Chlupacek v. Reed

169 S.E.2d 782, 225 Ga. 512, 1969 Ga. LEXIS 551
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 9, 1969
Docket25303
StatusPublished

This text of 169 S.E.2d 782 (Chlupacek v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chlupacek v. Reed, 169 S.E.2d 782, 225 Ga. 512, 1969 Ga. LEXIS 551 (Ga. 1969).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

A judgment dismissing a petition for habeas corpus and remanding the petitioner to custody of the respondent is for review here. The petition was filed by Franz Erwin Chlupacek in the Superior Court of Hall County against Wilburn L. Reed, Jr., sheriff of that county, alleging illegal detention by virtue of a writ of ne exeat.

The events essential to the determination of this appeal are those which follow.

On December 5, 1968, petitioner’s wife, Mildred M. Chlupacek, filed suit against him in the superior court of that county, seeking a divorce, alimony, support for their children, custody of them, and recovery of approximately $17,000 allegedly belonging to her. The complaint alleged that unless restrained and enjoined he would take the property or its proceeds and the children with him to his native land of Austria. Thereupon, the trial court entered a rule nisi requiring him to show cause on December 19, 1968, why the prayers should not be granted, and restraining and enjoining him from disposing of or moving her property from the court’s jurisdiction, ordering an accounting thereof by him, and restraining him from removing the children from the court’s jurisdiction. This complaint and order were personally served upon him on December 5, 1968.

At the December 19, 1968, hearing he did not appear or file any pleadings. After hearing sworn testimony the trial court on that date entered an order which granted temporary custody of the children to the wife and restrained and enjoined him from leaving the jurisdiction of the court, from removing therefrom any property claimed by her and from taking the children to any place outside the jurisdiction of the court. This order also required that he be arrested and retained in custody until he gave a ne exeat bond in the sum of $50,000. This order was not served upon him. It was ascertained that on December 11, 1968, after arranging for his personal property to be shipped to [514]*514him there, he had flown to Austria, taking with him money that he had received after December 5, from the sale of certain stocks claimed by his wife to have been purchased with her money.

On April 18, 1969, he returned to this State, and on that date was arrested by virtue of a writ of ne exeat issued on April 8, pursuant to the December 19 order.

On May 5, 1969, the instant petition for writ of habeas corpus was filed. It alleged that the restraint of petitioner is by virtue of the writ of ne exeat which requires bond of $50,000.

The grounds upon which the writ of habeas corpus is sought are essentially the following.

The December 5, 1968, order, above referred to, is illegal and void. It violates petitioner’s rights under the due process provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions and amounts to an injunction prohibiting him from going outside the limits of the Northeastern Circuit and from carrying his property beyond it.

The December 19, 1968, order is illegal and void. It was not served upon him, requires an excessive and unreasonable bond of $50,000, which is equivalent to a refusal to grant bond, in violation of stated provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions, and requires a bond not only for his personal appearance to answer his wife’s claim, but also for him to abide by the orders of the court.

The April 8, 1969, writ of ne exeat is illegal and void. It was improperly issued, did not provide petitioner with a full hearing, deprived him of his liberty, was not served upon him, and required a bond of $50,000, which is illegal, excessive and unreasonable, contrary to named provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions.

Petitioner has been denied the right to a speedy trial, in violation of specified provisions of the State Constitution.

The writ of ne exeat requires a bond so that he will not go beyond the jurisdictional limits of the State and will appear when required by order of the court to answer any judgment therein. The requirement of both of these conditions is void.

[515]*515The respondent answered by alleging that petitioner’s detention was due to his failure to tender bond and security as required by the writ of ne exeat.

Upon the hearing in the habeas corpus proceeding the events leading up to the filing of the petition were the subject of considerable testimony by petitioner.

Thereupon, the trial court entered judgment that petitioner was being lawfully detained, dismissed the petition for habeas corpus, and remanded the petitioner to the custody of the respondent.

Petitioner, in his appeal, makes eight enumerations of error.

1. The first is that the court erred in denying the petition for habeas corpus because the December 5, 1968, and December 19, 1968, orders and the April 8, 1969, writ of ne exeat are illegal and void.

(a) Appellant contends that the two orders restraining and enjoining him from removing himself or specified property outside the trial court’s jurisdiction were void and had no effect upon him, and therefore he should have been released from custody.

This contention cannot be sustained.

The order of December 5, 1968, is not relevant to this inquiry since it contains nothing as to a writ of ne exeat.

Assuming that the portion in the December 19, 1968, order restraining and enjoining the petitioner from removing himself or property claimed by the plaintiff beyond the trial court’s jurisdiction is void as urged by appellant (see Bleyer v. Blum & Co., 70 Ga. 558), this did not invalidate the portion of the order providing for the writ of ne exeat. The issue here is not as to the injunctive feature of that order, but concerns the validity of the ne exeat, the basis for holding the appellant in custody. The two are separable, and the ne exeat portion is enforceable.

(b) The further contention is made that the writ of ne exeat is void in that it provides for conjunctive, instead of disjunctive, conditions, in violation of Code § 37-1403, which recites in material part that “The defendant may relieve himself or his property or the specific property from the restraint imposed by giving bond in double the value of plaintiff’s claim ... for the [516]*516forthcoming of each or either (according to the tenor of the writ), to answer to complainant’s claim or abide by the order and decree of the court.”

For this position appellant relies upon Swain v. Jaudon, 147 Ga. 773 (95 SE 696), and August v. August, 65 Ga. App. 883 (16 SE2d 784). The Swain case held that a ne exeat bond “is one for the personal appearance of the defendant at court.” Headnote 1 (a). It also held that “Where a writ required the taking of a bond, not only for the personal appearance of the defendant, but for the payment of the judgment in the suit for alimony, the writ was void. [Citations.]” Headnote 1 (b). There, the writ required a bond “. . . not to depart the State without the order of said court, and conditioned to pay any judgment that may be found against him. . .” P. 774. In the August case, the bond required in material part, for the defendant to “appear to answer the complaint . . . and answer the judgment of the court. . .” P. 883.

In the present case the provisions are materially different from those decisions and their citations.

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Related

August v. August
16 S.E.2d 784 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1941)
Bleyer v. Blum & Co.
70 Ga. 558 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1883)
Swain v. Jaudon
95 S.E. 696 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.E.2d 782, 225 Ga. 512, 1969 Ga. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chlupacek-v-reed-ga-1969.