STATE OF INDIANA EX REL. PRITAM SINGH SHAUNKI v. J. PATRICK ENDSLEY, JUDGE AND THE MARION CIRCUIT COURT
No. 177S1
Supreme Court of Indiana
May 4, 1977
265 Ind. 267 | 362 N.E.2d 153
NOTE.—Reported at 362 N.E.2d 144.
[No. 177S1. Filed May 4, 1977.]
Ronald E. Elberger, Bose, McKinney & Evans, of Indianapolis, for petitioner.
Edward F. Kelly, of Indianapolis, for respondent.
PRENTICE, J.— This matter is before us upon the return of the Respondent to the Writ of Mandate and Prohibition issued herein on January 3, 1977, and the Motion for Correction and Addition thereto filed by Respondent on January 11, 1977.
“and upon consideration of the Respondent‘s answer in opposition to thе Relator‘s verified petition for writ of mandate and prohibition and of Respondent‘s brief and affidavit in support thereof,“.
The aforesaid writ, as amended, directed (1) the Respondent to vacate the order of December 17, in cause No. C 75-1531 in the Marion Circuit Court which ordered Pritam Singh Shaunki confined to the Marion County Jail for non-payment of an alimony judgment; (2) to refrain from enforcing said order and (3) to show cause on or before January 12, 1977, why said judgment of contempt and order of confinement should not be vacated and this writ made permanent and absolute.
The temporary writ was issued upon the petition of the Relator, following a finding against him by the Respondent that the Relator was guilty of contempt of court for failure to pay the judgment theretofore rendered in the dissolution of the marriage of the Relator and his wife and an order cоnfining him to the Marion County Jail for such contempt. The pertinent part of the alimony judgment was as follows:
“11. That thе petitioner is entitled to a $35,000.00 judgment in lieu of property division pursuant to
31-1-11.5-11 .“12. That execution on said judgment shall be withheld pending payment of weekly installments of $60.00.”
The issue before us, as stated by the Respondent, is whether pаyment of a judgment awarded in lieu of property division and payable in weekly installments, is enforceable by contempt proceedings.
It was established in Marsh v. Marsh, (1904) 162 Ind. 210, 70 N.E. 154, that an alimony judgment which takes the form of a simple money judgment is not enfоrceable through contempt proceedings in view of
Respondent urges that the following quoted portion of the dissolution of marriage act, enacted subsequent to our deсision in State ex rel. Schutz explicitly provides for the use of contempt proceedings “as a means of forcing a rеcalcitrant and contumacious former husband, such as the Relator Shaunki, to comply with the terms and cоnditions of the court‘s decree.” We disagree.
We do not see the statute as authorizing enforcement of an alimony judgment by contempt. Rather, we view the quoted portion of the statute as merely recognizing the court‘s inherent authority to enforce its lawful orders by contempt proceedings. Unquestionably there are some aspects of a divorсe or marriage dissolution decree that properly may be the subject of a court order, but the payment of a sum of money, whether in a lump sum or in installments, as an incident of settling the property rights of the parties, is not among them. We hold that the Respondent may not enforce its money judgment against the Relator by contempt proceedings; and the temporary writ of mandate and prohibition hereinbefore issued оn January 3, 1977, as hereinabove amended, is now made permanent and absolute.
DISSENTING STATEMENT
ARTERBURN, J.—I dissent on the basis of my dissenting opinion in State ex rel. Schutz v. Marion Superiоr Court, (1974) 261 Ind. 535, 307 N.E.2d 53.
DISSENTING OPINION
DEBRULER, J.— This petition for writ of mandate and prohibition brings here for review a judgment and order of confinement for indirect contempt of court by which the trial court sought to enforce a provision of an earlier final dissolution of marriage decree requiring petitioner to pay his former wife $35,000 in installments. The petition presents the issue of whether that part of the order placing petitioner in confinement is contrary to the guarantee of
The temporary writ should be dissolved.
Arterburn, J., concurs.
NOTE.—Reported at 362 N.E.2d 153.
