Mendive v. Third Judicial District Court

253 P.2d 884, 70 Nev. 51, 1953 Nev. LEXIS 48
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1953
Docket3728
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 253 P.2d 884 (Mendive v. Third Judicial District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mendive v. Third Judicial District Court, 253 P.2d 884, 70 Nev. 51, 1953 Nev. LEXIS 48 (Neb. 1953).

Opinion

*53 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

This is a proceeding in prohibition in which the relator seeks to prohibit the respondent court and judge from continuing with adoption proceedings initiated by the individual respondents. The relator’s challenge of the jurisdiction of the Third judicial district court of Lander county to entertain the adoption petition is met by that court’s challenge of the jurisdiction of the *54 Second judicial district court of Washoe county to entertain the relator’s guardianship petition there. In determining these counter charges of lack of jurisdiction in the respective courts, a consideration of the facts and proceedings to date becomes necessary.

The minor child involved, David Vinn Adams, was orphaned at the age of less than five months while apparently domiciled in the state of California, and shortly thereafter was delivered into the custody of Madeleine Maestretti Mendive, the infant’s maternal aunt, in the state of Nevada. Mrs. Mendive made an abortive attempt in Elko county, Nevada, to secure letters of guardianship there. This proceeding was dismissed, and she and her husband moved to Washoe county. The infant is still in her custody.

On September 13, 1952, while the infant was living with Mr. and Mrs. Mendive in Washoe county, the infant’s maternal grandfather, Don P. Maestretti, and his wife, Helen Maestretti, filed a petition in the Third judicial district court, Lander county, for the adoption of the minor. On September 20, 1952 the judge of that court issued a citation directing Mrs. Mendive, as custodian of the minor, to show cause why said minor “should not be placed in the custody of Don P. Maestretti and Helen Maestretti, and why you should not be divested of the possession and custody of said David Vinn Adams.” Such citation was served upon Mr. and Mrs. Mendive in Washoe county, September 22, 1952.

On September 30, 1952 Mrs. Mendive filed a petition in the Second judicial district court, Washoe county, praying for her appointment as guardian, and, upon the statutory 10-day posted notice, 1 was by that court *55 appointed as guardian on October 11,1952. At the time of her filing of her petition for appointment as guardian she had complete notice and knowledge of the pendency of the adoption petition and of the citation directing her to appear as above recited. Maestretti on the other hand, the petitioner for adoption in Lander county, had no notice or knowledge of the filing of the guardianship petition, the pendency of the guardianship proceeding or the order appointing guardian.

The citation issued by the adoption court was returnable October 17, 1952, at which time the attorney for the guardian appeared and challenged the jurisdiction of the adoption court and objected to the proceeding upon the grounds (1) that the adoption petition did not allege that the minor resided in Lander county, (2) that it did not allege that the minor had resided in the home of petitioners “for six months prior to the filing of the petition,” and (3) that a guardian had been appointed for the minor “and there is no consent of said legal guardian to proposed adoption.” 2 A certified copy of the letters of guardianship was admitted in evidence. The petitioners for adoption, through their counsel, contended “that the citation was for the purpose of placing the child in the home of petitioners to meet the requirement of said child being in the home of petitioners for the six months period required for adoption purposes.” The adoption court overruled the objections of the guardian, denied her petition .to dismiss the adoption proceedings and set the date of November 19, 1952 “as the time set for the purpose of taking evidence herein.” No estate of the minor is involved.

*56 Mrs. Mendive, the relator, then sought a writ of prohibition from this court. Attached to her petition are copies of the pleadings and proceedings above set forth. The grounds of the petition are the same as those raised in the objections to the jurisdiction of the Lander county court as above recited. The personal respondents, Don P. Maestretti and his wife, filed an answer herein alleging their lack of knowledge of the guardianship proceedings and alleging the knowledge of the guardian of the prior pending adoption proceedings and the active concealment by the guardian from the adopting petitioner of the pendency of the guardianship proceedings. Attached to such answer is an affidavit of Don P. Maestretti, the petitioner for adoption, tó the effect that the guardian’s attorney, at Battle Mountain, Lander county, Nevada, on September 29, had a conversation with affiant but did not mention the pending guardianship proceeding set for hearing for October 11. Attached also is an affidavit of John F. Sexton, the attorney for the petitioner for adoption, to the effect that on the same day he likewise had a conversation with the guardian’s attorney at Battle Mountain but that the latter did not mention or refer to the pending guardianship proceedings. The guardian’s reply to such answer, drawn by the guardian’s attorney and signed and verified by the guardian before her said attorney as a notary public, curiously enough denies these allegations “for lack of information.”

Both parties rely upon the familiar rule that when a court of competent jurisdiction acquires jurisdiction of the subject matter of a case, its authority continues subject only to the appellate authority until the matter is finally and completely disposed of, and that no court of coordinate authority is at liberty to interfere with its action. Metcalfe v. District Court, 51 Nev. 253, 274 P. 5. Respondents contend that under this rule, the petition for adoption having first been filed in the Third judicial *57 district court, in and for Lander county, that court assumed jurisdiction to the exclusion of the jurisdiction of the Washoe county court for guardianship or other proceedings affecting the custody of the minor.

1. We have first to dispose of the guardian’s contention that the adoption petition filed in Lander county was so defective as not to invoke the jurisdiction of that court.

The guardian contends that under our statutes and by reason of the failure of the Lander county adoption petition to allege the residence of the minor in Lander county or to allege the petitioner’s custody of the minor for six months or to allege the guardian’s consent to the petition for adoption, the Lander county court acquired no jurisdiction over the matter. Our statute does not require that the minor be a resident of the county where the adoption petition is filed, and in this state such residence is not a jurisdictional requirement. Sec. 1065, N.C.L.1943-1949 Supp.; In re Wilson’s Estate (Wilson v. Wilson), 95 Colo. 159, 33 P.2d 969. Recital of the statutory jurisdictional requirements is all that is necessary. In re Byran, 48 Nev. 352, 232 P. 776, 37 A.L.R. 527; Wilson v. Otis, 71 N.H. 483, 53 A. 439, 93 Am.St. Rep. 564.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 P.2d 884, 70 Nev. 51, 1953 Nev. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendive-v-third-judicial-district-court-nev-1953.