The petitions for certiorari in these cases grow out of contempt proceedings in the domestic relations department of the trial court where, in each proceeding, petitioner was adjudged in contempt of court and sentenced to jail for his asserted wilful failure to comply with a prior order of the court for the support of his former wife and children. None of the petitioners had counsel. In each case the prosecutor * called the petitioner as a witness and both he and the judge proceeded to interrogate him. It appears that the trial court did not advise the petitioners of their constitutional rights and in particular that they had a constitutional right not to testify. It is apparent petitioners were unfamiliar with their legal rights and court procedure. It was necessary for one of them to testify through an interpreter.
The decisive question is: Did the failure of the trial court to inform petitioners that they need not testify amount to a violation of their constitutional rights ?
In
Ex parte Gould,
“Contempt of court is a public offense, and by section 166 of the Penal Code is expressly declared to constitute a misdemeanor ... It is none the less a criminal offense that the statute authorizes it to be punished by indictment, or information, as well as by the summary proceedings provided in sections 1209-1222 of the Code of Civil Procedure. By these provisions, the procedure for the investigation of the *149 charge is analogous to the criminal procedure, and the judgment against the person guilty of the offense is visited with fine, or imprisonment or both—the essential elements of a judgment for a criminal offense. ‘ Contempt of court is a specific criminal offense. It is punished sometimes by indictment and sometimes in a summary proceeding, as it was in this ease. In either mode of trial, the adjudication against an offender is a conviction, and the commitment in consequence is execution.’ [Citation.] ‘Although the alleged misconduct of the defendants occurred in the progress of a civil action, the proceeding to punish them for such misconduct is no part of the process in the civil action, but is in the nature of a criminal prosecution. Its purpose is not to indemnify the plaintiff for any damages he may have sustained by reason of such misconduct, but to vindicate the dignity and authority of the court. It is a special proceeding, criminal in character, in which the state is the real plaintiff or prosecutor.’ [Citation.] In Ex parte Hollis,59 Cal. 408 , it was said: ‘To adjudge a party guilty of contempt of court for which he is fined and imprisoned, is to adjudge him guilty of a specific criminal offense. The imposition of the fine is a judgment in a criminal case.’ ” (Pp. 361-362.) (To the same effect see Hotaling v. Superior Court,191 Cal. 501 , 504 [217 P. 73 , 29 A.L.R 127]; In re Ferguson,123 Cal.App.2d 799 , 801 [268 P.2d 71 ] ; Brophy v. Industrial Acc. Com.,46 Cal.App.2d 278 , 283 [115 P.2d 835 ].)
It is fundamental that requiring a defendant in a criminal case to testify violates his constitutional privilege against self-incrimination. It is likewise a violation of this privilege to compel a defendant to testify in a contempt proceeding. (Ex parte Gould, supra; In re Ferguson, supra; Brophy v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra.)
The privilege cannot be made truly effective unless the defendant in a criminal case who is not represented by counsel is advised by the court of the existence of the privilege whenever such advice appears to be necessary.
(People
v.
Chlebowy,
These principles also have been held to apply to proceedings which were not technically criminal prosecutions. In
State
v.
Clifford,
It is axiomatic that a person may waive the privilege against self-incrimination. But any such waiver “must be informed and intelligent. There can be no waiver if the defendants do not know their rights.”
(Wood
v.
United States,
Applying these principles to the cases before the court, it is clear that the judgments holding petitioners guilty of contempt must be annulled. By requiring petitioners, *151 who were without the aid of counsel, to testify without advising them of their constitutional rights, the court violated their privilege against self-incrimination. And petitioners cannot be said to have waived their privilege since such waiver must be “informed and intelligent” in order to be voluntary. (Wood v. limited States, supra.) We must assume petitioners were ignorant of their constitutional rights since they were not advised thereof by either court or counsel.
“ When a defendant has been denied any essential element of a fair trial or due process, even the broad saving provisions of section 4% of article VI of our state Constitution cannot remedy the vice and the judgment cannot stand.”
(People
v.
Sarazzawski,
In view of the foregoing it is unnecessary to consider other questions raised by counsel.
The judgment in each case is annulled.
Ashburn, J., and Richards, J. pro tem., * concurred.
