Adamsen v. Adamsen

195 A.2d 418, 151 Conn. 172, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 5, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 195 A.2d 418 (Adamsen v. Adamsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adamsen v. Adamsen, 195 A.2d 418, 151 Conn. 172, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 326 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Alcorw, J.

The defendant appeals from a judgment rendered in a habeas corpus proceeding awarding custody of a minor child of the parties to the plaintiff. She has assigned error in the court’s finding of subordinate facts, in its conclusions, in its denial of a motion to quash the application for the writ of habeas corpus, in its denial of a motion for nonsuit and in its overruling of her claims of law, which essentially relate to the matters already mentioned. The attack on the finding is of the wholesale kind which we have repeatedly criticized. Pet Car Products, Inc. v. Barnett, 159 Conn. 42, 44, 184 A.2d 797; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 157. Many of the corrections sought in the finding are not pursued in the brief and are therefore treated as abandoned. Practice Book § 447; Yale University v. Benneson, 147 Conn. 254, 255, 159 A.2d 169. *174 The corrections which are properly raised cannot be made.

The parties were married in Oslo, Norway, on April 12, 1947, and cohabited there until October, 1959. They have two children — a daughter, Ann, the subject of this litigation, who was born in Oslo on June 9, 1948, and a son, Peter, born in Oslo on November 26, 1950. In October, 1959, the parties separated, and the plaintiff went to live at a hotel in Oslo, while the defendant continued to live with the children in the family home. In an action brought by the plaintiff, a Norwegian court decreed a legal separation in February, 1960. A final divorce decree was rendered on April 19, 1961. In a separate custody proceeding brought by the plaintiff, a Norwegian court, on September 29, 1960, awarded custody of Ann and Peter to the plaintiff. The defendant was represented by counsel throughout the Norwegian court proceedings and does not attack their validity. The defendant appealed from the lower court’s decision in the custody ease to an intermediate appellate court in Norway, and, on March 4, 1961, while the appeal was pending, she left Norway, taking Ann with her. The departure from Oslo was on the pretext of taking a weekend skiing trip. Ann was dressed for that activity and took none of her personal belongings or other clothes with her. After leaving Oslo, the defendant followed a circuitous route calculated to confuse the plaintiff and eventually, with Ann accompanying her, arrived in Rowayton, Connecticut. The defendant did not tell the plaintiff, her son Peter, or her son by a previous marriage, who lived in Norway with the parties, that she was leaving Norway. After two and one-half months of intensive search, the plaintiff located the defendant and Ann in the *175 United States. In the meantime, on March 22,1961, the Norwegian intermediate appellate court upheld the decision of the lower court awarding custody of Ann and Peter to the plaintiff. After locating Ann and the defendant, the plaintiff brought the present action on May 18, 1961. Subsequently, on June 29, 1961, the Supreme Court of Norway dismissed the defendant’s appeal from the intermediate appellate court’s decision in the custody case.

The plaintiff’s application for the writ of habeas corpus, duly verified, alleges, in substance, that he is Ann’s father, that Ann is issue of his marriage to the defendant, that he and the defendant are legally separated, that he has been awarded custody of Ann by a Norwegian court, and that Ann is being illegally held by the defendant, who refuses his demands to return Ann to him. The defendant moved to quash the writ on the grounds that (1) the application alleged, as the sole ground for relief, the decree of the Norwegian court; (2) the decree was not entitled to enforcement as to custody of a minor child resident in Connecticut; (3) even if otherwise enforceable, the decree could not be enforced because an appeal therefrom was pending in Norway; and (4) the application lacked an allegation that the plaintiff was a fit person to have custody. The Superior Court overruled the motion to quash, and its action in so doing is the first ground of appeal.

The motion to quash is equivalent to a demurrer. State ex rel. Foote v. Bartholomew, 103 Conn. 607, 611, 132 A. 30. The reasons stated in it may be treated as the reasons for a demurrer. State v. New York, N.H. & H.R. Co., 71 Conn. 43, 47, 40 A. 925. Its function is to test the legal sufficiency of the allegations in the application for the writ. For *176 that purpose, the third ground of the motion, namely, the pendency of an appeal from the Norwegian decree, is unsound because it amounts to a speaking demurrer. The remaining grounds assert only that the application is insufficient in placing reliance on the Norwegian decree and in failing to allege the plaintiff’s own fitness to have custody.

Our statute requires that the application for a writ of habeas corpus “shall be verified by the affidavit of the applicant for the writ alleging that he verily believes the person on whose account such writ is sought is illegally confined or deprived of his liberty.” General Statutes § 52-466. The only purpose served by the application is to secure the issuance of the writ in the discretion of the court. The issues on which any subsequent trial is held are framed by the return and the pleadings subsequent thereto. General Statutes §52-469; Kennedy v. Walker, 135 Conn. 262, 265, 63 A.2d 589, aff’d, 337 U.S. 901, 69 S. Ct. 1046, 93 L. Ed. 1715; Scott v. Spiegel, 67 Conn. 349, 358, 35 A. 262; see Practice Book, 1963, §§450-57; 39 C.J.S., Habeas Corpus, §§ 80 (2), 88. It is a well-settled principle that, unless the law of another jurisdiction or rights arising thereunder contravene our public policy or violate our positive laws, a plaintiff may enforce in this state any legal right of action which he may have whether it arises under our own law or that of another jurisdiction. Santoro v. Osman, 149 Conn. 9, 12, 174 A.2d 800; Ciampittiello v. Campitello, 134 Conn. 51, 54, 54 A.2d 669; Cristilly v. Warner, 87 Conn. 461, 463, 88 A. 711. Under the accepted principle of comity, it was proper for the plaintiff to allege, and sufficient for the court to recognize, with the other facts alleged, the outstanding judgment of the Norwegian court as a *177 proper basis for entertaining the plaintiff’s application for the issuance of the writ of habeas corpus. Morrill v. Morrill, 83 Conn. 479, 492, 77 A. 1; Fisher, Brown & Co. v. Fielding, 67 Conn. 91, 105, 34 A. 714; Holcomb v. Phelps, 16 Conn. 127, 132. The issuance of the writ did not determine the validity of the foreign judgment or its effect, if any, as establishing the custodial rights of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A.2d 418, 151 Conn. 172, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adamsen-v-adamsen-conn-1963.