Opinion
No. 37958
Decided July 3, 1963.
Contempt of court — Violation of injunctive order — Removing securities from safety deposit box and converting into cash — Refusal to divulge names of banks where deposited — Direct contempt — Common Pleas Court, Division of Domestic Relations — Power to issue temporary injunctions.
1. The Court of Common Pleas, Division of Domestic Relations, being a court of general jurisdiction with full equity powers, has the power to issue temporary injunctions, and such injunctions must be obeyed by parties duly served with notice thereof.
2. Where a person, in violation of an injunctive order, removes securities from his safety deposit box, converts the securities into cash and deposits the cash proceeds in a bank or banks, and, upon being questioned as a witness in open court, refuses to divulge the names and locations of the banks where such deposits were made, after being ordered to do so by the court, such refusal of the witness to answer constitutes a direct contempt for which the court has inherent power to punish summarily.
APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Hamilton County.
This is a habeas corpus proceeding growing out of an order of contempt in a divorce case. It was instituted in the Court of Appeals.
The petitioner was a defendant in a divorce action. In the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Division of Domestic Relations, Alice D. Roberts sought a divorce, alimony and an injunction restraining her husband, James Barr Roberts, petitioner herein, from disposing of or withdrawing or removing from his safety deposit box any intangible property. This divorce petition was filed on October 9, 1961. The injunction was allowed on the day the petition was filed.
The court's docket entry indicates that on October 13, 1961, a motion was filed to dissolve the temporary injunction. The court's docket entry of October 20, 1961, shows that the restraining order was dissolved. The transcript of the Common Pleas Court docket entry reveals that on July 30, 1962, Roberts' counsel withdrew from the case, and that on August 13, 1962, the case was tried in open court as an uncontested divorce case, both parties being present in court.
Roberts took the witness stand and was interrogated by the court regarding the disposition of certain assets which he had previously been enjoined from selling. He stated that he had disposed of some of the securities enumerated in the injunctive order, due to the fact that the declining stock market was shrinking his assets at a rapid rate. He informed the court that he had converted such securities into cash and had deposited the cash proceeds in a bank or banks, the names and locations of which he refused to divulge to the court after being ordered by the court to do so.
The entry finding Roberts guilty of contempt of court reads:
"It appearing to the court that the defendant, James Barr Roberts, having admitted in open court that he removed from his safety deposit box at the Fifth Third Union Trust Company, Reading, Ohio Branch, certain securities deposited therein in violation of the order of this court enjoining such removal and that he has converted said securities into cash and deposited the cash proceeds in a bank or banks, the names and locations of which he refuses to divulge to said court.
"The court finds that by reason of such conduct the said defendant is guilty of contempt of this court and the court hereby so finds him guilty of such contempt and,
"It is therefore hereby ordered that said defendant be peremptorily taken to the county jail and confined therein until further order of this court."
The record of the divorce case is before us, and this court must indulge the presumption that the trial court had evidence before it which justified the judgment rendered by it. We must take this court entry as speaking the truth. Pursuant thereto Roberts was committed to jail on August 13, 1962, and there he remains to the present day. This habeas corpus action originated in the Court of Appeals for Hamilton County.
The Court of Appeals refused to release the petitioner, and the cause is here on an appeal as a matter of right.
Messrs. Cors, Hair Hartsock and Mr. Clyde E. Mattox, for appellant.
Mr. Raymond E. Shannon, prosecuting attorney, and Mr. Raymond C. Wetherell, for appellee.
We are dealing here with a civil contempt as distinguished from a criminal contempt. It is an instance where Roberts was ordered by the Common Pleas Court to divulge the names and locations of the banks where he had deposited moneys received from the sale of certain securities which he had sold. The purpose of the contempt order, issued in a civil action (divorce), was to preserve and enforce the rights of private persons. In other words, this contempt order was civil, remedial and coercive and in no wise was it punitive.
In its journal entry, the court found, in effect, that Roberts' actions in removing securities from his safety deposit box, converting the securities into cash and depositing the cash proceeds in a bank or banks, in violation of an injunctive order of the court, constituted an indirect contempt, and that his refusal, as a witness, to divulge to the court the names and locations of the banks in which such deposits were made constituted a direct contempt.
Under the provisions of Sections 2705.01 and 2705.02, Revised Code, the Court of Common Pleas is clothed with power to punish for contempt of court.
Section 2705.01, Revised Code, reads:
"A court, or a judge at chambers, may summarily punish a person guilty of misbehavior in the presence of or so near the court or judge as to obstruct the administration of justice."
Section 2705.02, Revised Code, reads:
"A person guilty of any of the following acts may be punished as for a contempt:
"* * *
"(C) A failure to obey a subpoena duly served, or a refusal to be sworn or to answer as a witness, when lawfully required." (Emphasis added.)
11 Ohio Jurisprudence (2d), 91, Section 4, reads in part as follows:
"* * * a direct contempt being such as is offered in the presence of the court while sitting judicially."
In the first paragraph of the syllabus in Univis Lens Co. v. United Electrical Radio Machine Workers of America, 86 Ohio App. 241, it is stated:
"Contempt of court committed in the presence of the court or near enough to obstruct the administration of justice is direct contempt of court; proceeding for punishment is a summary one under Section 12136, General Code [Section 2705.01, Revised Code] * * *." (Emphasis added.)
The refusal of Roberts to disclose the names and locations of the bank or banks where cash proceeds from the sale of the securities had been deposited was a direct contempt of the court in that the act was done in the presence of the court while sitting judicially.
The Court of Common Pleas, a court of general jurisdiction with full equity powers, has the power to issue a temporary injunction (Section 3105.20, Revised Code), and such injunction must be obeyed by parties duly served with notice thereof.
Questions were asked by the court while Roberts was on the witness stand. The court ordered him to answer the questions and he was openly contumacious and defiant of that order. His contentions that the court could hear the action only after written charges were filed and after he was given an opportunity to be heard and after he was able to prepare his defense are unfounded and do not pertain to the procedure for direct contempt proceedings.
In the first paragraph of the syllabus in Hale v. State, 55 Ohio St. 210, it is said:
"The General Assembly is without authority to abridge the power of a court, created by the Constitution, to punish contempt summarily, such power being inherent and necessary to the exercise of judicial functions; and Sections 6906 and 6907 Revised Statutes [Sections 2917.26, 2917.27 and 2917.07, Revised Code] will not be so construed as to impute to the General Assembly an intention to abridge such power."
The testimony of the contemnor and his refusal to answer the court's questions under the circumstances of this case show an utter disrespect for the authority of the Court of Common Pleas. He challenged the authority of the court by refusing to answer the questions and to obey the order of the court. His conduct was subverting and defiant to the administration of justice.
Appellant's contention, that, in the absence of anything in the record to show what he must do to purge himself, his sentence for contempt could conceivably be a life sentence, is without merit. A contemptuous witness, summarily sentenced for refusal to answer a question, when directed to do so by the court, can always purge himself upon application to the court by answering the question propounded in open court.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
ZIMMERMAN, MATTHIAS and O'NEILL, JJ., concur.