Children's Home v. Fetter

90 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1914
DocketNo. 14251
StatusPublished

This text of 90 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110 (Children's Home v. Fetter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Children's Home v. Fetter, 90 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110 (Ohio 1914).

Opinion

Newman, J.

Counsel in support of their motion to dismiss this proceeding rely upon Chapman Mfg. Co. v. Taylor, 61 Ohio St., 394. There separate judgments were rendered against separate parties on separate causes of action in favor of the same party. The parties against whom such separate judgments were rendered united in prosecuting error. The'court held that there, was a misjoinder of parties plaintiff and dismissed the proceeding in error. The law of that case does not apply here where the judgment was rendered against the Children’s Home and its superintendent—neither separate judgments nor judgments based upon separate causes of action. There is no reason why these two parties may not unite in a proceeding' for a review of this adverse judgment. But it is claimed that W. P. Fetter is not entitled to become a party to this proceeding because no judgment was rendered against him. Conceding this, his joining in the petition here does not invalidate the proceeding in error as to the other [120]*120two parties. The petition in error is in usual form. It recites the rendition of the judgment and assigns the several errors upon which the parties rely. Then follows the prayer for a reversal and for final judgment in favor of plaintiffs in error. This proceeding, so far as the Children’s Home and its superintendent are concerned, is properly here, and the motion to dismiss is therefore overruled.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error challenge the judgment of the court of appeals upon the grounds that the complaint in habeas corpus was insufficient and that the court of appeals had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter.

The contentions of counsel for Minnie Fetter, the mother, are, that the juvenile court never had jurisdiction; that if it had, it lost it, because it could make but one of two orders—it could commit ■the boy to the Children’s Home or it could discharge .him—it had no authority to divide the custody of the boy between the parents; that if the juvenile court had jurisdiction, its rights were wholly subordinate to the right of either parent if ■fit, able and willing to care for the child; that the court of common pleas of Erie county had exclusive jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter and custody of the child.

An affidavit as authorized by Section 1647, General Code, was filed by the truant officer of Marion ■in the probate court, acting as a juvenile court, ■with the jurisdiction and powers conferred upon it by Section 1639 et seq.

A citation was issued to W. P. Fetter and Min[121]*121nie Fetter, the parents having the custody and control of the child, as required by Section 1648. On March 13, 1912, the child was brought before the court, evidence was heard and a finding was made that he was under the age of seventeen, that he was incorrigible, that he was a delinquent child and that he came into the custody of the court and would continue for all necessary purposes of discipline and protection a ward of the court until he attained the age of twenty-one. In Section 1644, a “delinquent child” is defined, and includes, among others, a child under seventeen years of age that is incorrigible. Section 1643, prior to the amendment of April 28, 1913, was as follows: “When a child under the age of seventeen years comes into the custody of the court under the provisions of this chapter, such child shall continue for all necessary purposes of discipline and protection, a ward of the court, until he or she attains the age of twenty-one years. The power of the court over such child shall continue until the child attains such age.”

On March 13, 1912, by order of the juvenile court, on motion of the father, agreed to by the mother, Howard Fetter was permitted to make his home with his father on certain days of the week and with his mother on the remaining days, also to stand subject to such other discipline, disposition and conditions as might be imposed by the judge during the term of probation. It was further ordered that so long as the child should, in the opinion of the judge, comply with the conditions and terms of the probation, final judgment or [122]*122final commitment to any other place, person or institution be stayed and suspended, such suspended judgment, however, to be subject to the directions and conditions imposed by the judge, “for such time as in the opinion of the judge such child has been sufficiently corrected of its delinquency and final judgment entered herein, otherwise committing or disposing of the custody of such child or discharging it from any further control by the judge in this cause.”

Counsel for the mother insist that the juvenile court had no authority to make this order, that it could commit the child to the Children’s Home or discharge it. We cannot agree with counsel, for, under the provisions of Section 1652, General Code, the court is authorized to make temporary provision for a child such as was made here, subject to be returned to the judge for further proceedings whenever such action might appear necessary.

Such action was necessary in this case, as shown by the records of the juvenile court in its finding of March 28, 1913, and it is immaterial that the matter was brought to the attention of the juvenile court by the father of the child after the decree in the divorce proceeding. The court speaks by its record, and it appears that all parties interested were before the court, that the court heard evidence on the subject and was convinced that there should be a modification of its former order in reference to'the custody of. the child. It did not, however, change its finding that the child' was a delinquent. It found that on account of the es[123]*123trangement of the parents it would be to the best interests of the child to remove it from their custody, and it committed it to the Marion County Children’s Home, to be there received, cared for and educated, and kept subject to the control of and until discharged by the proper adjustment of differences of said parents. This order of the court, at the time of the proceeding in habeas corpus, was unreversed and unmodified and was in full force and effect.

The proceeding in Erie county was one in divorce, and the only parties’ there were Minnie Fetter and W. P. Fetter. As between them the common pleas court may have had the authority to determine which of the two was entitled to the custody of the child, but its order in no way could affect the order of the juvenile court under which, on March 13, 1912, the child became a ward of the juvenile court to continue as such until the age of twenty-one. Exclusive jurisdiction of the child and of the subject-matter was acquired by the juvenile court several months prior to the proceedings in divorce and was a continuing jurisdiction, and that the order of commitment to the Children’s Home was made subsequently to the decree in divorce in Erie county is wholly immaterial.

As required by Section 12164, General Code, a copy of the commitment of Howard Fetter to the Children’s Home was exhibited to the court of appeals with the complaint of Minnie Fetter, the mother. The exhibit attached to the complaint contained not only a copy of the-commitment but [124]*124a certified copy of the entire proceedings had in the juvenile court. It appeared then to the court of appeals that Howard Fetter, alleged to be restrained of his liberty, was in the custody of the Children’s Home by virtue of an order of a court of record.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McGrath v. Cowen
49 N.E. 338 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1898)
Lessee of Barton v. Heirs of Morris
15 Ohio St. 408 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1846)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childrens-home-v-fetter-ohio-1914.