                                         2016 IL App (1st) 152494
                                               No. 1-15-2494
                                                                        Fifth Division
                                                                   September 30, 2016
     ______________________________________________________________________________

                                         IN THE
                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                     FIRST DISTRICT
     ______________________________________________________________________________

                                                    )
     In re MARRIAGE OF                              )
                                                    )   Appeal from the Circuit Court
     MARY BETH KNOLL, f/k/a Mary Beth Coyne,        )   of Cook County.
                                                    )
           Petitioner-Appellant and Cross-Appellee, )   No. 03 D 470
                                                    )
     and                                            )   The Honorable
                                                    )   Naomi Schuster,
     ROY J. COYNE, JR.,                             )   Judge Presiding.
                                                    )
           Respondent-Appellee and Cross-Appellant. )
                                                    )
     ______________________________________________________________________________

           PRESIDING JUSTICE GORDON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
           Justices Hall and Reyes concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                                 OPINION

¶1         The instant appeal arises from the trial court’s finding that petitioner Mary Beth Knoll

        was in civil contempt for depriving respondent Roy Coyne, Jr., of his visitation rights with

        their minor child following the dissolution of the parties’ marriage. On appeal, Mary Beth

        argues that the trial court’s finding of civil contempt was erroneous, while in his cross-

        appeal, Roy argues that the trial court erred in finding that certain of Mary Beth’s conduct

        was not contemptuous. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the civil contempt finding but

        affirm the trial court’s finding of visitation abuse and its order of make-up visitation.
     No. 1-15-2494


¶2                                         BACKGROUND

¶3                     I. Dissolution of Marriage and Joint Parenting Agreement

¶4          On January 15, 2003, Mary Beth filed a petition for dissolution of marriage, alleging that

        irreconcilable differences had caused an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. The

        petition alleged that Mary Beth was pregnant, with the anticipated due date of March 29,

        2003, and sought sole care, custody, control, and educational responsibility of the child.

¶5          The record indicates that the parties’ son was born on April 10, 2003, and on April 17,

        2003, the trial court entered a judgment for dissolution of marriage, which incorporated a

        marital settlement agreement and joint parenting agreement entered into by the parties. The

        joint parenting agreement provided that the parties would have joint legal custody of the

        child, with Mary Beth retaining the physical possession and primary residence of the child.

        The joint parenting agreement further set forth a visitation schedule and included a provision

        providing that “[t]he parents agree to be flexible in implementing the visitation program and,

        should a parent miss a scheduled visitation time for a valid reason, the parents shall attempt

        to ‘make-up’ the lost time by agreement.”

¶6          The parenting agreement and visitation schedule were modified a number of times over

        the years, including on June 7, 2007, when Mary Beth was granted sole custody of the child.

        At the time of the civil contempt proceedings at issue in the instant case, the visitation

        schedule had been modified by a December 16, 2011, agreed order and provided, in relevant

        part:

                     “a. *** [Roy] shall have unsupervised parenting time with [the child] every other

                weekend beginning on Friday at 3:15 p.m. and shall conclude Sunday at 4:00 p.m.

                                                 ***


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                       d. ROY will have [the child] for 10 consecutive days every summer from the third

                  Friday in June at 5:00 pm until the Sunday 10 days later at 4:00 pm and such other

                  times as the parties may agree in writing.

                       ***

                       f. ***

                          ***

                          ii. Every year ROY shall have [the child] on New Year’s Day from 9:00 am

                  until January 2 at 6:00 pm.

                          iii. Every year Roy shall have [the child] from December 28 at 9:00 am until

                  December 31 at 5:00 pm.”

          Additionally, one provision of the original visitation schedule that had not been amended was

          a provision providing that Roy was entitled to parenting time with the child until 8 p.m. on

          Father’s Day.

¶7                                     II. Petition for Visitation Abuse

¶8            On July 14, 2014, Roy filed several motions and petitions before the trial court, namely,

          (1) a motion to modify the parenting schedule, (2) a petition to enroll the child in therapy,

          and (3) a “Verified Petition for Finding of Visitation Abuse, Indirect Civil Contempt and

          Other Relief.” It is the third petition that is at issue on appeal.

¶9                                                 1. Petition

¶ 10          With respect to the petition for a finding of visitation abuse and indirect civil contempt,

          which is the petition at issue on appeal, count I of the petition was for visitation abuse and

          alleged that Mary Beth had violated the court orders concerning Roy’s visitation with the

          child, who was now 11 years old, in a number of ways. First, under the heading “Missed

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          Parenting time,” the petition alleged that during Father’s Day weekend 2014, Mary Beth

          contacted Roy to inform him that the child was not feeling well and that Roy would not be

          able to retrieve the child for his parenting time. However, the following day, the child texted

          Roy and informed him that he had recovered and was able to play in his baseball game later

          that day. When Roy requested make-up time for the missed Father’s Day weekend visitation,

          Mary Beth responded that “ ‘[the child] didn’t want to go with you, he is more than willing to

          discuss that with the Judge,’ ” and would not agree to provide Roy with make-up time. The

          petition alleged that Mary Beth also refused to respond to Roy’s request for make-up time for

          Roy’s missed parenting time from December 28, 2013, to December 31, 2013, and January 1,

          2014, to January 2, 2014.

¶ 11         Next, under the heading “Violation of Reasonable Telephone Access,” the petition

          alleged that in January 2014, Roy was unable to communicate with the child for a period of

          six days, with the child not responding to Roy’s texts and phone calls and Mary Beth not

          facilitating any communication between Roy and the child during that time period. The

          petition further alleged that “[a]s a regular occurrence during MARY BETH’s parenting

          time,” the child would not return Roy’s phone calls or text messages. However, the child had

          his phone with him at all times during Roy’s parenting time and was “very protective of his

          phone.” The petition also alleged that, upon information and belief, during Roy’s parenting

          time, Mary Beth “incessantly” called and texted the child at least 10 to 15 times a day on the

          child’s cell phone to ask if he wanted to come home and had advised him “ ‘don’t let your

          dad take your phone.’ ”

¶ 12         Under the heading “Loss of Opportunity to Vacation with Minor Child Due to

          Unreasonable Notice of Extracurricular Activities,” the petition alleged that Mary Beth


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          provided notice of the child’s extracurricular activities one day prior to Roy’s scheduled

          vacation time, when Roy had planned to take the child to Wisconsin during Roy’s only

          scheduled period of summer vacation time with the child. The petition further alleged that,

          upon information and belief, Mary Beth advised the child that he would be allowed to attend

          his activities while exercising vacation time with Roy. The petition alleged that the child’s

          scheduled activities occurred during the entire period of Roy’s summer vacation period and,

          in light of this, Roy was unable to take the child to Wisconsin and Mary Beth would not

          agree to permit Roy to have any additional vacation time in order to take the child to

          Wisconsin.

¶ 13         Finally, under the heading “Not Mentally Preparing the Child for Visitation and

          Attempting to Prevent ROY from exercising his parenting time with [the child],” the petition

          alleged that on Friday, June 20, 2014, when Roy attempted to retrieve the child for his

          vacation parenting time, Mary Beth called the police in an attempt to stop Roy from taking

          the child. The petition further alleged that in the presence of police officers, Mary Beth

          continually asked the child if he wanted to go with Roy and told him that if he did not, he

          could stay at home. The petition alleged that the child indicated he wanted to leave with Roy

          and, after a period of 20 minutes, the child was allowed to leave with Roy.

¶ 14         Count I of the petition alleged that Roy was requesting make-up parenting time for his

          missed parenting time (1) on Father’s Day weekend and (2) from December 28, 2013, to

          January 2, 2014, and also requested additional time in the summer to exercise vacation

          parenting time with the child. The petition further requested that the child be required to

          engage in therapy or counseling and that Mary Beth be required to facilitate at least one

          phone call per day from the child to Roy. Count I of the petition requested an order: (1)


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          finding Mary Beth in civil contempt for visitation abuse, (2) entering a rule to show cause

          against Mary Beth requiring her to show cause why she should not be held in indirect civil

          contempt for her failure to comply with the court orders concerning visitation, (3) ordering

          the child to attend therapy, (4) ordering Roy to be allowed make-up parenting time for the

          missed visitation dates, (5) ordering Mary Beth to facilitate at least one phone call per day

          from the child to Roy, and (6) ordering attorney fees and costs for the preparation and

          presentation of the petition.

¶ 15         Count II of the petition was for indirect civil contempt and realleged the same factual

          allegations concerning visitation as in count I. Count II also alleged that Mary Beth violated

          several additional provisions of the judgment for dissolution of marriage. First, under the

          heading “Lack of Information concerning [the child’s] Medical Issues,” the petition alleged

          that on January 2, 2014, the child underwent a medical procedure, but Mary Beth did not

          inform Roy of the procedure until she contacted him on February 28, 2014, to seek payment

          for the procedure. Additionally, under the heading “Inability to Foster a Loving Relationship

          Between the Minor Child and Roy,” the petition alleged that on June 20, 2014, when Roy

          arrived at Mary Beth’s residence to pick up the child for his vacation time, Mary Beth

          repeatedly asked the child if he wanted to go and told him that he did not have to go with

          Roy if he did not want to go; she continued asking him despite the child indicating that he

          wanted to leave with Roy. The petition also alleged that Mary Beth called the police and

          refused to allow Roy to leave with the child until the police arrived. The petition further

          alleged that during Roy’s parenting time, Mary Beth frequently texted the child to ask if he

          wanted to return home.




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¶ 16         Count II of the petition alleged that Mary Beth “has demonstrated that she is unwilling to

          behave in a positive manner that would support and encourage the minor child to exercise

          parenting time with ROY and maintain a loving relationship with his father.” The petition

          further alleged that her conduct was without compelling cause or justification and was

          contumacious and alleged that she had acted in willful violation of court orders. Count II

          requested an order: (1) finding Mary Beth to be in civil contempt; (2) entering a rule to show

          cause for Mary Beth to show why she should not be held in indirect civil contempt for her

          failure to comply with the terms of the judgment for dissolution of marriage and the

          December 16, 2011, agreed order; (3) ordering the child to attend therapy; (4) ordering Roy

          to be allowed make-up parenting time for his missed visitation time; (5) ordering Mary Beth

          to facilitate at least one phone call per day from the child to Roy; and (6) ordering attorney

          fees and costs in the preparation of the petition.

¶ 17         Count III of the petition was for attorney fees and requested the costs and attorney fees

          that Roy had incurred because of Mary Beth’s failure to comply with the court’s orders.

¶ 18         In her response to Roy’s petition, Mary Beth denied violating the court’s orders

          concerning visitation. With respect to Father’s Day weekend, Mary Beth explained that the

          child “suffers from a condition with his lymphatic and vascular system, whereby one of the

          symptoms results in him developing lesions on his sides and flesh which cause him pain and

          anxiety,” and had suffered a flare-up of the condition shortly before June 13, 2014. Mary

          Beth took the child to his pediatrician, who recommended contacting the Mayo Clinic, which

          normally treated the child for his condition. After contacting the Mayo Clinic, Mary Beth

          was advised to ice and wrap the site, and was told that “if [the child] felt up to it he could

          play in his game—which he decided to do.” Mary Beth had the child “notify his father


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          immediately that he would be going to his game” and Roy attended the game “but did not

          speak to [the child] at all while he was there, and did not take [the child] or ask to take [the

          child] for his visitation.” The next day, Mary Beth arranged for Roy to pick up the child,

          which he did at 11 a.m. Roy indicated that he would drop the child off at 8 p.m., but without

          any notification to Mary Beth instead dropped him off between 1 and 2 p.m.

¶ 19          Mary Beth also denied that she had refused to allow Roy make-up parenting time,

          claiming that she had been “generous” in permitting make-up time if there was no conflict in

          the family’s schedule. Mary Beth further claimed that she had provided a cell phone for the

          child “for many years” and she had not interfered with the child’s communications with Roy

          and the child “is free to communicate with his father as he wishes.” Mary Beth claimed that

          Roy had also “greatly exaggerated her communications with” the child when he was with

          Roy, which were largely initiated by the child himself, and denied that she called and texted

          the child with the frequency suggested by Roy.

¶ 20          With respect to Roy’s summer vacation time, Mary Beth explained that the child had

          been playing baseball in a league since he was very young and that both she and Roy had

          encouraged the child’s participation. The league did not send out its playoff schedule until

          late in 2014, and Mary Beth claimed that Roy received the schedule directly via email from

          the coach and had the schedule as long as Mary Beth did. Mary Beth claimed that she had

          nothing to do with the interference of the child’s games and practices during Roy’s vacation

          time and stated that she also had to modify her schedule to accommodate her children’s

          activities.

¶ 21          Mary Beth also denied that Roy was unaware of the child’s January 2, 2014, medical

          procedure. She claimed that Roy was emailed and informed about the medical treatments


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          and, in fact, traveled to Minnesota and spoke to the child’s physicians on January 3, 2014. In

          addition, Roy texted and communicated with the child about his meeting with the doctors at

          the Mayo Clinic. Mary Beth attached a document from the Mayo Clinic in which it stated

          that the doctor “discuss[ed] the result of investigation and treatment with [the child’s] father”

          on January 3, 2014. Finally, Mary Beth denied Roy’s account of the events of June 20, 2014,

          claiming that she did not encourage the child not to visit with Roy but, instead, the child “did

          not want to go because of the circumstances created by Roy” and, in fact, still left with Roy

          for his visitation.

¶ 22                                              2. Trial

¶ 23          The parties came before the court for a trial on Roy’s petition. Mary Beth and Roy

          testified on their own behalf and Mary Beth’s husband, Brian Knoll, testified on Mary Beth’s

          behalf.

¶ 24          Roy testified that under the parties’ parenting agreement, he was entitled to visitation on

          June 13, 2014, through June 15, 2014, which was Father’s Day weekend. However, Mary

          Beth informed Roy that he would not be able to exercise his parenting time that weekend

          because the child was ill. On Saturday, the child sent Roy a text message at 4 p.m. informing

          Roy that he was feeling better and would be attending his baseball game. Roy was able to

          exercise his parenting time with the child on Sunday, from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m., which was

          “the only time that Mary Beth would allow [him] to have.” Roy testified that he saw the

          child, as well as Mary Beth and her husband, Brian, on Saturday but did not communicate

          with them “[b]ecause with what was going on Friday with just deciding to pull my entire

          weekend visitation, I wasn’t going near them as I figured something was up. And whenever




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          they start acting like that, I don’t go near them, because I am not going to walk into a trap. I

          was alone and without a witness. So I stayed as far away from them as I could.”

¶ 25         Roy also testified that he exercised parenting time on December 25, 2013. When he

          picked the child up, Mary Beth invited Roy inside and told him that the child’s side was

          swelling in the area where he had an earlier operation. She showed Roy the child’s side and

          told Roy that she was going to call the Mayo Clinic and see if she could get an appointment

          as soon as possible. Roy looked at the child’s side and testified that he observed “[n]o

          difference at all” from how it normally looked. The child was at the Mayo Clinic from

          December 28 to December 31. While there, he had appointments with a surgeon and a

          dermatologist and had a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) test. Roy testified that he did not

          sit in on the appointments; Roy explained that the child’s first appointment was for an MRI

          and Roy arrived at the appointment early but discovered that the child had already been

          checked in. Roy went to the location of the MRI but was informed that the child was

          currently undergoing the test and the nurse would not allow him into the room. The second

          appointment was to learn the results of the MRI, and Roy again arrived at the appointment

          early; “[a]s soon as Mary Beth and [the child] showed up, she saw [Roy] there. She left. And

          the next thing you know the security guards showed up trying to remove [him] from the

          hospital.” Roy also testified that he asked Mary Beth for the child’s medical records but she

          would not provide them and told him “that she had sole custody, and she didn’t have to tell

          [him] anything.” Roy testified that he requested make-up parenting time from Mary Beth

          several times but was not granted make-up time “until I filed this motion.”

¶ 26         Roy also testified about his summer parenting time in 2014. He testified that he was

          planning on going to Wisconsin with the child for a fishing trip but that the night before his


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          vacation, he received an email from Mary Beth “which was more so an itinerary of every day

          of my vacation activities that [the child] had to be at. And it varied from baseball games,

          practices, golf, band car wash, band practices. So pretty much every day of my vacation he

          had stuff I had to take him to.” Roy testified that Mary Beth had not provided him notice of

          these activities prior to that email and that he did not have access to the schedule, school

          records, or band activities. When Roy arrived to pick up the child on June 20, he called a few

          times and rang the doorbell, but nobody answered. He waited 15 to 20 minutes “and then

          finally two police cars showed up out of nowhere. Mary Beth had called the police.” Roy

          also testified that he had requested make-up parenting time for the summer vacation period,

          but Mary Beth did not allow it. He testified that when he requested parenting time, “[s]he just

          doesn’t answer my requests. She just ignores them.”

¶ 27         After Roy’s testimony, the trial court found that there was a prima facie case of visitation

          abuse, meaning that the burden then shifted to Mary Beth to demonstrate whether she

          complied with the court’s orders and whether any failure to comply was willful or

          contumacious.

¶ 28         Mary Beth testified that she had never asked the child’s school not to give any records to

          Roy. In July 2012, she had asked Brian, her husband, to provide Roy with the information to

          access the child’s school portal information, so that Roy could log on and access the child’s

          grades on a daily basis. She testified that her parents were listed as the child’s emergency

          contacts at school, because they lived in the same town as the school and were retired, so

          they would be available if anything happened at school.

¶ 29         Mary Beth testified that for Christmas 2013, the child received a cell phone, so that he

          would be better able to communicate with her or Roy when he was with the other parent.


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          Mary Beth denied reading the child’s messages until the instant petition was filed, when the

          child gave her permission to read his messages and download them. Mary Beth also denied

          that she or her husband ever wrote any messages to Roy from the child’s phone that they

          pretended were from the child.

¶ 30         Mary Beth testified that, since he was an infant, the child had suffered from “lymphatic

          and vascular malformations,” in which the child occasionally presented with tumors that

          needed to be removed. The child was initially treated in Chicago but was encouraged to seek

          treatment at the Mayo Clinic. Mary Beth testified that on Christmas morning 2013, the child

          had clear lymphatic bubbles on his side, as well as two blood bubbles; she testified that “[t]he

          clear lymphatic bubbles we have seen before, but not the blood bubbles.” The child went

          with Roy for his visitation, and Mary Beth contacted the child’s doctor at the Mayo Clinic.

          She sent photos of the child’s side to the doctor’s nurse and received a phone call on

          December 30 scheduling an appointment on December 31. Mary Beth informed Roy of the

          child’s appointment via text message. Mary Beth and the child flew to the Mayo Clinic on

          December 31, where they met with the child’s doctor, who scheduled the child for an MRI on

          January 2. When Mary Beth and the child arrived for the MRI, they had preregistered, so

          they went directly to the MRI lab. During the child’s MRI, Mary Beth waited in a waiting

          area; she did not go into the MRI room with him. During the MRI, Roy was in the lobby

          area. After the MRI, they had a tentative appointment with the doctor that afternoon but

          needed to first meet with dermatology, so Mary Beth asked Roy if he wanted to take the child

          out to lunch, but Roy declined. Mary Beth testified that she received information about the

          child’s appointments at the Mayo Clinic by calling and giving the child’s “Mayo Clinic

          number” to find out his scheduled appointments; she further testified that Roy had access to


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          this information because “[i]t had been on every single bit of communication ever since [the

          child] was assigned a Mayo Clinic number when he was an infant.” The dermatology

          appointment took longer than scheduled, because one of the child’s blood blisters had

          cracked and was bleeding, so Mary Beth and the child arrived for their next doctor’s

          appointment at 4 p.m. instead of the scheduled 3:30 time. When they arrived, Roy was in the

          waiting area and began screaming at Mary Beth and the child, asking where they had been.

          The child began crying immediately and Mary Beth asked if she and the child could be put in

          a room in the back so that they would not have to be in the same waiting area as Roy. Mary

          Beth testified that “[n]ext thing I knew, security showed up”; she did not contact security and

          did not know who had done so. Mary Beth and the child were taken to an office in the back

          and Roy was asked to leave.

¶ 31         As to Father’s Day weekend, Mary Beth testified that on Thursday, June 12, 2014, the

          child was not feeling well and his side was swollen. Mary Beth contacted the Mayo Clinic

          and notified Roy. The Mayo Clinic instructed her to “take it easy” with the child for the

          weekend and to ice his side and wrap it if necessary. On Friday, the child was still not feeling

          well and was nervous about whether the problem was going to resolve itself or get worse. He

          wanted to stay home for the weekend, so Mary Beth sent Roy a text message informing him.

          Roy responded, telling Mary Beth that he was more than capable of taking care of the child

          and threatening to call the police if she did not send the child with him; Mary Beth testified

          that Roy was “definitely” capable of taking care of the child and his medical condition. Mary

          Beth informed the child that he needed to go, but the child still did not want to go. Mary Beth

          prepared the child’s things, and Roy arrived to pick him up. Roy and the child had a

          discussion and ultimately determined that they would do something on Sunday, Father’s


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          Day; Mary Beth testified that Roy was not angry “at all” and was “very respectful” when he

          spoke to the child and then left. The next day, the child was feeling better and decided he

          wanted to play in his scheduled baseball game; the child notified Roy through text messages.

          Mary Beth and Roy both attended the game but did not communicate; Roy did not ask if he

          could take the child home with him. On Sunday, Roy picked the child up at 11 a.m.; he was

          allowed to have him until 8 p.m. under the court order but arranged to bring him home at 3

          p.m. and actually brought him home at 1:30 p.m. On cross-examination, Mary Beth admitted

          that she responded to Roy’s request for make-up time by stating that “ ‘[a]s far as making up

          visitation for last weekend, [the child] didn’t want to go with you. He is more than willing to

          discuss that with the judge.’ ” Mary Beth admitted that “[i]t was totally wrong” for her to say

          that and that she never discussed her comment with the child.

¶ 32         With respect to summer vacation, Mary Beth testified that the night before Roy’s

          scheduled visitation, the child asked Mary Beth to send Roy a list of the child’s previously

          scheduled activities so that he would have a list of everything that the child was supposed to

          attend, which included baseball, band, and golf; Mary Beth sent Roy an email with this

          information but did not insist that the child attend every one of the activities. Mary Beth was

          under the impression that Roy knew about all of the child’s activities, as he was involved

          with the child’s participation in them. Mary Beth did not add any activities to the child’s

          schedule and all of his activities were ones that he had engaged in previously: that year’s

          baseball schedule had been released in October 2013, and he had participated in band camp

          and golfing for the past two years. Mary Beth testified that Roy contacted her 45 minutes

          before his parenting time was scheduled to begin, seeking to reschedule it, but Mary Beth

          was unable to accommodate him on such short notice due to her own schedule. Roy arrived


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          to pick the child up “and parked sideways on the driveway and was wailing on his horn.”

          Even though the child was prepared to do so, he did not want to leave with Roy, and Mary

          Beth contacted the police due to Roy’s behavior and the child’s refusal to leave. The police

          spoke with the child, and between them, Mary Beth, and Brian, they were able to convince

          the child to leave with Roy. Mary Beth denied calling the child “incessantly” during Roy’s

          parenting time and testified that her phone records showed that she called the child seven

          times during the period of summer parenting time and that the child called her seven times.

          Mary Beth testified that she also texted with the child and estimated that they would have

          texted not more than 10 times during that period.

¶ 33         Mary Beth testified that after the visit at the Mayo Clinic, the relationship between her

          and Roy changed; she described it as “horrible” and said there was “not much

          communication” and that any communication was through Brian, her husband. Mary Beth

          testified that the child continued visiting and communicating with Roy, including a number

          of requests from Roy for extra visits that Mary Beth always granted.

¶ 34         Brian Knoll, Mary Beth’s husband, testified that he was able to access the child’s school

          records through an online portal, which the school district began implementing in 2012. The

          portal could be accessed using a school-provided username and password; Brian passed that

          information along to Roy in July 2012 at Mary Beth’s request. He explained that at the time,

          he had been emailing Roy all of the child’s progress reports and report cards, so sending the

          information to Roy would allow him to access that material himself.

¶ 35                                       3. Trial Court Order

¶ 36         On August 5, 2015, the trial court entered an order on Roy’s petition. Concerning

          Father’s Day weekend, the trial court noted that “[t]his Court finds it incredibly unnerving


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          the amount of responsibility the parties give to their twelve-year-old child. The Court is

          concerned that Mary Beth allows [the child] to pick and choose when he wants to visit with

          either parent and also let [the child] decide when he can play in a baseball game after

          claiming a medical ailment prevented him from visiting with his father. This Court is by no

          means downplaying [the child’s] medical issues; however, if [the child] is too sick to visit

          with his father, then he should not be playing in a baseball game the next day. At the very

          least, Mary Beth should have informed Roy that [the child] was feeling better. The fact that

          Roy was only informed of [the child’s] well-being through a text from [the child] about his

          baseball game calls into question the creditability of the statements made by Mary Beth in

          alleging that she did not interfere in Roy’s parenting time.” The court did, however, note that

          Roy had parenting time on Father’s Day itself, June 15, 2014, from approximately 11 a.m. to

          2 p.m., and found that Roy had not presented clear evidence to establish that Mary Beth

          restricted his parenting time on Father’s Day.

¶ 37         With respect to Roy’s summer parenting time, the court found that the evidence

          established that Roy was informed of the child’s band camp schedule through a text sent by

          the child on June 12, that he had a copy of the child’s baseball schedule and that he knew or

          should have known of the continued baseball schedule due to playoffs. The court noted that

          “[i]t is not visitation abuse when the minor child has pre-planned activities, like [the child],

          that he or she has been a part of for an entire sport’s season or year, especially when both

          parents are aware of the activities and have supported the child throughout his or her

          participation in the activities.” The court found that there was no evidence that Mary Beth

          interfered with Roy’s summer parenting time and further found that Roy was able to exercise

          his summer parenting time with the child. The court did, however, criticize Mary Beth’s


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          decision to involve the police in the parenting time exchange that occurred on June 20, 2014,

          noting that “Mary Beth and Roy are the parents of [the child], not the police. It is not the

          responsibility of the police department to talk [the child] into going with his father for

          parenting time. It is unlikely that the presence of the police did little more than scare the child

          into attending parenting time with [his] father. This Court hopes that both parties consider the

          potential negative impact on the minor child before engaging the police in future parenting

          time exchanges.”

¶ 38         Finally, concerning the child’s trip to the Mayo Clinic at the end of December 2013, the

          court found that “[w]hile it is unfortunate that the appointment fell on Roy’s parenting time,”

          Mary Beth did not intentionally schedule the appointment in an attempt to interfere with

          Roy’s parenting time. The court found that the child had a severe medical issue known to

          both parents, sustained a flare-up of that medical issue on December 25, 2013, and necessary

          medical follow-up was sought by Mary Beth as soon as possible. The court further noted that

          Roy was informed of the appointment and even drove to Minnesota to visit the child.

          However, the court found that Roy requested make-up time for the period of parenting time

          that he missed and that it was unclear whether Mary Beth ever agreed to the requested make-

          up time; the court found that “through Roy’s testimony and the evidence presented, it appears

          that Roy’s request was ignored.”

¶ 39         After making the above findings of fact, the court concluded:

                       “1. Roy was scheduled to have parenting time with [the child] on June 13, 2014

                 through June 15, 2014; December 28, 2013 through December 31, 2013 and January

                 1, 2014 through January 2, 2014; and from June 20, 2014 through June 29, 2014.




                                                        17
No. 1-15-2494


                2. *** The weekend of June 13 through June 14, 2014 fell on Roy’s parenting

         time weekend. Mary Beth denied him the right to exercise his parenting time with the

         minor child as outlined in the December 16, 2011 Agreed Order. She has not given

         any legally sufficient reasons for failure to comply with the aforementioned order and

         her failure to comply with the order was willful and contumacious. Her conduct

         defeated and impaired the rights and interests of Roy and has further impeded and

         obstructed the Court in its[ ] administration of justice.

                3. *** In 2014, Roy’s summer vacation parenting time based on the

         aforementioned Agreed Order was from June 20, 2014 to June 29, 2014. For that time

         period, Roy was able to exercise his summer vacation parenting time with [the child],

         despite [the child’s] summer activity schedule. Although Roy’s parenting time was

         subject to the child’s activity schedule, it was not due to any willful or contumacious

         behavior of Mary Beth.

                4. *** For the time period of December 28, 2013 through December 31, 2013 and

         January 1, 2014 through January 2, 2014, Roy was not able to exercise all of his

         awarded parenting time due to [the child’s] medical issues which caused the necessity

         of traveling to Rochester, Minnesota for medical treatment. Although Roy missed the

         parenting time, it was not due to any willful or contumacious behavior. Mary Beth

         had a legally sufficient reason for failing to comply with the aforementioned order.

                5. Pursuant to Paragraph 3.4 of the parties’ Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage

         entered on April 17, 2003, which allows for make-up parenting time when a party is

         unable to exercise his or her allotted parenting time, Roy should have received make

         up parenting time for the parenting time he missed on June 13 through June 14, 2014


                                               18
       No. 1-15-2494


                 and the days he missed between December 28 through December 31, 2013 and

                 January 1 through January 2, 2014.”

¶ 40         The court granted count I of Roy’s petition, which was for visitation abuse, in part,

          ordering:

                       “a. Petitioner, Mary Beth Knoll f/k/a Mary Beth Hickey Coyne, is hereby found

                 and declared to be in indirect civil contempt of Court for her willful failure to obey

                 the Court’s Order as herein stated and for visitation abuse for the time period of June

                 13 and 14, 2014;

                       b. The parties shall immediately determine a make-up parenting time schedule for

                 the parenting time missed by Respondent, Roy James Coyne, for the periods of June

                 13 through June 14, 2014 and the days that Roy missed parenting time during [the

                 child’s] 2013 Winter Break, pursuant to Paragraph 3.4 of the parties’ Judgment for

                 Dissolution of Marriage entered on April 17, 2003.”

          The court, however, denied count II of the petition, which was for indirect civil contempt.

          With respect to count III, Roy’s attorney fees, the court ordered that attorney fees were

          “subject to further court order entered after the filing of the proper petition.”

¶ 41         On September 2, 2015, Mary Beth filed a notice of appeal, appealing the trial court’s

          finding her to be in civil contempt. On September 15, 2015, Roy filed a notice of cross-

          appeal, appealing the trial court’s denial of count II of the petition as well as the trial court’s

          “findings and rulings as to any relief denied to him.”

¶ 42                                             ANALYSIS

¶ 43         On appeal, Mary Beth challenges the trial court’s finding her in civil contempt with

          respect to Father’s Day weekend and also challenges the trial court’s finding that Roy was

                                                        19
       No. 1-15-2494


          entitled to make-up visitation. In his cross-appeal, Roy argues that the trial court “erred in

          denying certain relief to” him. Prior to considering the merits of the parties’ arguments, we

          must first discuss an issue raised by Roy concerning this court’s jurisdiction to hear the

          instant appeals. The question of whether we have jurisdiction over the instant appeals

          presents a question of law, which we review de novo. In re Marriage of Demaret, 2012 IL

          App (1st) 111916, ¶ 25; In re Marriage of Gutman, 232 Ill. 2d 145, 150 (2008). De novo

          consideration means we perform the same analysis that a trial judge would perform. Khan v.

          BDO Seidman, LLP, 408 Ill. App. 3d 564, 578 (2011).

¶ 44         In the case at bar, Mary Beth claims that there are two separate bases for jurisdiction. One

          such basis is Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(b)(5) (Feb. 26, 2010), which provides that

          “[a]n order finding a person or entity in contempt of court which imposes a monetary or other

          penalty” is appealable without a Rule 304(a) finding. Our supreme court has made clear,

          however, that “only a contempt judgment that imposes a sanction is a final, appealable

          order.” (Emphasis in original.) Gutman, 232 Ill. 2d at 152. Here, Mary Beth claims that the

          trial court found Mary Beth to be in civil contempt of court “and penalized her by ordering

          her to cede a portion of her time with [the child] to Roy as make-up visitation.” While we are

          mindful that, to the parent, any reduction in parenting time feels like a penalty, Illinois law

          establishes that parenting time is something that is guided by the best interests of the child

          and is not a vehicle used to punish either parent. See, e.g., 750 ILCS 5/607(c) (West 2012)

          (providing that “[t]he court may modify an order granting or denying visitation rights of a

          parent whenever modification would serve the best interest of the child”); Pryweller v.

          Pryweller, 218 Ill. App. 3d 619, 633 (1991) (“We also emphasize that, even in contempt

          proceedings involving visitation abuse issues, the importance of the children’s best interests


                                                      20
       No. 1-15-2494


          must not be lost, and the children should not be used as pawns.”); In re Marriage of Mitchell,

          319 Ill. App. 3d 17, 22 (2001) (“Visitation should not be used to penalize or reward parents

          for their conduct.”). Thus, the trial court’s finding that Roy was entitled to make-up parenting

          time cannot be considered a penalty or sanction imposed on Mary Beth that would render the

          civil contempt order appealable.

¶ 45          Mary Beth also claims that we have jurisdiction under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 301

          (eff. Feb. 1, 1994), 1 which provides for appeals from final judgments, despite the fact that

          there are several outstanding matters between the parties, including Roy’s petitions for

          modification of the visitation schedule, enrolling the child in therapy, altering the drop-off

          and pick-up points for visitations, and attorney fees. “ ‘An order is final and appealable if it

          terminates the litigation between the parties on the merits or disposes of the rights of the

          parties, either on the entire controversy or a separate part thereof.’ [Citation.] Absent a Rule

          304(a) finding, a final order disposing of fewer than all of the claims is not an appealable

          order and does not become appealable until all of the claims have been resolved.” Gutman,

          232 Ill. 2d at 151 (quoting R.W. Dunteman Co. v. C/G Enterprises, Inc., 181 Ill. 2d 153, 159

          (1998)).

¶ 46          However, Mary Beth cites a line of cases 2 in which our appellate courts have held that a

          postdissolution order may be an appealable order even if other postdissolution matters are

          pending, so long as the matters are sufficiently unrelated. See In re Marriage of A’Hearn,

          408 Ill. App. 3d 1091, 1098 (2011) (finding jurisdiction where pending petitions for rule to

              1
                Mary Beth actually claims we have jurisdiction under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 303 (eff Jan.
          1, 2015). However, Rule 303 provides the procedures for appealing from final judgments. Ill. S. Ct.
          R. 303 (eff. Jan. 1, 2015). It is Illinois Supreme Court Rule 301 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994) that actually
          provides that “[e]very final judgment of a circuit court in a civil case is appealable as of right.”
              2
                We note that there is a split of authority on this issue. See In re Marriage of Demaret, 2012 IL
          App (1st) 111916, ¶¶ 26-37 (discussing the conflict between courts).

                                                         21
       No. 1-15-2494


          show cause were not related to a petition for modification of custody at issue on appeal); In

          re Marriage of Demaret, 2012 IL App (1st) 111916, ¶ 38 (finding jurisdiction where a

          party’s petition for attorney fees was “wholly unrelated” to the issues presented in the

          removal petition at issue on appeal); In re Baumgartner, 2014 IL App (1st) 120552, ¶ 36

          (finding jurisdiction where a pending petition for attorney fees was unrelated to the

          determination of the parties’ obligation to provide educational expenses for their child). See

          also In re Parentage of Rogan M., 2014 IL App (1st) 132765, ¶ 14 (noting the “need for the

          reviewing court to examine the relationship of any pending matters to those being

          appealed”). In the case at bar, we agree with Mary Beth that the matters remaining pending

          between the parties are unrelated to the petition at issue on appeal. The pending matters all

          concern either the parties’ visitation schedule in the future or Roy’s attorney fees. These

          issues are wholly unrelated to the question of whether Mary Beth engaged in visitation abuse

          in 2013 and 2014. Accordingly, we find we have jurisdiction over the instant appeals and

          proceed to consider their merits.

¶ 47                                      I. Mary Beth’s Appeal

¶ 48         We first consider Mary Beth’s appeal, in which she claims that the trial court order

          finding her in civil contempt was erroneous in several respects. First, she claims that the trial

          court’s finding that she willfully failed to comply with the court’s orders concerning

          visitation was contrary to the evidence adduced at trial. Next, she claims that the order was

          invalid because it did not contain a provision allowing her to purge herself of the civil

          contempt. Finally, she claims that Roy had received make-up visitation on numerous

          occasions, and therefore, the trial court erred in finding he was entitled to make-up visitation.

          We consider each argument in turn.


                                                       22
       No. 1-15-2494


¶ 49                      A. Finding of Civil Contempt Due to Visitation Abuse

¶ 50         Mary Beth first argues that the trial court’s finding that she was in civil contempt because

          she denied Roy’s visitation was contrary to the evidence heard by the trial court. “Generally,

          civil contempt occurs when a party fails to do something ordered by the trial court, resulting

          in the loss of a benefit or advantage to the opposing party.” In re Marriage of Charous, 368

          Ill. App. 3d 99, 107 (2006). “Where a parent is found in contempt for failure to turn a child

          over to the other parent for visitation or custody, the conduct occurs outside of the court’s

          presence and must be construed as indirect contempt.” (Emphasis omitted.) Pryweller, 218

          Ill. App. 3d at 630. “Proof of willful disobedience of a court order is essential to any finding

          of indirect civil contempt.” In re Marriage of McCormick, 2013 IL App (2d) 120100, ¶ 17.

          The burden initially falls on the petitioner to establish, by a preponderance of the evidence,

          that the alleged contemnor has violated a court order. McCormick, 2013 IL App (2d) 120100,

          ¶ 17. Once that burden is satisfied, the burden shifts to the contemnor, who has the burden of

          showing that the violation was not willful and contumacious and that he or she had a valid

          excuse for failing to follow the order. McCormick, 2013 IL App (2d) 120100, ¶ 17.

          “Contumacious conduct consists of ‘conduct calculated to embarrass, hinder, or obstruct a

          court in its administration of justice or lessening the authority and dignity of the court.’ ”

          Charous, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 108 (quoting In re Marriage of Fuesting, 228 Ill. App. 3d 339,

          349 (1992)). “Whether a party is guilty of contempt is a question of fact for the trial court,

          and a reviewing court should not disturb the trial court’s determination unless it is against the

          manifest weight of the evidence or the record reflects an abuse of discretion.” McCormick,

          2013 IL App (2d) 120100, ¶ 17. “A decision is against the manifest weight of the evidence

          where the opposite conclusion is clearly evident or where the court’s findings are


                                                       23
       No. 1-15-2494


          unreasonable, arbitrary, and not based on any of the evidence.” (Internal quotation marks

          omitted.) Demaret, 2012 IL App (1st) 111916, ¶ 43.

¶ 51         In the case at bar, the trial court found that on June 13 and 14, 2014, Mary Beth denied

          Roy the right to exercise his parenting time with the child as outlined in the December 16,

          2011, agreed order and further found that Mary Beth’s failure to comply with the order was

          willful and contumacious. 3 Mary Beth claims that “[t]he trial court supplies no facts or

          reasoning whatsoever to explain how Mary Beth denied Roy visitation; the order does not

          state (1) how Mary Beth denied Roy his right to exercise visitation, (2) how Mary Beth failed

          to comply with the trial court’s order, or (3) how Mary Beth’s claimed failure to comply was

          willful.” We do not find this argument persuasive.

¶ 52         First, in an indirect civil contempt proceeding, “[t]he judge does not have full personal

          knowledge of the elements, and proof of facts of which the court cannot take judicial notice

          must be presented in order for the court to make a finding of contempt.” Pryweller, 218 Ill.

          App. 3d at 629. “An appellate court will accordingly have at its disposal the benefit of the

          record, including the petition alleging specific acts of contempt and the testimony adduced at

          the hearing, to adequately determine whether the finding of contempt is substantiated.” In re

          Marriage of Betts, 155 Ill. App. 3d 85, 98 (1987). Since “[t]he purpose of requiring that facts

          constituting contempt be set forth with specificity is to afford an appellate court a basis for

          reviewing the contempt order” (Betts, 155 Ill. App. 3d at 97-98), in an indirect civil contempt

          proceeding, “such a failure under the facts is not fatal” (Betts, 155 Ill. App. 3d at 97).



             3
                We note that the trial court did not find Mary Beth in civil contempt concerning Roy’s summer
          2014 vacation or the trip to the Mayo Clinic at the end of 2013. While the court found that Roy was
          entitled to make-up time for the latter, in its findings of fact, the court expressly noted that
          “[a]lthough Roy missed the parenting time, it was not due to any willful or contumacious behavior.
          Mary Beth had a legally sufficient reason for failing to comply with the aforementioned order.”

                                                        24
       No. 1-15-2494


¶ 53         Furthermore, in the instant case, the trial court order did explain the factual basis for its

          decision, contrary to Mary Beth’s contention. The court’s order states that the testimony of

          the parties revealed that the weekend of June 13 through June 15, 2014, was allocated to Roy

          for parenting time. However, on June 13, Mary Beth contacted Roy to inform him that the

          child wanted to stay home due to a flare-up of his medical issue. Roy nevertheless sought to

          exercise his parenting time, coming to Mary Beth’s home to pick up the child. After a

          discussion with the child, Roy left without him and made plans to exercise parenting time on

          Father’s Day, June 15. Thus, Roy was not allowed to exercise his parenting time on June 13

          or 14, despite the trial court’s finding that “Roy’s ability to care for [the child] was never in

          question.” The next day, Roy received a text message from the child—not from Mary Beth,

          which the trial court found significant—indicating that the child would be playing in his

          baseball game that afternoon. The trial court made clear in its order that it was “concerned”

          that Mary Beth permitted the child to “pick and choose” when he would visit with Roy and

          that Mary Beth permitted the child to decide to play in his baseball game after being too ill to

          visit with Roy the prior day. We note that “Illinois courts have held that a custodial parent

          may not disregard the visitation requirements of a dissolution judgment merely because his

          or her children do not desire to visit the noncustodial parent.” Charous, 368 Ill. App. 3d at

          111. In other words, it was not the child’s choice as to whether Roy would be able to exercise

          visitation on June 13 or 14—as the custodial parent, such a decision fell to Mary Beth. See

          Charous, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 112 (“[The custodial mother] cannot escape responsibility for

          her failure to comply with the visitation provisions of the parenting agreement by shifting the

          blame to the children. Although [the children] were not children of tender years, they were

          nonetheless minor children under the care, control, and custody of [the mother].”). The trial



                                                       25
       No. 1-15-2494


          court in the instant case found that Mary Beth had not demonstrated any justification for

          denying Roy his parenting time, and we cannot find that such a decision was against the

          manifest weight of the evidence.

¶ 54          Mary Beth argues that she did not deny Roy’s visitation rights and that, instead, Roy

          “voluntarily elected to forego his visitation and made no attempt to resume it.” She claims

          that after Roy arrived at her home on June 13, he “voluntarily left” after inspecting the

          child’s side and further claims that he made no effort to resume his visitation until June 15,

          despite knowing that the child felt well enough to play in his baseball game. However,

          “[w]itness credibility and resolution of conflicts in evidence are matters within the discretion

          of the trial judge and should not be disturbed upon review.” Moniuszko v. Moniuszko, 238 Ill.

          App. 3d 523, 530 (1992). Here, the trial court observed both parties testify during a several-

          day-long hearing and we will not second-guess its determination that Roy was denied his

          visitation instead of “voluntarily elect[ing] to forego” it, as Mary Beth contends.

¶ 55                                           B. Purge Provision

¶ 56          Mary Beth’s second argument on appeal is that the trial court’s civil contempt order was

          invalid as it did not contain a purge provision. Our supreme court has explained that “[w]hen

          a party is found in civil contempt of court, *** the contempt order is coercive in nature. The

          court seeks only to secure obedience to its prior order. Since the contempt order is coercive

          rather than punitive, the civil contemnor must be provided with the ‘keys to his cell.’ That is,

          he must be allowed to purge himself of contempt even after he has been imprisoned.” In re

          Marriage of Logston, 103 Ill. 2d 266, 289 (1984).

¶ 57          In the case at bar, the trial court’s order granting count I of Roy’s petition, which was for

          visitation abuse, in part, stated:


                                                        26
       No. 1-15-2494


                       “a. Petitioner, Mary Beth Knoll f/k/a Mary Beth Hickey Coyne, is hereby found

                 and declared to be in indirect civil contempt of Court for her willful failure to obey

                 the Court’s Order as herein stated and for visitation abuse for the time period of June

                 13 and 14, 2014;

                       b. The parties shall immediately determine a make-up parenting time schedule for

                 the parenting time missed by Respondent, Roy James Coyne, for the periods of June

                 13 through June 14, 2014 and the days that Roy missed parenting time during [the

                 child’s] 2013 Winter Break, pursuant to Paragraph 3.4 of the parties’ Judgment for

                 Dissolution of Marriage entered on April 17, 2003.”

          Mary Beth argues that that the order “neither uses the word ‘purge’ nor otherwise sets forth

          the conditions upon which Mary Beth may dissolve the indirect civil contempt” and,

          accordingly, does not constitute a valid civil contempt order. Roy, by contrast, argues that the

          order for make-up visitation operates as a purge provision. We agree with Mary Beth.

¶ 58         “A valid contempt order must contain a purge provision, which lifts the sanction when

          the contemnor complies with the order. [Citation.] A civil contempt order that fails to provide

          the contemnor with the ‘keys to his cell’ is void.” Bank of America, N.A. v. Freed, 2012 IL

          App (1st) 113178, ¶ 42. In the case at bar, the order does not provide for any way for Mary

          Beth to purge her civil contempt; it does not say that the civil contempt will be purged

          through make-up visitation, as Roy attempts to argue. Furthermore, even the make-up

          visitation provision would not provide Mary Beth with the “keys to her cell,” as it specifies

          that “[t]he parties shall immediately determine a make-up parenting time schedule.” Thus,

          Roy’s participation is a necessary prerequisite to establishing a make-up parenting time

          schedule. We have found that it is not a proper purge provision where the provision requires


                                                      27
       No. 1-15-2494


          action by a third party to be effective. See Bank of America, 2012 IL App (1st) 113178, ¶ 44

          (finding a purge provision invalid where it contained a requirement that a receiver make a

          recommendation to the court regarding the collection, sale, and distribution of the

          defendants’ assets and noting that “[t]hese provisions appear to take the keys out of the

          defendants’ hands and give them to the receiver, for even if defendants cooperate with the

          receiver, the contempt will not be purged until the receiver determines that his investigation

          is complete and makes a report and recommendation to the court”). Here, even if Mary Beth

          reached out to establish a make-up schedule, Roy could single-handedly prevent such a

          schedule through his conduct. Thus, even if it could be considered to be a purge provision, it

          would not be a proper one. Accordingly, the civil contempt finding must be vacated.

¶ 59         As an aside, although the parties do not discuss the issue, we must note that the court’s

          contempt order in the instant case could also be arguably characterized as criminal contempt

          in addition to civil contempt. While civil contempt is designed to compel compliance with a

          court order, “criminal contempt is ‘instituted to punish, as opposed to coerce, a contemnor

          for past contumacious conduct.’ ” Emery v. Northeast Illinois Regional Transportation Co.,

          374 Ill. App. 3d 974, 977 (2007) (quoting In re Marriage of Sharp, 369 Ill. App. 3d 271, 279

          (2006)). “ ‘Criminal sanctions are retrospective in that they seek to punish a contemnor for

          past acts that he cannot now undo.’ ” Emery, 374 Ill. App. 3d at 977 (quoting Sharp, 369 Ill.

          App. 3d at 279). Here, the court found Mary Beth in contempt for denying Roy visitation on

          June 13 and 14, 2014, an action which cannot be undone. Thus, the court’s contempt finding

          could have been arguably characterized as a criminal contempt finding, in addition to a civil

          one. This does not salvage the court’s order, however, because, as we discussed in our

          jurisdictional analysis, the trial court did not impose a punishment and only ordered make-up


                                                     28
No. 1-15-2494


   visitation. Thus, Mary Beth was not “punished” in any way other than being found in

   contempt. Moreover, in a criminal contempt proceeding, the contemnor is entitled to similar

   constitutional protections and procedural rights as in other criminal proceedings. People v.

   Budzynski, 333 Ill. App. 3d 433, 438-39 (2002). “The defendant in an indirect criminal

   contempt action has a right to be charged by written complaint, petition, or information; a

   right to personal service; a right to file an answer; a right to be heard; a right to present

   evidence; a right to cross-examine witnesses; a right to subpoena witnesses; a right to a

   public hearing; a right to the privilege against self-incrimination; a right to counsel and the

   appointment of counsel if indigent; and a right to be proved guilty beyond a reasonable

   doubt.” Budzynski, 333 Ill. App. 3d at 439 (citing In re Marriage of Betts, 200 Ill. App. 3d

   26, 53-34 (1990)). Additionally, the contemnor may move for a substitution of judge and, if

   the potential penalty may exceed six months’ incarceration or a fine of $500, the contemnor

   is entitled to a trial by jury. SKS & Associates, Inc. v. Dart, 2012 IL App (1st) 103504, ¶ 21.

   Furthermore, “[t]he alleged contemnor cannot assert these rights unless he receives proper

   notice of the nature of the charges against him. Accordingly, any party wishing to initiate

   indirect criminal contempt proceedings must not only notify the alleged contemnor that

   sanctions are being sought, but that the proceedings were criminal in nature.” People v.

   Goleash, 311 Ill. App. 3d 949, 957 (2000). “Unless a contemnor is notified in advance of the

   nature of the charge, the contemnor would be impermissibly precluded from asserting her

   due process rights and certainly could not knowingly waive such rights.” (Emphasis in

   original.) In re J.L.D., 178 Ill. App. 3d 1025, 1031 (1989) (finding that “the failure of the

   trial court to advise respondent of the nature of the proceedings” was reversible error). See

   also People v. Covington, 395 Ill. App. 3d 996, 1009 (2009) (finding the trial court erred in



                                               29
       No. 1-15-2494


          entering a criminal contempt judgment against the defendant without providing the necessary

          criminal procedural rights where “at no point during the indirect criminal contempt

          proceeding was defendant admonished of his right to counsel”). Since Mary Beth was not

          admonished of these rights, a criminal contempt finding could not be valid.

¶ 60         Nevertheless, vacating the finding of civil contempt is not the end of the appeal. “As a

          reviewing court, we can sustain the decision of a lower court on any grounds which are

          called for by the record, regardless of whether the lower court relied on those grounds and

          regardless of whether the lower court’s reasoning was correct.” Leonardi v. Loyola

          University of Chicago, 168 Ill. 2d 83, 97 (1995). In the case at bar, the trial court’s order

          found both that Mary Beth was in indirect civil contempt and that she had engaged in

          visitation abuse for the time period of June 13 and 14, 2014. 4

¶ 61         “Section 607.1 [of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (Act) (750 ILCS

          5/607.1 (West 2012))] provides a party an alternative remedy to seek enforcement of court-

          ordered visitation that is separate and apart from the trial court’s contempt power.” Charous,

          368 Ill. App. 3d at 114. Under section 607.1, “[v]isitation abuse occurs when a party has

          willfully and without justification: (1) denied another party visitation as set forth by the

          court; or (2) exercised his or her visitation rights in a manner that is harmful to the child or

          child’s custodian.” 750 ILCS 5/607.1(a) (West 2012). “A trial court’s finding that a party

          committed visitation abuse will not be disturbed unless it is against the manifest weight of

          the evidence.” Charous, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 114 (citing In re Marriage of Aleshire, 273 Ill.

          App. 3d 81, 83 (1995)). As noted, “[a] decision is against the manifest weight of the evidence

          where the opposite conclusion is clearly evident or where the court’s findings are

             4
                Indeed, we note that count I of Roy’s petition was expressly for visitation abuse and sought a
          civil contempt finding as a remedy for the visitation abuse.

                                                        30
       No. 1-15-2494


          unreasonable, arbitrary, and not based on any of the evidence.” (Internal quotation marks

          omitted.) Demaret, 2012 IL App (1st) 111916, ¶ 43.

¶ 62         In the case at bar, as we have discussed above, the trial court’s finding that Mary Beth

          had willfully denied Roy his visitation rights on June 13 and 14, 2014, was not against the

          manifest weight of the evidence. The same reasoning set forth in our discussion concerning

          the civil contempt finding applies here, as both require the finding of a willful denial of

          visitation. See Charous, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 114 (referring to its reasoning on contempt issue

          in determining whether visitation abuse had occurred). Thus, we affirm the trial court’s

          judgment finding that Mary Beth engaged in visitation abuse on June 13 and 14, 2014.

¶ 63         “Upon a finding of visitation abuse, a trial court is authorized to (1) modify the visitation

          order; (2) order supervised visitation with a third party or public agency; (3) order makeup

          visitation; (4) order the parties to participate in counseling and mediation; and (5) order other

          appropriate relief deemed equitable.” Charous, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 114; 750 ILCS 5/607.1(c)

          (West 2012). In the case at bar, the trial court ordered make-up visitation for the periods of

          time in which Roy was unable to exercise his parenting time, a remedy that is expressly

          authorized by statute. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

¶ 64                                   C. Make-Up Parenting Time

¶ 65         Mary Beth’s final argument is that, to the extent that Roy was entitled to make-up

          parenting time, he had already received it. Mary Beth argues that she agreed to give Roy

          additional visitation on over 20 occasions after January 2, 2014, which satisfied any make-up

          time to which he was entitled. Roy admits that Mary Beth allowed him additional parenting

          time for Blackhawks games and other such events, but argues that this was not a substitute




                                                       31
       No. 1-15-2494


          for the visitation to which he was entitled under the parenting agreement, especially since he

          was entitled to overnight visitation on the days he missed.

¶ 66         We agree with Roy that the kind of visitation permitted makes a difference in

          determining whether there has been make-up time. For instance, in permitting an award of

          make-up time for visitation abuse, section 607.1 of the Act notes that it should be “[m]ake up

          visitation of the same time period, such as weekend for weekend, holiday for holiday.” 750

          ILCS 5/607.1(c)(3) (West 2012). Additionally, Mary Beth raised the additional visitation

          times before the trial court, and the trial court was aware of all of the evidence of visitation.

          We will not second-guess the trial court’s factual determination that the additional visits

          permitted by Mary Beth did not constitute make-up time for the times that Roy missed.

          Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment on the make-up visitation, but, as noted, on

          the basis of visitation abuse instead of civil contempt.

¶ 67                                      II. Roy’s Cross-Appeal

¶ 68         In his cross-appeal, Roy argues that “[t]he trial court erred in denying certain relief to”

          him. Roy argues that the trial court’s finding that Roy did not miss any summer visitation

          was against the manifest weight of the evidence because Roy was prevented from taking the

          child out of state, as he had wished to do, and “there is authority in Illinois that

          overscheduling the child can be contempt of court and visitation abuse.” Roy also claims that

          Mary Beth “engaged in other contemptuous conduct” and proceeds to list a page and a half of

          her alleged misdeeds.

¶ 69         We agree with Mary Beth that Roy’s cross-appeal is seriously deficient. His arguments

          are undeveloped and have only one citation to authority, a case which does not support his




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          argument. 5 “This court is entitled to have issues clearly defined with pertinent authority cited

          and cohesive arguments presented [citation], and it is not a repository into which an appellant

          may foist the burden of argument and research.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Velocity

          Investments, LLC v. Alston, 397 Ill. App. 3d 296, 297 (2010). Since the deficiencies in Roy’s

          brief render us unable to understand the arguments he wishes to raise on appeal or the basis

          for those arguments, we dismiss Roy’s cross-appeal. See Ill. S. Ct. 341(h)(7) (“Points not

          argued are waived and shall not be raised in the reply brief, in oral argument, or on petition

          for rehearing.”).

¶ 70                                            CONCLUSION

¶ 71          For the reasons set forth above, we cannot find that the trial court’s finding that Mary

          Beth willfully denied Roy visitation on June 13 and 14, 2014, to be against the manifest

          weight of the evidence. We vacate the portion of the order finding her in civil contempt of

          court, but affirm the finding that she engaged in visitation abuse. We further affirm the trial

          court’s order of make-up visitation. Roy’s cross-appeal is dismissed for lack of compliance

          with Illinois Supreme Court Rules.

¶ 72          Civil contempt judgment vacated; judgment affirmed in all other respects.




              5
               Roy cites Charous in support of his statement that “there is authority in Illinois that
          overscheduling the child can be contempt of court and visitation abuse.” However, in Charous, it was
          the mother’s use of the children’s schedules as an excuse, not the activities themselves, that served as
          the basis for the contempt and visitation abuse findings. See Charous, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 111
          (rejecting the mother’s assertions that the children’s extracurricular activities justified her
          noncompliance with the visitation provisions of the parenting agreement).

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