Chavez-Rey v. Chavez-Rey
Decision Date | 20 August 1968 |
Docket Number | CHAVEZ-RE,No. 68--176,A,68--176 |
Parties | Hugoppellant, v. Georginappellee. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Bretan & Marks, Miami, for appellant.
Kneale, Roberts, Kneale, Starkweather & Rodriguez, Miami, for appellee.
Before PEARSON, BARKDULL and SWANN, JJ.
Hugo Chavez-Rey appeals from an order vacating a divorce decree between the parties and sentencing him to sixty days for criminal contempt in the procurement of the divorce. The appellant asserts first that the adjudication of contempt was not made in accordance with due process of law and second that the divorce was vacated in contravention of due process of law.
The appellant filed a bill of complaint for divorce and an affidavit on August 31, 1965. He set forth a false address for his wife in both the complaint and the affidavit. Pursuant to this affidavit the court issued notice of publication and subsequently entered a decree pro confesso. The appellant appeared before the trial court on October 7, 1965. He testified that he was sending his wife, who was then in Peru, $250 to $350 every month. The court supplemented the examination by asking the following questions:
A final decree of divorce was entered at the conclusion of the hearing.
On February 14, 1968, the appellee filed a petition praying that the appellant be held in contempt of court for failing to make child support payments of $7,000. The trial judge entered an order on the petition for contempt in which he directed the appellant to appear on February 16, 1968, 'to show cause why you should not be in contempt of court for your failure and refusal to comply with the terms and provisions of the final decree of divorce.' (For the sake of clarity we point out that the contempt to which the foregoing petition and motion to show cause refer is not the criminal contempt involved in this appeal.)
At the time designated for the hearing the appellant did not appear personally; a lawyer appeared on his behalf. This lawyer announced that he represented the appellant and requested a continuance. The court agreed to continue the appellant's response to the petition until a later date but proceeded to take the testimony of the appellee. She testified that she had never received child support payments. Upon cross examination by appellant's attorney she revealed that: prior to the divorce the appellant had sent her to Peru with their children and promised to follow her; he had written her that he did not want a divorce and that he would send tickets for his wife and children to return to this country; he did not write her that he had been divorced from her; she did not know that the she had been divorced until a lawyer retained by her notified her of the divorce. Thereupon the court announced: Thereupon the court in the presence of the attorneys continued the hearing until the morning of February 19, 1968.
At the hearing on February 19 the appellant appeared without an attorney. The court asked him where his attorney was, and he replied that he did not have an attorney. The court then stated:
After the court heard testimony to the effect that the appellant had made no child support payments, that he had listed a false address for his wife in the complaint and affidavit in 1965, and that in 1965 he had falsely testified that his wife knew about the divorce action, the court announced it would listen to anything the appellant had to say. After some discussion as to whether the appellant had ever sent money to the appellee and whether the address the appellant had given in 1965 as his wife's address had really been her address, the appellant stated:
The following exchange later took place:
Thereafter the court found him guilty of criminal contempt and entered the order which is appealed.
Appellant's first point is that the contempt committed by the appellant was an indirect criminal contempt and that the court could punish him for it only if the court followed the provisions of Rule 1.840, Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure, 33 F.S.A. We hold that the appellant was guilty of direct criminal contempt by his own admission and that the court had the inherent power to punish for this contempt by the imposition of the 60 days sentence. The direct contempt was the appellant's false testimony in 1965 that the appellee knew of the divorce. The 1965 divorce action and the present cause were both heard by the same judge. Appellant further urges under his first point that the action of the trial court did not follow due process of law because it violated the mandate of the Supreme Court of the United States in Bloom v. State, 391 U.S. 194, 88 S.Ct. 1477, 20 L.Ed.2d 522 (1968), and the holding in Sharp v. Sharp, Fla.App.1968, 209...
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