In re Guardianship of Klein

70 N.W. 64, 95 Wis. 246, 1897 Wisc. LEXIS 175
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 70 N.W. 64 (In re Guardianship of Klein) 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 Guardianship of Klein, 70 N.W. 64, 95 Wis. 246, 1897 Wisc. LEXIS 175 (Wis. 1897).

Opinion

Pinnev, J.

1. The proceedings before the county judge of Sheboygan county, by which Nicholas Klein was deprived of the custody of his infant daughter, Gertrude, and she ivas given into the custody of Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas, her maternal grandparents, and the succeeding orders, made by said county judge, changing such custody (1) to Mr. and Mrs. Blenski and (2) to Mrs. Gertrude Brosey, did not constitute any valid objection to the jurisdiction of the circuit court to hear and determine the present petition. The statute under which the proceedings before the county judge were had (S. & B. Ann. Stats, sec. 45875) provides that,. [250]*250“ whenever proper affidavit shall be made before any county or municipal judge, in any county in the state, that the physical or moral welfare of any child in such county is seriously endangered by the neglect, abuse, or the vicious or immoral habits or associations of its parents, or parent, guardian, or by any person having the custody of such child, or that the physical or moral welfare of any such child is seriously endangered by the inability, refusal or neglect of such parents, parent or guardian or custodian to properly care for such child, it shall be the duty of such county or municipal judge to summon witnesses as to the facts set forth in such affidavit; and also such parents or parent, guardian or custodian of such child; and if the proofs be sufficient to establish the facts set forth in such affidavit, and to warrant public interference with the custody of such child, it shall be the duty of such judge to cause such child to be removed from the custody of such parents or parent, guardian or custodian, and provide with a home, or such place for safe keeping and provision of such child as may be available, and in his judgment most suitable; ” and declares that it shall be unlawful for said parents or parent, guardian or ■custodian to interfere with or remove such child from the place so provided, without the consent of such county or municipal judge;” and it also provides that it shall be a penal offense for any person to entice any child away from the place provided for it, or to interfere in any manner whatever with the care, custody, control, personal liberty, or education of any child so removed from its parents, etc. This statute is founded upon the police power of the state,— upon “ the political necessity and duty of the sovereignty to make provision for the care of subjects or citizens unable for any cause to take care of themselves, and destitute of other •care, too long recognized in all civilized countries, and too well established under the state governments of this country, to be an open question.” Milwaukee Industrial School v. Mil[251]*251waukee Co. 40 Wis. 831. The statute iu question is similar in its purposes, and justifiable on the ¡same grounds, as the statute held valid in that case. The deprivation of custody, by reason of the order made under it, is not permanent; but, when a parent or guardian may be able to show that the ground of deprivation no longer exists, and that he is not an unsuitable person for the custody of the child, his right to it will prevail, and the order of the judge, which for the time being precludes him from such custody, should be regarded as having served its purpose, and he will be restored to the custody of the child, by habeas eorjpus or other appropriate remedy.

The proceeding before the county judge, although judicial in its character, was before him as a magistrate, and was not one in any court known to the law. It was, therefore, no bar to the appointment of the guardian by the circuit court, in the proper exercise of its general equity jurisdiction over infants. In addition to appointing guardians, the court of equity will, in a proper case, and to promote the highest welfare of the infant, where there is already a guardian, natural or legal, interfere, by controlling the person of the infant, and by removing it personally from the custody of its natural or legal guardian, even from the custody of its own parents ” (3 Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. § 1307); and the court will not only remove guardians appointed by its own authority, but it will remove testamentary or statute guardians or custodians, whenever a sufficient cause can be shown for such purpose, and whenever it appears that the guardian is abusing his trust, or it may take the child from one custodian and give it to another (2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 1339; 2 Beach, Mod. Eq, Jur. § 1026; Glasscott v. Warner, 20 Wis. 654). The circuit courts, by sec. 8, art. YII, of the constitution, took the original jurisdiction possessed by courts of chancery, and this included the jurisdiction in question, which has not since been prohibited by law; and hence the jurisdiction. [252]*252conferred upon the county court by R. S. secs. 3962-3964, is concurrent with that of the circuit court upon the same subject. The power of a court of equity to remove guardians or custodians of infants is sustained by numerous well-considered cases. Wilcox v. Wilcox, 14 N. Y. 575; Cowls v. Cowls, 8 Ill. 435; Disbrow v. Henshaw, 8 Cow. 349; People ex rel. Johnson v. Erbert, 17 Abb. Pr. 395; Hill v. Hill, 49 Md. 450; Bowles v. Dixon, 32 Ark. 92. In ITochheimer, Custody of Infants, § 15, the entire subject is well considered, with numerous citations of adjudged cases. The application for adoption in the county court was made by the petitioner and his wife, and the county court denied it, because the father, from whose custody the infant had been taken under the previous order of the county judge, withdrew his consent. The application to the county judge by Mrs. Brosey,. to be made the custodian under sec. 45875, S. & B. Ann. Stats., was made November 20, and granted November 22, 1894, while the infant was in the custody of the petitioner, where she has since remained. As already observed, the proceeding under that section was not in any court, but a mere police proceeding before the judge as a magistrate. There was no conflict between courts having concurrent jurisdiction to appoint a guardian, and no interference by one court with another of matter already within the appropriate jurisdiction of another court, within the rule stated in Cardinal v. Eau Claire L. Co. 75 Wis. 404, and cases there cited. The circuit court, by virtue of its inherent jurisdiction in equity over infants, and its supervisory jurisdiction over inferior courts and tribunals, may, in a proper case, remove a guardian regularly appointed, even by the county court. In Willis v. Fox, 25 Wis. 646, it was said that a court of equity should not exercise its jurisdiction, except in extraordinary cases, or when some special reasons are shown to exist why the matter should be withdrawn from the probate court.” In Batchelder v. Batchelder, 20 Wis. 452, and Meyer v. Garth[253]*253waite, 92 Wis. 571, 573, the court has held that the circuit court should decline to take jurisdiction, even of a cause of action which is within its general equity jurisdiction, notwithstanding the question of jurisdiction has been waived by omitting to raise it by answer or demurrer. We think that the rule laid down in these cases is correct, as a matter ■of practice and sound policy, and should not be departed from, particularly as appeals from orders made by the •county courts are quite liberally allowed.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W. 64, 95 Wis. 246, 1897 Wisc. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-klein-wis-1897.