Graves v. Graves
This text of 122 So. 2d 350 (Graves v. Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Mary Williams GRAVES, Applicant,
v.
Travis E. GRAVES, Jr., Respondent.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*351 Albert B. Bryson, Shreveport, for applicant.
Lee & Taylor, Shreveport, for respondent.
AYRES, Judge.
Writs were issued for the purpose of reviewing the correctness vel non of the action of the Twenty-Sixth Judicial District Court in and for Bossier Parish, Louisiana, in declining jurisdiction over, and in refusing to make an award of the custody of, three minor children, issue of the marriage of plaintiff and defendant. Plaintiff, by this action, sought a separation from bed and board from her husband, the dissolution of the community estate and custody of the minors, ranging in age from six months to three years. Defendant, in reconvention, sought an absolute divorce and an award of the children to his custody. After trial, plaintiff was granted a separation, as prayed for. No award of the children, however, was made because the court considered it *352 had no jurisdiction or authority to do so for the reason the children were, at the time, in the State of Michigan and, hence, beyond and outside the territorial jurisdiction of the court.
The facts, material to the issue presented for resolution as disclosed by the record, may be briefly stated. Plaintiff and defendant were married January 9, 1957, following which and until February 12, 1960, they resided and lived together as husband and wife in Bossier Parish. On the latter date plaintiff and defendant separated, plaintiff moving to an apartment in the City of Shreveport and defendant continuing to reside in Bossier Parish where as a member of the armed service he was stationed at Barksdale Air Force Base. Upon leaving the matrimonial domicile, plaintiff removed with her the three children, who remained in her care and custody until April 20, 1960, when they were forcibly taken from her by the defendant, removed from the State of Louisiana to the State of Michigan and there placed with defendant's parents.
Plaintiff instituted suit for separation on April 26, 1960, and on the same date, obtained an order of court directing defendant to show cause, inter alia, why she should not be granted the custody of the aforesaid children. The order, as issued, recited "* * * that the defendant be ordered to produce the children in court and/or physically deliver them to the plaintiff." On the court's failure to accept jurisdiction for the purpose and to the extent of making an award of the custody of the minors, counsel for plaintiff and defendant stipulated "* * * that, should the Louisiana Supreme Court rule that the judge of this Court does have jurisdiction over the children, evidence on the custody of the children would be heard for both parties litigant." Upon plaintiff's application to that court for writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus, the court issued the following order:
"Application not considered.
"This court will not exercise its supervisory jurisdiction in those matters over which the intermediary courts of appeal have jurisdiction unless and until all relief in those courts has first been exhausted. See, Sections 10, 29, and 30 of Article VII of the Constitution of 1921 [LSA] as amended by Act 561 of 1958, and effective July 1, 1960, and particularly that portion of Section 29 providing: `Each court of appeal has supervisory jurisdiction, subject to the general supervisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, over all inferior courts in all cases in which an appeal would lie to the court of appeal.'
"All rights are reserved to applicant to apply to the proper Court of Appeal for appropriate relief."
Application for such writs was subsequently made to this court, and pursuant to our order the record has been transmitted and lodged with us and the matter submitted for our consideration. Briefly stated, the question presented is: Does a court having jurisdiction of the parents in an action for a divorce and/or separation, have jurisdiction of their minor children for the purpose of awarding custody thereof, although the children have been removed from the state by one of the parents and were not present in the State of Louisiana at the time of the institution of the action or at any time thereafter? Before answering this question, we may observe there is no question of the court's jurisdiction of the parties litigant, or of plaintiff's action for a separation, or of defendant's reconventional demand for a divorce, for during a period exceeding three years following their marriage, plaintiff and defendant lived together as man and wife in Bossier Parish, Louisiana. Moreover, on answering plaintiff's demands, defendant reconvened for a divorce and prayed he be granted the custody of the children, and thus submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court.
From our review of the record and consideration of the authorities cited by the parties in support of their respective contentions, we have arrived at the conclusion *353 that the question posed must be answered in the affirmative and that the trial court's action in declining jurisdiction of the minors and refusal to make an award of custody was erroneous. Minor children have no domicile other than that of the parents. LSA-C.C. art. 39. In Person v. Person, 172 La. 740, 135 So. 225, 227, the question of jurisdiction of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans to make an award of the custody of three minor children was given consideration. There, it appears that the defendant, after having been granted, by ex parte order, the temporary custody of the children, removed them to the State of Illinois, where two of the children, issue of the marriage, were placed with their grandmother, and the third, an adopted child, in a convent. In holding that the court had jurisdiction over the children and the authority to make an award, it was there stated:
"When once a person's domicile is shown to be at a given place, it is presumed to exist at that place until a change is made to appear, unless it appears that the person has forfeited his domicile in this state by a voluntary absence from the state for a period of two years. Succession of Simmons, 109 La. 1095, 34 So. 101; Kinder v. Scharff, 125 La. 594, 51 So. 654; Civ. Code, art. 46. The domicile of the father, who has been awarded the care and custody of his children, whether in a proceeding for separation from bed and board or in one for divorce, is the domicile of the children. 19 C.J. 410. In this case, it does not appear that there has been a change in the domicile of the father, nor does it appear that plaintiff had voluntarily absented himself from the state for a period of two years. To hold that he had would be to base the finding on conjecture. He was certainly, for instance, present in New Orleans, in May, 1930, when he made affidavit to the petition for divorce. Under the law applicable to the facts in the record, the children must be regarded as being temporarily absent from the state when the judgment below was rendered."
The general rule is well established in the jurisprudence that where the jurisdiction of a person or of the res has once attached, it is not defeated by a removal of the person or the res beyond the jurisdiction of the court. Lukianoff v. Lukianoff, 166 La. 219, 116 So. 890. In the cited case, after citation had been served personally on the defendant, plaintiff obtained a judgment of separation from bed and board in Caddo Parish. Both parties subsequently became residents of New York.
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122 So. 2d 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-graves-lactapp-1960.