Noble v. Noble

160 N.E.2d 426, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 581
CourtHighland County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1957
DocketNo. 18486
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 160 N.E.2d 426 (Noble v. Noble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Highland County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noble v. Noble, 160 N.E.2d 426, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 581 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

OPINION

By HOTTLE, J.

Trial was had upon the within cause of action on April 25, 1959, with Plaintiff presenting her case, and Defendant failing to make any appearance, having been served by publication, which the Court finds proper to afford jurisdiction for said trial, and a divorce was granted to Plaintiff upon the evidence.

However, the question of the Court’s jurisdiction and power to award custody of the parties’ children was reserved for further consideration by the Court.

The evidence was that Plaintiff is, and has been for some ten or eleven years, a resident of the state of Ohio and for several years a resident of tbe county of Highland; that she and the children named in the petition and the Defendant herein have had their domicile in said county during those years, although Defendant, in his work, was located in other states from time to time. It appears that Defendant has recently failed to come home on weekends and that his interests apparently lie’elsewhere than with his wife and family.

The question that this Court fails to find adjudicated in the cases of Ohio is whether or not this Court has the jurisdiction and power to determine the custody of the parties’ children when the mother, Plain[582]*582tiff, has residence and domicile with them in this county, but when the father and husband, Defendant, is residing outside the state of Ohio and service is effected by publication pursuant to §3105.06 R. C., and he makes no appearance in any way. It should be noted that the papers in the file do not reveal any copy of the divorce petition or a copy of the publication reaching him.

Upon consideration of the question, this Court decides upon the facts herein that it has the jurisdiction and power to make a determination of the custody of the children, but does not have the jurisdiction and power to make any award for their support. In view of the testimony, the custody is awarded to Plaintiff with reasonable visitation rights for the Defendant at the home of Plaintiff, subject to the Court’s further order.

The Ohio case as nearly parallel to the facts of the instant case is Black v. Black, 110 Oh St 392, in the opinion of which the Court said at page 394,

“Surely, if there was jurisdiction in the common pleas court here to hear and determine the application for divorce or alimony, that jurisdiction would also extend to the determination of the custody of the minor child who had in fact been with her mother all the time referred to, and prior to that decree the juvenile court of Franklin County, Ohio, in a proceeding under the statute, had made the child a ward of the court and placed her in the custody of the mother.”

However, the instant case does not involve an award of the Juvenile Court, and the Black case did not have the specific question before it because the Defendant had, by his pleadings and his appearance in open Court, waived any question of jurisdiction over his person. Therefore, the statement above quoted seems to be obiter dictum. It appears to the writer of this opinion that the question involved in the instant case was specifically reserved by the Supreme Court in Swope v. Swope, 163 Oh St 59 at 61 (last paragraph).

Sec. 3105.21 R. C., provides:

“Upon satisfactory proof of any of the charges in the petition for divorce or for alimony, the court of common pleas shall make such order for the disposition, care, and maintenance of the children of the marriage, as is just, and in accordance with §3109.04 R. C.”

Sec. 3105.04 R. C., provides:

“When a wife files a petition for divorce or for alimony, the residence of her husband does not preclude her from the provisions of §§3105.01 to 3105.21, inclusive, R. C.”

The Code provisions, in the Court’s opinion, necessarily require a determination of the Court’s jurisdiction over the question stated above.

Turning to the highest courts of other states for decisions on the exact question, the writer of this opinion has found some determinations thereof.

Syllabus 3 of Hicks v. Hicks, 18 S. E. Reporter 2d 754 (Georgia), states in part:

“In an action for divorce instituted in the courts of this state by a [583]*583wife against her nonresident husband, the court has power to award to her the custody of the children, if they are within its territorial jurisdiction, and even though the only service on the husband is by publication.” . . .

Kenner v. Kenner, a Tennessee decision, reported in 201 S. W. Reporter 782, involved a case in which the wife left her husband to live with her brother, a- doctor in Alabama, who was treating the child of the parties. The primary purpose in the wife’s leaving was because of the ill treatment of the husband. She secured a divorce in Alabama, later returning to Tennessee to visit, and during the visit, the former husband filed suit to set aside the Alabama divorce decree and to obtain the custody of or visitation privileges with the parties’ child. The following quotation indicates the Tennessee Court’s decision on the question.

“Should such foreign decree .be accorded binding force when it purports to determine the right of custody of the children of the marriage, when such children were in the foreign state, in the custody of the plaintiff therein, where the suit was brought, and where the decree was pronounced or should the defendant in that suit, aside from grounds of fraud, be permitted to reopen the question, on such child or children being brought into the residence state of such defendant, for a temporary purpose, as for a visit?
“We are of the opinion that, under the circumstances stated in the question, the decree should be held binding on the parties thereto. Where the father loses custody of his infant children, and their disposition is brought before a competent court for determination of the question, the. primary inquiry concerns the welfare of the children, not the technical legal right of the father to their possession, to use them at once, or at some future day, when grown older, for the benefit of their services and this is emphatically true when the person who invokes the aid of the court is the mother of the children, and a worthy woman. . . . The dominant thought is that children are not chattels, but intelligent and moral beings, and that as such their welfare and their happiness is a matter of first consideration.”

Brandon v. Brandon, a Georgia decision reported in 115 S. E. Reporter 118, involved a mother residing in Akron, Ohio, who filed her suit against the husband residing in Georgia. The parties’ child was with the mother, but soon after the divorce proceeding was filed and before service was made, the father of the child surreptitiously came to Ohio and took the child to Georgia. The Georgia Court refused in the mother’s habeas corpus proceeding to give the mother the custody; but did state by way of obiter dictum,

“If this child had been residing with the mother in Ohio at the time of the rendition in that state of the decree of divorce in favor of the mother upon constructive service, such decree might be binding and conclusive upon the father in this habeas corpus proceeding brought by the wife in this state to secure the custody of the child from the father.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 N.E.2d 426, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noble-v-noble-ohctcomplhighla-1957.