Hackett v. Hackett

146 N.E.2d 477, 77 Ohio Law. Abs. 98, 4 Ohio Op. 2d 245, 1957 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 251
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 15, 1957
DocketNo. 49584
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 146 N.E.2d 477 (Hackett v. Hackett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hackett v. Hackett, 146 N.E.2d 477, 77 Ohio Law. Abs. 98, 4 Ohio Op. 2d 245, 1957 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 251 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

OPINION

By ALEXANDER, J.

On motion to show cause filed by defendant-father against plaintiff-mother.

The facts are not in dispute. The mother, a non-Catholic, and the father, a Catholic, were married in the Catholic Church after executing an ante-nuptial agreement providing that “all children born issue of the marriage shall attend the Catholic school and be brought up in the Catholic faith.” One child was born and duly baptized in the Catholic Church.

[99]*99Soon thereafter the mother changed her mind and sought exit from her ante-nuptial agreement. Release was refused. As she nursed her child she apparently nursed also a determination to repudiate her agreement and by the time the child had reached five she was making no secret of her intentions. A few months later she left the matrimonial dwelling, taking the child with her. She retained counsel and executed a separation agreement which, among other things, awarded the non-Catholic mother custody of the child and provided the child was to attend a certain Catholic school previously approved by the mother.

Thereafter the parties were divorced in this court, without contest, and the separation agreement, though not approved by the Court, was, in compliance with the terms thereof, made a part of the decree.

The mother duly entered the child in the Catholic school where she completed the first grade. When it came time to enter the child in the second grade, instead of taking the child back to the same school, the mother entered her in a public school. Thereupon the father filed this motion, calling upon the court, among other things, to require the mother to show cause why she should not be punished for contempt of court for violating the court order embodying the agreement that the child attend the Catholic school.

The mother appeared and defended on the ground that this provision of both the ante-and post-nuptial contracts is void, and hence that portion of the court order reiterating same is not enforceable by the court. Whether this contention is correct is the only issue before the court at this time.

The father’s counsel has argued orally and in briefs with persuasive skill and impressive learning in behalf of the validity of this kind of contract and court order, and very effectively in behalf of his client who happens to be not only an able and popular member of the bar of this court, but also the nephew of the distinguished Roman Catholic prelate who performed his marriage ceremony.

However, we are constrained to hold that the court does not have the right or the power to enforce the contract the mother has repudiated or the order of which she appears to be in contempt, either by imprisoning her until she sends the child back to the Catholic school or by any other means. Our study of the question has convinced us that the violated portion of the contracts and hence the order embracing same are really void. “Void” means “empty, having no legal force, ineffectual, unenforceable.” It is not the court’s function to pronounce a value judgment upon the contracts, i. e., to decide whether good or evil, right or wrong, wise or unwise, proper or improper.

The Ohio Constitution, Art. I, Sec. 7 reads as follows: ■

“All men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own conscience. No person shall be compelled to attend, erect, or support any place of worship, or maintain any form of worship, against his consent; and no preference shall be given, by law, to any religious society; nor shall any interference with the rights of conscience be permitted. . . .”

[100]*100The Catholic father very understandably insists upon the child’s attendance at the Catholic school because there the child is nurtured in and prepared for the Catholic form of worship. Now it seems a school must have scholars as well as dollars. Hence it must be concluded that when the father pays the child’s tuition he supports and maintains the Catholic school and the Catholic faith. And that when the mother sends the child to this school she too supports and maintains the Catholic school and the Catholic faith. Only if the school were to abandon every vestige of Catholicism would these conclusions appear to be untrue.

Regardless of what the mother assented to or solemnly promised, if the court were to compel her now, viet armis or otherwise, to keep her promise, that would appear to be compelling her to support or maintain a certain “form of worship, against her consent.” Moreover, that would be an unpermitted “interference with her rights of conscience.” And these are among the very things which no person, not even a devout communicant, may lawfully be compelled to do by any person, not even his own church — against his consent.

The Supreme Court of the United States in a celebrated case (McCollum v. Board of Education, 333 U. S. 203, 219, footnote 8), quotes Black, “Essays and Speeches,” 52 (1885): “The manifest object of the men who framed the institutions of this country was to have a State without religion and a Church without politics — that is to say, they meant that one should never be used as an engine for the purpose of the other. . . . For that reason they built up a wall of complete and perfect partition between the two.” Surely it would be regarded as using the State “as an engine for the purpose of the” Church to call upon the authority and power of the State to coerce the mother to send the child against her consent to any school extolling the tenets of any religion. It would be breaching that “wall of complete and perfect partition” erected for the benefit and protection of the Church as well as of the State.

The father “concedes that the welfare of the child is the determining factor.” But the court is not deciding the welfare issue at this time, but only the question of the court’s power to enforce the contracts and order, which of course depends upon the legal validity thereof. “A child’s interest in its temporal welfare will be protected by the law if its parents neglect to protect it; hence, it is appropriate to speak of a child’s right to its temporal welfare. On the other hand, under the mandate of separation of church and state, if the child’s' religious welfare is neglected the state may not intervene to protect it. A judge convinced that a child will die if it does not receive an immediate blood transfusion can constitutionally direct the giving of the transfusion over the parent’s objection. A judge equally convinced that the parent’s refusal to baptize his dying child will deprive the child of eternal salvation is constitutionally without power to take any legal action. It serves no useful purpose to speak of a legal right which the Constitution prohibits the state from recognizing or enforcing.” (Pfeifer, p. 354. See below.)

Just in case we have misconstrued the Constitution, and it be propounded that it doesn’t really mean what it says, we have sought enlightenment beyond the properly partisan briefs of counsel in case at [101]*101bar, and believe we have found it in three collations of authorities each of which appears to be free from partisanship, bias or prejudice.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.E.2d 477, 77 Ohio Law. Abs. 98, 4 Ohio Op. 2d 245, 1957 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackett-v-hackett-ohctcompllucas-1957.