The petitioner was adjudged guilty of contempt for failing to pay $20 per month towards the partial support of her five minor children, all wards of the juvenile court. The record shows that for several years the public authorities have attempted, so far unsuccessfully, to compel petitioner to either care for her children, or to partially pay for their support. Some two years ago the court ordered Mrs. Carpenter to receive her children into her home, and care for them. Upon her failure to comply with this order she was cited and committed for contempt. Upon
habeas corpus
she was discharged from custody on the ground that her second husband, who is not the father of the children, could not be compelled to support them.
(In re Carpenter, 21
Cal. App. (2d) 658 [
In this proceeding it is the contention of petitioner that the recital of ability to pay contained in the commitment is totally unsupported by any evidence. The respondent contends that in this proceeding the adjudication of ability to comply with the order is conclusive. With this contention we are in accord. The proper rule supported by the citation of many cases, in a ease factually similar to the instant case, is thus succinctly stated by the Supreme Court in
Ex parte Levin,
“It is an established doctrine that in a proceeding to punish for an alleged contempt the finding of the court as to the ability of the contemner to comply with the terms of the order is conclusive on habeas corpus, and the prisoner cannot be discharged from custody if the facts showing ju *277 risdiction appear upon the record. (Ex parte Spencer, 83 Cal. [460], 461 [17 Am. St. Rep. 266 ,23 Pac. 395 ].) The writ of habeas corpus cannot be used as a basis for review as upon appeal. (Ex parte Cottrell, 59 Cal. 417; Ex parte Clark,110 Cal. 405 [42 Pac. 905 ] ; Ex parte Levin,191 Cal. 207 [215 Pac. 908 ].) The question is one of fact which the court making the order has the right to determine. Here the court found in its order of commitment that petitioner was able to comply with the order, and this adjudication is conclusive upon this hearing. ’’ (See, also, In re Gutierrez,46 Cal. App. 94 [188 Pac. 1004 ]; In re Hallinan,126 Cal. App. 121 [14 Pac. (2d) 797 ].)
These cases are sound. It is elementary that on
habeas corpus
the court is limited to the single question of jurisdiction. Adjudication of questions of fact, the court having jurisdiction of the person and subject matter, cannot be reviewed. There are, it is true, some exceptions to this rule. Thus where a judgment, although apparently valid, is founded upon facts and proceedings from which alone it may be made to appear that the court was without jurisdiction, a review of the entire record, including the evidence, will be made as in
certiorari.
This is the explanation of the statement appearing in some of the cases that the scope of the inquiry upon either
habeas corpus
or
certiorari
is precisely the same. (See
In re Chaus,
The writ is discharged and the prisoner remanded.
Ward, J., and Goodell, J., pro tern., concurred.
