By this proceeding in certiorari, petitioner, a practicing attorney, seeks annulment of certain orders of the respondent superior court, dated September 2, 1966, and September 21, 1966, respectively. These orders adjudge petitioner to be in contempt of that court and that he be jailed therefor for five days.
Charles W. Kieser, the real party in interest, also an attorney, represented Ann Sorell, wife of petitioner in a divorce action. On motion of Ann Sorell, following a hearing, the court on December 2, 1963, made an order for temporary support and attorney fees. In this order petitioner here was, among other things, ordered to “pay to Charles W. Kieser, attorney for plaintiff herein, the further sum of $100.00 on account of counsel fees, in addition to the $200.00 ordered paid on July 18, 1963.” Admittedly no part of these sums have been pаid.
In July 1966 the real party in interest commenced contempt proceedings against petitioner for nonpayment of the sums so ordered paid. A “Notice of Motion re Contempt” was served and filed togethеr with a supporting declaration made under *159 penalty of perjury. This declaration in its material portions alleges: ‘‘ That defendant has not paid any part or portion of said fees and costs due, [that] defendant wilfully refuses to pay said amount [as] ordered by the above-entitled court; That from December 2, 1963 to date, defendant has received sums of money as and for attorney’s fees in various legal cases he has handled . . . ; That defendant has announced his intention not to pay said fees, on more than one occasion. ’ ’
Petitioner (defendant below) offered no counterdeclaration or affidavit. At the hearing neither side produced evidence, and argument was confined to legal issues. During the proceedings petitioner admitted that he had said in the presence and hearing of the court that he had no intention of рaying any money to Mr. Kieser, regardless of his ability, and that under no circumstances would he pay one cent.
In the ensuing orders the court found that petitioner “has had the ability to comply with the Judgment and Order of this Court made 2nd day of December 1963, together with accrued interest,” totaling $393.50. (Italics added.)
Petitioner’s contentions are two. First, he states that Mr. Kieser, not having been a party to the divorce action in which the order in question was made, has no standing to enforce that order by сontempt proceedings. He appears to be in error.
Section 137.5 of the Civil Code has since 1937 provided for payment of such attorney fees directly to the attorney concerned. Until 1951 that sectiоn had also provided that such an attorney fee order could be enforced only by way of execution. In 1951 section 137.5 of the Civil Code was amended to refer to the enforcement provision of sectiоn 137.3 of the Civil Code which allows enforcement “by the court by execution or by such order or orders as, in its discretion, it may from time to time deem necessary.” This language includes the contempt power. (See
Miller
v.
Superior Court
(1937)
It is true, generally, that a motion for attorney fees cannot be made by one not a party to the action.
(Marshank
v.
Superior Court
(1960)
Petitioner next contends, there being no showing of his present ability (in 1966) to make payment as ordered, that the court lacked jurisdiction to make the questioned orders.
In a proceeding for the punishment of constructive contempt, i.e., one committed out of the presence of the court, thе affidavit or, as here, the declaration of the complaining party constitutes the basis of the judicial action.
(Freeman
v.
Superior Court
(1955)
In a proceeding to punish for contempt, it is generally not necessary that the complainant allege that the contеmner has the ability to comply with the order.
(In re McCarty
(1908)
In the
McCarty
case, the court stated that it is not necessary for the wife to allege her spouse’s ability to comply with the original order granting alimony. “The court had originally found that he had such ability, and the only jurisdictional facts required to be stated in the affidavit were the making of the order and disobedience to it by refusal to
*161
pay.” (
Petitioner, however, urges
Mery
v.
Superior Court
(1937)
In Mery, supra, the alleged contemner had over a period of years paid $8,860, finally beсoming delinquent in the amount of $2,000. In Brown, supra, he had met payments of $350 per month for 33 months following the court order, after which he missed payments totaling $800. In each of these eases the alleged contempt occurred yеars after the court’s determination of ability to pay. It is reasonable in such cases to require a new finding of ability to pay. In the case before us we have quite a different situation. Here the court on Deсember 2, 1963, determined that petitioner then had the ability to pay the amount ordered. Petitioner did not pay, thereby forthwith placing himself in contempt by wilful disobedience of a lawful order of the court. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1209, subd. 5.) In the contempt proceedings below (1966) the court found that petitioner “has had the ability to comply” with the earlier order. This finding is fully supported.
Petitioner’s contention seems to be that even though he had previously had the ability to comply with the lower court’s order, and did not, there must nevertheless be an affirmative showing by respondent that petitioner now has such a present ability. We do not believe this to be the law. 2
In
In re Risner, supra,
In
Risner, supra,
(
The principle followed in Risner, supra, seems to be the general rule. Volume 17, Corpus Juris Secundum, in its article on Contempt, at page 49, states: “. . . if the order could have been obeyed when made, the party is in contempt, although at the time of the contempt proceedings he could not comply.” Volume 27B of the same work in the article “Divorcе,” page 101, sets forth: “Ability to comply at the time of the act of disobedience, and not at the time of the imposition of sentence, is the test of whether a refusal to comply with a decree for the payment of alimony constitutes contempt; ...”
A leading case on this point is
In re Clifts Estate
(1945)
Accordingly the issue here is not as petitioner contends, whether he has the present ability (in 1966) to pay the amounts ordered paid in 1963 at which time the court found an ability to pay. Instead the question is: Did petitioner, having the ability to pаy (at least in 1963) wilfully fail to comply with the court’s order? From the record before us it is clear that he did. Further proof of a present ability to pay would seem to be unnecessary.
For the reasons stated the orders are affirmed.
Molinari, P. J., and Sims, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 17, 1967. On February 24, 1967, the judgment was modified to read as printed above.
