In Re Cruse
This text of 203 So. 2d 893 (In Re Cruse) 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
In re the juveniles Donna CRUSE, Vincent Cruse and Michael Cruse.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Oliver S. Delery, George M. McCulloch, Jr., New Orleans, for Ramona Ollivier, respondent-appellant.
Elmer R. Tapper, Arabi, for appellees.
Salvador L. Licciardi, Chief Juvenile Probation Officer, absent and unrepresented.
Before McBRIDE, HALL and BARNETTE, JJ.
McBRIDE, Judge.
Donna Cruse, Vincent Cruse and Michael Cruse, aged respectively 1, 2 and 3 years, are the illegitimate children of Cecil Monroe Cruse and 17 year old Ramona Louise Ollivier. On May 12, 1967, Salvador L. Licciardi, Chief Juvenile Probation Officer, *894 commenced these proceedings by filing in the Twenty-fifth Judicial District Court for the Parish of St. Bernard a document reading as follows:
"REQUEST OF CUSTODY
"I, Salvador L. Licciardi, recommend to the Court that the three above named children be placed in a foster home through the Helping Hand Society until the trial of Cecil Monroe Cruse.
"Mr. Cruse is awaiting trial for burglary, contributing to the delinquency of juveniles and impersonating an officer.
"Donna Cruse, age 10 months is now living with Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Stopinski at 81 East Claiborne Square, through the Helping Hand Society and the two boys are staying in a room at the K'Teri Motel with their mother and Mr. Cruse.
"All three of the said minors were previously cared for by the Helping Hand Society and were taken to a doctor for examination and their baby shots.
"For the best interest of these children, I strongly recommend that temporary care and custody be given to the Helping Hand Society."
It should be pointed out that the foregoing "Request of Custody" was filed in the Twenty-Fifth Judicial District Court and the order signed pursuant thereto and all subsequent orders, including the motion and order for appeal, carry a caption indicating a proceeding in the district court. Only in the extract of minutes of the court do we find any reference to the court's "acting as a juvenile court" for the Parish of St. Bernard. The district court is clearly without jurisdiction. However, the case is docketed under a number followed by the letter "J", which we assume indicates the juvenile docket, and we think the judge intended to act in his capacity as judge of the Juvenile Court for St. Bernard Parish otherwise the entire proceeding would be stricken wth nullity. State v. LaBorde, 233 La. 556, 97 So.2d 393. It should have been filed in, and all proceedings had in, "The Juvenile Court for the Parish of St. Bernard". Const. art. 7, § 52; R.S. 13:1561.
On May 15, 1967, without a hearing, one of the district court judges, presumably acting as a judge of the Juvenile Court for the Parish of St. Bernard, entered the following order:
"ORDER
"The Court has been informed by Mr. Salvador L. Licciardi, Chief Juvenile Probation Officer, that Miss Ramona Ollivier, mother of Donna Cruse, Vincent Cruse and Michael Cruse is unable to care for her said minor children and the father, Cecil Monroe Cruse is awaiting trial for burglary, contributing to the delinquency of a juvenile and impersonating an officer.
"THEREFORE, The Court is granting temporary care and custody of Donna Cruse, Vincent Cruse and Michael Cruse to the Helping Hand Society and will be placed by them.
"IT IS ORDERED that the minors, Donna Cruse, Vincent Cruse and Michael Cruse is hereby placed in the temporary care and custody of the Helping Hand Society, until further orders of this Court."
From the pleadings we gather that the Helping Hand Society, which the record does not show to be an agency or institution licensed by the State Department of Public Welfare for the placement of children for adoption (see R.S. 9:401), turned custody of the children over to other persons. The child Donna is in the custody of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Stapinski; Vincent is with Mr. and Mrs. Benoit J. Stein; Michael is with Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLanueville, Jr. When and under what authority and circumstances this was done is not shown by the record.
On June 7, 1967, Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Ollivier, the parents of Ramona Louise Ollivier, *895 petitioned the court alleging that they, as grandparents of the children, are financially able and willing to care for them, and prayed for custody and control of the children with leave to take them to the Ollivier home in California. The matter was set down for ex parte hearing at which the Olliviers were represented by their attorney; on June 9, 1967, the judge ordered the minors placed "* * * in the temporary care and custody of Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Ollivier" and "* * * released the Helping Hand Society of the temporary care and custody * * *".
On June 12, 1967 Mr. and Mrs. Stapinski, Mr. and Mrs. Stein and Mr. and Mrs. DeLanueville, Jr. (who seek to adopt the respective child in their possession), filed a joint motion in which they allege it would be to the best interest of said children that a "full" hearing on the matter of their custody be held in order to give movers the right to be represented by counsel and to present evidence on their behalf; they further requested the court to stay the order issued June 9, 1967 which granted custody to the Olliviers. On June 15, 1967 the judge issued an order staying his order of June 9, 1967 and fixed for hearing "the question of custody"; on June 30, 1967 on which date the judge verbally ruled: "In light of the case of State [ex rel. Lott] v. Courtney, [La.App.] 178 Southern 2d 489; State [ex rel. Graham] v. Graham, [173 La. 469] 137 Southern 855, the court will now order the order signed by me on June 9th vacated and set aside."
Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Ollivier, individually, and also on behalf of their minor daughter, Ramona Louise Ollivier, perfected a suspensive appeal from the above rule.
All proceedings in the juvenile court are brought by and in the name of the State, and may be on petition of a probation officer, in the interest of the named juveniles and "shall be entitled `The State of Louisiana in the interest of ________, a child [or children] under seventeen years of age'". R.S. 13:1574. Exceptions to this procedure are adoption cases, which are governed by special statute, and proceedings to have a child decreed abandoned under the provisions of R.S. 9:403.
Since this is an ex parte proceeding initiated by a probation officer of the juvenile court there is no defendant. The parent is required to be served with a copy of the petition and order setting the matter for hearing, and his or her appearance in response thereto is not as defendant but, more correctly, as a respondent. Mr. and Mrs. Ollivier are not parties to this proceeding, can claim no interest herein and possess no right to appeal. The Stapinskis, the Steins and the DeLanuevilles are absolutely without interest and do not occupy the status of appellees herein.
In this case, as in every juvenile court proceeding in the interest of a neglected or delinquent child, the State of Louisiana is the moving party, and the Juvenile Court is the exclusive organ of the State to determine his custody, provided there is a proper adjudication that the child comes within the purview of the court's jurisdiction as defined in R.S. 13:1570.
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