Langan v. Langan

150 F.2d 979, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 189, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2868
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1945
Docket8795
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 150 F.2d 979 (Langan v. Langan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langan v. Langan, 150 F.2d 979, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 189, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2868 (D.C. Cir. 1945).

Opinion

MILLER, Associate Justice.

Appellant initiated a habeas corpus proceeding in the District Court to recover the custody of a minor child, Joan. Her petition alleged unlawful detention of the child by reason of appellee’s disregard of an order of a Maryland court, issued in a habeas corpus proceeding in that State, which awarded custody to appellant. The petition in the present case was granted and the writ issued, but, following a hearing, the writ was discharged and custody was awarded to appellee, the child’s father. On .this appeal appellant says that she and appellee were divorced in 1941 by the decree of a California court; that custody of the minor was then awarded to her; that, disregarding the order of custody, appellee seized the child and disappeared with her; that after a two-year search, appellant found -the child living with appellee in Maryland; that in a habeas corpus proceeding a Maryland court awarded custody to appellant; that one day after the Maryland decree was signed appellee again seized the child and brought her into the District of Columbia.

Assuming the completeness and correctness of this statement, it might appear that the trial court had unwisely and improperly determined issues not presented to it in a dispute between transient nonresidents. 1 But that was not the case. The father of the child is, and has been for some time, a government employee stationed in Washington, D. C.; the child had lived with him and his present wife, just over the District line in Maryland, for approximately a year and a half prior to the hearing. Since eight months prior to the hearing the family has included, also, a baby boy, son of appellee and his present wife. As we .said recently, in another case, this family is in every real sense a member of the District of Columbia community; even though it did not live within its physical limits but, instead, occupied one of the Maryland homes of the Nation’s capital city. 2 In addition, the trial court found that appellee and his family had moved from Maryland at the time of hearing in the present case and were actually residing in the District. Moreover, when jurisdiction is invoked, as it was in the present case, the court acts, not as an arbiter between contesting parents, determining adversary rights in human chattels, but as parens patriae, protecting the child whose custody is in dispute and making its award, solely, according to the interests and welfare of the child. 3 This is true, regardless of the settled or transient character of the parents’ residence in the District, or even of a child abandoned by its parents.

*981 The trial court found, in substance, that the child Joan was born in March, 1933, of the marriage of appellant and appellee; in August, 1938, the Superior Court of California entered a decree of divorce in favor of appellee against appellant; it made the child a ward of the •court, at the expense of appellee, denying custody to both parties; in 1941, appellee consented that the child be put in •appellant’s custody in order to terminate the child’s living in orphanages; appellant is a subject of Great Britain and is subject to deportation; conditions surrounding the parties have changed materially since the entry of the “consent order of custody,” as follows: appellee has remarried, he and his present wife are living a normal life, they are the parents of a baby boy eight months old, the present wife is able, industrious, capable, honest and devoted to both children, and is a proper person to aid appellee in caring for the child Joan; appellee occupies a responsible position in the United States Government and is a proper person to whom to award the custody of the child; appellant falsely claimed, during the trial, that the child was illegitimate and born •out of wedlock; at the trial, appellant testified on one occasion that she had married appellee and on another occasion that she had not married him; at the trial, appellant testified, also, on one occasion that she had never been married to John L. Manners, who she claimed was Joan’s father, and on another occasion she interrupted argument of counsel to state that she been married to John L. Manners; appellant is irresponsible as to her statements and her mental processes are insecure ; she is not a proper person to have the custody of the child; the child Joan is very intelligent, fully capable of expressing her preferences, prefers to be in appellee’s custody and care, loves and cherishes her stepmother and does not desire to be with her mother; appellee had moved from the State of Maryland at the time of filing the petition in this case; he was then domiciled in the District of Columbia and intends to remain here. The court concluded that the best interests of the child required that she be placed in the custody of her father.

It will be noted that in his findings and conclusions the trial judge disregarded the Maryland decree and based his award upon changes in circumstances occurring since entry of the California decree. 4 Whether or not his reason for doing so was correct, his action was proper. Even in a case in which the full faith and credit clause is fully applicable, the judgment is entitled to credit only as to issues considered and judicially determined. 5 In a custody case, such a judgment is, at best, entitled only to qualified consideration in another State. 6 In the present case, the Maryland court did not judicially determine the one question upon which this case turns.

The Maryland law is very explicit in requiring that when a child is brought before a court or judge, even upon habeas corpus, the judge shall be guided and controlled by “a parental consideration” of what is demanded by the best interests of the child and that custody shall be determined without reference to any alleged technical claim or right of custody. 7 This statute is, in fact, a specification in terms of the duty and power of *982 the court to act as parens patriae, as well as an admonition that no casual disposition of custody cases on the bare, technical, legal ground of unlawful detention is to be tolerated. But the Maryland court, in the present case, rested its decision upon alleged illegality of detention; it, apparently, assumed that the California decree was final and entitled to full faith and credit without qualification. It refused to receive evidence of competent witnesses upon .the question of present welfare of the child. Language in Tull v. Tull, 8 recently decided by the Maryland Court of Appeals, is equally apt with respect to the proceedings in Maryland in the present case: “There is no testimony in the record with regard to the present welfare and custody of the child and, without it, no rational conclusion could be had by this court under the statute which provides a review of the evidence and disposition of the child’s custody on appeal.” Moreover, the order of the Maryland court was merely interlocutory and nonappealable in character.

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Bluebook (online)
150 F.2d 979, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 189, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langan-v-langan-cadc-1945.