Lead Opinion
This appeal raises the issue of whether a father who wilfully refuses to pay child support required by a divorce decree may be found guilty of criminal contempt of court and unconditionally imprisoned for 20 days pursuant to Code § 24-2615 (5).
The trial court found that the defendant father was able to pay the alimony and child support awarded in the
The defendant-appellant enumerates that order as error and urges only that the sanction of criminal contempt (unconditional imprisonment) is not a sanction available to the trial court for his refusal to make payments required by a court order, as such imprisonment would constitute imprisonment for debt in violation of our Constitution (Code § 2-120).
The difference between civil and criminal contempt has been frequently stated (Cobb v. Black,
We note that there is nothing inherent in a divorce decree or alimony award which prevents wilful disobedience of its commands from being punished by criminal contempt proceedings. For example, an unconditional fine for refusal of a mother to allow a father’s visitation was approved in Bowen v. Bowen,
There is at least one decision, however, holding that the sanction of criminal contempt is not available to punish disobedience to an alimony award. Mathews v. Mathews,
On the other hand, there are numerous cases holding that imprisonment conditioned upon payment of alimony is not imprisonment for debt where the contemnor is found to be able but unwilling to pay. Carlton v. Carlton,
The lack of precision in our divorce-contempt decisions (including most recently this author’s opinion in Easley v. Easley,
Although cited for that proposition, neither Davis v. Davis, nor any of its progeny prior to Mathews v. Mathews, supra, held that criminal contempt was not available as a sanction for wilful refusal to pay alimony or child support. In fact, the court in Dacis went on to find that there was no evidence to support a finding of criminal contempt in that case as there was no evidence of disrespect toward the court (138 Ga. pp. 10, 13). Implicit in this latter finding was the finding that criminal contempt would be available in a proper nonpayment of alimony case.
We find that error was committed in the third division of Mathews v. Mathews, supra, and Brown v. Brown,
A father who wilfully refuses to pay child support which he is able to pay and which is required by an order of court may be found guilty of either civil or criminal contempt of court, or both, and dealt with as provided by law. The court below did not err in finding the defendant in contempt of court. However, in view of the reliance which the appellant father may have misplaced in Mathews v. Mathews, supra, and Brown v. Brown, supra, which we today overrule, the judgment of criminal contempt is vacated and the case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Judgment vacated.
Notes
As noted in Davis v. Davis, supra, an attachment for contempt may be both civil and criminal, as in the case at bar.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent for the reasons stated in Brown v. Brown,
In my opinion the ratio decidendi in Brown and Mathews v. Mathews,
I respectfully dissent.
