her
criminal contempt conviction. But respondent argues that she only meant she had begun looking
into a military home study for AO’s father, not that Anderson instructed her to abandon the
Interstate Compact. Thus, she asserts, insufficient evidence existed to support a finding that she
willfully made a false statement to the court, because Anderson admitted that she directed
respondent to look into the military home study as an alternative to the Interstate Compact.4
It is true that respondent never explicitly told the court that she had not yet completed the
Interstate Compact because Anderson directed her not to. And respondent’s statement that she
was following the directions of her supervisor could be open to multiple interpretations. Indeed,
respondent testified at the show cause hearing that, had she not been interrupted by the court
during the PPH, she would have explained that she had begun working on the military home
study, at Anderson’s request, which took her attention away from the Interstate Compact.
Further, Anderson admitted, in both her affidavit and at the show cause hearing, that she did
4
We note that respondent also lists the elements of perjury and asserts that petitioner failed to
prove these elements at the show cause hearing. But perjury contains elements that criminal
contempt does not, see In re Contempt of Henry, 282 Mich App at 677-678, and the court
convicted respondent of criminal contempt, not perjury. Thus, we do not address that assertion.
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direct respondent to look into obtaining a military home study that could potentially be used in
lieu of the Interstate Compact.
Nevertheless, the court acknowledged these facts on the record, including that respondent
never explicitly stated at the PPH that her supervisor directed her not to complete the Interstate
Compact, but still found that respondent misrepresented the Compact’s status because “the
context of questions and answers, and the statements and answers by the Court and her response
to it, make it clear . . . that that’s what she was telling me.” In so doing, it determined that
respondent’s testimony to the contrary at the show cause hearing was not believable.
As stated above, we cannot weigh evidence or the credibility of witnesses when
reviewing a trial court’s contempt findings for clear error. In re Contempt of Henry, 282 Mich
App at 668-669. Thus, we must accept the court’s determination that respondent’s testimony
regarding the meaning behind her statement at the PPH was not credible. And competent
evidence supports the finding that respondent misrepresented the status of the Interstate Compact
by implying she had not yet completed it because her supervisor told her not to. Respondent,
Anderson, and three DHHS coworkers all testified that when respondent returned to the DHHS
offices following the PPH, she said that she threw Anderson under the bus in court.
Additionally, Anderson testified that during her conversation with respondent following the
PPH, respondent said she told the court the Interstate Compact had not yet been requested
because Anderson directed her not to do it. This was confirmed by one of the DHHS coworkers,
who explained she “could hear [respondent] tell [Anderson] something along the lines that she
had told the Judge whatever paperwork that was suppose [sic] to filed [sic] that her supervisor
told her not to do it or she wasn’t suppose [sic] to do it.” And Anderson said that she never told
respondent to abandon the Interstate Compact.
Thus, reviewing the record before us, we hold that the court did not abuse its discretion
when it convicted respondent of criminal contempt. Sufficient evidence existed for the court to
find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that respondent willfully disregarded the order of the court by
misrepresenting the status of the Interstate Compact and implying that she had not completed the
Compact at Anderson’s direction.
Affirmed.
/s/ Christopher M. Murray
/s/ Kirsten Frank Kelly
/s/ Karen M. Fort Hood
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