Court Opinion

ID: 3395824
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 19:02:26.430051+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:42:24.103593
License: Public Domain

This cause comes on before this Court upon the Return to a Writ of Habeas Corpus issued upon a Petition therefor reciting that petitioner had been illegally committed by the Chancellor for contempt because on the non-payment of alimony, in that:
"(a) The term of arrest or incarceration, as specified in said order, is vague, indefinite and uncertain in that it contains a provision that the relator, Robert James Carroll, be held by the respondent and imprisoned for a period of 'thirty days, or until further order of this Court.'
"(b) An alleged violation of two orders of the Circuit Judge, which are 'void, illegal, oppressive and in violation of the provisions of due process of law.'
"(c) That one of the orders referred to in (b) supra is 'vague, indefinite, and uncertain, either as to amount, or as to time of payment, and which said expenses had not, in fact, at the time of entry of the said order become due and over which no provision whatsoever was made as to either the amount thereof, or time of payment; said provisions being left solely to the discretion of the plaintiff, her counsel of record, and such of the doctors, nurses, and hospitals as might later become therein involved.
"(d) That there nowhere appears in the said orders any findings based upon the matters therein related, declaring a violation of the said orders for which a commitment for contempt could be based; it appearing, on the contrary, from the *Page 117 
said orders, that certain portions thereof were impossible of compliance.
"(e) That he is destitute and unable to perform such orders of the chancellor."
The petitioner was before the Chancellor as a defendant in a suit for divorce. A hearing was had and a decretal order was entered by the Chancellor exacting alimony payments from the petitioner for the benefit of the wife and, in a subsequent hearing, he was ordered committed because of the non-performance of the Chancellor's order.
In order to properly review the action of the Chancellor we will be compelled to review the record of the proceedings before him. It is not before us in such form as is conducive to a proper review.
The petitioner has been found guilty of an indirect civil contempt. It was indirect because it was not in the presence of the court and because proof thereof was necessary in order that the chancellor be advised of the facts going to the determination of the contempt.
It was civil because it was for the benefit of the wife and the chancellor's order was for coercive purposes, to-wit: Perform his obligations to his wife, relative to maintenance and support.
We are familiar with the decisions of this Court, notably Miller v. Miller, 91 Fla. 82, 107 So. 251; (See also Culpepper v. Culpepper, 103 Fla. 390, 138 So. 799; Hamilton v. State ex rel., 148 Fla. 551, 4 So.2d 660) holding that orders like the one now under study may not be reviewed by certiorari.
We now recede from that position and hold that such procedure may be employed, a view which we consider justified by our Rule No. 34, as follows:
"(a) Interlocutory Appeals to Be By Certiorari. All appeals from interlocutory decrees as authorized by statute including orders or decrees after final decree, shall be prosecuted to this court by certiorari in the manner provided by the rules relating to the constitutional writ of certiorari. This rule shall not preclude the review of such orders and decrees on final decree, if found more expedient." *Page 118 
So we discharge the writ heretofore issued and remand the petitioner to custody, without prejudice to the petitioner's bringing the challenged order here by petition for certiorari supported by a record in proper form.
THOMAS, C. J., TERRELL and CHAPMAN, JJ., concur.
BUFORD, ADAMS and SEBRING, JJ., dissent.