Foley v. Foley

61 Ill. App. 577, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 836
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 61 Ill. App. 577 (Foley v. Foley) 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
Foley v. Foley, 61 Ill. App. 577, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 836 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the Coubt.

Plaintiff in error, a minor, brought suit charging defendant in error, in the various counts of the declaration, with assault and battery; with wrongfully requiring plaintiff, as his servant, to use and drive a vicious horse, by which he was kicked and permanently injured; and with neglect to furnish medical attendance or surgical aid at the time of such injury.

It was proved at the trial that plaintiff, when a child of four years, was left, after the death of his father, with the defendant, his uncle, by his mother, who afterward went to Bloomington, Illinois. She was married to a man named Pemberton. Plaintiff lived with defendant about fourteen years, and during that time his mother lived at Bloomington and visited him at defendant’s residence each year, except three or four, when prevented by sickness. At the expiration of that time, defendant wrote to her to come and get her son, as he did not amount to a pinch of snuff, and defendant would not put up with him any longer. She went to Grundy county where' defendant lived, and took plaintiff home with her. His right arm had been broken and dislocated some years before and he was crippled in that arm.

One of the lower bones of the arm had been broken, and the fracture not being reduced, it had partly grown together on the joint, and the other bone had been dislocated and the dislocation not reduced.

The plaintiff was taken by defendant from his mother under an agreement with her, which she stated to be that he would clothe and educate plaintiff, and was to have him until he was twenty-one years old, when he would set him out jn life. Defendant’s version of the contract was, that he asked her if she was going to let him have Willie to raise, and that, when she subsequently brought plaintiff to his house, she said that now he wanted Willie, there he was, that she had brought him. The evidence for plaintiff was, that defendant beat him severely on several occasions; that he was kicked by a horse in 1889, occasioning the injury to his arm; that he carried the arm in a sling for some time, and that no medical attendance or surgical aid was furnished, for want of which the arm was permanently injured. The defendant denied the beating, and although the injury to the arm necessarily produced swelling and great pain, with ■inability to use it for a considerable time, he claimed that he did not know that there was anything wrong with it until July, 1891.

Defendant also offered in evidence an order of the County Court of Grundy County, made at the June term, 1879, declaring plaintiff to be his adopted child. The order was admitted against the objection of plaintiff. 3STo petition for the adoption was shown conferring jurisdiction to make any order touching the matter. Plaintiff, for the purpose of impeaching the order, offered in evidence the petition upon "which it was founded, but the court excluded said petition, refused all instructions asked by plaintiff, and gave to the jury the following:

“ 1. The court instructs the jury that if a parent, or one sustaining that relation to a child, treats that child inhumanly and cruelly, so as to injure it in health or limb, the parents are subject to criminal prosecution, and on conviction punished by fine or imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of not exceeding five years. But the child can not maintain a civil action for damages against its parents for such injury. This rule of law, as the court conceives, is founded upon consideration of public policy, affecting family government; that is, that the child shall not contest with the parent the parent’s right to govern the child.

2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the mother of plaintiff gave the plaintiff, or left plaintiff, when he was about four years old, with defendant, under an arrangement that defendant should keep and rear plaintiff as his child, then defendant was in law the parent of plaintiff, and subject to the law governing the relation of parent and child, and plaintiff can not, under such circumstances, maintain this action.

3. And the jury are further instructed that the decree offered in evidence from the County Court of Grundy County, in relation to the adoption of plaintiff by defendant, established, inlaw, the relation of parent and child between defendant and plaintiff.

Under the law, as stated by the court in this instruction, the jury will have to return a verdict for defendant, and the form of your verdict will be as follows: 1 We, the jury, find the defendant not guilty.’ ”

A verdict was returned in accordance with the direction given and judgment was entered accordingly.

It is doubtless the law, that a child can not maintain an action for damages on account of maltreatment against a parent, whether the relation is by blood or created by adoption, under the statute, followed by all the legal consequences and incidents of the natural relation. By the instruction given, the jury were told that the decree in question established the relation of parent and child between the parties, with those consequences and incidents, and that therefore they should return a verdict for defendant.

The adoption of children is unknown to the common law. The principle of adoption is taken from the Boman law, and is solely the creation of statutory enactment. The proceeding does not belong to the general jurisdiction of County Courts, nor is it in accordance with the usual form of common law or chancery proceedings; but it is under the special statute and to be exercised in a special and summary manner. In such cases it is the rule. that the record must show upon its face, everything that is necessary to sustain the jurisdiction of the court. This rule was laid down in Haywood v. Collins, 60 Ill. 328, upon a full review of the decisions in this and other States. That case was cited and approved in Johnson v. Von Kettler, 84 Ill. 315.

The rule is general and well settled. 12 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 276; Black on Judgments, Sec. 279.

The statute under which the attempted adoption of plaintiff was had, requires a petition by the person desiring to adopt a child, and such petition is jurisdictional. The second section of the act is as follows:

h The petition shall state the name, sex and age of the child sought to be adopted, and if it be desired to change the name, the new name, the name and residence of the parents of the child, if known to the petitioner, and of the guardian, if any, and whether the parents or the survivor of them, or the guardian, if any, consents to such adoption.” There was no petition in evidence nor any recital in the judgment of any petition stating such jurisdictional facts.

The statements of the petition offered in evidence by plaintiff, were as follows: “ Tour petitioners,William Foley and Bridget Foley, his wife, of Nettle Creek, in said county, would respectfully show unto .your honor, that they are residents of said county, and desirous of adopting a child so as to render it capable of inheriting their estate; that the name of said child is William Ambrose Foley; that it was of the age of four years on the éth day of July last, and is a male child. And further, that your petitioners desire the name of said child be hot changed.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ill. App. 577, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-foley-illappct-1895.