This is an original habeas corpus proceeding. Relator, Robert Dustman, has been adjudged in contempt by the 47th District Court of Randall County for failure to make payments for the support of his minor children as required by a divorce judgment entered by that court on November 28, 1972. The contempt decree assessed a fine of one dollar against Dustman and ordered that he be committed to jail until he purges himself of the contempt by paying $4,710 in delinquent child support plus court costs amounting to $22. We order relator discharged.
Under the 1972 divorce decree, Dustman became obligated to pay child support payments of $150 per month. It appears from the record that as of October 31, 1975, only one such monthly payment had been made. Article 1911a, V.A.T.S., authorizes punishment for contempt by a fine of not more than $500 and by confinement in county jail for not more than six months. We are not concerned here with the power of the trial court to impose punishment within these limits. Rather, our consideration relates to the coercive portion of the contempt decree, the indefinite confinement of relator until payment of the $4,710 and court costs.
*410 The evidence bearing upon relator’s ability to pay the arrearage at the time of the contempt hearing on October 31,1975 is not controverted. He testified that he desired to pay the $4,710 as soon as possible but was unable to pay it at the time of the hearing; that he was employed by a swimming pool company; that his work week ranged from ten to forty hours per week due to the seasonal nature of the work; and that he wished to pay off the arrearage over a period of time but simply did not know how he would do so. In his petition for writ of habeas corpus, Dustman makes the following sworn statements concerning his ability to pay, which statements remain uncontradicted:
[H]e is unable to comply with the Order of the Court to pay FOUR THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED TEN AND NO/100 ($4,710.00) DOLLARS by virtue of financial inability . . . . [H]e only grossed THREE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED THIRTY-FOUR AND 50/100 ($3,534.50) DOLLARS during the year of 1975. [H]e is unable to borrow the said sum to secure his release. [He] has no property he could mortgage to raise said sum.
The duration of Dustman’s incarceration is some corroboration of his uncontra-dicted testimony.
Ex parte Fiedler,
An original habeas corpus proceeding in this Court is a collateral attack upon the contempt order, and the relator may be relieved of that order’s impositions only if the order is void.
Ex parte Thetford,
The testimony of Dustman falls within the exception giving conclusive effect to testimony of an interested party where “it is clear and positive, and there are no circumstances in evidence tending to discredit or impeach such testimony.”
McGuire v. City of Dallas,
The relator is discharged.
