In re Coons

20 Ohio C.C. 47
CourtHancock Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ohio C.C. 47 (In re Coons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hancock Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Coons, 20 Ohio C.C. 47 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Norris, J,

Marjorie Coons, a child about seven years old, is the daughter of the relator, William Y. Coons, and his wife, Ada Coons, now deceased. The respondent, Mary L. Reigle,is the mother of Ada Coons and the grandmother of the child Marjorie.

On May 19th, 1894, Ada Coons, by the decree of the court of common pleas of this county, was because of the aggressions of her husband, adjudged to be divorced from the relator,and in the same decree she was awarded the care, custody and control of said child, Marjorie, and relator was enjoined from interfering with said custody and control until the further order of that court. The mother and child thereafter became members of the family of respondent and so remained up to the--day of April, 1898, when' Ada Coons, the mother of Marjorie,died. Since the death of its mother the child has remained, and still is in the custody and under the care of its grandmother, the respondent, who relator says restrains said child without authority, and by force deprives relator of its possession. As the child’s father he claims its custody and control and the possession of its person, and seeks his remedy by habeas corpus.

Of the writ due return is made. Respondent brings the child into court, and makes answer that she has care of said child, her grandchild, and denies that she unlawfully keeps the child; she denies that relator has legal or moral right to have its custody, and pleads the decree in divorce, and that the custody was awarded to the wife, her daughter, and alleges that at the time of the decree the child was abandoned by its father, who became a stranger to it. That the child is delicate and afflicted with curvature of the spine and has been so afflicted since it became a member of her family. That from that time to this she has cared for it [49]*49and ministered to its wants and necessities, and that under her ,,care, and the proper and sufficient treatment which she has afforded, and still affords it, the child is rapidly approaching entire recovery. That relator and his relatives are strangers to the child, and that to take her from her present home and place her with those with whom she is not acquainted will retard her recovery and not be to her benefit.

It is pleaded in the answer that this court has no jurisdiction to determine the custody of the child, That the court of common pleas retains jurisdiction,that its award of said custody to (he mother, being a continuing order, the modification of it must be sought in the court that made it.

The reply denies abandonment of the child, and denies that to change its custodian and its present abode will endanger its life or retard its recovery. These issues were submitted with the evidence.

It appears beyond any doubt that relator and respondent are each of them eminently proper persons to have the custody of this child,and that in the control of either, she would receive every care which her necessities might require, or her condition suggest. So that the question of fitness or unfitness of either of the parties does not arise in this controversy. It is urged that the right of relator to the custody of this-child is a right that was adjudicated by the decree in the divorce proceeding in the court of common pleas; that having determined as between the husband and wife, and having awarded the custody to the wife, the order as to the child is continuing and vital; and that the rights of relator are by it held suspended in that court, and can only be rehabilitated by the modification of that order. That the position of the wife under that order was such as to enable her to name a testamentary guardian; and having done this, and chosen respondent as such guardian, by her last will, the custody of the mother passed unabated to respondent by that intrument, And that such being the case, the rights of these parties to the custody of this child are not a subject of inquiry in a proceediung of this character in this court.

One lawfully entitled to the custody of another, of which custody he is unlawfully deprived, may prosecute a writ of [50]*50habeas corpus to inquire into the cause of such deprivation. So, if this court may have jurisdiction of the controversy, the rights of the parties can be fully adjudicated in this proceeding. That the mother of this child did by her last will, in writing, name and appoint the respondent the guardianes not a reason that the father should be denied its custody. The situation contemplated by section 6266, of the Revised Statutes, which provides for the appointment of a guardian of a minor child by will, is not present in the case at bar. The father is not dead nor gone to parts unknown. If abandonment of the child by the father, could be read into the section, as a condition under which the testamentary appointment could be made; the evidence does not verify the claim that the child was or has been forsaken, renounced or rejected by him. He does not appear to have voluntarily yielded control,even to the mother. The interposition of the.court of common pleas and its order was required to compel him to relinquish his custody; and this proceeding would negative the assertion that he refuses its custody and care. So that the will of Ada Coons, the mother, purporting to make respondent the guardian of this child, carries with it no weight in this inquiry, and does not create testamentary guardianship. The very fact that the order made by the court of common pleas as to the custody of the child, is a continuing order, retaining the child in the arms of the law as between the parties to that divorce proceeding, makes untenable the proposition that the decree thus awarding custody conferred authority upon the mother that might be cast by will. However that court may have dealt with the rights of the husband, her rights under that decree insofar as concerns this child, died’ with her.

And this now brings us to the consideration of the decree of the court of common pleas awarding the custody of the child to the mother, “until the further order of this court”, says the decree, and the potency and effect of that decree when applied to the rights of the parties here.- Whatever may have been its vitality, and however it may have concluded the parties to it as a continuiung order, reserving in the court that made it the power to recall it, to set it aside, or to modify it and make other disposition of the person of [51]*51this little girl — what relation do these parties bear to it; how far does it conclude them, or either of them, in this proceeding.

Ada Coons, the mother of this child, and plaintiff in the action for divorce in which the decree was made giving to her its custody, is dead; relator was the defendant against whom the order was made. The respondent in this proceeding was not a party to that case; her rights were not created by that decree, nor by authority springing from it, and if she has rights, they are not conluded by it. The effect of that decree was not to extinguish the rights of the father, but only to make them subservient to the rights of the mother. That order disposed of the custody of the child only as between the parties to that suit; and the mother’s right to its custody was made by order of that court superior to the father’s right to its custody.

Conditions have arisen when the welfare of the child required it, and the reported cases are many, where, by action of the court, the rights of a.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio C.C. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-coons-ohcircthancock-1899.