Even when contempt is based upon the failure to pay child support, the contempt order must contain the conclusion of law that respondent willfully violated the court order. That conclusion must be supported by findings of fact showing respondent actually has/had the ability to comply or to take reasonable steps to comply and deliberately failed to do so. Those findings of fact must be based on evidence.
In other words, a contempt order cannot be entered by default - a court cannot assume a respondent has the ability to comply simply because the respondent fails to prove he/she does not have the ability to comply.
Civil Contempt
A civil contempt proceeding can be initiated in one of three ways:
- Pursuant to GS 5A-23(a1), by filing a verified motion, or a motion along with an affidavit, and a notice of hearing on the contempt motion; or
- Pursuant to GS 5A-23(a), by filing a verified motion, or a motion along with an affidavit, that includes a request for a show cause order;
- And for child support contempt only, pursuant to GS 50-13.9(d), by filing an affidavit and asking a judge or a clerk to issue a show cause order.
- The order being violated remains in force;
- The purpose of the order may still be served with the respondent’s compliance with the order;
- The respondent’s failure to comply with order is willful; and
- The respondent has the present ability to comply with the order in whole or in part or take reasonable steps that would enable him/her to comply in whole or in part.
Public Officials - Courts and Judicial Administration Roles
Topics - Courts and Judicial Administration