Ex Parte Harwell

538 S.W.2d 667, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2932
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1976
Docket5602
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 538 S.W.2d 667 (Ex Parte Harwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Harwell, 538 S.W.2d 667, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2932 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES, Justice.

This is a habeas corpus proceeding. Petitioner J. A. Harwell filed this application for writ of habeas corpus contending that he is being restrained of his liberty by virtue of a writ of attachment issued out of the 53rd District Court of Travis County, Texas, as a result of an order signed by said court holding him in contempt of a previous *668 order. We grant the relief sought and discharge Petitioner from custody.

The background facts are these:

Petitioner J. A. Harwell and his former wife B. K. Harwell were divorced by a decree of the 53rd District Court of Travis County, Texas, in Cause No. 190,156, on April 16, 1973, in which decree J. A. Har-well was ordered to pay as child support the amount of $100.00 per month. In addition thereto said divorce decree provided that an arrearage of $1965.00 which J. A. Harwell theretofore owed by way of temporary alimony and child support was reduced to judgment bearing 6% per annum interest from the date of said decree until paid. Thereafter, B. K. Harwell utilized post judgment discovery remedies in attempts to discover assets out of which said judgment could be collected and satisfied.

In February 1975, a Motion for Contempt was filed by the attorney representing B. K. Harwell alleging two grounds for contempt, to wit, (1) a current arrearage in the amount of $100.00, and (2) the $1965.00 arrearage of temporary alimony and child support which was reduced to judgment by the divorce decree of April 16,1973. These contempt matters (along with other related visitation and child support matters) were heard on March 7,1975, in the 53rd District Court by Judge B. B. Schraub, a visiting district judge. After said hearing, Judge Schraub made findings of fact and conclusions of law, among which he found that the $100.00 current arrearage had been paid prior to the date of the hearing; and in addition thereto, said court denied B. K. Harwell’s motion for contempt on the count alleging the $1965.00 arrearage which had been reduced to judgment. Said court held that said money judgment “may be enforced by any means available for the enforcement of judgments for debts, but may not be enforced by an action for contempt,” and that “the amount of money referred to in said judgment was an obligation imposed upon the said J. A. Harwell to be made from his own income or property (in the future) as distinguished from an amount of money to be delivered to the said B. K. Harwell as a portion of the community property.”

B. K. Harwell appealed from the trial court’s judgment, which included Judge Schraub’s refusal to hold J. A. Harwell in contempt. The Austin Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment, pointing out in the appellate opinion that the trial court’s refusal to hold J. A. Har-well in contempt was not appealable. After this, the attorneys on both sides conceded that this was correct. Thereafter, the attorneys for B. K. Harwell filed an application for writ of error to the Supreme Court of Texas; however, said application did not raise any point of error about the contempt issue.

And now we come to the contempt proceeding out of which arose the writ of habeas corpus presently before us: On March 25,1976, the said B. K. Harwell (now Horne) filed a new motion for contempt setting out two grounds: (1) alleging that J. A. Harwell was at the time of filing said motion $100.00 in arrears in current child support, and (2) the $1965.00 arrearage of temporary alimony and child support which had been reduced to judgment in the divorce decree of April 16, 1973. This $1965.00 arrearage of course was the same arrearage for which Judge Schraub had refused to hold J. A. Harwell in contempt in the 1975 proceeding hereinabove referred to.

Pursuant to this last motion for contempt, the court on March 25,1976, entered an order commanding the Clerk to issue notice to “J. A. Harwell, Route 6, Box 843, Waco, McLennan County, Texas, to appear before this court on the 15th day of April 1976, at 2 o’clock P.M. to show cause_ why he should not be held in contempt for the $100.00 current arrearage and the $1965.00 arrearage hereinabove mentioned.

For reasons not shown by the record, J. A. Harwell was never personally served by any notice of any kind, but instead a notice was sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to Hon. Tommy P. Herring, Attorney at Law, of Waco, Texas, who had represented J. A. Harwell in the previous *669 1975 contempt hearing before Judge Schraub and the appeal therefrom. Upon receipt of this notice by certified mail, Mr. Herring wrote a letter to the District Clerk of Travis County, advising that J. A. Har-well had not been served with personal service of any kind, but that he (Herring) had received the notice by certified mail. Herring further advised the Clerk that “I am not authorized and do not accept service for him in this matter.” Also, Herring advised that neither he nor J. A. Harwell would be present for the hearing.

Hearing was had on the last named contempt action on April 16, 1976, before Judge James R. Meyers, sitting for the 53rd District Court of Travis County, at which hearing neither J. A. Harwell nor Attorney Herring were present. At this hearing B. K. Harwell Horne and her husband Ed Horne testified that they both talked to J. A. Harwell on the telephone more than ten days before the hearing and that J. A. Harwell actually knew about the hearing and the time and place was same was to be held:

On April 22, 1976, Judge Meyers entered an order which recited that J. A. Harwell had paid the $100.00 current arrearage after the motion for contempt had been filed, but prior to the hearing. Then Judge Meyers’s order adjudged J. A. Harwell to be in contempt of court on two counts, to wit, (1) the $100.00 current arrearage and (2) the $1965.00 arrearage which had been reduced to judgment in the April 16, 1973, divorce decree. Punishment for both counts of contempt was set at a $500.00 fine and confinement in jail for 60 days and thereafter until J. A. Harwell has “fully purged himself of contempt- by paying _ the sum of $2465.00 fine and back child support.”

Pursuant to Judge Meyers’s order of April 22, 1976, a writ of attachment was issued upon which J. A. Harwell was arrested and placed in custody, which precipitated the filing of the application for writ of habeas corpus now before us. We granted the writ, ordered the Petitioner to be brought before us, and authorized a $500.00 bond pending decision herein.

Petitioner asserts that the writ of attachment is void and that he is being illegally restrained of his liberty for the following three reasons: (1) That he was denied due process of law for failure to have been served with personal service of the contempt hearing in question; (2) that the contempt order of April 22, 1976, is void because it amounts to imprisonment for debt in violation of Article I, Section 18, of the Texas Constitution; and (3) that Judge Schraub’s order of March 7, 1975, wherein the court declined to hold Petitioner in contempt concerning the $1965.00 arrearage reduced to judgment was res judicata of this matter, and contempt being quasi-criminal in nature, he pleads also former jeopardy. We sustain these contentions and hereby order Petitioner discharged from custody.

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Bluebook (online)
538 S.W.2d 667, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-harwell-texapp-1976.