This is an appeal from a judgment of contempt of the Superior Court of Marion County, Room No. 5, entered against the appellants, hereinafter referred to as defendants, upon the complaint of the appellees, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs. The contempt consisted of a violation of the Court’s order of March 11, 1968, requiring the defendants to close a driveway located in violation of subdivision restricted covenants and “to take all reasonable measures in the future as occasion arises” in order to prevent its use.
The contempt judgment, entered March 24, 1969, awarded plaintiffs damages in the sum of $1,000.00, attorneys’ fees in the sum of $2,000.00, and costs. The court ordered further affirmative action by defendants within a prescribed period. This judgment further provided that, in the event such action not be completed within such period, the defendants pay an additional sum of $300.00 damages and the sheriff incarcerate the defendant James G. Thomas and confine him until he has complied.
1. The decision is not sustained by sufficient evidence.
2. The decision is contrary to law.
3. The decision is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law.
4. The Court assessed excessive damages.
After this appeal was fully briefed, defendants filed an application for writ of certiorari seeking to bring into the record the transcript of additional proceedings which, according to the application, would disclose that upon their petition (filed subsequent to this appeal) the trial court dissolved the March 11, 1968, order.
Directing our attention first to the defendants’ application for certiorari, such application should be denied. The issue on this point is whether or not the writ, if granted, would bring anything into this record which would be germane to the issues, and we think it would not. We are not here concerned with the ultimate disposition by the trial court of the dispute between the parties, but rather with whether or not the judgment and order of March 11, 1968, were lawful at the time of rendition, whether or not the trial court was warranted in its finding of contempt, and, if so, whether or not its order of March 24, 1969, was lawful.
An injunction while it is in force must be obeyed in order to preserve respect for and obedience to the mandates of the court. Any other approach would be intolerable. There may be circumstances under which a party would be warranted in disobeying a court order, such as impossibility of performance. We need not here concern ourselves with such questions, however, as the proceedings under which the initial order was dissolved, as reflected by plaintiffs’ petition, only terminated the initial order and did not render it void from the beginning.
Defendants next contend that the decision is contrary to law in that the awards of $1,000.00 damages and $2,000.00 attorneys’ fees were excessive in the light of the evidence. Defendants do not challenge the court’s right to assess damages and attorneys’ fees, which right appears to be firmly established under Burns Ann. Stat. § 3-2115 (1968 Repl.), (Acts 1881 (Spec. Sess.), ch. 38, §191, p. 240), and
Trotcky
v.
Van Sickle
(1949),
The authorities offer little assistance upon the question of the amount of damages in situations similar to the case at hand. From the authorities above cited and from
Chadwick
v.
Alleshouse
(1968),
With respect to the defendants’ position that the award for attorneys’ fees was not sustained by the evidence, the evidence clearly shows that plaintiffs had either expended or obligated themselves for amounts considerably in excess of the award therefor. Defendants acknowledge that a trial judge may apply his own knowledge and professional experience in determining the value of services rendered, and this appears to be the law as stated in
Dunn
v.
Deitschel
(1932),
Defendants maintain that the provision for damages in anticipation of a future violation would be an award of future damages without any showing and an abuse of discretion. They cite no authority, but we agree that the trial court erred in this respect and in providing for the incarceration of defendant James G. Thomas, but for a somewhat different reason. It is not to be anticipated that the lawful orders of the court will be violated but rather that they will be obeyed. If they are violated, however, the remedy is by way of attachment or a rule to show cause. Burns Ann. Stat. § 3-2114 (1968 Repl.), (Acts 1881 (Spec. Sess.) ch. 38, § 190, p. 240). In either event, the matter and alleged offender is again brought to the attention of the court for appropriate action. There must be some prima facie showing that the order has been violated. There may be intervening circumstances that rendered compliance impossible or circumstances surrounding the violation may have rendered it relatively innocent. These are factors that should be taken into account in determining whether or not there has been a contempt and, if so, what the penalty should be. They cannot be determined in advance. To anticipate the breach, assess the penalty and provide for the execution, it appears to us, amounts to the abandonment by the trial court of its responsibility in this area and should not be sanctioned.
The judgment of the trial court insofar as it found the defendants in contempt, assessed damages including attorneys’ fees, and ordered further affirmative action within a prescribed time is affirmed, and it is reversed insofar as it prescribed the damages and incarceration in anticipation of a future contempt,
Note.—Reported in
