Ex Parte Bates

24 So. 2d 421, 247 Ala. 391, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 425
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 23, 1945
Docket6 Div. 408.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 421 (Ex Parte Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Bates, 24 So. 2d 421, 247 Ala. 391, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 425 (Ala. 1945).

Opinions

*392 THOMAS, Justice.

A petition for writ of prohibition was presented to this court in the above stated cause to prevent the Hon. George Lewis Bailes from assuming jurisdiction to hear and determine a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, involving the custody of Frances Elizabeth Bates, a child, about two years of age.

On September 7, 1945, Juanita Lester Bates, the mother of said child, filed on the law side of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Ala., a petition addressed “to the Hon. Judges of the Circuit Court for the Tenth Judicial Circuit of the State of Alabama,” at Birmingham. This petition sought the custody and control of the child, Frances Elizabeth Bates; alleged that for the past ten months the child has been in the custody and control of the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Bates, at Maplesville, in Chilton County, Alabama;' averred that petitioner is a resident of Jefferson County, and that the child was being restrained of its liberty in Chilton County by the paternal grandparents. This petition was on September 7, 1945, presented to the Hon. George Lewis Bailes, and he signed the usual writ of habeas corpus, directed to Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Bates, at Maplesville, in Chilton County. This writ bears the endorsement, “Filed in office, September 7th, 1945. O. L. Andrew, Clerk.” The clerk of the circuit court upon the filing of the writ in his office- directed the execution of the writ on Mr. and Mrs. Bates by any sheriff of the State of' Alabama.

On the 28th day of September, 1945, as directed in the writ, the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Bates, appeared specially before the Hon. George Lewis Bailes, and filed a plea to the 'jurisdiction of the said Judge to hear and determine the petition for a writ of habeas corpus. This plea in substance sets up that the child was never in the custody and control of the respondents in Jefferson County, Ala., and that they never, at any time, resided in Jefferson County, Ala., but that if said child was at any time restrained of its liberty, it was in Chilton "County, Ala., and at no time in Jefferson County. This plea was filed in the office of O. L. Andrews, Clerk of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County. Upon the filing of this plea, the attorney representing petitioner filed in the office of the circuit clerk a motion to strike the plea.

The Hon. George Lewis Bailes, upon consideration of said plea, granted the motion to strike the plea and held the plea insufficient. Thereupon judgment was entered on the law side of said circuit court and in the office of the clerk thereof in accordance with the judgment of the court in the following words: “Therefore, it is the order and judgment of the Court that the motion to strike plea to the jurisdiction be and the same is hereby granted, and said plea to jurisdiction is overruled.”

Upon disposal of the plea, the court then set October 12, 1945, to hear the petition for writ of habeas corpus on its merits. The respondents in said petition, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Bates, then applied for a writ of prohibition to this court to prevent the said Judge from proceeding further in said cause.

The Hon. George Lewis Bailes filed his return to rule nisi. The issue injected in the proceeding is that on Sept. 7, 1945, 'Júanita Lester Bates, the mother of the child, filed in the Circuit Court of Jefferson-County, Ala., a bill for divorce from her husband, - and for the custody of this same child. This bill alleges that the separation occurred in Jefferson County, Ala., on July 18, 1945, and averred that the fa *393 ther, Norman Monroe Bates, is a resident of Jefferson County, Ala., and is not a suitable and fit person to have the care, custody and control of said child. Judge Bailes in his answer takes the position that having assumed jurisdiction in the divorce proceeding, that this gave him jurisdiction to hear and determine the writ of habeas corpus directed to the petitioners in this cause.

There is no dispute relative to the facts presented by the petition for rule nisi nor in the return made by Judge Bailes. The petitioners contend that notwithstanding the filing of the hill for divorce on the same date as the petition for writ of habeas corpus, that Judge Bailes had no jurisdiction to hear and determine the writ of habeas corpus directed to residents of' Chilton County where the child is allegedly detained.

There are several propositions of law entering into this contention which we will consider. Any matter affecting a child may become a subject of chancery jurisdiction and it is immaterial whether that jurisdiction is invoked by bill, petition or application for habeas corpus. State v. Black, 239 Ala. 644, 196 So. 713; Ex parte White, 245 Ala. 212, 16 So.2d 500; Murphree v. Hanson, 197 Ala. 246, 72 So. 437; Thomas v. Thomas, 212 Ala. 85, 101 So. 738; Woodruff v. Conley, 50 Ala. 304.

Chancery Court has authority to direct or to remove trustees and when the estate is property of an infant he becomes ward of court, and court may of its own motion institute protective proceeding. Ex parte Cabaniss, 235 Ala. 181, 178 So. 1.

The domicile of Juanita Lester Bates, the plaintiff in the divorce suit and petitioner in writ of habeas corpus, is also the domicile of the child involved in this proceeding. 28 C.J.S., Domicile, § 12, pages 21 and 22, note 39.

In Moss v. Ingram, 246 Ala. 214, 20 So. 2d 202, it is held that the “Domicile of divorced mother to whom custody of minor child was granted was domicile of her mother child in determining right to custody thereof.”

Code 1940, Tit. 13, § 156 provides that. “Whenever it shall appear to any court of law or equity that any cause filed therein should have been brought in another court of like jurisdiction in the same county, the court shall make an order transferring the cause to the proper court and the clerk or register shall forthwith certify the pleadings, process, costs and order to the court to which the cause is transferred, and the cause shall be docketed and proceed in the court to which it is transferred and the costs accrued in the court in which the cause was originally filed shall abide by the result of the suit in the court to which transferred.”

In Hayes v. Hayes, 192 Ala. 280, 68 So. 351, 353, after quoting from McGough v. McGough, 136 Ala. 170, 33 So. 860, the court observed: “A reading of the authorities demonstrates that, a court of chancery once in a proper proceeding having acquired jurisdiction over an infant as to his custody and control, such infant becomes the ward of the court, and it is, in a sense, a continuous jurisdiction; the welfare of the child being the question of paramount importance, the parties to the suit being of secondary consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 421, 247 Ala. 391, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-bates-ala-1945.