Anderson v. Cossey

214 S.W. 624, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 944
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1919
DocketNo. 9132.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 214 S.W. 624 (Anderson v. Cossey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Cossey, 214 S.W. 624, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 944 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

Appellant, Mrs. E. T. Anderson, presented to the judge of the Seventy-Eighth judicial district her petition for writ of ha-beas corpus, alleging that her grandson, Ray N. Anderson, Jr., was a minor of tender years and that said minor was being illegally restrained of his liberty by Mrs. Mary Cossey, who appears to be the maternal grandmother of said child. She alleged that the father of said child was in the United States army, serving in Prance, and thus out of the state and the United States, and that the father had waived in favor of petitioner his right to act as the guardian of said child during the duration of the war with Germany, and had instructed plaintiff to procure the possession of said child and take him to the home of petitioner and properly care for and maintain him during the father’s absence. Petitioner alleged that she was a fit and proper person to care for and tutor said child, and appellee was not a fit and proper person for such purpose.

The petition was- presented to the judge in chambers, who set the case for hearing and ordered notice to issue to respondent. Respondent filed her plea of res adjudicata, alleging that theretofore the relator had been axipointed by the county court of Wichita county temporary guardian of said Ray N. Anderson, Jr., and had subsequently sought to be appointed permanent guardian of said child; that upon the hearing of said motion and petition the respondent had contested the same, and that after full consideration the court denied relator’s petition and denied her the right to the care, custody, and possession of said minor, which care and custody she was seeking in this suit to obtain by a decree of the district court; that said judgment of the county court still remained in full force and effect; wherefore she prayed that plaintiff take nothing by her suit and defendant be discharged with her costs.

The district court rendered its judgment that the cause abate and be dismissed on the ground that the county court of Wichita county had heard and determined the controversy between the same parties who were litigants in the district court, and because the cause in the county court was still pending, and because the right of the plaintiff to the care and custody of said minor had theretofore been adjudged against her in tl)e county court. From this judgment, the plaintiff has appealed.

[1] No statement of facts appears in the record. Only appellant has presented a brief in this court. There appears in the transcript in this case what purports to be certain orders and judgments rendered in the county court proceedings, citation issued out of said court, guardianship bond executed by appellant here, etc., but these instruments are not agreed to by the attorneys, nor approved by the court as a statement of facts, nor attached to the pleadings filed in the district court; hence we are not permitted to consider the same as a statement of facts or for any other purpose. Scaling v. Collins, No. 9106, 214 S. W. 624, recently decided by this court, May 10, 1919, not yet officially published.

[2] Therefore we are limited to the consideration of the one question, to wit: Did the district court err in abating and dismissing plaintiff’s action for writ of habeas corpus because there had been filed, and at the time of this trial was pending, a suit in the county court involving the right of the care and custody of the minor, Ray N. Anderson, Jr.? In Ex parte Reeves, 100 Tex. 617, 103 S. W. 478, the Supreme Court, in an opinion by Chief Justice Gaines, said:

“Under the common-law and equity system of England, which was adopted in Texas as early as 1840, the courts of chancery exercised jurisdiction to appoint guardians for minors and to supervise their conduct with reference to the persons and estates of their wards. 3 Pomeroy’s Equity (3d Ed.) § 1303 et seq. In section 1307 the same author says: ‘In addition to its power to appoint guardians, the court of equity will also exercise its jurisdiction, in a proper case, and to promote the highest welfare of the infant, where there is already a guardian, natural or legal, by controlling the person of the infant, and by removing it personally from the custody of its natural or legal guardian, even from the custody of its own parents.’ That' this latter jurisdiction may be lawfully exercised by the district courts of this state is held in Degate v. Legate, 87 Tex. 248, 28 S. W. 281, and in other cases which need not be cited. That' the Constitution does not take from the district courts such jurisdiction is clear from the language we have already quoted from section 8 of article 5. It is equally clear that the Constitution confided the appointment of guardians of minors to the county courts sitting in probate ; but we are unable to see that such courts are given any control over minors, or their estates, save as wards of guardians appointed by them. We think the words ‘business of minors,’ *626 found in section 16, mean business growing out of'the administration of their estate, and that they cannot he aptly applied to controversies over their custody. It would seem that in framing the provisions of sections 8 and 16 of article 5 of the Constitution the able lawyers who drew it had in view the jurisdiction exercised by courts of equity over minors, and intended to confer so much as relates to guardianship to the county courts, and that which was exercised over their custody, merely, to the district courts.”

The Supreme Court in this case further held that former articles 3502a and 3502b of the Revised Statutes of 1895 were uncon-' stitutional, because in violation of the two sections of article 5 of the Constitution above mentioned. In Estes v. Presswood, 137 S. W. 145, 147, the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals, in an opinion by Chief Justice Pleas-ants, holds that jurisdiction to determine the right to the custody of a minor is conferred by the Constitution upon the district court, and can be invoked only by an original proceeding brought in that court, and cannot be exercised on an appeal in a guardianship proceeding begun in the county court.

It will be remembered that plaintiff’s petition alleged that the defendant, Mary Cossey, had said child in her home and refused to deliver it to the petitioner, and further alleged that said Mary Cossey was not a fit and proper person to maintain, care for, and tutor said child. In the answer of Mary Cos-sey, no denial is made of plaintiff’s allegation that defendant is in possession and has the custody of the minor. But a plea of the former suit and judgment is made, and that by the terms of said judgment the plaintiff in this suit was denied the possession, care, and custody of said minor in the former suit in the county court. .Hence the respondent does not answer the issues, tendered by relator, to wit, that the respondent is in possession of said minor, and that relator is a proper and fit person and is entitled to have the care and custody of said child and respondent is not so entitled. These issues so presented were properly cognizable by the district court, even though the county court had theretofore denied the appellant here the right of custody of said child and had awarded the custody to some other person. Even though under article 4091, V. S. Civ.

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Bluebook (online)
214 S.W. 624, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-cossey-texapp-1919.