In re Alley

182 N.W. 360, 174 Wis. 85, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 114
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 182 N.W. 360 (In re Alley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Alley, 182 N.W. 360, 174 Wis. 85, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 114 (Wis. 1921).

Opinion

Rosenberry, J.

It is contended by the appellant that the evidence does not sustain the findings and that the court was therefore in error in ordering the child committed to the Wisconsin industrial school for boys. In our consideration of this matter we are, of course, limited to the matters appearing of record. From the record the following facts appear, stating them most favorably for the state: Arnold was absent during the school year fifty-seven and one-half days, it not appearing whether the absences were excused or unexcused. His class standings were poor, the grades running, beginning with the highest, A, B, C, D, and E. He received two Cs and six Ds. It appeared that the absences were usually upon Friday and were with the consent of the father, and that he was permitted to be absent for the purpose of working in order to earn money with which to buy himself clothes. There was a school picnic to which Arnold was not invited. Against the protest of the teacher he accompanied the children. While on the way to the picnic grounds some of the boys left the party to get a drink of water. Arnold joined this party and had in his possession some dynamite caps and some fuse. He attached a fuse to one cap and exploded it, as he says, for the purpose of frightening the party. A fuse was attached to a second cap, lighted, and then thrown out, and was picked up by the son of the complainant. It exploded in his hand, producing serious injuries. Arnold’s mother died in 1914, leaving him and five other children. Arnold’s grandfather is also a member of the family. After the death of the mother the family was cared for by the daughters. The father is a common laborer and at the time of the mother’s death was receiving $1.50 [88]*88a day, which was just sufficient to enable him to provide for his family. It appears that the boy minds his father and the father offered to see, if the boy was put on probation, that he attended school. It further appeared that the father punished the boy for swearing and for skipping school. There is no evidence that he was guilty of any other form of delinquency. It appeared upon cross-examination that Arnold thought if he frightened the picnic party away he would be able to steal their lunch. It appeared also that he has at times stayed around the railroad tracks, climbing on cars, but after the injury of another boy had quit that practice. It appears that the complaint was prompted by the conduct of Arnold which resulted in the injuries sustained by the Krakau child.

While it is said in Jensen v. Jensen, 168 Wis. 502, 170 N. W. 735, that the paramount right of the father to the custody of his children has become the merest prima facie right, which yields readily when it is shown not to be for the best interests of the child, that language must be understood in connection with the facts in that case. There was a contest between the father and the mother as to the custody of an infant girl Dorothy, four and one-half years of age. The question here involved and in most cases of child delinquency is whether or not the interest of the child will be promoted by taking the child out of the family and placing it in a public institution, which is a question fundamentally different from that involved in the Jensen Case. Sec. 3964, Stats., declares:

“The father of the minor, if living, and in case of his death the mother, being themselves respectively competent to transact their own business and not otherwise unsuitable, shall be entitled to the custody of the person and estate of the minor, and to the care of his education.”

This statute has not been repealed and the rights preserved to the father and mother under that section still remain, and they are substantial rights.

[89]*89When the court finds any child to be delinquent under sec. 48.08, Stats., it may by order place the child on probation or cause the child to be placed in a suitable family home or institution, subject to the friendly supervision of the probation officer, or commit the child to an industrial school for boys and girls respectively. By sub. (b), sec. 48.01, a delinquent child includes any boy under the age of seventeen years who violates any law of this state the penalty for which is not imprisonment in the state prison, or who is incorrigible, or who is growing up in idleness or crime, or who loafs or congregates with groups or gangs of other boys about any railroad yard or tracks, or who habitually uses any vulgar or profane language, or who is habitually truant or habitually insubordinate in any school.

In this case the court found that Arnold was habitually truant and incorrigible and upon that finding holds that he is delinquent within the meaning of sec. 48.01, and by the judgment of the court the father is deprived of the care and custody of his child, the child is taken out of the family and sent to a public institution. Sec. 40.73,-which defines compulsory school attendance, contains the following provision:

“Any person who shall be proceeded against under the provisions of this subsection may prove in defense that he is unable to compel the child under his control to attend school or to work, and he shall be thereupon discharged from liability, and such child shall be proceeded against as incorrigible, or otherwise, according to- law, and in case of commitment, if the parents or. person having control of such child desire it, such child shall be committed to a school or association controlled by persons of the same religious faith as such child, which is willing and able to receive and maintain it without compensation from the public treasury.”

The law contemplates that the parent shall first be proceeded against if for any reason a child within his care and custody does not comply with the law relating to compulsory school attendance. There is no evidence in this case that the truant officer, the school ■authorities, or any one else had [90]*90called the attention of the father of Arnold to the fact that he was not attending school, and the evidence does show that when he was absent he was at work, at least a part of the time. The statute does not define the words “habitually truant.” We think the evidence comes far short in this case of establishing the sort of “habitual truancy” upon which a finding of delinquency may be based. It must be borne in mind that the habitual truancy which amounts to delinquency is a refusal to attend school in defiance of parental authority. It is the intention and purpose of the statute that the child shall not be held a truant except in cases where the parent is unable to compel compliance by his child with the provisions of the compulsory school attendance law. The child Arnold in this case, if he can properly be said to be a truant at all, which is very doubtful in view of the fact that his absence was consented to by his father, was certainly far from being habitually truant within the meaning of sec.-48.01.

It may well be that there are parents in the state of Wisconsin who do not fully understand the purpose and objects of our recent legislation in regard to the education, protection, and reformation of children and that such legislation imposes upon parents a positive duty and a much higher obligation than that under which many parents suppose themselves to labor. The parent no longer has the right to decide whether his child shall attend school or work; the law determines that for 'him.

It is not the intent and purpose of the statute to visit upon the child a penalty for the neglect of his parent.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.W. 360, 174 Wis. 85, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-alley-wis-1921.