Potter v. Wilson
This text of 1980 OK 51 (Potter v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The issue tendered by this proceeding is: When by the terms of the divorce decree title to a jointly-owned enterprise is set apart to one spouse [Wife] who is adjudged to assume the outstanding indebtedness of the business so awarded her and to hold the other spouse [Husband] harmless from that class of jointly-incurred obligations, will contempt lie against the assuming spouse in default to enforce her liability for the court-ordered indemnity? In the narrow context so phrased the question is one of first impression. Recognizing that its early settlement likely will serve an important and urgent statewide need, we assume original jurisdiction to pronounce our answer in the negative. Our holding here deals with the enforceability, by contempt, of but one class of judicial decisions — the adjudicated liability, at law or in equity, for payment of money in general. It does not apply to a court order that directs payment [1280]*1280of money from a specified fund, or from some other identified personal-property source, then in existence, by one who is in control of that source. If a debt be ordered paid as integral part of an award for support alimony, contempt becomes a permissible mode of enforcement.
For his indemnity claim Husband relies on the provision of the divorce decree which generally orders Wife to hold him harmless from “any indebtedness” of the business that was awarded her.1 His application for contempt citation charges her with default in paying four different obligations, only one of which has been partially satisfied by Husband. Neither party has raised, and we heed not decide here, the question whether Wife’s court-ordered indemnity became enforceable when she allowed the obligation ordered to be assumed by her to fall in default or when that obligation came to be satisfied by the Husband’s payment. The answer to that question depends, of course, on whether the tersely-worded clause of the decree created indemnity against liability or indemnity against loss. 15 O.S.1971 § 427(1) and (2). The former gives rise to a claim against the indemnitor on his default, while the latter is litigable only after the indemnitee has satisfied the delinquent obligation.2
As a general rule there is no authority for executing an adjudged civil liability for payment of money against the body of the obligor.3 The executory process of imprisonment by means of capias ad satisfaciendum (ca.sa.), which at common law originally lay only in trespass vi et armis and later came to be extended by statute to other cases,4 is not available under any Oklahoma legislative enactment to one who seeks satisfaction of an adjudicated obligation to pay money.5
The fabric of applicable executory process would not be quite complete without allusion to our fundamental law’s interdiction of imprisonment for debt. Art. 2 § 13, Okl.Con. Although in the context of this constitutional prohibition “debt” is sometimes restrictively defined as limited to obligations arising ex contractu
A decree of divorce ordinarily contains a veritable cluster of adjudicated claims for money payment which possess different characteristics for enforcement classification. Maintenance-related monetary awards for alimony in the strict canonical sense of the civil-law’s “alimentum”, •meaning “provision of food, clothing, habitation and other necessities for support”10, either designated or intended as support alimony, temporary or permanent, spousal or filial, are excluded from the definition of “debt”. These excluded categories may be enforced by contempt because of express statutory authority.11 A court-decreed allowance for services rendered by an attorney in a matrimonial suit may be deemed an “accessory” to, and in the same category as, obligations to pay support alimony.12 With respect to child support the exception has received a somewhat strict and narrow application. It is > merely coextensive with the period of the child’s minority. After the child has attained majority installments which accrue and remain unpaid may not be enforced by contempt proceedings.13 On the other hand, our decisional law is equally clear that when the object of the recovered liability for payment of money is related not to support proper but rather to an adjustment or division of conjugal assets, recourse to body attachment or to the coercive process of contempt may not be had to enforce the performance of an adjudicated spousal obligation.14
There is neither indication nor intimation here that the indemnity liability sought to be enforced has some nexus to Husband’s support. The record before us demonstrates rather clearly that it was an integral part of the conjugal-property adjustment scheme. The underlying obligation whose payment is attempted to be coerced by contempt is a business debt. The indemnity which the divorce court superimposed upon it did not alter or transmute the essential character of that debt. It merely reallocated between the affected spousal obligors the incidence of their liability for one class of jointly-incurred indebtedness. We are therefore constrained to hold the court-ordered indemnity may not be enforced by contempt. The only enforcement process available to indemnitee-Husband is by civil execution after the accrued liability has been judicially “reduced” or “commuted” to judgment.15
[1282]*1282The respondent-judge is prohibited from proceeding further to coerce by contempt Wife’s performance of her decree-imposed indemnity obligation.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1980 OK 51, 609 P.2d 1278, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-wilson-okla-1980.