66 A.2d 13 | Vt. | 1949
This is a petition of habeas corpus brought directly to this court. A commissioner was appointed to hear the evidence and report the facts. The relator was committed to Windham County jail on August 1, 1947, on a mittimus issued by the Windham County court in the divorce case of Ruth D. Sage v. Merton W. Sage. He has since been released on bail. The mittimus stated that the court found and adjudged the present relator Merton W. Sage to be in contempt of court for failure to comply with an order for temporary alimony signed by a superior judge. The mittimus directed the keeper of Windham County jail to receive and keep the relator "until he purges himself of contempt of court as is hereinafter stated or is otherwise discharged according to law. The said Merton W. Sage may purge himself of contempt of *517 court by paying to the keeper of the Windham County jail or to the clerk of the Windham County court or to any other person authorized to receive the same the sum of $401.50 and upon such payment the keeper of the Windham County jail is hereby authorized and directed to release and discharge the said Merton W. Sage from said jail and from custody therein."
The relator presents two grounds for his release. The first ground is that the mittimus is void and the relator illegally confined for two reasons: (a) No definite term of confinement was stated; (b) no express finding of ability to pay was made.
Contempts of court are classified as civil or criminal. In a criminal contempt the purpose of the commitment is punitive and in a civil contempt the purpose is coercive. Clay v.Waters, 178 F 385, 389, 21 Ann. Cas. 897; Eastman v. Dole,
The commissioner found that the relator was committed as punishment for failure to comply with the temporary order. It is apparent from the facts found that the commissioner used the term "punishment" inadvisedly in the foregoing sense. Although the imprisonment may be defined as a punishment whether in civil or criminal contempt, and is so considered in some of the cases, we think that the use of such term in civil contempt proceedings has a tendency to mislead. Since it clearly appears that the purpose of the commitment was coercive, the finding that the relator was committed as a punishment is to be disregarded. Archambault v. Caselini-Venable Corp.,
The relator relies on In re Leach,
The relator contends that the mittimus is void because there was no express finding that the prisoner has power to pay. But the case is not here on exceptions to the findings of the lower court, and they cannot be inquired into by this proceeding,Ex parte Beavers,
Application for relief on the ground of inability to pay should be made to the court below. Ex parte Beavers,
The final ground for release claimed by the relator is because, having insufficient money to comply with the order, his failure to apply for relief from time to time constituted a misapprehension of his duties. The Vermont Statutes, Revision of 1947, § 2105, authorizes a discharge from imprisonment when it appears that the disobedience or contempt was committed through ignorance, mistake, or misapprehension, . . . and that relief may be granted without impairing the rights of the parties concerned or the due administration of the law. Here the rights of relator's former *519 wife and four dependent children are concerned and would be impaired if he were released without compliance with the order. Under all the circumstances we feel that due administration of law demands that the relator direct his appeal to the court whose orders he has persistently violated, there to be dealt with as seems just.
Therefore it is adjudged that the relator Merton W. Sage is notillegally deprived of his liberty and he is remanded into thecustody of the keeper of Windham County jail whence he wastaken and his petition is dismissed.