Tbe question involved: Should tbe order adjudging defendant in contempt of court bave been signed over tbe objection of defendant from tbe record as appears in tbe ease ? We think not.
Chapter 17, Consolidated Statutes, under “Contempt,” tbe pertinent provision to tbe present controversy, is C. S., 978: “Any person guilty of any of tbe following acts may be punished for contempt: (4) Wilful disobedience of any process or order lawfully issued by any court.” It will be noted that to punish for contempt in a matter of this kind, there must be wilful disobedience. We think tbe decision binges on tbe meaning of wilful disobedience.
In
S. v. Whitener,
In
S. v. Banks,
In
Truelove v. Parker,
Tbe evidence we doubt sufficient to show that defendant’s noncompliance with tbe rule was wilful, as that word has been frequently defined by tbe decisions of this Court. As a contemnor is liable to be imprisoned tbe rule that a criminal statute should be strictly construed is applicable.
In re Odum,
Reversed.
