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Remedial Contempt - Commitment Order Based on Ex Parte Motion of (Non-attorney) Child Support Cas...

  • Ehren Hasz
  • Feb 13, 2009
  • 1 min read

Minor point, perhaps: the court notes Teasdale’s argument that, because the request was signed by a nonattorney, the trial court lacked competency to issue the order, ¶1, but the court never quite gets around to saying whether or not it agrees. The court, to be sure, clearly says “the child support agency’s request for a commitment order should have been stricken from the record,” id., but whether that outcome equates to a lack of competency is left to the reader’s determination. The court is clear, though, about the necessity of notice:

¶11      Further, motions “shall” be heard on a minimum of five days’ notice. Wis. Stat. § 801.15(4). Yet, here the agency’s request for a commitment order was granted the day after its submission. A contemnor is entitled to an opportunity to request a hearing  before  being committed to jail for allegedly failing to comply with purge conditions.  V.J.H. , 163 Wis.  2d at 838, 842-44 (“When a contemnor’s liberty interests are at risk he or she must be given the opportunity to show the court that the failure to comply with the purge condition was not willful and intentional.”). Thus, as a matter of necessity, the contemnor must be provided notice of the allegations before any arrest warrant is issued.  <7>  In light of our decision in  V.J.H. , the court’s policy as described in this case, to jail the contemnor first and ask questions later, cannot be condoned.  <8>

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