In re State ex rel. Toler

261 So. 2d 659
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 1972
DocketNo. 3894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 261 So. 2d 659 (In re State ex rel. Toler) 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.

Bluebook
In re State ex rel. Toler, 261 So. 2d 659 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

HOOD, Judge.

Dr. William F. Toler has appealed from a judgment of the trial court decreeing his six minor children to be neglected and placing them in the care and custody of the Louisiana State Department of Public Welfare.

The principal issues presented are whether the evidence establishes that the children are “neglected,” as that term is used in LSA-R.S. 13:1569 and 1570, and whether the proof warrants the removal of the children from the custody of their father.

Dr. Toler, a prominent dentist who practices in Opelousas, is the father of seven children. His oldest child is married, but the remaining six children are minors, and on February 6, 1972, they lived with their father in the latter’s spacious home located in or near Washington, a few miles north of Opelousas, Louisiana. Toler’s first wife, the mother of these children, died about four years ago. He remarried after her death, but his second marriage terminated in a divorce.

On Sunday evening, February 6, 1972, the doctor’s 12-year old son, Frankie, refused to come into the house or to quit throwing rocks at the side of the building when instructed to do so by his father. Dr. Toler thereupon picked up his fully loaded pistol, and after removing a safety attachment from it, he walked out of the house into a carport and fired the pistol into the air. The bullet struck the ceiling of the carport. The doctor explains that the shot was fired because he felt that the loud noise would cause Frankie to come back into the house. The noise, however, did not have that effect. Frankie ran away from the house when his father emerged from it with a pistol, and after the shot was fired the boy proceeded approximately a mile to the home of a family friend, Charles Olivier, to whom he reported the incident. Olivier then contacted the sheriff’s office and the district judge.

About four hours after the shooting occurred, or about midnight, the district judge and two deputy sheriffs went to Dr. Toler’s home to investigate the reported shooting and to talk to the doctor. As a result of that visit, the district judge decided to remove the three minor boys from the custody of the father. The judge, while in the doctor’s residence, telephoned a local priest and arranged for Dr. Toler to go immediately to the priest’s home. The doctor thereupon voluntarily went to the priest’s home and he spent the rest of the night there.

On the following morning, February 7, the trial judge issued an ex parte order decreeing that all six of the minor children were “made wards of the Court and are taken into its protective custody;” that the “temporary care and immediate physical possession” of the three minor sons of Dr. Toler was granted to Charles Olivier; and that Dr. Toler was awarded the “temporary care and immediate physical possession” of his three minor daughters.

The three boys were taken to the home of Charles Olivier that night, and they have not been returned to the custody of Dr. Toler since that time. The doctor’s three minor daughters remained in his home for four or five days after that date.

[661]*661On Thursday evening, February 10, Dr. Toler’s 14 year-old daughter, Francezica, ran away from home after being told by her father to take a bath. This was reported to the sheriff’s office, and two or three patrols were dispatched to search for the girl. The trial judge, upon being notified of this occurrence, again went to the Toler home with a deputy sheriff about 1:30 A.M. The judge stated that he went “because of concern that the father’s condition had become dangerous,” that he found Dr. Toler “unusually excited,” and that he “became concerned as to whether he (Dr. Toler) would maintain his control throughout the night.” Dr. Toler talked to his attorney by telephone while the trial judge was there, and after doing so he agreed “to go sit up with the desk sergeant at the Washington Police Station for the rest of the night.” The daughter, France-zica, was found and returned to the Toler home later that day.

On Friday, February 11, the trial judge issued another ex parte order, rescinding and revoking the previous order which had been issued on February 7, and decreeing that the temporary and detentive care of all six of Dr. Toler’s minor children was awarded to the Louisiana State Department of Welfare, all pending further orders of the court. The three girls thereupon were removed from their father’s custody and have not been returned to the Toler home since that date.

The trial judge promptly scheduled and held a hearing on the issue of whether the six children should be decreed to be neglected under the provision of LSA-R.S. 13:1561 et seq. The hearing was held on February 11 and on February 15, 1972. Dr. Toler and his two attorneys were present at, and they actively participated in, that hearing.

At the conclusion of the trial, the trial judge concluded that “the said juveniles are within the purview of the statute as neglected children and are in need of the protection of the State.” He thereupon rendered judgment on February 16, 1972, decreeing that all six of Dr. Toler’s minor children were “within the purview of R.S. 13:1561-1580, and are neglected children and otherwise in need of the protection of the State, and their care and custody are awarded to the Louisiana State Department of Public Welfare, all subject to further orders of this court.” Dr. Toler has appealed from that judgment.

The law is settled that the natural parent has a superior right to the custody of his child, but that this right must yield to the paramount right of the State to deprive him of that custody in the event he is found to be morally, mentally or otherwise unfit or incapable of caring for the child, or if the welfare of the child requires it, or if it is shown that the parent would likely subject the child to neglect or bad influences. LSA-C.C. arts. 26 and 215 et seq.; In re State ex rel. Thoman, 253 La. 496, 218 So.2d 571 (1969); State ex rel. Paul v. Department of Public Welfare, 170 So.2d 549 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1965).

There is a presumption that the welfare and best interest of the child will be served by reuniting him with his natural parents, and the courts are reluctant to interfere with this parental right to custody, except under exceptional circumstances. The burden is on the party resisting the parent’s demand for custody to show that the latter is disqualified or unfit, or that it would be detrimental to the child’s welfare to place him under the care of the parent. Lindsay v. Finch, 240 So.2d 405 (La.App. 2 Cir. 1970); State ex rel. Lombardo v. Miller, 232 La. 617, 94 So.2d 888 (1957); State ex rel. Paul v. Department of Public Welfare, supra.

LSA-R.S. 13:1561-1592 vests jurisdiction in the juvenile court to decree a child to be a “neglected child” or a “delinquent child.” Our concern here is whether the six Toler children should be decreed to be neglected children within the meaning of those statutes. A “neglected child” is de[662]*662fined in LSA-R.S. 13:1569 and 1570 as a child:

“(1) Whose parent or other person legally responsible for the care and support of such child neglects or refuses, when able to do so, to provide proper or necessary support, education as required by law, or medical, surgical or other care necessary for his well-being; or who is abandoned by his parent or other custodian ; or who is otherwise without proper care, custody, or support.
“(2) Whose occupation, behavior, environment or associations are injurious to his welfare.”

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Related

State, in Interest of Toler
263 So. 2d 888 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
261 So. 2d 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-state-ex-rel-toler-lactapp-1972.