J-A03029-18


NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

 MARY JANE MARMO                        :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                        :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                        :
              v.                        :
                                        :
                                        :
 VINCENT J. MARMO                       :
                                        :
                   Appellant            :   No. 2597 EDA 2017

                Appeal from the Order Entered July 10, 2017
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Domestic Relations at
                  No(s): 1763N2015 PACSES 051115671,
                              2012-10451-DI

BEFORE:    GANTMAN, P.J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and PLATT*, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.:                       FILED MARCH 27, 2018

      Vincent J. Marmo (“Husband”) appeals from the order imposing late fees

as a contempt sanction for his failure to make timely support and counsel fee

payments, as required by prior orders. On appeal, Husband argues that the

trial court improperly imposed the late fee sanction and failed to assess

properly his ability to pay before imposing the sanction. We affirm.

      Wife filed a Divorce Action in October 2012, and although that action is

still ongoing, in March 2015, the parties entered into a Property Settlement

Agreement (“Agreement”) pursuant to which Husband was to pay Wife

alimony and/or alimony pendent lite. They subsequently entered into a

Stipulation in May 2016 that required Husband, among other things, to pay

$7,000 per month in alimony through May 2017, $2,500 per month in child




____________________________________
* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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support, and $250 per month towards arrears. The Stipulation was reduced

to an order dated May 19, 2016 (the “May 2016 Order”).

      Wife filed a contempt petition on September 14, 2016, for Husband’s

failure to comply with the May 2016 Order, alleging that Husband had not paid

spousal or child support. The trial court held a hearing on November 14, 2016,

after which the court found Husband in contempt. The following day, the court

ordered Husband to pay $2,000 per month towards arrears and $1,500 in

counsel fees (the “November 2016 Order”).

      Approximately one month later, on December 19, 2016, Wife filed an

Emergency Petition for Special Relief asserting that Husband had failed to pay

alimony, child support, and arrears, and that she had exhausted all financial

resources available to her. After a hearing, the court found Husband in willful

contempt of both the May 2016 and November 2016 Orders, as well as a

support order entered in April 2015.

      Consequently, the court entered an order that sentenced Husband to

one year of probation, with the probation conditions that he “post” his alimony

payments by the first and fifteenth of the month; pay $2,000 a month toward

arrears until the arrearages were eliminated; and “post” his child support and

arrears payments within the month they are due. Order dated 1/20/17 (the

“January 2017 Order”), at 2. The January 2017 Order also directed Husband

to pay on or before January 30, 2017 the $1,500 in counsel fees that the

November 2016 Order had imposed, and imposed an additional $1,500 in


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counsel fees, likewise to be paid on or before January 30, 2017. The court also

warned Husband in the January 2017 Order that failure to comply could result

in additional penalties, including a $50 per day fee for late alimony and child

support payments, and a $100 per day fee for counsel fees that remained

unpaid after January 30, 2017.

      Wife filed yet another petition for contempt on March 15, 2017, alleging

that Husband had failed to pay both the $3,000 in counsel fees that were due

by January 30, 2017, and the March 2017 $3,500 alimony payment. After a

hearing, the court found Husband in “continuing contempt of the Agreement”

as enforced by the May 2016, November 2016, and January 2017 Orders. The

court then entered a pair of orders dated July 10, 2017 (the “July 2017

Orders”), one under a Domestic Relations docket number and the other under

the Divorce Action docket number. As the court had warned in the January

2017 Order, it ordered Husband to pay $100 for each day late in paying

counsel fees and $50 for each day late in paying alimony, for total late fees at

that time of $12,450.

      Husband appealed to this Court on August 9, 2017. He raises two issues

for our review:

      1.    Did the trial court err and abuse its discretion in assessing
            Husband not only counsel fees for late payment of alimony
            and child support, but also a $100.00 per day additional
            counsel fee penalty for failure to pay the assessed counsel
            fees timely?

      2.    Did the trial court err and abuse its discretion in its
            assessment of Husband’s ability to pay counsel fees?

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Husband’s Brief at 6.

      Our standard of review when considering an appeal from an order

holding a party in contempt of court is narrow: We will reverse only if the

appellant establishes that the lower court abused its discretion. Godfrey v.

Godfrey, 894 A.2d 776, 780 (Pa.Super. 2006). The court abuses its discretion

if it misapplies the law or exercises its discretion in a manner lacking reason.

Id.

      In his first issue, Husband likens the late fees to an award of counsel

fees, and argues that the fees are improper because they are unreasonable in

comparison to the work Wife’s counsel performed. He further argues that the

late fees are improper because there is no statutory provision for an award of

a “late fee” on counsel fees. These arguments lack merit.

      Husband’s argument that the late fees amount to an unreasonable

counsel fee is based on a patent mischaracterization of the July 2017 Orders.

Both Orders state that the January 2017 Order threatened a “$100.00 per day

late fee sanction” if Husband did not pay the counsel fees by January 30,

2017. Orders, dated 7/10/17, at 2 (emphasis added). The terms of the Orders

themselves thus make it clear that the late fees were a contempt sanction, as

do the history of the proceedings and the text of the court’s prior orders. That

is, the July 2017 Orders merely followed up on the warning in the January

2017 Order that if Husband failed to abide by that Order’s directives, he ran




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the risk of additional sanctions, including the late fees. Any notion that the

fees had to be “reasonable” in comparison to counsel’s work lacks foundation.

       Husband is also incorrect that the trial court needed statutory

authorization to impose the late fees as a contempt sanction. A judge imposing

contempt sanctions for violation of a court order in an action under either the

Divorce Code or the Domestic Relations Code enjoys the full powers of a court

of equity. See 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3323(f) (providing that court in divorce action

has “full equity power and jurisdiction”); Prol v. Prol, 935 A.2d 547, 553

(Pa.Super. 2007);1 Stamerro v. Stamerro, 889 A.2d 1251, 1257 (Pa.Super.

2005).2 The court may therefore impose any appropriate sanction for

noncompliance with its orders. Prol, 935 A.2d at 553. Husband cites two cases

for the contrary proposition, Blinkoff v. Blinkoff, 483 A.2d 929, 933

(Pa.Super. 1984), and Bruzzi v. Bruzzi, 481 A.2d 648 (Pa.Super. 1984).

However, he does not explain how either case supports his position, and




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1 “[T]he Divorce Code grants trial courts broad powers to enforce orders of
equitable distribution, and provides remedies available against one who fails
to comply with a court's order of equitable distribution.” Prol, 935 A.2d at 553
(quoting Richardson v. Richardson, 774 A.2d 1267, 1270 (Pa.Super.
2001)).

2 “The powers of a domestic relations judge are plenary and the function is
that of a law judge or equity chancellor as the case demands.” Stamerro, 889
A.2d at 1257 (quoting Horowitz v. Horowitz, 600 A.2d 982, 984 n. 1
(Pa.Super. 1991)).



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neither decision, in our view, has any relevance here.3 Husband’s first issue is

devoid of merit.

       In his second issue, Husband claims that the trial court erred and abused

its discretion in assessing Husband’s ability to pay counsel fees. He maintains

that the trial court failed to take into account the cumulative effect of his

monthly financial obligations, which he states include child support, alimony,

and college tuition, in addition to the arrearage, counsel fee, and late fee

payments the trial court ordered.

       This issue is also meritless. Husband challenges the imposition of

“counsel fees,” when, as explained above, the July 2017 Orders imposed late

fees as a contempt sanction, not counsel fees. Any claim that the order from

which Husband appealed – the July 10, 2017 order in the Domestic Relations

Section imposing late fees as a contempt sanction – improperly imposed

counsel fees lacks any basis in the record.

       To the extent Husband means to say that the Court should not have

imposed the late fees (which he characterizes as counsel fees) as a sanction

because he lacked adequate resources to pay them, we perceive no abuse of

discretion. An alleged contemnor’s claim of present inability to comply with a



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3 See Blinkoff, 483 A.2d at 932 n.2, 933 (holding trial court lacked subject
matter jurisdiction to modify visitation order, where children resided in New
York, but had “inherent power to enforce” its own order); Bruzzi, 481 A.2d
at 654 (vacating sentence of imprisonment as improper sanction for indirect
criminal contempt).

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purge condition is an affirmative defense that the alleged contemnor bears

the burden of proving. Childress v. Bogosian, 12 A.3d 448, 465 (Pa.Super.

2011) (citing Barrett v. Barrett, 368 A.2d 616, 621 (Pa. 1977)).

      Husband is a cardiologist and claims to work 360 days a year. N.T.

1/17/17 at 97; N.T., 4/21/17, at 57. He testified that he “is under financial

constraints such that [he has] an issue relative to payment of [the court-

ordered counsel fees].” Id. at 55. He explained that while in some months his

practice may have no revenue, due to delays in payment, in other months,

his practice receives large payments. Id. Nonetheless, he pays his son’s

tuition of approximately $68,000 a year on a monthly basis, as well as the

mortgages, taxes, and insurance for his primary residence as well as for three

other properties. N.T., 1/17/17, at 82, 85-87. Husband presented no

testimony or evidence that he has fallen behind on these financial obligations.

He also presented no testimony that he had to borrow money or liquidate

funds from an IRA in order to make his monthly payments. Id. at 11, 21, 24.

      The trial court assessed the evidence before it and evidently disbelieved

any claim that Husband has access to insufficient financial resources to pay

the late fees. On the record presented, we cannot say that the trial court

abused its discretion in assessing Husband’s ability to pay.

      Order affirmed.




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Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 3/27/18




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