Mussallam v. Mussallam
Mussallam v. Mussallam
Opinion of the Court
In 1981 the plaintiff-husband, Hussein Sayyed Mussallam, a Kuwaiti, obtained a divorce from his Finnish wife, the defendant Eeva Hannelle Mussallam, in Kuwait, but did not then seek custody of the child of the marriage. About six months later, the husband filed an action in Finland, where the wife and minor child were then living, seeking custody of the child. The Finnish court granted custody to the wife. In 1985 the wife brought the child to Greensboro, North Carolina, for a visit with the husband who was then a student at North Carolina A&T State University. The husband took the child, removed her to Kuwait, returned to North Carolina alone, and refused to return the child to the wife.
Seeking enforcement of the Finnish custody decree, the wife filed a copy of the custody decree in Guilford County pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 50A-15 and § 50A-23 and on 7 May 1985 filed a motion in the cause for immediate custody of her daughter. The district court entered a show cause order directing the husband to appear on 9 May 1985 with the minor child and requiring that he be held in custody without bond until after the 9 May hearing. On that date, the district court judge modified the order, releasing the husband from custody upon condition that he turn his two passports over to his attorney and that he return for a full hearing. At a 16 May 1985 hearing, the district court entered an order finding that the husband was in willful contempt of the Finnish custody decree and ordering that he be held in custody until he purged himself of contempt “by sending for the minor child, NORA Cassandra Mussallam, and bringing her to this Court.”
While in custody under this order, the husband petitioned the superior court for a writ of habeas corpus. On 17 May 1985, Superior Court Judge James A. Beaty set a secured bond of $25,000 and ordered the husband to appear before the district
On 31 May 1985, when the husband failed to appear, the district court ordered the $25,000 secured bond forfeited immediately. The order and notice of forfeiture was served upon the sureties on the bonds, who filed motions to release the bonds or assess civil damages. A copy of the motions and notice to release the bonds was served upon the appellant, Guilford County Board of Education. The Board filed an answer seeking forfeiture of the amount of the bonds to the Guilford County School Fund. On 25 October 1985, after a hearing, the district court entered an order holding that appellant Board of Education had no interest in the proceeds of the forfeited bonds because the bonds had been set in a civil domestic case “solely for the purpose of producing the child of the parties and not for further proceedings requiring the [husband’s] presence.”
The Board of Education appealed. The Court of Appeals held that the district court had properly found that the superior court’s order was solely for the purpose of ensuring compliance with its order to produce the minor child before the district court and that the combined bond was therefore a compliance bond as opposed to an appearance bond, thus precluding the Board’s entitlement to its proceeds. We conclude, to the contrary, that the bond was an appearance bond required for the purpose of ensuring the defendant’s presence before the district court and that under our constitution, the Guilford County Board of Education is entitled to the proceeds from its forfeiture. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.
Both the Board and the wife agree that the bond is a civil bond, imposed in a civil proceeding. The wife argues, however, that it is a compliance bond because (1) her goal throughout was to regain custody of her daughter, (2) the goal of the district court and the superior court was to ensure that the child was brought before the court and returned to her custody absent any showing
Our review of the record demonstrates that the judges who heard various aspects of this case were primarily concerned with the husband’s attendance in court. At the 16 May 1985 hearing on the original motion to show cause, the district court made extensive findings of fact. The court observed that (1) the husband had not been released from custody because the court feared that he would flee the jurisdiction; (2) the court had later permitted the husband’s release from custody provided he turn his passports over to his attorney; (3) the husband had taken the child to Kuwait and had returned alone to North Carolina; (4) the husband had declared through his attorney that he did not intend to return the child to North Carolina; and (5) the husband had no ties to North Carolina but had the means to flee the jurisdiction. The court then ordered the husband to be taken into custody. When the husband obtained his freedom under writ of habeas corpus, the superior court ordered that his release was to be conditioned on the posting of a secured bond. The title on the bonds in question is “Appearance Bond” and their terms provide in part:
XX Pretrial Release — The conditions of this bond are that the above named defendant shall appear in the above entitled action whenever required and will at all times render himself amenable to the orders and processes of the Court. . . .
If the defendant appears as ordered and otherwise performs the foregoing conditions of this bond, then the bond is to be void, but if the defendant fails to obey any of these conditions, the Court will enter an order declaring the bond forfeited.
The wife argues that even if the bond in question is determined to be an appearance bond given to guarantee plaintiff’s appearance, it still remains a civil bond, the proceeds of which she is entitled to under article IX, section 7 of the North Carolina Constitution. Article IX, section 7 provides:
All moneys, stocks, bonds, and other property belonging to a county school fund, and the clear proceeds of all penalties and forfeitures and of all fines collected in the several counties for any breach of the penal laws of the State, shall belong to and remain in the several counties, and shall be faithfully appropriated and used exclusively for maintaining free public schools.
N.C. Const, art. IX, § 7. The section has been codified at N.C.G.S. § 115C-452. The wife interprets article IX, section 7 to mean that the clear proceeds of penalties, forfeitures and fines go to the school fund only if they arise from criminal cases. Since this was a civil case, she argues, no penal laws have been breached and therefore section 7 does not apply to allow the Board to collect the proceeds of the forfeited bond. Although we agree that we are dealing with a civil case here, we cannot accept the wife’s interpretation of section 7.
We interpret the provisions of section 7 relating to the clear proceeds from penalties, forfeitures and fines as identifying two
Applying this reasoning to the bond at issue here, it is clear that the superior court judge set the bond to ensure the husband’s appearance. The punishment for his failure to so appear would be immediate forfeiture of the bond. The terms of the bond specifically made its proceeds payable to the State of North Carolina should it be forfeited. The bond therefore falls within the parameters of the first category.
The wife cites Katzenstein v. R.R. Co., 84 N.C. 688 (1881), for the proposition that the framers of the North Carolina Constitution did not intend to award penalties and forfeitures arising out of civil matters to the county school fund, thus ignoring the damages of aggrieved individuals. However, in Katzenstein this Court distinguished between “those penalties that accrue to the state, and those that are given to the person aggrieved, or such as may sue for the same.” Id. at 693.
Katzenstein was a civil case, yet the statutory penalty involved was recoverable by the state under the mandate of section
Finally, the wife points out that under N.C.G.S. § 5043.2(c) the court has authority in a civil custody action to require the posting of a bond to ensure the return of a child to the court’s jurisdiction. She argues that the superior court judge imposed this type of bond in the husband’s habeas corpus proceeding. Because we find that the bond at issue here was an appearance bond intended to guarantee the appearance of the husband, this argument is without merit.
The bond set by the superior court in this civil case was an appearance bond designed to guarantee the husband’s appearance before the court and as a penalty in the event of his failure to appear as ordered. Under article IX, section 7 of our constitution, the appellant Board of Education is entitled to the clear proceeds of the forfeiture in question. The Court of Appeals’ decision is therefore
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority reverses the decision of the Court of Appeals which upheld the district court’s order distributing proceeds of the forfeited bonds to the child’s mother.
The majority notes that the bonds actually signed by the husband were entitled “Appearance Bond” and contained the usual language for such bonds. While this language might be crucial if we were interpreting a question of the surety’s liability on the bonds, that is not the question before the Court. The only question is who gets the proceeds of the bonds once those proceeds are paid into court. The answer should depend, not upon which form some clerk or magistrate had the surety sign, but rather upon the purpose of the bond, as shown by the nature of the proceeding and the orders of the court pursuant to which the bonds were given.
The nature of this proceeding is not an ordinary civil proceeding, and certainly not a criminal action. It is a custody proceeding, to enforce compliance with a previous decree awarding custody of the child to the mother. Her husband had taken the child out of the country and refused to return the child to her. The court orders pursuant to which the bonds were given clearly required the husband to appear with the child. Thus they were compliance bonds and not ordinary civil or criminal bonds.
When compliance bonds are forfeited, the proceeds are paid to the injured party. See, e.g., N.C.G.S. § 1-478 (1983) (claim and delivery statute where failure to return property results in for
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hussein Sayyed Mussallam v. Eeva Hannelle Mussallam
- Cited By
- 25 cases
- Status
- Published