DISSENTING OPINION
CALVERT, Chief Justice.I respectfully dissent. I would hold the judgment of contempt void for two reasons: (1) The order Hooks is charged with violating will not support the judgment, and (2) the trial court had lost jurisdiction of the subject matter when the judgment of contempt was entered.
To put the issues in proper perspective, it will be well to point out what the majority have not held. They have not held that Hooks may be imprisoned under the terms of the March, 1961 judgment. They could hardly do so in view of the recitation in the May, 1961 judgment that the “matter [of prior contempt] had been satisfied by *170agreement.”1 Moreover, when the May, 1961 judgment materially changed the terms of the 1946 order of support, Hooks could no longer be in contempt of the first order, whether his violation of it occurred before or after the modification. See Miller v. Railroad Commission, 9 Cal.2d 190, 70 P.2d 164, 112 A.L.R. 221 (1937); Warder v. Shufeldt, 40 N.M. 442, 62 P.2d 812 (1936); Peck v. Yorks, 32 How.Pr. 408 (N.Y.1867); 17 Am.Jur. 52, Contempt § 48. Neither does the majority holding appear to give any effect to the provision of the May, 1961 judgment which purports to adjudge in advance that Hooks was in contempt — “continuing contempt” — if he should fail to carry out its terms. That is understandable. An advance adjudication of contempt would deny the right to present defenses when violation of the order occurred and would be a denial of constitutional due process.
Hooks was adjudged by the trial court to be in contempt for violation of the “child support orders of May 9, 1961,” and those orders alone. Unless the order of May 9, 1961, directing him to pay $4,-070 will support the judgment of contempt, he should be released. To this, I understand the majority agree. I suggest that the order directing Hooks to pay $4,070 will not support the judgment of contempt for alternative reasons: (1) It did not fix a definite time when he was commanded or required to make the payment, or (2) the court had no power to require him to make the payment at the time fixed by the order.
The validity of the judgment of March 30, 1961, committing relator to jail until he paid support arrearages of $3,700 is not questioned. Assuming the validity of that judgment, the court nevertheless had the power to release relator from incarceration whether or not he had purged himself of contempt by making the payment. This the court did. The court also had the power by virtue of the express language of Article 4639a to alter or change its original support order. This the court also did. The terms of the order entered on May 9, 1961, are less than clear. As pertinent here the order reads:
“ * * * that the defendant, Earl M. Hooks, be released from custody upon the payment of Sixty ($60.00) Dollars each month commencing on the 9th day of May, 1961, said payments to be continued until the youngest child of the marriage of the above parties shall reach the age of eighteen (18) years and then the defendant, Earl M. Hooks, to be held in continuing contempt until the arrears in the amount of Four Thousand and Seventy ($4,070.00) Dollars has been paid in full; * * *.”
It seems obvious to me that this order fixed no definite time at which Hooks was required to make the payment of $4,-070. His monthly payments were to be continued until the younger child reached age eighteen, “and then," the order said, Hooks was to be “in continuing contempt until the arrears” in the amount of $4,070 had been paid in full. He was not expressly required or commanded to pay the $4,070 when the younger child reached age eighteen, but he was to be in contempt if he did not pay it then or thereafter.
We announced the controlling general rule in this area in the very recent case of Ex parte Eugene L. Slavin, Tex., 412 S.W. 2d 43, in this language:
“It is an accepted rule of law that for a person to be held in contempt for disobeying a court decree, the decree must spell out the details of compliance in clear, specific and unambiguous terms so that such person will readily know exactly what duties or obligations are imposed upon him.”
In Slavin we quoted language from Ex parte Duncan, 42 Tex.Cr. 661, 62 S.W. 758 (1901), to the effect that when a court seeks to punish for disobedience of an *171order, the order “must be in the form of a command, and, when tested by itself, must speak definitely the meaning and purpose of the court in ordering.” The indefiniteness in the order in Duncan was in the time fixed for performance of the ordered act. The holding of the majority in this case seems to me to be in direct conflict with the holdings in Slavin and Duncan. If the May, 1961 order fixed a time when Hooks was required to pay the $4,070, it was only by inference.
If the order fixed a time by inference when Hooks was required to pay the $4,070, the time was when the younger child reached age eighteen. The court had no power to require Hooks to make a support payment at that time, regardless of whether the payment was for pre-eighteen or post-eighteen support. This would seem to be crystal clear from the history of Article 4639a and prior judicial decisions.
Before enactment of Article 4639a in 1935, the law of this State did not authorize a court to require a parent to contribute to the support of his or her children except during the pendency of a divorce suit. Cunningham v. Cunningham, 120 Tex. 491, 40 S.W.2d 46, 75 A.L.R. 1305 (1931). Inasmuch as trial courts had no power before enactment of the statute to order a parent to make child support payments after a divorce judgment became final, the extent of the power conferred by the statute must be measured by the terms of the statute. See Ex parte Taylor, 137 Tex. 505, 155 S.W.2d 358 (1941). The provisions of the statute conferring and limiting the power are as follows:
“ * * * and said court may by judgment, order either parent to make periodical payments for the benefit of such child or children, until same have reached the age of eighteen (18) years, or, said court may enter a judgment in a fixed amount for the support of such child or children * * * Said court shall have power and authority to alter or change such judgments, or suspend the same, as the facts and circumstances and justice may require, upon notice to such parent as above provided for, or with his or her consent.”
It is at once apparent from the wording of the statute that the limitation on the period in which child support payments, either periodic or lump sum, may be required by the power thereby conferred, is when the child or children reach the age of eighteen. Our appellate courts have consistently held that our trial courts have no power to require a parent to make support payments beyond the time limited by statute. Thus when power of the courts to order child support payments was by statute limited to the period of time while divorce suits were pending, we recognized in Cunningham v. Cunningham, 120 Tex. 491, 40 S.W.2d 46, 75 A.L.R. 1305 (1931) that by our decision in Ex parte Davis, 101 Tex. 607, 608, 111 S.W. 394, 17 L.R.,A.N.S., 1140 (1908), we had declared the law to be that trial courts had no power by orders entered pending divorce to compel a husband to make payments for the support of his children “beyond the date of entry of the final judgment.” See 40 S.W.2d 50. And see Ex parte Gerish, 42 Tex.Cr. 114, 57 S.W. 1123 (1900), in which the court held that a trial court judgment, incorporating the terms of an agreement of the parties as here, ordering child support payments beyond the time when a divorce judgment became final was to that extent void; and that a commitment of the defaulting husband to jail for contempt for failing to comply with the order was a violation of his constitutional right against imprisonment for debt. In Ex parte Hatch, 410 S.W.2d 773 (Tex.Sup.1967), only recently decided, we held under the present statute that a judgment which purported to require a father to make support payments for the benefit of a child both before and after she reached age eighteen “could be enforced only by contempt proceedings for failure to make payments due before the child reached eighteen years of age.” If the trial court had no power to require Hooks to make *172the payment of $4,070 after the younger child reached age eighteen, the order so doing is void; and it cannot be controlling that payment was ordered one hour rather than one year after she reached eighteen. The rule is well settled in this State, and is one of general acceptance, that a person may not be punished as for contempt for violating an order which a court had no power to enter, and may not be imprisoned to compel obedience to the order. Ex parte Lillard, 159 Tex. 18, 314 S.W.2d 800 (1958); Ex parte Henry, 147 Tex. 315, 215 S.W.2d 588 (1948); Ex parte Castro, 115 Tex. 77, 273 S.W. 795 (1925); Ex parte Armstrong, 110 Tex.Cr. 362, 8 S.W.2d 674 (1928); 17 Am.Jur.2d 46, Contempt § 42; 12 A.L.R.2d 1059.
From the foregoing authorities, the law would seem to be settled that the contempt power may not be employed to punish for violation of, or to coerce compliance with court orders which fix no definite time for performance of the ordered act or which require performance beyond the time limited by statute. I can find nothing in Article 4639a indicating a legislative intent to change the well settled law of contempt. Thus the fact that “The entire sum embodied in the 1961 order in question was determined as a fixed and certain amount that was delinquent during the time the children were less than eighteen” cannot validly support the judgment committing Hooks to jail unless he was commanded to pay the same at a definite time before the younger child reached age eighteen. The majority seem to attach some overriding significance to the fact that when Article 4639a was enacted a provision was included conferring “full power and authority” to enforce ordered support payments by civil contempt proceedings. I attach none. The enforcement provision of the statute is pure surplusage; once the power to order support payments was conferred, the courts automatically had full power to enforce such payments by contempt proceedings, and no express grant of such power was needed. See Ex parte Davis, 101 Tex. 607, 608, 111 S.W. 394, 17 L.R.A.,N.S., 1140 (1908).
My second reason for saying that the contempt judgment is void, at least to the extent of its coercive provision, is because when it was entered the trial court had lost jurisdiction of the subject matter. On this question the temporary alimony cases are analogous. In Wright v. Wright, 6 Tex. 29 (Tex.Sup.1851), the trial court had ordered the husband to make alimony payments during pendency of a divorce suit. When the suit was later dismissed, three-fourths of the ordered payments had not been made. The wife sought collection of the arrearage through execution. Recovery was denied, not on the ground that such payments could only be enforced by contempt proceedings but for a more fundamental reason. The reason is found in the following language of the court (6 Tex. 31—32):
“ * * * On the dismissal of the suit the order for alimony had no longer legal subsistence or vitality * * *. It is true that three-quarters of the alimony were unpaid; but whether it was the fault or misfortune of the appellee [wife] or fraud of the appellant [husband] that payment had not during pendency of the suit been enforced is in any aspect presented by this case wholly immaterial. For whatever may be the right of appel-lee, or whatever may be the wrong suffered from the appellant in relation to this claim, yet redress cannot be obtained by means of compulsory process upon a reversed and annulled judgment or decree. * * *
“Alimony during pendency of the suit is given to the wife for her present support, and the presumption is that it has been paid according to the terms of the decree, or that summary measures will be taken to secure its payment.”
Wright v. Wright was followed in Ex parte Norton, 118 Tex. 581, 17 S.W.2d 1041 (1929). In that case the trial court ordered a husband to make certain alimony *173payments during pendency of his divorce suit. He sought to take a nonsuit, but the court refused to grant it and thereafter held him in contempt for failure to make the payments. The court assessed a fine of $50 against the husband and ordered him committed to jail for three days and until he paid back alimony in the sum of $120. This court discharged the husband, holding that he had a right to take a nonsuit, and said (17 S.W.2d 1043):
“Had the court granted relator his legal rights and dismissed the divorce suit when he in open court took a nonsuit, he would have lost jurisdiction of the divorce proceedings as such, and would have had no power or jurisdiction to enter a contempt order for failure of relator to pay alimony, and, had the relator been accorded the right which was absolutely given him under the statute, there would have been absolutely no way to enforce the payment of the back alimony claimed by the wife."
The two cases last cited stand for the broad proposition that when the event occurs which marks the outer limits of time within which support payments can be required, the court loses jurisdiction of the subject matter and can no longer enforce such payments by contempt or otherwise. The specific question presented by this case was noted but not decided in Ex parte Smart, 152 Tex. 229, 256 S.W.2d 398 (1953). But while it has not been decided in this State, it has been decided in other jurisdictions.
The question was squarely presented and decided by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in McCartney v. Superior Court, Okmulgee Division, 187 Okl. 63, 101 P.2d 245 (1940). The Oklahoma statute providing for custody and support of children of divorced parents was remarkably like the Texas statute except that support payments could be ordered during minority. In McCartney the former wife sought through contempt proceedings instituted after the child of the parties had reached her majority to compel the father to pay support installments which accrued during the child’s minority. The court stated the question to be decided thusly:
“The question involved is one of jurisdiction. Does the court retain its jurisdiction to enforce those payments, or did its jurisdiction terminate by operation of law when the minor reached the age of majority?”
The court answered that it was obvious from the language of the statute that the jurisdiction of the court to punish for contempt terminated with the child’s attaining majority. And with the question again squarely presented in Lowry v. Lowry, 189 Okl. 650, 118 P.2d 1015 (1941), the Oklahoma court said:
“The purpose of the order in this case was the support of the minor children. * * * The force and life of the order expired on the date the youngest child attained majority. * * * We hold, therefore, that the trial court does not have jurisdiction to enforce its order to pay child support by contempt proceedings on accrued unpaid installments commenced after the child has reached majority.”
The Oklahoma cases were cited with approval and followed, in the face of a vigorous dissent, by the Supreme Court of Minnesota in Lieder v. Straub, 230 Minn. 460, 42 N.W.2d 11 (1950), in which the court held that the trial court did not “have jurisdiction to enforce by contempt the payment of unpaid support money accruing prior to attainment of majority.” Accord, Zieman v. Zieman, 265 Minn. 190, 121 N.W.2d 77 (1963). In Minnesota as in Oklahoma, the courts were authorized to order support for children during minority.
In Corbridge v. Corbridge, 230 Ind. 201, 102 N.E.2d 764 (1952), the Supreme Court of Indiana made the same holding with respect to a statutory provision for support of minor children, saying:
“The extraordinary remedy of attachment for a civil contempt of court is *174available, not for the protection of the one having custody of the child, but for the benefit of the child, so that it may not want for necessities during the period of its minority. When the child reaches its majority the purpose and justification for the extraordinary remedy cease, and the court has no right to coerce the back payments of support by imprisonment.”
The same rule has been adopted in Mississippi and Wisconsin. See Sides v. Pittman, 167 Miss. 751, 150 So. 211 (1933), and Halmu v. Halmu, 247 Wis. 124, 19 N.W.2d 317 (1945). The Supreme Court of Oregon reached an opposite conclusion without discussion of the jurisdictional problem. See State ex rel. Casey v. Casey, 175 Or. 328, 153 P.2d 700, 172 A.L.R. 862 (1944). With such overwhelming agreement on the issue among courts of last resort of other states, I think we would do well to follow the majority rule.
All of the equities in this case and some considerations of social policy weigh against relator. Relator did not support his children to the extent the court found him able to support them. He admits he is now able to make all payments he failed to make under the court’s original judgment and which he has refused to make under the new judgment of 1961. But the question is one of judicial power and not one of equities or policy. Nevertheless, one policy consideration weighs on the side of relator. In this case the defaulting father is adjudged in contempt more than three years after the younger child reached age eighteen. Will the next contempt judgment requiring the payment of arrearages as a condition of purging be delayed five years? And the next, ten years and after the child’s earnings are more than the father’s? Where is the end?
I would discharge relator from the penalties and restraints of the void judgment.
GREENHILL and STEAKLEY, JJ., join in this dissent.
. Emphasis throughout is mine.