OPINION
Daniel Taylor, Relator, asks this Court to order him released from custody by writ of habeas corpus. He is confined under an order of contempt issued by the 71st Judicial District Court of Harrison County, Texas, and under that order will remain confined for civil contempt until he purges himself by paying unpaid post-divorce maintenance in the amount of $16,624.00. The issue as framed by Relator is whether an agreement in his divorce decree providing contractual alimony for his former spouse is enforceable by contempt.
An original habeas proceeding is a collateral attack on the contempt judgment.
Ex parte Dolenz,
The relevant portion of the decree reads as follows:
Contractual Maintenance.
The Court finds that under- the circumstances presented in this case, the parties have agreed to contractual maintenance. Accordingly, Daniel Webster Taylor, Jr. contracts to pay and is ordered to pay as maintenance the sum of $950.00 per month to Vanoka Taylor, with the first payment being due on September 26, 2000, and a like amount being due on the 26th day of each consecutive month thereafter until the earliest of one of the following events occurs:
1. The expiration of sixty timely payments, or
2. death of .Respondent.
Relator argues that this falls squarely within the authority of
In re Dupree,
This case is distinguishable on two separate bases. First, the decree speaks of contractual maintenance rather than alimony, and it clearly contains decretal language by the trial court ordering Relator to pay a sum certain. Thus, it is not merely an agreement of the parties, but an order of the court. A court has the authority to enforce its order. See
Ex parte Slavin,
Second, Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 8.059 (Vernon Supp.2004) specifically states that a court may enforce by contempt the court’s maintenance order or an agreement for the payment of maintenance.
After examination of the petition, brief, and record presented to this Court, we conclude Relator has failed to show he is entitled to the relief sought. See Tex. R.App. P. 52.8.
We deny the petition.
