Does a Civil Protection ‘No Contact’ Order Survive a Subsequent Divorce Decree Permitting Visitation?
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State of Ohio v. Jeffrey L. Price, Case no. 2006-1689 2nd District Court of Appeals (Montgomery County) ISSUES: • When a divorce decree granting parenting time modifies a prior-issued civil protection order (CPO) to the extent that the two orders contradict one another, is an individual who follows the order of the later divorce decree in violation of the prior CPO? • When a later order of the same court directs that an individual who was the subject of an earlier CPO is granted parenting time with a child “in the discretion” of the protected party, does communication with the protected party or the child regarding visitation violate the “no contact” provision of the earlier protection order? BACKGROUND: On Sept. 21, 2000, Cathy L. Price obtained a Civil Protection Order (CPO) from her husband Jeffrey L. Price in the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, and was granted temporary custody of the couple’s child, Justin Price, born April 21, 1997. At that t