81 W. Va. 761 | W. Va. | 1918
A judgment of committal for a contempt of court, effected by non-payment of installments of alimony, decreed against the plaintiff in error, constitutes the subject matter of this writ of error; and one very vital question arises on the motion to dismiss the writ as having been improvidently awarded.
A judgment for contempt of • a trial court, consisting of disobedience of its judgment, decree or order, is not reviewable in the appellate court, if the trial court had jurisdiction of the cause in which it rendered, pronounced or entered the violated judgment, decree or order, and did not exeeeed its jurisdiction in doing so. State ex rel. v. Baltimore & Ohio Ry. Co., 73 W. Va. 1; Code, ch. 160, sec. 4.
Full acquiescence in the foregoing proposition is evidenced by the brief filed for the plaintiff in error; but it is earnestly insisted that the contempt .procedure complained of was action in excess of the jurisdiction of the court, because, it is said, see. 1, of eh. 139, of the Code, has stripped courts of
If the construction contended'for should be conceded, it may not follow that a writ of error lies to a judgment in a contempt proceeding; for the statute expressly withholds a writ of error to a judgment for a contempt effected by disobedience of a judgment, decree or order. It reads: “To the judgment of a circuit court, for a contempt of court, other than for the non-performance of, or disobedience to, a judgment, decree or order, a writ of error shall lie from the supreme court of appeals. ’ ’ Code, ch. 160, sec. 4. State ex rel. v. Baltimore & Ohio Ry. Co., 73 W. Va. 1, recognizes an implied exception to this statute founded upon lack of jurisdiction in the circuit court, but the lack of jurisdiction, constituting the ground of the exception, as defined in that case, pertains to the judgment or decree for enforcement of which the contempt proceeding is invoked. That decision necessarily denies to the statute in question a part of the force and effect literally imported by its terms. If an exception thereto can be validly founded upon lack of jurisdiction to pronounce the decree for enforcement of which contempt procedure is x*esorted to, it is difficult to see any reason why lack of jurisdiction in the process of enforcement would not constitute a sufficient basis for another or further exception. In the lat-ter case, the lack of jurisdiction would be more clearly and directly involved, than in the former. In neither,,is there any foundation for it in the terms of the statute. At the same time, it must be remembered that a judgment or decree rendered without jurisdiction, is a nullity, wherefore it may be said there is no judgment or decree, in such ease, to be en
Every act of a court founded upon an erroneous interpretation of a statute or a misconception of the common law and variant therefrom, is not void for want of jurisdiction. . It is familiar law that a court has as much -power to decide erroneously as it has to decide correctly. Mere errors in decisions upon questions of law are not acts in excess of jurisdiction. In some instances, however, they are. In the determination of the meaning of laws pertaining to their own power and jurisdiction, courts decide and act at their peril. On the other hand, in administering law applicable to the rights of the litigating parties, their acts founded upon erroneous interpretations of laws are, ordinarily, mere errors of judgment. These propositions are so self-evident and so thoroughly attested by the decisions of this and other courts, that authority for them need not be cited.
Courts derive their authority and powers from the constitution and laws of the state and, unless the power or authority of a court to perform a contemplated act, is found therein, the act, if done, is coram non judice. 7 R. C. L., p. 1030; N. & W. Ry. Co. v. Pinnacle Coal Co., 44 W. Va. 574. In the absence of a .statutory modification or abrogation,
The statute invoked in resistance of' the contempt procedure manifestly deals with remedies as well as rights and impliedly forbids enforcement of a decree or order in chancery for the payment of money, otherwise than by execution. It makes the decree the'equal of a judgment and declares it shall be embraced by the word “judgment” whenever it is used in certain chapters. It also makes the person entitled to any decree or order requiring the payment of money, a judgment creditor, even though the money may be required to be paid into a court, or a bank, or other place of deposit. In all such cases, it authorizes an execution on the decree or order. Furthermore, the decree becomes a lien upon the real estate of the party against whom it is pronounced. Having done all this, it then declares that the party in whose favor it is may proceed to carry into execution, a decree or order in chancery, other than for the payment of money, as he might have done before the passage of the act. This necessarily implies that he cannot so enforce a decree for the payment of money. Manifestly, therefore, power to enforce such a decree by process of contempt has been abrogated and no longer exists. When such remedy is available, it is the court’s remedy or process. Denial thereof to a party necessarily carries denial of power in the court to award it. Jurisdiction formerly existing is, to that extent, abrogated or withdrawn hy the statute.
An overwhelming weight of authority, however, makes a decree for alimony more than a mere decree for the payment of money. “It has frequently been insisted that a decree for alimony is in fact a debt, and therefore payment should not be enforced by an attachment for contempt where the eonsti-tution prohibits imprisonment for debt. But it is uniformly held, and such is the true doctrine, that the decree for alimony
Under our statutes, a decree for ailmony is more than a
In view of this conclusion warranted by the weight of judicial opinion and the liberal terms of the divorce statute, there is no lack of jurisdiction, and, hence, no right of review by writ of error. If the decree goes beyond the ability of the plaintiff in error, in its requirements, an application to the court for relief by a modification of its terms and provisions, would have forestalled and prevented the procedure for contempt. Error in the court’s action upon that application could have been corrected on an appeal. When the court has jurisdiction in all respects, the party'subject to a decree en
■A careful reading of the opinion in Cariens v. Cariens, 50 W. Va. 113, fails to disclose an assertion of lack of power in the trial court to modify a decree for alimony, entered contemporaneously with a decree of divorce, upon 'facts subsequently arising. Such a decree is declared to be conclusive upon the parties, as to all facts existing at its date, but power in the court to discharge the husband from payment, for good cause'subsequently accruing, is affirmed in unequivocal terms. As to the power of the court, respecting alimony, the statute deals with both classes of divorce, in exactly the same terms, wherefore the legislature cannot be deemed to have intended to withhold or deny right to modify the decree in one class any more than in the other. Moreover, in Henrie v. Henrie, 71 W. Va. 131, a majority of this court expressed the opinion that the statute does not deny such power.
Entry of the order complained of in the chancery order book and under the style of the divorce suit is relied upon as a fatal and jurisdictional departure in the proceeding. Our decisions uniformly say every contempt proceeding is criminal in its nature and, after issuance of the rule, should be conducted in the name of the state and recorded in the law order book. State v. Fredlock, 52 W. Va. 232; State v. Cunningham, 33 W. Va. 607; State v. Irwin, 30 W. Va. 404; Ruhl v. Ruhl, 24 W. Va. 279; Craig v. McCulloch, 20 W. Va. 148; State v. Harper’s Ferry Bridge Co., 16 W. Va. 864. In each of these cases except Ruhl v. Ruhl, the alleged contempt consisted of the doing of a forbidden act and the object of the proceeding was punishment. The contempts were primarily criminal, rather than civil, in their natures, and the.purpose of the procedure was not mere enforcement of performance of an affirmative act or duty required by a decree. When the disobedience consists of failure to perform a decree in favor of the opposite party, the contempt is civil in its main fea
The suggestion in argument that the imprisonment involved In the court’s process of enforcement of obedience to its decree necessarily makes the proceeding criminal and confers right of trial by jury, wherefore- it is one for the cognizance -of a court of law only, 'is altogether untenable. Instancing the case of a refusal to pay alimony and imprisonment to -coerce such payment, the Supreme Court of the United States, in Gompers v. Buck Stove and Range Co., 221 U. S. 418, 34, L. R. A. N. S. 874, speaking through Mr. Justice Lamar, said: ‘‘Imprisonment in such cases is not inflicted ás a punishment, but is intended to be remedial by coercing the defen
It is unnecessary and would be improper here, to attempt to indicate the class of cases in which the procedure should be on the law side of the court, or to say whether procedure in the wrong forum would be fatal to the judgment of contempt or committal for a civil contempt. Such a departure might be a mere error as to which there is no right to relief. McGrew v. Maxwell, decided at this term.
For the reasons stated, the writ of error will be dismissed as having been improvidently awarded.
Writ of error dismissed.