Martin v. State
This text of 97 So. 57 (Martin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This was a proceeding in the juvenile court of Jefferson county to determine the delinquency of Margaret Annie Lee Martin, alias, etc., a child three years of age, whose parents were unknown, and to direct her guardianship and custody according to the provisions of the act establishing the juvenile court, approved February 19, 1919 (Acts, p. 128 et seq.). Upon hearing the evidence the juvenile court adjudged the child in question to be dependent and neglected and in need of the care and protection of the state, and committed her to the care of the Alabama Children's Aid Society. The child, it appears, was in the custody of one Effie Zoder, and this proceeding was set on foot by Vina A. Thomas, who now appeals in the name of the child, alleging that she had adopted the child in pursuance of section 5202 of the Code, which provides for the adoption of children, and complaining that the custody of the child was improperly and *Page 45
erroneously taken from her by the decree. This appeal is taken from a decree of the circuit court of Jefferson county where the cause was tried de novo on appeal from the juvenile court, as provided by section 25 of the act establishing the last-named court. Both decrees purport to have been rendered upon consideration of the evidence, but there is no reproduction of the evidence here for our consideration, and, obviously, this court has no means of reviewing the decree in question on its merits. There is complaint, expressed in very general terms in the brief, that the juvenile court had not authority to dispose of this child as it did contrary to the wishes of its adopted parent. The record furnishes no evidence that the real appellant, who claims to have adopted this child, is in law or fact the adopted parent. We have only her assertion, and it may be that the chancellor and the judge of the juvenile court had no more. If, however, the purpose of the appellant be to draw into question the constitutional power of the court, it seems enough to say that the power, conferred upon the juvenile court, of controlling the persons of infants to promote their highest welfare, is a part of the inherent original jurisdiction of equity (3 Pom. Eq. Jur. [4th Ed.] § 1307), and may by legislative action be conferred upon the juvenile court concurrently with chancery or the circuit court exercising chancery powers (Ex parte Pruitt,
In this cause there is an assignment of errors, but no note of testimony nor, as we have already said, any testimony. In this state of the record the writer has stated above what he considered to be a proper disposition of the cause. However the court is of opinion that the appeal is governed by the rule laid down in Lunday v. Jones,
Reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.
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97 So. 57, 210 Ala. 44, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-state-ala-1923.