44 Cal. 475 | Cal. | 1872
The plaintiff, in January, 1868, obtained a judgment against the defendant, who was the husband of the plaintiff) but living apart from her, requiring him on the first day of
After consideration the Court refused to adjudge the defendant guilty of a contempt, on the ground that he was unable to comply with the judgment, and thereupon dismissed the application. The ap¡)eal is from the order of the Court refusing to commit the defendant.
It is claimed by the appellant that the process sought is in the nature of an execution to enforce the performance of a duty by the defendant, and that she is entitled to it without inquiry as to whether he is able to perform or not; that his ability to perform is a question which can be inquired into only upon proceedings afterwards taken for his release.
From the earliest times Courts of equity have used the process of contempt for the purpose of compelling a party to- pay money or to perform some pecuniary obligation, which he may have been directed to pay or perform by the decree or order of the Court, as well as to enforce obedience to a decree, directing the performance of some other act,
In this State the power of Courts to punish for contempt has been regulated by statute. It is provided that when one is adjudged guilty of contempt he may be punished by a fine of not exceeding five hundred dollars and by imprisonment for not exceeding five days, except when the contempt consists in the omission to perform an act which is yet in his power to perform, in which case he may be imprisoned until he have performed it. (Practice Act, Sections 488, 489.) This is a limitation upon the power formerly exercised by Courts to punish for contempt; but whether Courts in this State can exercise power in this respect in cases not named in the statute, or otherwise than it has provided, we are not called upon in this case to consider. In our opinion, however, where one is called before a Court to answer for contempt for not doing an act which he has been adjudged to do, inquiry may properly be had as to whether it is still in his power to do it, and if it be not, he should not be adjudged guilty, unless he has voluntarily and contumaciously disabled himself from -doing it. (Ex Parte Cohen, 6 Cal. 318.)
In Myers v. Trimble, 3 E. D. Smith, 612, it is said: “If it appear that the debtor is unable to pay the sum ordered to be paid, that may be deemed a sufficient excuse when he appears to answer for apparent contumacy. Courts will not adjudge a defendant in contempt for not doing an impossibility, nor for not doing what it is not in his power to do, unless he has voluntarily disabled himself to do the act, when the creation of the disability was itself a contumacious act.”
In this case it is not claimed that the defendant was either able to pay the money, or that he had contumaciously ren-. dered himself unable to pay it.
Order affirmed.