In re Belle

22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113

This text of 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113 (In re Belle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Belle, 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

•Kinkead, J.

This is a proceeding in error from the probate court. Julia C. Belle, mother, brought proceedings in habeas corpus in the probate court to obtain the custody of her child.

The claim is that the probate court of this county was without jurisdiction. The child was in the custody of its paternal grandmother who resided in Athens county. The custody of the child was legally vested in the father by a Missouri court decree in divorce. The father placed the’ child in .the care and control of its grandmother, Catherine Wolfe, the respondent below.

The writ of habeas corpus was directed to the sheriff of Franklin county, who made return that he "served the within named Catherine Wolfe by handing a * * * copy * * * at her home in Jacksonville, Athens county, etc.” * # *

Catherine 'Wolfe, respondent, filed a motion to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction. To obtain jurisdiction over the respondent and child by habeas corpus it is contended that the [114]*114proceeding should have been commenced in Athens county, where both child and respondent resided.

Counsel for respondent in error contends that as habeas corpus is regarded as essentially a civil action (Henderson v. James, 52 O. S. 542), provisions of General Code concerning venue, Tit. 4, Div. 2, ch. 3, apply; that Sections 11268-11276 do not apply, but that Section 11277 governs. The latter section of the Code provides that:

“Every other action must be brought in the county in which a defendant resides or may be summoned, except actions against an executrix, etc.” * * *

We go back to the pages of legal history to obtain light upon the subject.

Section 604 of the original 1851 Code provided that,

“until the Legislature shall otherwise provide this code shall not affect proceedings on habeas corpus, quo warranto, or to assess damages for private property taken for public uses * * * (and other special statutory proceedings enumerated) * * * nor any special statutory remedy' not heretofore obtained by action.
“The design of the code as shown in Section three,” said the codifying commissioners, “and in all its parts, is to furnish one civil action, which shall take the place of all the actions at law, and all suits in equity. There are many proceedings in courts, which are not commenced by any of the actions at law, or by the common law bill in chancery. These proceedings are not ordinary, but special, and the action of the Code does not take their place, or supplant them. It only tabes the place of actions at law and suits in equity.” (Quoted in Ohio Civil Trials, Ch. X-a, Section 289-i, being new matter inserted in the volume after all copies off the press had been consumed.)

Section 605 of the 1851 Code further provided that if a civil action be given by statute, and the mode of proceeding is prescribed, the same was not to be affected by the new code “until the Legislature shall otherwise provide.”

The pertinent question in this historical retrospect is the matter of “the mode of proceeding prescribed” in habeas corpus. A new mode was prescribed by the Code of 1851 for the new [115]*115civil action which it created; any existing remedy was not to be affected by the civil code, unless or “until the Legislature shall otherwise provide.” The Legislature never otherwise provided any other way of commencing habeas corpus than bv issuance of the writ. The civil code of 1851 made provision that rights of action given by it or secured by existing laws were to be prosecuted in the manner by it provided (Section 603 Original Code, 51 O. L., 161), except as provided by Section 604 thereof (51 O. L., 161).

This historical review fully shows that the statutes prescribing the venue and service of summons in the commencement of the ordinary civil action have no application whatever to oroceediugs in habeas corpus

At the time of enactment of the civil code the manner of commencing the extraordinary proceedings in habeas corpus was already regulated and governed by special provision, which has not since been changed or modified.

The act securing the benefit of the extraordinary writ of habeas corpus was enacted February 22, 1811 (29 O. L. 164; 1 S. & C. 681 et'seq.). Section 1 thereof provided,

"that if it be made to appear to the ‘judge’ or ‘judges’ that the person is detained without legal authority it shall be his duty forthwith to allow a writ of, habeas corpus; which shall be issued forthwith by the clerk * * * directed to the proper officer, person or persons who detain such prisoner.”

An amendment to the habeas corpus act was passed February 8, 1847, which added the provision which is now Section 12171, viz.:

"Section 12171. The writ may be served in any county by the sheriff of that or any other county, or by a person deputed by the court or judge.” 45 O. L., 45.

The amendment of 1847 added what is now' Section 12169 and following sections, viz.: Sections 12169 to 12180 inclusive.

The provision found in Section 12170 introduced the remedy as one to be pursued in cases of confinement, or detention by a person not an officer. In other words, since the 1847 amendmenl [116]*116the writ has been recognized as the appropriate remedy in controversies respecting the custody of minor children.

The expression found in 52 O. S. 259, that, "a proceeding in habeas corpus is essentially a civil proceeding and not a criminal proceeding” is of no bearing here. It is not a civil action in the same sense as is the new civil action created by the Code; it is not governed by all the incidents respecting proceedings therein as is the ordinary civil action. Some of the statutes relating to proceedings in the ordinary civil action apply and govern, but not those relating to the commencement and service of the initial process essential to bringing the same.

Habeas corpus is commenced by the filing of a petition and issuance of a writ,

"which may be served in any county, or by a person deputed by the court .or judge. ’5

The contention of counsel for respondent that Section 11277, which provides for the commencement of certain actions in the county which a defendant resides or may be summoned, is not well taken. Nor is the argument of counsel'for the petitioner sound that Section 12171 authorizing the writ .to be served in any county confers juridiction in the probate court of a county where the petitioner resides but in which neither the respondent nor the child resides.

It must be conceded that writs of process properly issued and served constitute the essential steps to confer jurisdiction. The rule is well expressed by Read, J., in Lessee v. Mooreland, 15 Ohio , on p. 444, viz.:

"A court acquires jurisdiction by its own process. If the process of the court be executed upon the person or thing, concerning which the court is to pronounce judgment, jurisdiction is acquired. The writ draws the person or thing within the power of the court. The court once having, by its process, acquired the power to adjudicate upon a person or thing, it has what is called jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-belle-ohctcomplfrankl-1918.