Barclay v. People

132 Ill. App. 338, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 133
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 10, 1907
DocketGen. No. 4,626
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 Ill. App. 338 (Barclay v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barclay v. People, 132 Ill. App. 338, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 133 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

On May 26, 1905, Charlotte E. Bleakley filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Bock Island county, stating that she is a citizen of Lawrence, Kansas; that Edith Bleakley, her daughter, aged fifteen months, is restrained of her liberty by James Gr. Barclay and Stella Barclay, of Moline, in Bock Island county, by virtue of so-called adoption papers which are illegal and void for lack of compliance with the law concerning the adoption of minor children; that said adoption papers were obtained by fraud and misrepresentation; and that her husband, the father of said Edith Bleakley, refuses to join in the petition. The petition prayed for a writ of habeas corpus commanding said Barclays to bring said child before the court and show the cause of her detention. A writ was ordered and issued. The respondents filed their return, and after-wards amended the same. They therein set out at length ■ the history of the child as hereinafter more fully detailed and averred that said child was found by them in an incubator in the St. Louis Exposition held at St. Louis, Missouri, in the year 1904, and that the child was said to have been delivered to that institution by a certain midwife, and that said midwife informed respondent, Stella Barclay, that the mother of said infant was a Mrs. Bleakley, of Lawrence, Kansas. They set out the steps by which they procured adoption papers from the relator and her husband, and that they adopted said child and received her and have ever since treated her as their own; that though they were informed by the midwife that said child was born on February 15, 1904, and that the relator was its mother, yet they had no further knowledge of the parentage of said child, and that at the time of and since the adoption of said child they had heard conflicting statements of said midwife concerning the parentage of said child, and therefore they denied that said child is the child of said Charlotte Bleakley, but they also averred that if she is the mother of the child she has surrendered all care and custody of her to these respondents and that the best interests of the infant require that they retain such custody. On June 14, 1905, the relator filed an answer to said return and in said answer set up the statutes of Missouri providing for the adoption of children by deed, and pointed out various respects in which said deed of adoption was alleged not to be in compliance with said statute. The relator also alleged in said answer that at the time of the execution of said deed of adoption she and her husband were residents of the State of Kansas; and she set out various statutes of Kansas relative to the adoption of children and alleged that said deed of adoption was not in conformity with said statutes of Kansas. The relator then by way of further answer to said return alleged that said deed of adoption was null and void because it was procured by fraud and misrepresentation, the details of said alleged fraud and misrepresentation being set out at length. The fraud and misrepresentation, however, was not alleged to be the act of the respondents, but of others, and especially of her husband’s father. She also set out at length that she left her husband before the birth of said child because of the cruel conduct of her husband, and unavailing efforts she had made before and since the commencement of this suit to induce her husband to join her therein. On June 17,1905, the.cause came on for trial. On July 14,1905, the court entered an order finding said deed of adoption null and void: that the child was the daughter of the relator and her husband, and was born February 15, 1904; that said child is illegally held in custody by the respondents; that the relator is a fit person to have charge of her daughter and able to provide for her, and that the best interests of the child require that the relator should have the custody of said child. It was adjudged that the said deed of adoption was null and void, and that the respondents deliver said child to the relator. This is a writ of error sued out by the respondents to review said judgment.

The clerk has copied into the record a motion to strike out from the return the clause to the effect that though respondents were informed by said midwife that relator was the mother of said child, yet they have no knowledge of its parentage and have heard com flicting statements of said midwife concerning its parentage and therefore deny that said child is relator’s child; and has also copied into the record an order granting said motion, and has stated in said record that respondents excepted thereto. Said supposed motion is in writing and sets out certain grounds upon which the motion is alleged to be based. The motion and the ruling of the court and an exception thereto are not in the bill of exceptions. The rule is familiar that action of a court such as sustaining a demurrer to a declaration or plea is reviewable on appeal without a bill of exceptions. Bennett v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 203 Ill. 439; Burke v. C. & N. W. Ry. Co., 108 Ill. App. 565. But that rule does not apply to a motion to strike pleadings from the files, as held in Snell v. Trustees, 58 Ill. 290; Harms v. Aufield, 79 Ill. 257; Gaynor v. Hibernian Savings Bank, 166 Ill. 577; and Van Cott v. Sprague, 5 Ill. App. 99. In Gaynor v. Hibernian Savings Bank, supra, the court said that the action of the court in striking a plea from the files cannot be considered unless the motion and decision, and an exception thereto, are included in a bill of exceptions, and that unless so included they do not become a part of the record; and that as a case might occur where an order striking them from the files would be proper it would be presumed, in the absence of a bill of exceptions, that a proper case for the order wa-s made. In Van Cott v. Sprague, supra, the court, by McAllister, J., stated what rulings upon pleadings could be re-examined in the Appellate Court without any exceptions or a bill of exceptions, and then stated that various other rulings may be made in the progress of a cause which do not belong to the record proper and require to be preserved in the bill of exceptions with proper exceptions, and placed in the latter category all motions and orders striking pleas from the files. The supposed action of the court in ordering a paragraph of the return stricken out is therefore not before us for our consideration.

The record discloses the following facts: Relator and Joseph J. Bleakley were married August 13, 1903. They lived with her husband’s parents and lived unhappily, and she left him and went to St. Louis, reaching there December 17, 1903. She was directed by the Young Women’s Christian Association to a Mrs. Wheelan, who gave relator employment. On February 9, 1904, she went to a lying-in hospital or sanitarium conducted by Mrs. Merrifield, a midwife, where a female child was born to relator on February 15, 1904, 186 days after her marriage. Two days later relator was taken ill with scarlet fever. • On February 23, 1904, she wrote a letter to her husband in which she told him of the birth and death of this baby, and that though a wee little thing, her features were perfect and she was the very image of her father, and that even one little leg was curved just a little where her husband’s was broken; that they only let her have the baby a few minutes and then took her away and she never saw the baby again; that she insisted on a nice white casket and a grave in one of the best cemeteries, and had paid $15 of that expense, and wanted her husband to send her $40 of which $25 was for her bill and $15 was for the other half of the funeral expenses.

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Related

People ex rel. Kuhn v. Weeks
228 Ill. App. 262 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
132 Ill. App. 338, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barclay-v-people-illappct-1907.