Annie D. Winter v. Stephen Bradford Crowley, Jr.
This text of 374 F.2d 317 (Annie D. Winter v. Stephen Bradford Crowley, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
We granted this review 1 of an order of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals dismissing an appeal for failure to file a brief within the time allowed. The relevant circumstances are as follows.
On November 4, 1965, appellee-husband filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Domestic Relations Branch of the District of Columbia Court of General Sessions, alleging that in a divorce decree of the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Maryland, on March 21, 1961, he was awarded custody of the minor children, 2 and that appellant-wife had wrongfully removed three of the four children from the custody of appellee in Maryland and was wrongfully detaining them in the District of Columbia. Upon issuance of the writ, appellant answered and counterclaimed for a decree of custody and support, alleging the children had deserted their father because of harsh and cruel treatment. She further averred other changes of circumstance since the entry of the Maryland decree which, if true, seriously affect the welfare of the children.
The trial court held that the Maryland decree was conclusive between the parties on the issue of custody in the habeas corpus proceeding; that appellant’s allegations of a change of circumstances were not responsive to a writ of habeas corpus; and that the doctrines of forum non conveniens and comity precluded inquiry into the present welfare of the children with respect to their custody. On these bases, the court refused to consider any testimony bearing on the present welfare of the children and stated that if appellant wished to claim custody, she would have to do so in Maryland litigation.
On November 10, 1965, appellant filed a timely notice of appeal to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. On November 16 she filed a statement of error and a designation of record, which was supplemented on November 22. The record was filed on November 24. Believing that the trial court had made a plain and serious error of law, appellant filed a motion for summary reversal on December 13. Appellee was allowed to file a late opposition 3 on December 23. The motion was denied on December 28. Appellant’s brief on appeal had been due on December 14 4 On January 6, 1966, she tendered the brief with a motion for leave to file it out of time because she had deferred filing pending the court’s disposition of her motion for summary reversal, and because of counsel’s heavy trial schedule and year-end engagements. 5 The motion was denied on January 13, “time for same having expired,” and on February 8 the appeal was dis-' *319 missed for failure to file a brief within the time allowed. We reverse.
The future of three children should not be made to turn solely on a technical and comparatively minor court rule. 6 The refusal to allow the brief to be filed out of time was a clear abuse of discretion in the circumstances of this case. Under the rules the court may allow a brief to be filed late for “extraordinary reasons.” 7 We think such reasons were plainly present.
Appellant had not been idle during the period allowed by rule for filing her brief. As will appear, a meritorious motion for summary reversal was filed, 8 accompanied by a full statement of facts and legal arguments. Appellant took only slightly over a week after the denial of the motion for summary reversal not only to file her motion for late filing of the brief, but to file the brief itself, and appellee made no claim that he was prejudiced by the delay.
Most importantly, there was strong and undeniable merit to the appeal. 9 The action of the trial court was patently contrary in several respects to the long-established law in this jurisdiction 10 and in others. 11 There is no question that the children were subject to the jurisdiction of District of Columbia courts, since they were and still are physically present in the District. 12 *320 When the custody of minor children subject to the court’s jurisdiction is in issue, the court, acting as parens patriae, not only has the power, but the duty to resolve the matter solely on the basis of the present welfare of the children. The form in which the action in initiated, as a petition for habeas corpus or otherwise, is irrelevant. The welfare of minors is not to be determined by legal technicalities, or by adversary rights as between the parents or other custodians, or by contumacy or other reprehensible conduct of the parents which does not have a direct bearing on the children’s welfare. The fact that there is a previous custody decree, issuing from this jurisdiction or any other .jurisdiction, is relevant only to the extent that the circumstances present to and considered by the earlier court as a basis for its decree have remained unchanged since that time. If changed circumstances are alleged which may be relevant to the welfare of the children, the court must hear testimony and must determine anew the question of custody. 13 All of the foregoing are long-settled principles in this jurisdiction. 14
The order of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals dismissing the appeal is hereby reversed, and the case remanded to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
. By authority of 11 D.C.Code § 321 (Supp. V, 1966); D.C.Cm. Rule 1, Review of Cases from the D.C.C.A.
. On February 13, 1962, appellant petitioned unsuccessfully in Maryland for a change in custody. Winter v. Crowley, 231 Md. 323, 190 A.2d 87 (1963).
. See Rule 8(b) of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
. Rule 27(m) of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals requires that appellant’s brief be filed within twenty days from the date of filing the record.
.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
374 F.2d 317, 126 U.S. App. D.C. 103, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/annie-d-winter-v-stephen-bradford-crowley-jr-cadc-1967.