Court Opinion

ID: 8374212
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-18 21:04:09.343273+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:46:16.146575
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U
                                          No. 2-21-0739
                                   Order filed October 18, 2022

      NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
      except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
______________________________________________________________________________

                                              IN THE

                              APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

In re MARRIAGE OF                      ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
MATTHEW ZYSKOWSKI,                     ) of McHenry County.
                                       )
      Petitioner-Appellee,             )
                                       )
and                                    ) No. 18-DV-1015
                                       )
NOELIA ZYSKOWSKI, a/k/a Noelia         )
Donamaria,                             ) Honorable
                                       ) Jeffrey L. Hirsch,
      Respondent-Appellant.            ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court.
       Presiding Justice Brennan and Justice Jorgensen concurred in the judgment.

                                             ORDER

¶1     Held: In postdissolution proceedings concerning a marital settlement agreement (MSA),
             the trial court did not err in holding respondent in indirect civil contempt for entirely
             depleting a securities investment account that the MSA directed be divided between
             the parties. The trial court also did not err in declining to hold petitioner in indirect
             civil contempt for failing to cooperate in preparing a QDRO for the division of a
             retirement account. Since the QDRO had been completed before the hearing on the
             petition for a rule to show cause, a civil contempt finding would be inappropriate
             because petitioner would have no means to purge himself of the contempt.

¶2     In this post-dissolution proceeding, Matthew Zyskowski (petitioner), and Noelia

Zyskowski (a/k/a Noelia Donamaria) (respondent), each filed a petition for a rule to show cause
2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U

as to why the other party should not be held in indirect civil contempt for failing to comply with

certain provisions of the parties’ marital settlement agreement (MSA). Following a hearing, the

trial court granted petitioner’s petition, finding respondent in indirect civil contempt, and denied

respondent’s petition. After that, the court denied respondent’s motion for reconsideration. On

appeal, respondent argues that the trial court erred (1) in finding her in indirect civil contempt,

because the provision of the MSA that she was alleged to have violated was ambiguous and

unenforceable; and (2) in refusing to find petitioner in indirect civil contempt, because he violated

the terms of the MSA by refusing to cooperate in respondent’s efforts to obtain a qualified domestic

relations order (QDRO) for one of his retirement accounts. We affirm.

¶3                                      I. BACKGROUND

¶4      On April 30, 2020, the trial court entered a judgment dissolving the parties’ marriage. The

judgment of dissolution incorporated the parties’ MSA. The MSA contained the following

provisions concerning the financial accounts at issue here.

¶5      Section 10.1 governed the division of petitioner’s “PNC Roth IRA” (the Roth IRA), which

had an approximate balance of $49,800.01. It provided that respondent was “entitled to one half

(50%) of the marital portion of said IRA account and such shall be transferred to her pursuant to

QDRO within ninety (90) days of entry of the Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage.” (Emphasis

in original.)

¶6      Section 10.2 governed the division of petitioner’s “Barclay 401(k)” (the Barclay 401(k)),

which had an approximate balance of $218,206.86. It similarly provided that respondent was

“entitled to one half (50%) of the marital portion of said 401K account and such shall be

transferred to her pursuant to QDRO within ninety (90) days of entry of the Judgment for

Dissolution of Marriage.” (Emphasis in original.)

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¶7     Section 10.4 governed the parties’ “Joint E*Trade Securities Investment Account” (the

joint E*TRADE account), which had an approximate balance of $6,725.69. It provided: “Each

Party is entitled to one half (50%) of said account and such shall be split pursuant to the QDRO

within ninety (90) days of entry of the Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage.”

¶8     Section 10.5 addressed QDROs. Subsection “i” provided, inter alia, that “[e]ach party shall

be financially responsible for any QDRO herein that is for his or her respective benefit, and they

shall utilize any attorney of his or her choice.” Subsection “v” provided, inter alia, that “[b]oth

parties shall cooperate in the drafting and execution of any and all QDROs necessary to effectuate

the agreement of the parties as stated herein, and absent approval by the Plan(s), said QDROs shall

be entered within ninety (90) days of entry of the Judgment for Dissolution of Marriage.”

¶9     On August 24, 2020, petitioner filed a “Petition to Issue a Rule to Show Cause: Failure to

Comply with [the MSA]” against respondent. Petitioner alleged that, under the MSA, the parties

were to equally divide the joint E*TRADE account. According to petitioner, “[o]n or about June

23, 2020, [respondent] unilaterally sold all stocks in the E*Trade account and transferred,

withdrew, or otherwise absconded with all funds contained in said account: $7,131.07.” (Emphasis

in omitted.)

¶ 10   On September 8, 2020, respondent filed a “Petition for Rule to Show Cause Seeking

Indirect Civil Contempt: Failure to Comply with the [MSA]” against petitioner. The petition

contained three counts. As is relevant here, count I alleged that, under the MSA, respondent “was

entitled to one-half of the marital portion of [the] Roth IRA and [the] Barclay 401(k), within 90

days from the entry of the judgment[.]” According to respondent, she asked petitioner several times

to divide the accounts, but he refused.

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¶ 11    On September 10, 2020, the trial court issued a rule to show cause on each petition. The

court granted the parties 21 days to respond. The trial court set the matter for status on October 21,

2020.

¶ 12    On September 30, 2020, respondent responded to petitioner’s petition. Respondent

admitted to the allegation that she liquidated the joint E*TRADE account but stated that she “had

to liquidate the only joint account she had access to (the E*Trade Account), to pay the joint marital

expenses.”

¶ 13    On that same day, petitioner responded to respondent’s petition. Petitioner admitted that

he had not divided his retirement accounts since the entry of the judgment of dissolution. However,

he denied that (1) respondent requested him to “divide his retirements accounts,” (2) he “has

refused to take any action concerning the division of his retirement accounts,” and (3) “any of his

actions to date have been to willfully and contumaciously disregard the [MSA].” In addition, as an

affirmative defense, he raised the following provision in the MSA: “Each party shall be financially

responsible for any QDRO herein that is for his or her respective benefit, and they shall utilize any

attorney of his or her choice.”

¶ 14    The hearings on the petitions did not occur until over ten months later. In the meantime,

on December 17, 2020, respondent filed a motion for entry of a QDRO for the Barclay 401(k). She

asked the trial court to enter the QDRO and order petitioner to sign all necessary documents. She

also asked for attorney fees in connection with the matter. On December 22, 2020, petitioner filed

a response and an objection to the proposed QDRO, arguing that the proposed QDRO included

certain nonmarital portions of the Barclay 401(k). The court ordered the parties to prepare legal

memoranda. The court held hearings on the motion on December 23, 2020, January 29, 2021, and

March 4, 2021. (No reports of proceedings from those hearings are in the record on appeal.)

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2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U

¶ 15   On March 30, 2021, the trial court granted respondent’s motion to enter the QDRO for the

Barclay 401(k). The court found that “the ‘marital portion’ of [the] Barclay 401(k) plan account

shall be defined as the account value on the date of dissolution on April 30, 2020, less its value on

the date of marriage on June 14, 2008, plus any gains or losses attributable thereon until

transferred.” The court stated: “Petitioner’s objection to the QDRO is overruled and his request to

introduce parol evidence is denied.” At the conclusion of the hearing, respondent’s counsel

reminded the court that the petitions for a rule to show cause were still pending and that there was

“another retirement account that is still to be divided, ***, and that’s the [Roth IRA] account.”

Counsel stated that she would try to “work through” the petitions with petitioner’s counsel. The

court indicated that it would address the status of the petitions at the next court date.

¶ 16   The hearing on the petitions for a rule to show cause eventually took place on August 12,

2021. The trial court first addressed petitioner’s petition. At the outset, respondent’s counsel

conceded that respondent withdrew the entire balance of the parties’ joint E*TRADE account. The

court stated:

                “All right. So based upon the pleadings and the admission that [respondent] has

       withdrawn the entire amount from the joint E*Trade account, the Court does find that’s

       sufficient evidence, at least to show a violation of the underlying judgment.

                The burden will shift to her to show cause (indiscernible) why she should not be

       held in indirect civil contempt of court.”

¶ 17   Respondent testified, in relevant part, that (1) the parties owned a home in Texas, (2) there

were expenses due for that home, (3) petitioner was responsible under the MSA for one-half of

those expenses, (4) she had reached out to petitioner concerning the expenses, (5) petitioner never

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2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U

responded, and (6) she withdrew the funds from the joint E*TRADE account to pay those

expenses. On cross-examination, the following exchange occurred:

              “Q. [(PETITIONER’S COUNSEL)]: Okay. With regards to paragraph 10.4 [in the

       MSA], which I’ll screen-share with the Court at this time, you see this highlighted portion

       that’s here, [respondent]?

              A. Yes.

              Q. And in this paragraph 10.4 here it says that: This account has approximately

       $6,725.69 at the time that you were divorced, correct?

              A. Yes.

              Q. And it says in paragraph 2 here:

              Each part is entitled to one-half of said account and shall be split pursuant to a

       QDRO within 90 days of entry of the judgment for dissolution of marriage; is that correct?

              A. No, that’s actually incorrect. Because this is—I mean, that was written that way,

       but that is incorrect. There’s no QDRO for an E*Trade account, so that was an error when

       the MSA was written.

              Q. Okay. But that’s—that’s what this particular provision says, correct?

              A. Correct. That couldn’t be carried out because this is not a QDRO qualifying

       account.

              [PETITIONER’S COUNSEL]: Your honor, objection. As to strike for being

       unresponsive.

              THE COURT: Sustained. Please answer only the questions you’re asked. Next

       question.”

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2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U

¶ 18   The trial court found that respondent knowingly and intentionally violated the terms of the

judgment when she withdrew the entire balance of the joint E*TRADE account. Therefore, the

court held her in indirect civil contempt. In its ruling, the court noted that respondent was correct

that “a QDRO won’t do that. You don’t need a QDRO for that.” Nevertheless, the court found that

the judgment was clear that the joint E*TRADE account was to be divided equally between the

parties. The court found that respondent’s testimony was insufficient to establish that she acted out

of necessity, because “she did have other available means with which to pay those expenses and

seek reimbursement.” The court rejected respondent’s argument that “she had no other choice but

to use the only joint asset to pay those other joint expenses.” The court ordered respondent to pay

petitioner $3670.45—half the value of the joint E*TRADE account—and sentenced her to jail

until she complied. The court stayed the sentence until October 12, 2021.

¶ 19   The matter then proceeded to a hearing on respondent’s petition for a rule to show cause.

Respondent’s counsel first addressed count I of respondent’s petition, which is the only count at

issue here. Counsel argued that, as of September 8, 2020, when respondent filed her petition, more

than 120 days had passed since the dissolution judgment, yet the retirement accounts were still

undivided. Respondent blamed this on petitioner’s repeated refusal to divide the accounts. Counsel

claimed that “[petitioner’s] actions were willful contumacious and disregarded the judgment.”

Counsel further noted that respondent filed a motion to compel the entry of a QDRO for the

Barclay 401(k) account and that the matter had proceeded to a hearing. She argued that, although

the Barclay 401(k) account had since been divided, the Roth IRA had not. She asked “that a rule

be issued against [petitioner] to show cause why he shouldn’t be held in contempt for failing to

follow the [MSA] and judgment as it relates to the Barclay[ ] 401(k) and the Roth IRA.”

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2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U

¶ 20   After that, the trial court inquired: “What specific provision do you allege that [petitioner]

has not complied with of the judgment?” Respondent’s counsel responded that, under the MSA,

each party was entitled to one-half of the Roth IRA. Counsel agreed that a QDRO was unneeded

for the Roth IRA. Nevertheless, she asserted that petitioner has “refused to sign the document” to

transfer the money. The court asked: “So where does it say he was required to do anything? You’re

talking about contempt, not whether she’s entitled to it. I don’t see anything in here that he’s

required to do anything.” Counsel directed the court to the following language in the MSA: “Each

party shall contact his or her respective attorneys within 30 days after the entry and copy the other

through his respective counsel. Both parties shall cooperate in the drafting and execution of any

QDROs and that they shall be entered within 90 days.” The court responded that a QDRO was not

required for an IRA, and it asked how it could hold petitioner in contempt for not doing a QDRO

when one was not required. Counsel argued that the court should hold petitioner in contempt for

refusing to transfer the funds to respondent. The court stated:

               “Look, I don’t think—if that’s what the evidence is going to be, I don’t think the

       prima facia case of noncompliance with the judgment is made because there is no specific

       provision in this judgment that he has violated about that IRA account. *** Count I is

       denied.”

¶ 21   The trial court’s written order, in addition to finding respondent in indirect civil contempt

and refusing to find petitioner in indirect civil contempt, ordered respondent’s counsel to submit a

proposed order to divide the Roth IRA for “review and possible execution, per the Court’s

discretion.” A separate order, filed that same day, ordered the parties to divide the Roth IRA

account equally.

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2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U

¶ 22   On September 10, 2021, respondent filed a motion for reconsideration. Respondent argued,

among other things, that the erroneous references in sections 10.1 and 10.4 of the MSA to the use

of QDROs to divide the Roth IRA and the E*TRADE account rendered those provisions “vague

enough that the Court’s duty was to construe the ambiguity against the drafter,” i.e., petitioner’s

counsel. Respondent further argued that other language “was clear in its requirement for the parties

to cooperate to accomplish the division of assets within 90 days.” Respondent asserted:

       “The Court used the reasoning about the ‘QDRO’ requirement to deny any finding of

       contempt against [petitioner], while making a finding of contempt against [respondent]

       when the provision regarding division of the E*Trade account had that same strict language

       which should have protected her against contempt just as the Court allowed it to protect

       [petitioner].”

Respondent asked the court to “reconsider its contempt finding against [her]” and to “reconsider

[its] finding of noncontempt against [petitioner] to hold him in contempt and to allow for

[respondent] to file a fees petition against him.”

¶ 23   On September 13, 2021, petitioner filed a petition for $7992.50 in attorney fees and costs

incurred for his petition for a rule to show cause against respondent.

¶ 24   On November 16, 2021, following a hearing, the trial court denied respondent’s motion for

reconsideration. The court found that the MSA’s reference to using a QDRO to divide the joint

E*TRADE account and the Roth IRA, when those accounts were not divisible by a QDRO, did

not render the provisions ambiguous, “even if the phraseology utilized therein amounted to legal

nullities.” Concerning its denial of a finding of indirect civil contempt against petitioner, the court

stated: “[T]he contempt would have required a specific court order creating a specific obligation;

and it was for that reason that the Court found that a contempt finding could not be entered.”

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Concerning its finding of indirect civil contempt against respondent, the court stated: “Yeah,

you’re right, that the exact same language [as to a QDRO] is in there about the E*Trade account.

But the basis for the contempt finding against [respondent] was not whether or not she divided or

not or should have divided it, it was that she took the whole thing.” The court stated further: “And

so the language—although, equally as ineffective as the other language about dividing an E*Trade

account by QDRO, was really immaterial to the issue before the Court about the violation of the

order that the Court found she had made.”

¶ 25   After hearing argument on petitioner’s petition for attorney fees and costs, the court

awarded petitioner $3900.

¶ 26   Respondent timely appealed.

¶ 27                                      II. ANALYSIS

¶ 28   Respondent argues that the trial court erred in (1) finding her in indirect civil contempt for

violating the MSA and (2) refusing to find petitioner in indirect civil contempt for violating the

MSA.

¶ 29   Generally, a party commits indirect civil contempt when the party fails to comply with a

court order outside of the court’s presence. In re Marriage of Knoll and Coyne, 2016 IL App (1st)

152494, ¶ 50. The terms of an MSA are enforceable through contempt proceedings. See 750 ILCS

5/502 (e) (West 2020).

               “A petition for a rule to show cause is the method for notifying the court that a court

       order may have been violated, and the petitioner requests a hearing on the issue. The

       petition for a rule to show cause and the rule to show cause operate together to inform the

       alleged contemnor of the allegations against her. The rule to show cause is the method by

       which the court brings the parties before it for a hearing. It also notifies the alleged

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2022 IL App (2d) 210739-U

       contemnor of the time and place of the hearing. Thus, the petition for a rule to show cause

       initiates the contempt proceedings, but it does not establish that a violation of a court order

       has in fact occurred. The rule to show cause, issued by the court, is not a finding [that] a

       violation of a court order has occurred, but part of the process of notifying the alleged

       contemnor of the charges, and time and place of the hearing. At the hearing, the burden is

       on the petitioner to show a violation of a court order has occurred. Once this showing has

       been made, the burden shifts to the alleged contemnor to show the violation was not

       willful.” In re Marriage of LaTour, 241 Ill. App. 3d 500, 508 (1993).

¶ 30   “Civil contempt is a coercive sanction rather than a punishment for past contumacious

conduct.” Felzak v. Hruby, 226 Ill. 2d 382, 391 (2007). “[C]oercion is the goal of indirect civil

contempt of court and punishment is the goal of criminal contempt of court.” In re Marriage of

Berto, 344 Ill. App. 3d 705, 713 (2003). Thus, a valid civil contempt order must contain a purge

provision, which lifts the sanction when the contemnor complies with the order. Felzak, 226 Ill.

2d at 391. “A contemnor must be able to purge the civil contempt by doing that which the court

has ordered him to do.” Id. “[A] finding of civil contempt is not proper unless the ability to purge

a contempt finding is within the power of the contemnor.” In re Marriage of O’Malley ex re.

Godfrey, 2016 IL App (1st) 151118, ¶ 29.

¶ 31   “ ‘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.’ ” Knoll, 2016 IL App (1st)

152494, ¶ 50 (quoting In re Marriage of McCormick, 2013 IL App (2d) 120100, ¶ 17). A decision

is against the manifest weight of the evidence if “ ‘the opposite conclusion is clearly evident’ ” or

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the court’s findings are “ ‘unreasonable, arbitrary, and not based on any of the evidence.’ ” Id.

(quoting In re Marriage of Demaret, 2012 IL App (1st) 111916, ¶ 43).

¶ 32   We first address respondent’s argument that the trial court erred in finding her in indirect

civil contempt. According to respondent, because section 10.4 of the MSA required the joint

E*TRADE account “to be divided by impossible means”—i.e., a QDRO—it was “ambiguous”

and “unenforceable through contempt power.” We disagree. The provision governing the joint

E*TRADE account unambiguously provided that “[e]ach Party is entitled to one half (50%) of

said account.” Although the provision also stated that the account “shall be split pursuant to the

QDRO,” the parties agree that the account is not divisible by a QDRO. Indeed, respondent

unilaterally withdrawing all the money in the account shows that a QDRO was not necessary to

access and divide the funds. Nevertheless, as the trial court found, respondent was held in contempt

not for how she accessed the funds but for removing all the funds in the account. Moreover,

respondent conceded at the outset of the hearing on petitioner’s petition that she entirely depleted

the joint E*TRADE account. This account depletion violated the MSA, which unambiguously

provided each party with half of that account.

¶ 33   Once petitioner established that respondent violated the MSA, the burden shifted to

respondent to prove that her failure to comply with the MSA was not willful. Respondent testified

that she withdrew the money to pay certain joint expenses. However, the trial court found that

respondent’s testimony was insufficient to establish that she accessed the funds out of necessity.

Instead, the court found that respondent knowingly and intentionally violated the terms of the

judgment and held her in indirect civil contempt. Other than challenging the enforceability of

section 10.4 itself, respondent makes no argument on appeal that the court’s ruling that she

knowingly and intentionally violated the MSA was against the manifest weight of the evidence or

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otherwise an abuse of discretion. Therefore, she has forfeited any such argument. “Points not

argued [in the appellant brief] are forfeited and shall not be raised in the reply brief, in oral

argument, or on petition for rehearing.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020). Accordingly,

based on the foregoing, we cannot say the trial court erred in holding respondent in indirect civil

contempt.

¶ 34   We next address the trial court’s denial of respondent’s petition for a finding of indirect

civil contempt against petitioner. We note that, in her argument on appeal, respondent does not

refer to the allegations in her petition concerning petitioner’s alleged failure to cooperate with the

division of the Roth IRA. Instead, she focuses solely on the trial court’s ruling on the Barclay

401(k). Thus, we confine our analysis to the trial court’s ruling regarding the Barclay 401(k).

¶ 35   Respondent frames the issue as follows: “The issue is whether the party’s [sic] [MSA]

placed an obligation on [petitioner] to assist or otherwise cooperate with the division of the

Barclay[ ] 401(k).” According to respondent, “the court based its denial off the belief that the MSA

did not specifically order [petitioner] to do something”—a belief she claims is “rebuffed” by the

language of the MSA, which specifically required “cooperation.”

¶ 36   First, we note that the trial court’s comments to which respondent refers were made about

the Roth IRA, not the Barclay 401(k). At the outset of her argument on count I of her petition,

respondent’s counsel reminded the court that, when she filed the petition, 120 days had passed

since the dissolution judgment, yet petitioner had still refused to divide the Roth IRA and the

Barclay 401(k). She conceded that the Barclay 401(k) had since been divided, but she noted that

“the Roth IRA [was] still not divided.” Counsel and the court then proceeded to address the Roth

IRA, which was not divisible by QDRO. The court stated: “[Y]ou can’t hold him in contempt for

[not] doing a QDRO when there is no QDRO. You’re not going to QDRO an IRA.” The court

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concluded: “I don’t think the prima facie case of noncompliance with the judgment is made

because there is no specific provision in this judgment that he has violated about that IRA account.”

¶ 37   Regardless of whether petitioner failed to cooperate as required in preparing a QDRO for

the Barclay 401(k), the QDRO for that account was completed before the hearing on the petition

for a rule to show cause. Thus, there was no means left by which petitioner could purge himself of

the alleged contempt and, accordingly, no basis to find him in indirect civil contempt. See Berto,

344 Ill. App. 3d at 712-13 (where the proceedings on the petition for rule to show cause for indirect

civil contempt were initiated to compel the respondent to pay past-due monthly maintenance and

child support payments ordered under the parties’ MSA and the respondent paid the arrearage at

the hearing on the petition, respondent could not be found in indirect civil contempt, as there was

no means by which he could purge himself of contempt); First Midwest Bank/Danville v.

Hoagland, 244 Ill. App. 3d 596, 611-12 (1993) (where the proceedings on the petition for rule to

show cause for indirect civil contempt were initiated to compel the respondent to comply with a

court order requiring him to turn over copies of his tax returns within five days of filing and the

respondent turned them over before the hearing on the petition—although not within five days of

filing—the respondent could not be found in indirect civil contempt, because there was no action

of the respondent to coerce). Indeed, the fact that the parties resolved the Barclay-401(k) issue

before the hearing is presumably why the trial court addressed only the Roth IRA. Accordingly,

petitioner could not have been held in indirect civil contempt for the Barclay 401(k) issue, because

doing so would not coerce petitioner to do anything; rather, it would punish him for his alleged

failure to cooperate. Thus, we find no error.

¶ 38   We note that, in her opening brief, respondent also states:

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                  “Furthermore, further litigation presumably incurred additional attorney fees, given

        that [respondent’s] contempt pleading sought reimbursement of incurred fees. The Court’s

        denial of [respondent’s] motion without requiring [petitioner] to justify his explanation was

        in error. And the denial of contempt should be reversed and remanded for hearing on

        whether [petitioner’s] objection was for purposes of delay, harassment, or otherwise in bad

        faith.”

Aside from this single reference to attorney fees, respondent makes no argument in her initial brief

that the trial court erred in denying her request for attorney fees related to obtaining the QDRO for

the Barclay 401(k). Instead, she focuses entirely on the propriety of the court’s refusal to find

petitioner in contempt. Nor does she cite any authority. Therefore, she has forfeited any possible

argument that she was entitled to attorney fees based on petitioner’s objection to the QDRO.

“Points not argued [in the appellant brief] are forfeited and shall not be raised in the reply brief, in

oral argument, or on petition for rehearing.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020); see also

In re Addison R., 2013 IL App (2d) 121318, ¶ 31 (points unsupported by citation to pertinent

authority are forfeited).

¶ 39    In her reply brief, respondent argues: “It was only after [respondent] filed her petition for

indirect civil contempt[ ] that the orders resolving her share of the retirement accounts was [sic]

resolved.” She cites section 508(b) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (Act)

(750 ILCS 5/508(b) (West 2020)). She argues that the Act “allows the court to allocate attorney

fees should a party’s violation [of a judgment] be without compelling cause or justification. And

this was part of her prayer for relief.” To be sure, “[a] finding of contempt is sufficient to require

an award of fees under section 508(b), but such a finding is not necessary. [Citation.] The party

that fails to comply with an order bears the burden of proving that compelling cause or justification

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for the noncompliance exists.” Berto, 344 Ill. App. 3d at 717. Thus, despite the trial court’s refusal

to find petitioner in indirect civil contempt, respondent could possibly have been entitled to

attorney fees based on petitioner’s objection to the QDRO and the division of the Roth IRA if the

trial court had found that, by so objecting, petitioner failed to comply with the MSA and had no

compelling cause or justification for that noncompliance. However, that does not seem to be

respondent’s argument. Nor does she cite any relevant authority other than the statute to support a

claim to attorney fees. In any event, under the plain language of Rule 341(h)(7), quoted above,

raising an issue for the first time in her reply brief does not avoid forfeiture.

¶ 40                                     III. CONCLUSION

¶ 41    For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of McHenry County.

¶ 42    Affirmed.

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