Court Opinion

ID: 1791291
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 07:27:18.874844+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:17:50.845609
License: Public Domain

243 S.W.2d 160 (1951)
Ex parte PALMATEER.
No. A-3370.
Supreme Court of Texas.
October 31, 1951.
James E. Anderson and James E. Robinson, Amarillo, for relator.
James W. Witherspoon, John D. Aikin, Wayne Thomas and Mel Ruth Aikin, Hereford, for intervenor respondents, Pearl Marie Palmateer and others, minors.
HICKMAN, Chief Justice.
This is an original proceeding instituted in this court by Ralph H. Palmateer for a writ of habeas corpus releasing him from the restraint of an order of the District Court of Parmer County entered on May 28, 1951, adjudging him to be guilty of constructive contempt of that court for violating an order entered therein on July 15, 1941, in a divorce suit commanding him to pay $60 per month toward the support of his three minor children until each reached the age of sixteen years. It appears that a valid judgment of contempt was entered but that no written order of commitment or other type of warrant was ever issued and delivered to the sheriff. Relator was confined in jail from May 28, 1951, until this court recently ordered his release on bond, pending a decision on the merits of his application.
The question determinative of the case is whether a peace officer may legally imprison a citizen who has been adjudged to be in contempt of court when there has not been issued and delivered to such officer a writ of commitment authorizing him to do so. We have discovered but few authorities on this precise question. *161 Most of the cases in this State dealing with the question in any way are decisions by our Court of Criminal Appeals, but, as held by this court in Ex parte Scott, 133 Tex. 1, 10, 123 S.W.2d 306, 311, 126 S.W.2d 626, "Since contempt proceedings are essentially criminal in nature it follows that they should conform as nearly as practicable to proceedings in criminal cases."
An early decision which has been most frequently cited is Ex parte Kearby, 35 Tex. Crim. 531, 34 S.W. 635; Id., 35 Tex. Crim. 634, 34 S.W. 962, 964. In that case there was neither a written judgment of contempt nor a written commitment. In ordering the relator discharged the court stated: "Both of these steps should have been taken, and without both no court ought to be armed with the power to imprison a citizen, no matter what the contempt may have been." A number of later decisions have cited and followed the decision in that case. In most of them there was neither a written judgment nor a written order of commitment. However, in Ex parte Alderete, 83 Tex. Cr.R. 358, 203 S.W. 763, where there was a written judgment of contempt the relator was discharged because there was not issued and delivered to the sheriff a written commitment. In Ex parte Ogden, 63 Tex. Crim. 380, 140 S.W. 345, the relator was imprisoned under a verbal order. Later during the term the court entered a written order, but no written commitment was issued, and for that reason the relator was discharged. Upon the authority of those decisions we hold that relator's imprisonment is illegal.
In a brief filed here by next friend on behalf of the minor children it is stated that in the case of Ex parte Smith, 40 Tex. Crim. 179, 49 S.W. 396, 398, it does not appear that any commitment was ever issued, but the Court of Criminal Appeals held that the judgment in itself constituted a commitment. We do not so construe that opinion. In its concluding paragraph it states that "There was no objection to the introduction in evidence of the writ of commitment, because it did not have a seal affixed thereto."
In a brief filed in behalf of Charles Loveless, Sheriff of Parmer County, Ex parte Coward, 110 Tex. 587, 222 S.W. 531, is relied upon in support of the proposition that relator was legally imprisoned. The argument is advanced that the decision by this court in that case forecloses this question. We do not so construe that opinion. While the question was not decisive of the case, the opinion expressed the view that the delivery to the sheriff of a certified copy of the judgment would serve as a legal commitment. An inspection of the record in that case reveals that a valid written order of contempt was entered in the case in which the facts were recited and the penalty of fine and imprisonment was clearly stated, following which the order itself recites: "that a certified copy hereof shall be delivered to the sheriff of Bexar County commanding him to arrest the said R. A. Coward and place him in said county jail and confine him therein for a period of three days and until said fine of one hundred dollars shall be fully paid, and for so doing this shall be sufficient warrant and authority to said sheriff."
The question decided by this court in that case was not that a written commitment was unnecessary, but that the commitment delivered to the sheriff was sufficient. There is no particular form prescribed by law for a commitment, and what was held in that case was that a certified copy of a valid judgment of contempt delivered to the sheriff by order of the court, which order recited that same shall be sufficient warrant and authority to the sheriff, is a valid written commitment. We do not question the soundness of that holding, but we do hold that it has no application to this case.
The relator is discharged.