A father appeals from an order holding him in civil contempt, with accompanying imprisonment, for failure to pay a substantial arrearage in child support. We affirm.
I.
Appellant John Wagley and appellee Polly Evans divorced in 1993. At that time, they agreed to joint custody of their two children (L.C., born December 22, 1982, and I.K., born May 6, 1984), and *207 Wagley was ordered to pay child support. 1 In 1998, Evans filed a motion for sole custody and increased child support. At the hearing, both parties acknowlеdged that their contentious relationship had harmed their children and contributed to a deterioration in L.C.’s mental health. The trial court granted Evans’s motion, finding that “the parents are unable to communicate and act jointly for the good of the children.” As part of the new custody and visitation order, Evans received sole legal custody, and Wagley was ordered to pay $2,261 per month in child support.
In February 2002, Wagley, then living in Massachusetts, stоpped paying child support. L.C. turned twenty-one in 2003. 2 On March 4, 2005, shortly before I.K. became twenty-one, Evans filed a motion seeking an order for Wagley to show cause why he should not be held in contempt of the 1998 child support order. Nine months later, in December 2005, the trial court granted Wagley, who had been representing himself, a continuance to obtain counsel. In April 2006, Wagley’s counsel filed another motion to continue based upon Wagley’s age and a doctor’s note saying that Wagley was “too ill to travel to Washington.” The court granted the second continuance, rescheduling the hearing for August 21, 2006. A week before that date, Wagley sought a third continuance, attaching to his motion an unsworn, typewritten doctor’s note stating, without elaboration, that Wagley was “ill, suffering from anxiety and stress, and ... unable to travel for the next four weeks.” Evans opposed the continuance, arguing that she had been prejudiced by the delays and that Wagley had not shown a valid reason for further delay. The court denied Wag-ley’s motion, concluding that the matter was ripe for decision, that Evans was suffering prejudice from the repeated delays, and that there was “no admissible evidence before the Court with respect to the state of Mr. Wagley’s health.”
Wagley did not appear at the contempt hearing, although he was represented by counsel. Evans testified that she had not received any child support payment from Wagley since February 2002. Her counsel introduced in evidence a certified copy of the payment detail from the Court Registry confirming that Wagley had not made a payment since February 2002 and was $85,918 in arrears (thirty-eight months times $2,261 per month). Evans explained that she had faxed Wagley each month, for thirteen months, a reminder that the child support had not been paid and advising him to send it as soon as possible. She further testified that Wagley had never told her he was unable to pay and that he had responded to only one of her reminders, stating in July 2002: “I have already explained more than three times, and you know full well, that my child support obligations have been paid more than three times over. Enough is enough.” On cross-examination, Evans added that she rarely talked to Wagley and had no personal knowledge of his health. She acknowledged that a Wagley family trust 3 *208 had paid many of the children’s educational expenses.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the court ruled that Evans had shown, by clear and convincing evidence, the existence of a court order to pay child support and Wag-ley’s failure to comply with the terms of that order. The court then found that Wagley had not established his inability to comply with the court order, and thus that he had acted in contempt of court by refusing to pay any amount of child support since 2002. In response to a contention by Wagley’s counsel that a civil contempt order was not an allowable remedy once the children had reached the age of majority, the court requested briefing on that issue. After reviewing the submissions, the trial court concluded that it had the authority to enter the requested contempt order, held Wagley in contempt, аnd ordered him confined in prison until he purged himself by paying the $85,918. 4
On appeal, Wagley contends that (1) the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to grant the third continuance, (2) the court did not have authority to enter a civil contempt order when children had reached the age of majority (in this case twenty-one), 5 (3) Evans failed to prove that he had the ability to pay the purge amount, (4) he was entitled to the defense of laches, and (5) finаncial contributions for the children’s education from his family trust should be credited against the purge amount. We address each argument in turn.
II.
“The grant or denial of a continuance rests within the sound discretion of a trial judge, to whom we accord a wide latitude.”
Fischer v. Estate of Flax,
The trial court did not abuse its discretion when it refused to grant Wagley a third continuance. Evans’s motion for a contempt order had been pending for nearly eighteen months, and Wagley had already sought, and received, two continuances. When seeking the third continuance, Wagley’s counsel proffered only an unsworn, typewritten statement purporting to be from Wagley’s doctor that referred generally to Wagley’s health and stress level. As the trial court noted, Wagley’s request was “barren of convincing detail.” The reasons given were neither “specific” nor “sufficient,” as required by Rule 40 — 1(d). Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Wagley’s motion for a third continuance.
III.
“In the District of Columbia parents have an unqualified obligation to contribute to the support of their children.”
Burnette v. Void,
Whеn a parent has failed to pay arrear-ages due on a child support order, most of the courts that have addressed the issue have upheld adjudications of contempt against the defaulting parent even though the child had reached the age of majority.
See Davenport v. Hood,
Upon emancipation of a minor child, the support-dependent parent is not magically reimbursed for personal funds spent nоr debts incurred due to nonpayment of child support. Hardships suffered by a family do not disappear. A family’s feelings of indignation from abandonment by the nonpaying parent or from past reliance on public assistance are not forgotten. Society’s interest in ensuring that a parent meets parental obligations must not be overlooked simply because the child has attained the age of majority. The support obligation does not cease; rather it remains unfulfilled. The nonpaying parent still owes the money.
Gibson,
IV.
We review an adjudication of civil contempt for abuse of discretion.
Lopez v. Ysla,
Wagley contends, to the contrary, that the trial court erred by entering the contempt judgment against him because Evans failed to prove that he had the present ability to pay the judgment. Wagley’s argument is predicated upon an apparent conflict in our case law which we must resolve — and do so in Evans’s favor.
A.
We begin with
Lundregan v. Lundregan,
102 U.S.App. D.C. 259,
Nine years later, in
Scott v. Scott,
127 U.S.App. D.C. 245,
In our first decision as a Home Rule court reviewing an adjudication for civil contempt in a child support case,
Bolden v. Bolden,
Four years after
Bolden
was decided, in
Smith v. Smith,
That would seem to have settled the issue, except that a year after
Smith,
in
Hackes v. Hackes,
After
Haches,
our case law in child support cases has gone in two directions, one saying that the alleged eontemnor bears the burden of showing an inability to pay,
see Lopez,
B.
In this case, Evans made a prima facie showing of civil contempt by proffering evidence of the child support order and of Wagle/s failure to comply with it in the amount of $85,918 in arrears. In support of its order of imprisonment for civil contempt, moreover, the trial court made the requisite finding that Wagley had the abili *213 ty to pay. This finding is supported by the record.
By his own admission, Wagley had been receiving money from a family trust. He has never asserted an inability to pay the debt owed, nor has he ever sought modification of the support order. In short, he has never offered a financial explanation for the arrearages; his communications with Evans have merely said that he considered his obligation satisfied and that he believed she had funds sufficient to satisfy the children’s needs without further payment from him. The record, it is true, does not reflect up-to-date information about Wagley’s financial condition, but there is enough information, based on undisputed evidence that he has been a man of means, to warrant a finding of ability to pay, especially given his failure to proffer any evidence to the contrary, either in explanations along the way to Evans or more recently to this court. If Wagley had suffered a financial downturn — if the record evidence of ability to pay had become stale — Wagley had the burden to produce evidence to that effect. He failed to do so. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in finding that Wagley had a present ability to pay the $85,918 due, and did not abuse its discretion in holding Wagley in civil contempt of court and ordering him to prison until he purges his contempt in full. 10
V.
Wagley’s final contentions, that he should have been protected by the defense of laches and that payments from his family trust for the children’s education should have been credited against the $85,918 due, also fail.
Laches is not available to Wag-ley because he has failed to show that the elements of the defense are present here. “A successful defense оf laches has two elements: an unreasonable and unexplained delay by one party [here, Evans], and prejudice to the other party [here, Wagley] resulting from the delay.”
In re Estate of Reilly,
The trial court also did not err in declining to credit Wagley with contributions he claims to have made to the children’s education through his family trust. Although Wagley asserts that these payments came from funds allocable to him, the trust agreement was not in evidence to justify that assertion. Nor was documentation or any other evidence offered at trial specifying the amount of the payments for which he claims such credit. Without proof of the payments or their source, the trial court could not have calculated a credit toward the purge amount.
See Lopez,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In 1995, Wagley was held in contempt for failing to pay $23,636 of the court-ordered child support. He subsequently purged the contempt by paying the amount owed.
. Tragically, L.C. took her own life in November 2005.
. In the 1998 custody and support modification proceeding, the trial court, relying upon Wagley's own financial statement, determined that Wagley received nearly $10,000 per month from sources of income other than wages, most likely the family trust, and that he had $7,631 in net monthly disposable income. The court also found that Wagley "has enough money to live well and to dine extensively at fine restaurants.” Although Wagley now contends it is unfair to rely upon this prior information, he has not identified any *208 manner in which his financial situation has changed and has not offered any more recent information upon which the trial court could make a new determination regarding his financial means.
. Because Wagley has not come to the District of Columbia, he has not been arrested and imprisoned.
.
Butler v. Butler,
. Beforе February 1, 1971, the effective date of the District of Columbia Court Reorganization Act of 1970, Pub.L. No. 91-358, the decisions of this court were subject to discretionary review by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
See M.A.P. v. Ryan,
. In
Truslow,
applying the
Lundregan
rule, we reversed an order for commitment to jail because the trial court had not made a finding that the eontemnor had the ability to pay the child support arrearages due. We criticized the father’s failure to present evidence of his inability to pay, but, noting record evidence that indicated “he had encоuntered difficulties in meeting the weekly payments directed by the court,” we remanded for the trial court to make the finding required by
Lundregan,
“a necessary prerequisite to enforcement by imprisonment.”
.In
Johnson,
we held that the trial court erred in refusing to adjudicate a father for contempt where the father "neither offered to pay the arrearages nor presented evidence upon which the court could predicate a finding that he was justified in failing to comply” with the support order.
. See note 6, supra.
. This is not a case, such as Truslow, where the defendant, like Wagley, had failed to present evidence of his inability to pay, but where we reversed and remanded the imprisonment order nonetheless, because the trial court had not made the requisite finding on that issue and some evidence of record cast doubt on the defendant’s ability to make the required payments. See note 7, supra.
