Vollmer v. Vollmer

266 P. 677, 46 Idaho 97, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 82
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1928
DocketNo. 5201.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 266 P. 677 (Vollmer v. Vollmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vollmer v. Vollmer, 266 P. 677, 46 Idaho 97, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 82 (Idaho 1928).

Opinions

*101 TAYLOE, J.

Plaintiff here was plaintiff in an action of the same title for divorce, and appealed from a judgment therein. By a subsequent order, the trial judge ordered plaintiff to pay certain counsel fees and expenses *102 and pay to the defendant $150 per month for maintenance of herself and child pending the appeal. No appeal was taken from that order. On plaintiff’s application, a writ was issued out of this court to review the action of the trial judge in adjudging him guilty of contempt for failure to make such monthly payments to the defendant, and directing that he be confined in jail until payment of the amount then due, $2,550. In this proceeding, the petition was entitled the same as in the divorce action, although the writ of review was directed to the Honorable Edgar C. Steele, District Judge. The same title and references to parties will be continued.

Return to the writ has been made. The defendant, Esther A. Vollmer, the real party in interest, has filed a demurrer to the sufficiency of the application to entitle plaintiff to a writ of review. A brief statement of the petition, likewise borne out by the record, will serve both upon the demurrer and main issue.

On July 6, 1926, the trial court ordered plaintiff to pay maintenance of $150 per month to defendant pending appeal. On April 23, 1927, on application and affidavit that plaintiff had failed to make such payments, an order citing him to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt, returnable April 30, 1927, was made, but never served. Later, on a showing of his failure to comply with this order for maintenance, this court refused to hear plaintiff’s appeal until he purged himself of this apparent contempt. Plaintiff thereafter, by counsel, appeared in the trial court and filed affidavits setting forth, as reasons for his failure to comply with the order of July 6, 1926, his inability so to do. Nothing further was done therein until on January 2, 1928, when, it is alleged, the court, “upon his own motion,” but with consent of attorneys for both parties, issued an order reciting practically all of the foregoing facts, and requiring the plaintiff to show cause on February 2, 1928, why he should not be punished for contempt for his failure to comply with the original order of July 6, 1926. On January 31, 1928, the defendant *103 filed an affidavit and application, setting forth the plaintiff’s failure to comply with the order up to that date, except by payment of some $85, and asking that he be punished for contempt. On February 2, 1928, the parties and counsel appeared, and plaintiff filed an answer to the affidavit and application of defendant, and after hearing evidence, the court found and adjudged the plaintiff to have been and to be in contempt, adjudged the amount then due to be #2',550, that the plaintiff had the ability to pay this sum, and ordered him to pay it and to be confined in jail until it be paid.

The application, sworn to by O. C. Moore, counsel for plaintiff, sets forth the foregoing facts and records and files, and alleges that the trial judge exceeded his jurisdiction in that the record will disclose that the order adjudging him guilty of contempt was entered “without any evidence to support the findings of fact, as shown in said order, .... particularly in that the evidence does not show that he has any present ability, or has ever had the ability to pay the alimony money allowed” by the original order, and on the other hand shows the contrary; “that it was not shown in the evidence .... that your petitioner was able to pay the amount due at the time of the commitment of your petitioner, or to pay any part or portion of the amount due on such alimony”; that the court “arbitrarily refused to hear any argument by counsel in behalf of your petitioner, and refused to hear or listen to the presentation on the part of petitioner’s counsel of the facts and the law applicable thereto.”

The contention of the defendant upon demurrer is that the application shows that the court had regularly acquired jurisdiction of the subject matter, and of the person of plaintiff, and that thus this court is precluded from inquiring further into the record of such jurisdiction.

C. S., sec. 7392, provides that in such proceeding the “court or judge must determine whether the person proceeded against is guilty of the contempt charged,” and C. S., sec. 7393, that “When the contempt consists in the *104 omission to perform an act which is yet in the power of the person to perform, he may be imprisoned until he has performed it, and in that case the act must be specified in the warrant of commitment.”

While a writ of review may not ordinarily be used to inquire into the weight or sufficiency of the evidence, yet upon an order such as imprisonment for contempt until performance of an act “which is yet in the power of the person to perform,” such review extends to the evidence itself, when questioned, to the extent of inquiring whether there was any evidence to furnish a substantial basis for adjudging the person guilty of contempt, and that the act “is yet in the power of the person to perform.” (4 Bancroft’s Code Practice, pp. 3630, 3631, secs. 2834, 2835; Hay v. Hay, 40 Ida. 159, 232 Pac. 895.)

Petitioner has moved to strike matters contained in the return by way of answer constituting matters of recital of facts not otherwise shown by the record. Under C. S., sec. 7246, the return consists of “a transcript of the record and proceedings, describing or referring to them with convenient certainty,” and the record cannot be added to or supplemented by matters of recital not called for by the writ. Such recitals will be stricken and not considered. (Johnson v. Ensign, 38 Ida. 615, 224 Pac. 73.)

While the facts are alleged in the application, although not therein alleged fatal to the jurisdiction of the trial court, it is here now contended that an application and order citing one to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt must be based upon an affidavit; that the application and affidavit filed by defendant, Esther A. Vollmer, upon January 31, 192'8, should not be considered, and gave the court no jurisdiction to act upon the previous order citing petitioner for contempt; that the affidavit filed upon April 23, 1927, was too remote to confer jurisdiction upon the district judge to make an order the 2d of January, 1928; and that the court was without jurisdiction to issue the order or hold a hearing thereon.

*105 This court having, as a condition of hearing his appeal, in effect required the petitioner to purge himself of an implied contempt of the lower court, he was as much concerned in having a hearing upon the original citation as was the court or defendant. Counsel entered a voluntary appearance in response to the original application and affidavit supporting it, and the order of April 23, 1927, citing him for contempt, long after the return day of that order, and filed affidavits in answer thereto, after the order of this court staying further proceedings upon his appeal. The order of January 2, 1928, was issued with his consent, and his appearance in response thereto was voluntary.

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Bluebook (online)
266 P. 677, 46 Idaho 97, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vollmer-v-vollmer-idaho-1928.