Juan v. Wallace

57 S.W.3d 365, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1835
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 2001
DocketNo. 23290
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 S.W.3d 365 (Juan v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Juan v. Wallace, 57 S.W.3d 365, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1835 (Mo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

A petition for habeas corpus was filed in this court by the natural father (“Petitioner”) of R.C.P., a male, then six (6) years of age, who Petitioner alleged was presently in the physical custody of his maternal grandfather (“Respondent Gulick”) and was being illegally restrained from the custody of Petitioner. The petition also sought an order directed to Leon Wallace (“Respondent Wallace”), juvenile officer for Jasper County, Missouri, to release R.C.P. to Petitioner. Petitioner’s claim to legal custody was based upon a judgment rendered in the State of Louisiana on July 30, 1999, granting him permanent and sole custody of the minor.

On March 28, 2000, this court, deeming the allegations of Petitioner’s petition sufficient for further inquiry, issued its writ and ordered both respondents, without producing the person of R.C.P. until such time as the same may be ordered by the Court, to answer the petition. On April 5, 2000, Respondent Wallace filed his answer. On April 10, 2000, a Master was appointed to hear all evidence relating to the issues in this proceeding and to prepare a report upon matters submitted by the order, including findings of fact and conclusions of law. On April 13, 2000, Respondent Gulick filed his answer to the petition.

The facts leading to the filing of the petition for habeas corpus are set forth in the report of the Master as follows:

[R.C.P.] (child) is the son of petitioner and Glenda Michelle Perry. Respondent Gulick is the father of Glenda Michelle Perry and is the maternal grandfather of the child. Respondent Wallace is the Juvenile Officer of Jasper County, Missouri.
The child was born out of wedlock in Slidell, Louisiana, while both parents were residents of Louisiana. The moth[369]*369er’s then husband was named on the birth certificate as the father of the child; but petitioner is the father, and the former husband has not participated in the custody proceedings.
At the time of the birth, petitioner and the mother were not living together; petitioner was living in New Orleans, and the mother was living in Metairie. Shortly after the birth, the mother moved into petitioner’s apartment with him.
After about three months, she moved to Joplin, Missouri, and then went back to Louisiana in May of 1994. She stayed intermittently with petitioner until she moved to her own apartment in the summer of 1995. At some time thereafter, she returned to Joplin and stayed with respondent until the early part of 1996. She then returned to Louisiana and stayed with petitioner for four or five weeks. In February of 1996, she again returned to Joplin to stay until she moved to Bartlesville, Oklahoma, in October of 1996, where she became a resident. She remained in Oklahoma until she went to Louisiana in September of 1997, for a vacation and to visit her older son who was in the custody of her former husband’s mother. While there, she was arrested in Jefferson Parish on October 1, 1997, on a warrant issued in Orleans Parish. While in a cell in Jefferson Parish, she called petitioner and asked him to pick up the child who was at a motel with a female friend of the mother. The mother was released from jail on October 28, 1997, when the charge of stealing a truck that was either petitioner’s or under his control, was dropped. She stayed at petitioner’s house for three or four days until she called the police, who took her to a shelter where she and the child were put on a bus to Bartlesville. During the foregoing periods and until March of 1998, the mother had the actual custody of the child except for four weeks when she was in jail in Louisiana and for about six weeks when the Oklahoma authorities had custody of the child.
On March 27, 1998, an Oklahoma court ordered the child returned to Louisiana where petitioner had temporary custody under a court order. The whereabouts of the mother from May until July of 1998, is not clear, although she apparently was traveling around the country. In July of 1998, she came to New Orleans, and while visiting the child, on or about July 28,1998, she took the child without petitioner’s knowledge or consent and disappeared. On July 28, 1998, the Louisiana court issued a civil warrant for the arrest of the mother. Petitioner later received a telephone call that the mother and the child were in Neodesha, Kansas. He notified the police there and they arrested the mother on January 17, 1999. The police notified petitioner that she had been arrested and that they had the child in custody. The next day, petitioner told them that he would come there and pick up the child, but they told him that the grandfather (respondent) had picked up the child and taken him to Joplin. Petitioner came to Missouri to get the child, but was unable to do so. The child has remained in respondent’s physical custody since January 17,1999.
On October 15,1997, while the mother was in jail in New Orleans on the charge of stealing the truck, petitioner filed in the District Court of St. Bernard Parish, a petition to establish paternity, filiation, and for custody of the child. That court, after a hearing on November 7, 1997, at which the mother did not appear, placed the temporary custody of the child with petitioner.
[370]*370While the mother and the child were in Bartlesville, petitioner initiated a ha-beas corpus proceeding in Washington County, Oklahoma. That court held a hearing on February 12, 1998, at which petitioner appeared in person and by attorney, and the mother appeared in person without an attorney. On March 27,1998, at another hearing in which the mother was represented by an attorney, the court found that the Louisiana court had jurisdiction under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UC-CJA), and ordered the child returned to Louisiana and held in custody by the authorities there pending a hearing in the Louisiana case.
The Louisiana court granted petitioner temporary custody on April 7, 1998. It held a hearing on July 30, 1999, at which petitioner appeared in person and by his attorney, and the mother appeared in custody and by her attorney, who had been appointed that morning. That court granted petitioner permanent and sole custody, and then stated: “I guess the forum is in Missouri after this, but, we’ll see.... ”
Respondent was not a party to either the Oklahoma case or the Louisiana case, although the record in the Louisiana case on July 30, 1999, reflects that respondent had actual custody of the child.
On January 19, 1999, respondent filed a petition for transfer of custody in the Circuit Court of Jasper County in case no. JU199-26. On that day, the court entered an order temporarily placing the custody of the child in respondent. On August 16,1999, the court dismissed this case for lack of jurisdiction; and on the same day dismissed the consolidated case no. JU199-262 at the request of the juvenile officer, the petitioner in that case.
Petitioner filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in Jasper County Circuit Court case no. CV199-1502CC, which was heard by the Honorable E. Mitchell Hough. Judge Hough signed a judgment on October 18, 1999, finding that Louisiana did not have jurisdiction under the UCCJA, and denying relief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 S.W.3d 365, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 1835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juan-v-wallace-moctapp-2001.