McManus v. McManus
This text of 528 So. 2d 696 (McManus v. McManus) 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.
Opinion
David McMANUS and Bernice McManus, Appellees,
v.
David Leo McMANUS, Jr. and Mary Potter McManus, Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Donald Joe Robinson, Monroe, for appellants.
William H. Baker, Jonesboro, for appellees.
Before MARVIN, FRED W. JONES, Jr. and LINDSAY, JJ.
FRED W. JONES, Jr., Judge.
We granted a writ in this case to consider whether the trial court erred in awarding temporary custody of minor grandchildren to grandparents upon the grandparents' petition for custody when the natural parents were still married and there was no pending proceeding for separation or divorce or a juvenile proceeding where the state was a party to the action.
David McManus, Jr. and Mary McManus were married in 1985. They were the parents of Corey (born April 1985) and Savannah (born May 1986). The family was residing in Ouachita Parish. David McManus and Bernice McManus, the parents of David McManus, Jr., were residents of Jackson Parish.
On November 20, 1987 the paternal grandmother encountered her son and his *697 family at a grocery store in Monroe. The grandmother took the two children home with her to spend the weekend. However, the grandparents refused to return the children and on November 24, 1987 filed a petition for custody in Jackson Parish alleging that the children were dirty and were not properly cared for. The district judge signed an order giving the grandparents temporary custody of the children and ordering the parents to show cause on December 7, 1987 why the grandparents should not receive permanent custody.
The parents filed exceptions of no right of action and no cause of action and improper use of summary proceedings. The prior rule was upset and refixed for December 17, 1987. On the latter date the exceptions were overruled. Testimony of only one witness, the child's mother, was heard concerning the children's living conditions. After hearing the testimony and before the other witnesses were called, the trial judge continued the hearing indefinitely. Temporary custody remained with the grandparents and the parents were granted visiting privileges. The parents then applied for the exercise of our supervisory jurisdiction.
The state has not instituted proceedings in a juvenile court to have these children declared neglected (La.R.S. 14:403) or to petition for termination of parental rights (La.R.S. 13:1601). Also see C.J.Pr. Articles 14, 17. Furthermore, the question of child custody has not been placed at issue in a separation suit or a divorce suit. See La.C.C. Articles 146, 157. Consequently, under these circumstances may grandparents petition for child custody?
This issue was addressed by our Supreme Court in Griffith v. Roy, 263 La. 712, 269 So.2d 217 (La.1972). In that case, the paternal grandfather filed suit in a civil district court alleging that the children of a mother who had been awarded provisional custody in a separation suit were neglected and that the mother was morally unfit to keep them. The grandfather prayed for permanent custody of the children. The Court noted that the constitution had established juvenile courts and these courts were vested with jurisdiction over "neglected" children. The Court found that the original custody of a child who has not been adjudicated neglected or delinquent could only be determined in a civil proceeding between the parents, when both were living, in connection with an attack upon a marital contract or after dissolution of that contract. Because custody and care of the children born of the marriage was such a vital part of the marriage contract and since the marital contract was held inviolate from attack by anyone other than the parties to it, no other person could institute a civil proceeding for child custody while that contract existed. To permit such an attack, the Court reasoned, would allow third parties to induce one of the parties to initiate a legal attack upon the marriage itself. Moreover, it would call upon the Court to exercise parental authority which then only existed in the parents. Until one of the parties attacked the marital contract, the State, through the judicial function, could interfere with that parental authority only under special laws defining neglect and delinquency, and then that function was assigned exclusively to the juvenile courts upon petition by the State in the interest of the child, and not by petition of a third party in its own interest.
The Court specifically held that in its decision, it only determined jurisdiction. The Court noted that the question of whether a third party had a right or cause of action to institute a suit which was in substance, as well as style, a civil proceeding for custody of the minor children was not before the Court.
The broad-sweeping language of the Supreme Court in Griffith was moderated in the later opinion of the Supreme Court in Wood v. Beard, 290 So.2d 675 (La.1974). In that case, the minor child had been given to the maternal grandparents for approximately one year when the mother was incarcerated. The grandparents refused to give the mother custody of her child and the mother instituted a habeas corpus proceeding. The natural parents were still married at the time of the proceedings. In that case, the Supreme Court held that when a parent competes with non-parents *698 of a child, the parents' right to custody is superior, unless the parent is unable or unfit, having forfeited parental rights.
The plaintiff-mother argued that only the juvenile courts had jurisdiction to interfere with parental authority. The Supreme Court held that this was a too narrow interpretation of the previous decision in Griffith. The Court noted that it had previously held that the juvenile courts do not have jurisdiction over a dispute between private litigants for custody of a child which was not within the purview of an action to terminate parental rights. The Court stated that the thrust of plaintiffs' argument was that no court could inquire into the fitness of a parent seeking custody while the marriage was in existence and there was no pending separation or divorce action. The Court stated that this argument ignored the universally recognized proposition that the State and its courts were always concerned with the welfare of the child. The Court concluded that the district court was not without jurisdiction to consider the fitness of the mother in a habeas corpus action brought by her.
See also Girouard v. Halpin, 368 So.2d 1139 (La.App. 3d Cir.1979), writ denied 369 So.2d 1377 (La.1979), wherein a step-sister and her husband were granted custody of the minor child although the natural parents were still married. However, the minor child had been residing with the step-sister and husband with the consent of the mother for a significant period of time before the proceedings were instituted.
The rule enunciated in Wood v. Beard, supra, that in order to award custody to a non-parent, the Court must find the parent unable or unfit to provide a home for the child or find a forfeiture by the parent of the paramount or superior parental right to custody was changed somewhat by the passage of Act 307 of 1982 which amended La.C.C. Article 146.
As noted in Boyett v. Boyett, 448 So.2d 819 (La.App. 2d Cir.1984), the primary concern in making custody awards to a non-parent in preference to the parent is the welfare or best interest of the child, not simply the enforcement of parental rights.
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528 So. 2d 696, 1988 WL 43185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmanus-v-mcmanus-lactapp-1988.