23.06.2014 Views

Child Support Enforcement - Sarpy County Nebraska

Child Support Enforcement - Sarpy County Nebraska

Child Support Enforcement - Sarpy County Nebraska

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

To be reasonable, the amount of money required to be paid for a contemner to<br />

purge himself or herself of contempt of court must be within the contemner’s ability<br />

to pay. The trial court may take into consideration not only the assets and financial<br />

condition of the contemner and the contemner’s ability to raise money, but also<br />

the contemner’s ability to earn money through a work release program while the<br />

contemner serves the coercive sanction in jail. If a contemner complains that he<br />

or she does not have the ability to comply with the purge order, the burden is<br />

on them to prove that inability.<br />

Mays v. Mays, 229 Neb. 674, 428 N.W.2d 618 (1988)<br />

Of course this came out of <strong>Sarpy</strong> <strong>County</strong>…<br />

[A]bsent an application and notice requesting modification, a trial court has no power<br />

to modify, during the course of contempt proceedings, the terms of an earlier order<br />

for support or division of property.<br />

Penn Cal, L.L.C. v. Penn Cal Dairy, 264 Neb. 122, 646 N.W.2d 601 (2002)<br />

The district courts of this state have the inherent power to enforce compliance with<br />

court orders and judgments through contempt proceedings.<br />

Given the district court’s inherent power to punish individuals for contempt of its<br />

orders, a <strong>Nebraska</strong> district court has the inherent power to punish a judgment debtor<br />

for his contempt of a foreign judgment which had been properly registered under<br />

the <strong>Nebraska</strong> Uniform <strong>Enforcement</strong> of Foreign Judgments Act (UEFJA).<br />

Richardson v. Anderson, 8 Neb. App. 923, 604 N.W.2d 427 (2000)<br />

Discusses also the Clean Hands Doctrine. Some great language….<br />

A parent has no right to insist upon the pursuit of fruitless dreams of success. There<br />

comes a time when a parent who is a would-be entrepreneur but is unsuccessful<br />

must simply become employed.<br />

[The noncustodial parent] cannot remain unemployed while he lives in an impressive<br />

style and use that lack of employment as an excuse for not paying child support.<br />

Smeal Fire Apparatus Co. v. Kreikemeier, 279 Neb 661, 782 N.W.2d 848 (2010)<br />

This is not a child support case, but it has enormous impact on the world of civil contempt of court.<br />

Although there is no graceful way of retreating from this court’s previous rulings,<br />

some of our troubling contempt cases have created needless difficulties at both the<br />

trial and the appellate levels. An untangling of the snarls was long overdue. Our<br />

decision changes the legal landscape of our present contempt law. We overrule a<br />

long line of cases affecting a trial court’s jurisdiction, an appellate court’s jurisdiction,<br />

and the standard of proof in civil contempt cases.<br />

we overrule cases that have unnecessarily limited a court’s inherent and statutorily<br />

granted contempt powers and cases that have precluded appellate review of final<br />

civil contempt orders. These cases’ roots run deep. Correcting our contempt<br />

jurisprudence will require extensive pruning.<br />

We hold that in a civil contempt proceeding, a district court has inherent power to<br />

order compensatory relief when a contemnor has violated its order or judgment. We<br />

further hold that whether a contempt sanction is civil or criminal is relevant only<br />

when a party appeals from an interlocutory order of contempt. An interlocutory<br />

contempt order is an order that a court issues during an ongoing proceeding before<br />

the final judgment in the main action.<br />

- 40 -

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!