In a civil action wherein the petitioner Simoniello was defendant, the court appointed a receiver of certain property of the defendant. Thereafter the receiver filed in said court an affidavit charging the defendant with contempt of court, in that he had committed certain acts calculated to interfere with and destroy the value of the property in the hands of the receiver. An order to show cause was issued, and at the hearing thereon the defendant was present in person and with counsel. Witnesses were sworn and testified and evidence received, and the matter having been submitted for decision the court found the defendant guilty of contempt, and ordered that the defendant-be imprisoned in the county jail for a period of five days and pay a fine in the sum of $500, with the usual alternative of imprisonment until the fine be paid. Thereupon the defendant applied to this court for a writ of habeas corpus and the writ was issued. This matter is now submitted for decision upon the petition, the writ and the return thereto.
Petitioner’s attack upon the commitment is based upon the single proposition that in the affidavit upon which the order to show cause was issued, the facts are stated entirely upon information and belief, and that the source of the information is not shown or alleged. The facts contained in the affidavit are in themselves sufficient to constitute a contempt of court. But it is true that they were stated only on information and belief, and that they did not contain a statement of the source from which the information had been received.
In support of his petition, the petitioner relies upon a recent decision entitled
Ex parte Roth,
3 Cal. App. (2d) 226 [
The case of
Golden Gate Consolidated Hydraulic Min. Co.
v.
Superior Court,
If it be true, as said by the Supreme Court in the Golden Gate case,
supra,
that every court has inherent jurisdiction to punish a contempt, then the rules of procedure should be so interpreted as reasonably to permit, the exercise of that jurisdiction. It does not appear that the Supreme Court has at any time overruled the decision of that court as set forth in the foregoing quotation from
*428
Golden Gate etc. Co.
v.
Superior Court,
The writ is discharged and the petitioner is remanded to custody.
Houser, J., and York, J., concurred.
