This is an appeal from an order holding appellant in contempt of court for failure to comply with a child support order of $38 per week. As a sanction, the trial court imposed a jail term of eighty days, but provided that appellant could purge the jail term at any time by paying the full amount of accrued but unpaid child support pay
In entering its order of cоntempt, the trial court made an explicit finding that appellant had the ability to make the $38 weekly payments. Appellant’s ability to pay is a factual question and as such cannоt be disturbed by this court unless it is “plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” D.C.Code § 17-305(a) (1989);
Smith v. Smith,
The overriding difficulty is with the terms of the sanction. Appellant argues that since in fact he could not then pay the full amount of accrued child support payments, he was effectively punished for criminal contempt without the requisite procedures being followed.
3
The critical features of the determination of whether a particular proceeding is civil or criminal in nature “are the substance оf the proceeding and the character of the relief that the proceeding will afford.”
Hicks v. Feiock,
[a]ny sentence “must be viewed as remedial,” and hence civil in nature, “if the court conditions release upon the contem-nor’s willingness to [comply with the order].” By the same token, in a civil procеeding the court “may also impose a determinate sentence which includes a purge clause.”
Id.
Therefore, before a trial court can properly impose a jail term with a purge clause purportedly as a sаnction for civil contempt, it should make a separate finding that the contemnor has the actual ability to purge the jail term. Without such a finding, express or implied, this court cannot ascertain whether the trial court even considered appellant’s ability to comply with the purge clause, and “[w]e may not supply a finding required for the validity of the commitment. We cannot say even that the court was aware of the necessity of ascertaining the facts requisite to the making of such a finding.”
Lundregan, supra,
Indeed, we think that such a result was clearly presаged, if not compelled, by our holding in
Truslow, supra,
All of the incidents of the contempt proceeding in the instant case were civil in nature. Appellant was called as a witness by the other side (which could not properly be done in a criminal proceeding), no criminal record was created for appellant, and the sanction imposed at least purpоrted to be civil in nature. The trial court plainly intended to conduct a civil contempt proceeding. To that end, the trial court sentenced appellant to a sentenсe of “eighty days or until such earlier time as he shall purge himself of his contempt by paying” the full amount of arrearage.
As already indicated, a finding of civil contempt for nonpayment of child support must be accompanied by a finding of ability to comply with the child support order. Logically, the same requirement must extend to the purge clause. No such finding was made here, and while the record sup-
Without the present ability to satisfy the purge clause, appellant did not “hold the keys to his jailhouse door,” for the key that he had to hold was the ability to free himself by his own actions. The jail term imposed in this case, therefore, with no concomitant finding of ability to comply with the purge clause, was invalid. Accordingly, we set aside and declаre invalid the sanction imposed by the trial court. 6
So ordered.
Notes
. As appellant acknowledges, he bore the burden in a civil contempt action to show inability to pay or other reason for noncompliance.
Smith, supra,
. We note that at no time during the proceedings did appellant file a written motion to reduce the required weekly support payments, and the trial court committed no abuse of discretion in declining to deal with appellant’s oral request to that end at a contempt hearing for past noncompliance. See Super.Ct.Dom.Rel.R. 7(b)(v).
. In particular, he argues that in criminal contempt, the burden would be upon the government to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Hicks v. Feiock,
.In
Hicks,
the Court found that the trial court had not specified whether respondent could have purged the determinate sentence by paying the accumulated prior payments. The case was therefore remanded to make this determination. The Court held that "[i]f on remand it is found that respondent would purge his sentence by
. Thus on this record we are unable to say that by implication, the trial court made such a finding by the very act of imposing the purge clause in what was clearly intended to be a civil contempt action. Furthermore, we are not dealing with a situation where appellаnt did not contest his ability to pay. Here, appellant challenged his ability to pay §38 per week, much less $1909. We think the issue of the validity of the sanction was properly preserved fоr appeal.
. Appellant has already served his eighty-day jail sentence. He never requested from this court a stay pending appeal. Therefore, we can afford him no practical relief other than to declare the invalidity of the sentence.
