232 P. 725 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1924
An order of commitment dated June 6, 1924, was issued by the superior court of Orange County, charging the petitioner with contempt of said court for failure to comply with the terms of an order made on July 27, 1923, directing him to pay temporary maintenance, attorney's fees, and costs in a separate maintenance suit, and for noncompliance with an order made on April 18, 1924, directing that he pay certain amounts then overdue or furnish bond therefor. Petitioner was arrested pursuant to the order first mentioned and incarcerated in the county jail of Orange County, from which confinement he now seeks relief by a writ of habeas corpus.
The order of July 27, 1923, was based upon evidence introduced at a hearing on an order to show cause, and the petitioner was therein directed to pay to the plaintiff $25 for costs, $150 attorney's fees, and $100 per month. It appears that payments were made thereunder until October 1, 1923, and that nothing has been paid since that date. On December 22, 1923, a warrant of attachment, based upon *787 affidavit, was issued for petitioner, under which he was arrested and brought into court on April 5, 1924; a hearing was had and evidence introduced on April 18, 1924, at which time the trial court found that petitioner had failed, neglected, and refused to make payments totaling $500, and that he was in contempt of court. An order was made on this latter date that he pay the full amount, or within one day furnish security for its payment within ten days. On the twenty-fourth day of May, 1924, the plaintiff Louise Pillsbury filed an affidavit reciting the foregoing facts, and that no part of said sum of $500 had been paid; it is further alleged that the order of April 18, 1924, was made in the presence of petitioner, and that a certified copy thereof was on that date personally served upon him; and it is averred upon information and belief that he ignored the order and neglected and refused to execute the bond which was required as an alternative; that the main action had gone to judgment, and that the petitioner had served and filed a notice of motion for new trial, but that the affiant had no money with which to employ counsel or to resist such motion. A prayer follows, asking that a warrant of attachment issue against the defendant and that he be brought into court upon contempt of court for failure to make the payments or the bond as he had previously been ordered to do.
The first ground upon which this proceeding is based is that the affidavit does not state sufficient facts, in that it fails to allege that the petitioner has the ability to comply with the order of the court and that the prayer should be for an order to show cause, rather than a warrant of attachment. Section
[4] The claim that the allegation upon information and belief that petitioner had wholly ignored the order of the court requiring security and had not furnished the same was insufficient is directly decided adversely to petitioner's contention in the following cases: In re Acock,
[5] Also the contention that petitioner's confinement is illegal because the plaintiff has not advanced to the jailer funds for his maintenance, is untenable. Section 1154 of the Code of Civil Procedure requires such provision for a person "committed to jail on an execution issued on a judgment recovered in a civil action." Such a contempt proceeding is not a civil action either at law or in equity (Hotaling v. SuperiorCourt,
It is urged that on June 6, 1924, when the order of commitment was made no testimony was introduced, and that the petitioner was not allowed to show cause why he was unable to comply with the order of July 27, 1923, for which he is held in contempt. However, it appears by stipulation that he made no request to be heard and no offer to purge himself of contempt, and no denial of the truth of the allegations contained in the affidavit stating that he had violated the orders of July 27, 1923, and of April 18, 1924. [6] Every reasonable intendment and presumption must be indulged to sustain the contention that the proceedings of the trial court were correct and regular.[7] When the court below made the order in the first instance, on July 27, 1923, it would regularly have done so only after receiving evidence and upon a hearing in which the petitioner here had an opportunity to participate. (Rose v. Rose,
Finally, it is contended that the petitioner made application under section 1143 of the Code of Civil Procedure to purge himself of the contempt for which he had been imprisoned, but that the trial court upon the date set for hearing said application declined to hear any evidence and dismissed the application. It appears that counsel for respondent objected upon the ground that there was no issue before the court, and that this objection was sustained. [8] Section 1143 of the Code of Civil Procedure relates to persons confined in jail on an execution issued on a judgment in a civil action, and where his ability to comply with an order of court has previously been determined by the trial court this section is not applicable, as we have heretofore shown. There is no showing that petitioner could have purged himself by making payment, or that he had any legitimate excuse.
The writ is dismissed and petitioner remanded.
Finlayson, P. J., and Works, J., concurred. *791