Stehle v. Zimmerebner , 497 S.W.3d 188 ( 2016 )


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  •                                   Cite as 
    2016 Ark. 290
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.   CV-15-953
    KATIE D. STEHLE
    Opinion Delivered: June   30, 2016
    APPELLANT
    V.                                              APPEAL FROM THE FAULKNER
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ERNEST W. ZIMMEREBNER                           [NO. 23DR-00-856]
    APPELLEE
    HONORABLE H.G. FOSTER, JUDGE
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    COURTNEY HUDSON GOODSON, Associate Justice
    Appellant Katie D. Stehle appeals the order entered by the Faulkner County Circuit
    Court incarcerating her as a sanction for her failure to make proper efforts to retire her
    child-support arrearage. For reversal, Stehle contends that the circuit court erred by
    incarcerating her for civil contempt without finding that she is able to pay the arrearage.
    She also argues that the circuit court erred in finding her in contempt and by incarcerating
    her because its orders were too indefinite for her to know the duties imposed on her. Our
    jurisdiction is pursuant to Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 1-2(a)(7), as a second or subsequent
    appeal following an appeal decided by this court. Both arguments raised on appeal have
    merit, and we reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I. Factual Background
    Our review of the record reflects that Stehle and appellee Ernest W. Zimmerebner
    divorced in 2001. At that time, the circuit court awarded Stehle custody of their daughter,
    KZ. However, in 2003, the circuit court granted Zimmerebner’s motion for a change of
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    custody and ordered Stehle to pay child support. The court subsequently denied Stehle’s
    request that custody of the child be returned to her, and Stehle appealed that order. In an
    unpublished opinion, the court of appeals reversed. Stehle v. Zimmerebner, CA-07-165 (May
    21, 2008). This court accepted review of that decision, and we affirmed the circuit court’s
    denial of Stehle’s motion for a change of custody. Stehle v. Zimmerebner, 
    375 Ark. 446
    , 
    291 S.W.3d 573
    (2009).
    The instant litigation begins with an order filed on May 1, 2014. In it, the circuit
    court found that Stehle was in willful contempt for her failure to pay child support as
    ordered, and the court granted judgment for an arrearage in the amount of $15,536.08.
    Along with Stehle’s biweekly support obligation of $189, the court ordered Stehle to pay
    the additional sum of $37.80 to be applied toward the arrearage. The order also contained
    a provision stating that “[s]hould [Stehle] miss any payment and remain in default for 30
    days, then [Stehle] shall be immediately picked up and incarcerated until such time as all
    arrears are satisfied.”
    On January 20, 2015, Zimmerebner filed a motion for contempt and body
    attachment, alleging that Stehle had missed payments of child support and had remitted sums
    below the required amount. Pursuant to the May 1, 2014 order, he asked the circuit court
    to issue an order of body attachment for Stehle’s immediate arrest. The motion also included
    a request for an increase in child support and asserted that Stehle was in contempt for
    violating certain aspects of the court’s visitation orders and for not paying her share of health-
    care expenses incurred on behalf of the child. The circuit court issued a body attachment
    that same day, stating that Stehle was to be held on a cash bond of $12,035.99, the current
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    amount of the arrearage. Stehle responded with a motion to stay execution of the body
    attachment, and she requested an expedited hearing on her ability to pay the arrearage in
    support. In her motion and accompanying brief, she alleged that she had been a full-time
    student from 2012 until the spring of 2014, at which time she had earned a bachelor’s degree
    and a teaching certificate. Stehle also stated that she had obtained a teaching job in late
    November 2014 and that since early December 2014, her child-support payments had been
    made pursuant to a wage-withholding order. The circuit court granted Stehle’s request to
    stay the execution of a body attachment pending a hearing that the court set for January 28,
    2015.
    At the hearing, Stehle testified that she has two children living in her home and that
    her husband had lost his job the past September. She stated that she had no money in
    savings, that her house was mortgaged, and that she could not obtain a loan to retire the
    arrearage. Stehle further testified that, following her graduation, she worked part-time at a
    daycare center and that she worked as much as she was allowed. She said that she had paid
    what she could in support except for those times when she did not have work. Stehle stated
    that in the fall of 2014 she worked forty hours per week as an unpaid substitute teacher as
    part of a teaching-internship program. She testified that she would learn the following June
    whether her teaching contract would be extended for another year.
    Following the hearing, the circuit court issued an order dated February 13, 2015. In
    this order, the court continued the stay of the body attachment and reserved ruling on the
    alleged contempt for her failure to pay support until a review hearing in July 2015. The
    order stated that Stehle “should make every effort to pay her child support pursuant to
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    previous orders of the Court, including maintaining full-time gainful employment.” The
    court also ordered Stehle to apply toward the child-support arrearage any income-tax refund
    she might receive for the 2014 tax year.
    On March 16, 2015, the circuit could held a hearing on the other contempt issues
    and the request for increased child support, as well as a related petition for an order of
    protection. In its order from that hearing dated April 2, 2015, the circuit court found that
    Stehle was in contempt for engaging in a series of behaviors in violation of previous orders.
    It withheld punishment pending the July 2015 hearing. The circuit court increased Stehle’s
    child-support obligation to $201 to be paid every two weeks, and the court ordered her to
    pay $369.60 as her portion of the child’s medical expenses. In addition, the circuit court
    awarded Zimmerebner $3,100 in attorney’s fees. With respect to both the medical expenses
    and attorney’s fees, the order states that Stehle “shall make a good faith effort to retire this
    debt and the Court shall evaluate her efforts at the review hearing.”
    At the July 2015 hearing, the circuit court determined that the arrearage had been
    reduced to $11,909. The parties agreed that Stehle had paid $200 toward the medical
    expenses and attorney’s fees. Stehle’s husband, Michael Stehle, testified that after he lost his
    job, he cashed in his 401k that netted $34,000, which was used during the period of his
    unemployment. Michael stated that they had $380 in the bank; that they were two months
    behind on their mortgage; and that they had been required to make substantial repairs to
    their vehicle. He testified that they owed state and federal income taxes for the 2014 tax
    year; thus, they did not receive a refund.
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    The circuit court took the issue of Stehle’s contempt and possible incarceration under
    advisement. On July 31, 2015, the circuit court entered an order finding Stehle in contempt
    and requiring her to report to jail every weekend. Specifically, the order states,
    1. That Defendant shall report to the Faulkner County Detention Center . . . at 5:00
    p.m. on July 31, 2015, as a sanction for the Court’s finding of civil contempt for failure to
    make proper efforts to retire her child support arrearages as of July 27, 2015, in the amount
    of $11,909.00 (which does not include interest accrued as of March 31, 2014). That
    Defendant shall be released at 7:00 p.m. Sunday, August 2, 2015, and Defendant shall report
    to the Faulkner County Detention Center the following Friday at 5:00 p.m. until Sunday
    at 7:00 p.m. where she will continue to be incarcerated every weekend until proper effort,
    in the opinion of the Court, is made to retire the sums previously ordered to be paid.
    2. In determining what is a proper effort, the Court will consider substantial payment
    reducing the arrearages, a substantial regular payment being established, additional
    employment (such as a summer job given that Defendant is a teacher and has her summers
    off), or any other action that convinces the Court that the Defendant is taking this obligation
    seriously, which to date has not occurred.
    3. Upon satisfaction of the Court that substantial effort is being made, Defendant
    will be deemed to have purged herself of contempt. The issue of Plaintiff’s request for
    $800.00 in attorney’s fees for the present action is taken under advisement.
    Stehle brings this appeal from the circuit court’s decision.
    II. Ability to Pay
    As her first point on appeal, Stehle argues that the circuit court erred by holding her
    in contempt without determining whether she has the ability to pay additional sums toward
    the arrearage. She contends that she does not have the means to pay the arrearage and that
    the circuit court wrongfully ordered her incarceration for the nonpayment of this debt.
    Contempt is divided into criminal contempt and civil contempt. Johnson v. Johnson,
    
    343 Ark. 186
    , 
    33 S.W.3d 492
    (2000). Criminal contempt preserves the power of the court,
    vindicates its dignity, and punishes those who disobey its orders. Omni Holding & Dev. Corp.
    v. 3D.S.A., Inc., 
    356 Ark. 440
    , 
    156 S.W.3d 228
    (2004). Civil contempt, on the other hand,
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    protects the rights of private parties by compelling compliance with orders of the court made
    for the benefit of those parties. 
    Johnson, supra
    . Because civil contempt is designed to coerce
    compliance with the court’s order, the contemnor may free himself or herself by complying
    with the order. Conlee v. Conlee, 
    370 Ark. 89
    , 
    257 S.W.3d 543
    (2007). This is the source
    of the familiar saying that civil contemnors “carry the keys of their prison in their own
    pockets.” Ivy v. Keith, 
    351 Ark. 269
    , 280, 
    92 S.W.3d 671
    , 678 (2002). Criminal contempt,
    by contrast, carries an unconditional penalty, and the contempt cannot be purged. 
    Id. (citing Fitzhugh
    v. State, 
    296 Ark. 137
    , 
    752 S.W.2d 275
    (1998)).
    We have recognized that it is proper for a court to make provision for the payment
    of arrearages in such amounts as the circumstances warrant in order to allow the judgment
    debtor to avoid punishment for contempt of court. Holley v. Holley, 
    264 Ark. 35
    , 
    568 S.W.2d 487
    (1978). However, in a contempt proceeding, where the object is to coerce the
    payment of money, the lack of ability to pay is a complete defense against enforcing payment
    from the defendant by imprisonment. Griffith v. Griffith, 
    225 Ark. 487
    , 
    283 S.W.2d 340
    (1955). As we have recognized, the practice of imprisoning people for debts was abolished
    long ago by the Debtor’s Act of 1869. 
    Ivy, supra
    . This fundamental concept is embodied
    in our constitution, which provides that “[n]o person shall be imprisoned for debt in any
    civil action, or mense or final process, unless in cases of fraud.” Ark. Const. art. 2, § 16.
    Imprisonment is “only justified on the ground of willful disobedience to the orders of the
    court, and, so soon as it is made to appear that the defendant is unable to comply with the
    orders of the court, he should be discharged . . . otherwise it would convert the court’s
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    power into an instrument for imprisonment for debt[.]” East v. East, 
    148 Ark. 143
    , 146,
    
    229 S.W. 5
    , 6 (1921).
    In the present case, the order of contempt is civil in nature because it is intended to
    coerce compliance with the circuit court’s order regarding the payment of an arrearage in
    child support. The circuit court has seen fit to incarcerate Stehle until she purges herself of
    the contempt. However, the court did so without making any finding whatsoever that
    Stehle has the ability to pay, and the record does not indicate that the court even took this
    requirement into consideration. Imprisonment for disobedience of an order to pay a sum
    into the court, without finding whether the party is able to pay the sum, is imprisonment
    for debt in violation of the Arkansas Constitution. Godwin v. Godwin, 
    268 Ark. 364
    , 
    596 S.W.2d 695
    (1980). When no finding is made, this court remands for the circuit court to
    make that determination. Hull v. Gardner, 
    334 Ark. 325
    , 
    974 S.W.2d 453
    (1998); Whitworth
    v. Whitworth, 
    331 Ark. 461
    , 
    961 S.W.2d 768
    (1998); Gould v. Gould, 
    308 Ark. 213
    , 
    823 S.W.2d 890
    (1992). We do so here because the circuit court neglected to make the critical
    determination whether Stehle has the ability to comply before imprisoning her for this debt.
    III. Clarity of the Order
    Stehle asserts under this point that the circuit court’s order is too indefinite for her
    to know how she might purge herself of the contempt. This argument is based on the
    familiar rule of law that such an order must be definite in its terms, clear as to what duties it
    imposes, and express in its commands. James v. Pulaski Cty. Circuit Court, 
    2014 Ark. 305
    ,
    
    439 S.W.3d 19
    ; Lilly v. Earl, 
    299 Ark. 103
    , 
    771 S.W.2d 277
    (1989). We agree that the
    circuit court’s order fails this test.
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    The order states that Stehle is to be incarcerated every weekend “until proper effort,
    in the opinion of the Court,” is made to retire the arrearage. The court stated that it would
    consider as a proper effort a “substantial payment,” a “substantial regular payment,” a
    summer job, or “any other action that convinces the Court that [Stehle] is taking this
    obligation seriously[.]” As is evident, what may or may not qualify as a “proper effort” is
    left entirely to the subjective opinion of the circuit court. In reading the order, Stehle is
    left to speculate whether a “substantial payment” might be $500, or would nothing short of
    $2,500 suffice? Would a “substantial regular,” biweekly payment of an extra $100 free
    Stehle from imprisonment, or does the circuit court expect a greater amount? What job
    must Stehle find at the end of the summer that would satisfy the circuit court that Stehle is
    making a proper effort? What “other action” might Stehle take to purge herself of the
    contempt? Because the answers to these questions are uncertain, the order falls woefully
    short of being definite, clear, and express in its commands. A person’s liberty cannot hinge
    on such imprecision. Accordingly, we reverse on this point as well.
    Reversed and remanded.
    BRILL, C.J., concurs.
    DANIELSON, J., and Special Justice JASON B. KELLEY dissent.
    HART, J., not participating.
    HOWARD W. BRILL, Chief Justice, concurring. I agree with the majority’s
    decision to reverse and remand, but I write separately to provide a comprehensive analysis
    for my conclusion.
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    I. Coercive Civil Contempt
    As early as the tenth century, the common law recognized the power of contempt. 1
    With the development of the chancery courts, the law of contempt split into criminal and
    civil contempt. See Omni Holding & Dev. Corp. v. 3 D.S.A., Inc., 
    356 Ark. 440
    , 
    156 S.W.3d 228
    (2004). Criminal contempt preserves the power of the court, vindicates its dignity, and
    punishes those who willfully disobey its orders, either directly or indirectly. 
    Id. The criminal
    contempt power rests upon the inherent authority of a court to maintain order.
    See Ark. Const. art. 7, § 26; Ark. Code Ann. § 16-10-108 (Repl. 2010); see also Ivy v. Keith,
    
    351 Ark. 269
    , 
    92 S.W.3d 671
    (2002).
    In contrast, civil contempt has different objectives and different procedures and is
    further subdivided into two variations. Compensatory civil contempt gives damages for the
    injuries a party suffered when the opposing party disobeyed a court order. See C.R.T., Inc.
    v. Brown, 
    269 Ark. 114
    , 
    602 S.W.2d 409
    (1980) (asphalt company ignored injunction and
    thus caused injuries to plaintiff’s cattle).2       These damages are both nonpunitive and
    avoidable. Mine Workers v. Bagwell, 
    512 U.S. 821
    (1994).
    On the other hand, coercive civil contempt is intended to compel, or encourage, a
    party to obey an injunction in the future. It looks ahead, not back. The orders do not
    constitute actual penalties or sanctions, because they are entirely conditional in nature. The
    1
    Ronald Goldfarb, The History of the Contempt Power, 1961 Wash. U. L. Q. 1, 9
    (1961) (stating that “there is no greater crime than contempt because all within the realm
    ought to obey the King and be part of his peace”).
    2
    See Louise Becker, The Remedial Side of Contempt When Injunctions are
    Disregarded, 
    1983 Ark. L
    . Notes 5.
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    court may threaten a prospective fine if an order is disobeyed. Alternatively, as in this
    instance, the court may order incarceration unless and until the party obeys. 3 By obeying
    the order, the party avoids imprisonment.          When compliance occurs, or is no longer
    feasible, the basis for coercive contempt ceases. Resting historically in equity, coercive
    contempt is an inherent tool of all courts to compel obedience to proper orders.
    Coercive civil contempt, including the threat of incarceration, may be used to
    compel payment of child-support arrearages. See Ark. Code Ann. §§ 9-12-314(d) and 9-
    12-214(j) (Repl. 2015); Gould v. Gould, 
    308 Ark. 213
    , 
    823 S.W.2d 890
    (1992). Our state
    constitution provides that “[n]o person shall be imprisoned for debt in any civil action.”
    Ark. Const. art. 2, § 16. Thus, we do not have debtors’ prisons. Aswell v. Aswell, 88 Ark.
    App. 115, 
    195 S.W.3d 365
    (2004). However, consistent with the constitutional prohibition,
    our case law is equally clear that a person may be jailed for failure to comply with a court
    order, including a court order that demands the payment of money. Harrison v. Harrison,
    
    239 Ark. 756
    , 
    394 S.W.2d 128
    (1965); Griffith v. Griffith, 
    225 Ark. 487
    , 
    283 S.W.2d 340
    (1955).
    Incarceration for contempt for failing to pay child support may not be used unless
    the contemnor has the ability to pay. Gould, 
    308 Ark. 213
    , 
    823 S.W.2d 890
    . While inability
    to pay is a defense to conditional incarceration, the trial court may consider the actions or
    inactions of the responsible party that may have created the inability to pay. See, e.g., Brown
    v. Brown, 
    305 Ark. 493
    , 
    809 S.W.2d 808
    (1991); Aswell, 
    88 Ark. App. 115
    , 195 S.W.3d.
    3
    See In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 
    97 F.3d 1090
    (8th Cir. 1996) (upholding conditional
    incarceration in the face of a constitutional challenge).
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    365. A factual finding that the party created the inability to pay supports the contempt order
    and conditional incarceration. Ex parte Coffelt, 
    239 Ark. 324
    , 
    389 S.W.2d 234
    (1965). In
    the absence of such a factual finding, we have remanded cases for a finding of the ability to
    pay. Whitworth v. Whitworth, 
    331 Ark. 461
    , 
    961 S.W.2d 768
    (1998).
    While unimportant in criminal contempt, the ability to pay “marks a dividing line
    between civil and criminal contempt.” Turner v. Rogers, 
    564 U.S. 431
    , 445 (2011). The
    failure to determine the ability to pay raises due process considerations. In Turner, 
    564 U.S. 431
    , the Supreme Court vacated a conditional incarceration order against a parent
    delinquent in his child-support obligations:
    He did not receive clear notice that his ability to pay would constitute the
    critical question in his civil contempt proceeding. No one provided him with
    a form (or the equivalent) designed to elicit information about his financial
    circumstances. The court did not find that [he] was able to pay his arrearage,
    but . . . nonetheless found [him] in civil contempt and ordered him
    incarcerated.
    
    Id. at 449.
    In the present case, the circuit court stated in its July 31, 2015 order that Stehle
    would report to jail “as a sanction[4] for the court’s finding of civil contempt for failure to
    make proper efforts to retire her child support arrearage as of July 27, 2015 in the amount
    of $11,909.00.” Here, neither the record nor the circuit court’s order contains an express
    finding that Stehle has the ability to pay or that her inability was the result of her own actions
    or inactions. Accordingly, under this analysis, I would reverse the circuit court’s ruling on
    this issue and remand for further proceedings.
    4
    Although the circuit court used the term “sanction,” the circuit court’s order clearly
    means coercive civil contempt.
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    II. Incarceration
    Because civil contempt is designed to coerce compliance with the court’s order, the
    civil contemnor may avoid additional proceedings by complying with the order. See Ivy,
    
    351 Ark. 269
    , 
    92 S.W.3d 671
    . When the threat of incarceration is the tool employed,
    compliance is the basis for the proverbial saying that civil contemnors “carry the keys of
    their prison in their own pockets.” 
    Id. at 280,
    92 S.W.3d at 678. Before a person can be
    held in contempt for violating a court’s order, the order must be definite in its terms, clear
    as to what duties it imposes, and express in its commands. Ivy, 
    351 Ark. 269
    , 
    92 S.W.3d 671
    . The key to the prison cannot be obscured.
    Our case law mandates that the party be informed of the method and means of freeing
    himself or herself from the conditional incarceration. See Brown, 
    305 Ark. 493
    , 
    809 S.W.2d 808
    (subject to incarceration unless $50,000 paid to former wife); Harrison, 
    239 Ark. 756
    ,
    
    394 S.W.2d 128
    (incarcerated unless $3000 paid); Williams v. Ramsey, 
    101 Ark. App. 61
    ,
    
    270 S.W.3d 345
    (2007) (father imprisoned until he paid $1500 in previously ordered
    attorney’s fees).
    A coercive civil contempt order is injunctive in nature. It tells the party what to do
    or not to do. Rule 65(d) of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure, which governs every
    injunction and restraining order, provides as follows:
    (1) Contents. Every order granting an injunction and every restraining order must:
    (A) state the reasons why it issued;
    (B) state its terms specifically; and
    (C) describe in reasonable detail—and not by referring to the complaint or other
    document—the act or acts restrained or required.
    Alongside the case law previously mentioned, the spirit, if not the letter of this rule, requires
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    that a party be clearly informed of the means of compliance with the court order.
    In this instance, the circuit court’s order does not appear definite in its terms, clear
    on the duties that it imposes, and express in its commands to Stehle how to pay the $11,909
    in child-support arrearage. In its order, the circuit court stated that Stehle would report to
    the Faulkner County Detention Center where she would remain incarcerated every
    weekend until she made a proper effort to retire the child-support arrearage. The court
    continued that “a proper effort” would include a “substantial payment reducing the
    arrearage, a substantial regular payment . . . , additional employment . . ., or any other action
    that convinces the court that [Stehle] is taking this obligation seriously” that would be noted
    by the court and “upon satisfaction of the court that substantial effort is being made,” Stehle
    would “be deemed to have purged herself of contempt.”
    Here, Stehle did not hold the key to the jail in her own pocket. The circuit court’s
    four options for paying the arrearage were not precise. They did not adequately outline a
    dollar amount to be paid, the time in which that amount would be paid, the application of
    that amount to the arrearage or to the current child-support obligation, and the point at
    which Stehle would “purge[ ] herself of contempt.” Instead, these conditions hinged on
    the circuit court’s satisfaction that a “substantial effort” was to be made by Stehle without
    informing her when that satisfaction would be met. Thus, the court’s order is speculative
    at best and did not provide enough guidance to Stehle to “purge[ ] herself of contempt”
    and to release herself from incarceration.
    Finally, the actions of the circuit court demonstrate commendable patience in dealing
    with Stehle’s willful failure to pay the arrearages in child support. Similarly, the circuit
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    court’s actions reveal its flexibility in ordering that Stehle make reasonable efforts to pay the
    accumulated child support. I would not wish to tie the hands of circuit courts in using the
    contempt power to compel obedience to proper court decrees. But when an order places
    a person in jail, even for a weekend, for failure to obey, the terms must be clear enough so
    that the person can turn the key and step out of jail. Accordingly, for these reasons, I would
    hold that the circuit court did not provide a proper basis for conditional incarceration and
    would remand for further proceedings.
    PAUL E. DANIELSON, Justice, dissenting. I respectfully dissent. The circuit
    court’s order finding appellant Katie D. Stehle in civil contempt and ordering her
    conditional incarceration was not clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. See
    Omni Holding & Dev. Corp. v. 3D.S.A., Inc., 
    356 Ark. 440
    , 
    156 S.W.3d 228
    (2004) (Our
    standard of review for civil contempt is whether the circuit court’s finding is clearly against
    the preponderance of the evidence.).
    First, the majority focuses on Stehle’s ability to pay her child-support arrearage,
    which, at the time of the circuit court’s July 31, 2015 order, totaled $11,909 plus interest.
    However, the July 31, 2015 order did not require Stehle to pay the entire arrearage of
    $11,909; it required only that she make a “proper effort . . . to retire the sums previously
    ordered to be paid.” Thus, her ability to pay the total amount is irrelevant.
    Second, the circuit court’s orders were sufficiently definite in their terms, clear as to
    what duties they imposed, and express in their commands. See, e.g., Ivy v. Keith, 
    351 Ark. 269
    , 
    92 S.W.3d 671
    (2002). The May 1, 2014 order, wherein the circuit court initially
    found Stehle to be in contempt, can only be described as definite, clear, and express: it
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    ordered her to pay $37.80 biweekly toward the arrearage and $189 biweekly in current
    support; if she missed a payment and remained in default for thirty days, she would be
    immediately incarcerated “until such time as all arrears are satisfied.” The circuit court’s
    July 31, 2015 order was considerably more lenient, but it too was sufficiently definite. It
    required only that Stehle make a “proper effort” to retire the arrearage, and it clearly defined
    what would constitute a “proper effort”: (1) “substantial payment reducing the arrearages”;
    (2) “a substantial regular payment being established”; (3) “additional employment (such as a
    summer job given that Defendant is a teacher and has her summers off)”; or (4) “any other
    action that convinces the Court that the Defendant is taking this obligation seriously.” The
    fact that the circuit court offered Stehle numerous alternative methods by which she could
    purge herself of the contempt is evidence of its laudable attempt to work with her, rather
    than evidence of a lack of clarity.
    For the above-stated reasons, I would affirm the circuit court’s order.
    Special Justice JASON B. KELLEY joins in this dissent.
    Dustin Duke, Center for Arkansas Legal Services, for appellant.
    No response.
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