TIMMER, Judge.
¶ 1 BMO Harris Bank National Association ("BMO") files this special action asserting the trial court abused its discretion by holding BMO in civil contempt of a stay order entered pending an appeal. We are asked to decide whether a court can find a party in contempt of a court order for expressing its intention to violate that order in the future. For the reasons that follow, we accept jurisdiction and hold the court lacks such authority. We grant relief to BMO by vacating the court's contempt orders.
¶ 2 Real-party-in-interest Brian Myers initiated this lawsuit to prevent BMO from proceeding with trustee's sales of four parcels of property owned by him in Sedona. The court issued a temporary restraining order ("TRO") on February 22, 2011 stopping the sales. Myers sought a preliminary injunction based on alleged deficiencies in the foreclosure documents, but the court denied the request, and the TRO expired. At Myers' request, the court reinstated the TRO pending appeal of the denial of the preliminary injunction request, as long as he filed a notice of appeal within ten days and posted a supersedeas bond. Myers did so.
¶ 3 While the appeal was pending, BMO canceled the original notices of trustee's sales and issued new ones that purportedly cured the alleged deficiencies in the original notices. Myers applied to the trial court for an order of contempt and sanctions, asserting BMO violated the reinstated TRO by issuing new notices of trustee's sales. The court agreed, finding "[BMO's] action in re-noticing the Trustee's Sale . . . to be in direct willful violation of this Court's February 22, 2011 order and the stay on appeal." As a sanction, the court awarded attorneys' fees
¶ 4 While the contempt proceedings were pending in the trial court, this court, on BMO's motion, dismissed the appeal as moot in light of the cancellation of the original notices of trustee's sales. Thereafter, the trial court ordered BMO to pay $5,650 in fees and costs to Myers as a sanction for contempt. This special action followed.
¶ 5 An order holding a party in contempt for refusing to obey a court order is not appealable and may only be reviewed through a special action. Stoddard v. Donahoe, 224 Ariz. 152, 154, ¶ 7, 228 P.3d 144, 146 (App.2010). Because BMO presents a meritorious issue and does not have a remedy by appeal, in the exercise of our discretion, we accept jurisdiction over the petition. Ariz. R.P. Spec. Act. 1(a).
¶ 6 The trial court possessed power to find BMO in civil contempt
¶ 7 The reinstated TRO restrained BMO as follows:
The trial court ruled that BMO willfully violated this order by issuing new notices of trustee's sales. We disagree. BMO did not violate the directive to refrain from conducting a trustee's sale because it did not, in fact, conduct a trustee's sale. Rather, BMO issued new notices reflecting its intention to conduct new sales; but the reinstated TRO did not prohibit BMO from issuing new notices. Thus, BMO did not violate a "specific and definite" court order. Fed. Trade Comm'n, 179 F.3d at 1239; see also Ariz. R. Civ. P. 65(h) ("[E]very restraining order . . . shall be specific in terms. It shall describe in reasonable detail . . . the act or acts sought to be restrained. . . .").
¶ 8 Myers nevertheless argues BMO acted in contempt of the reinstated TRO by making it clear it intended to proceed with the newly noticed trustee's sales despite the order. We agree with Myers the reinstated TRO prohibited all trustee's sales
¶ 9 We agree with the holdings in these cases. Unless and until BMO conducted the trustee's sales while the reinstated TRO remained in effect, it was not in contempt of that order, and the trial court therefore erred by finding BMO in contempt and sanctioning it for issuing notices of its intention to conduct trustee's sales in the future.
¶ 10 For the foregoing reasons, we accept jurisdiction over the special action petition and hold the trial court erred by finding BMO in contempt of the reinstated TRO for expressing an intention to violate that order in the future. We grant relief to BMO by vacating the trial court's contempt orders entered August 16, 2011 and September 14, 2011. In the exercise of our discretion, we decline BMO's request for attorneys' fees pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-341.01.
CONCURRING: MAURICE PORTLEY, Presiding Judge and ANDREW W. GOULD, Judge.
Absent material revision after the date of the events at issue, we cite a statute's current version.