People ex rel. Hickey v. Hickey

86 Ill. App. 20, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 188
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 86 Ill. App. 20 (People ex rel. Hickey v. Hickey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Hickey v. Hickey, 86 Ill. App. 20, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 188 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Thomas Hickey, in the name of the people, on the relation of Ethel Hay Hickey, his daughter, aged seven years, brought habeas corpus against appellees in the Cook County Circuit Court, to have the custody of said Ethel taken from her mother, the appellee, Melissa L. Hickey, and awarded to him.

Thomas Hickey, on November 29,. 1897, obtained, a divorce in the State of New Jersey from the appellee, Melissa L. Hickey, on the charge of adultery with William Vance Harrison, and was by the same decree awarded the custody of said Ethel.

Thomas and Melissa L. Hickey were married in 1884, and at the time the bill for divorce was filed the said Ethel was their only child, who resided with her mother in Cook county, Illinois. Melissa L. Hickey was not personally served with process from the New Jersey court, nor did she appear in the divorce proceeding, though she was, pursuant to a statute of the State of New Jersey then in force, authorizing such a proceeding, served with notice of an order entered by the New Jersey court in said divorce proceeding, directing her to appear, plead, demur or answer the bill" therein, or that in default thereof such decree might be made against her as the chancellor might think equitable. The same statute of New Jersey provides that “ any defendant upon whom such notice is served, as herein directed, shall be bound -by the decree in such case as if he were served with process in this State.” Melissa L. Hickey and the child Ethel were residing in said Cook county at the time said bill was filed, when said notice was served upon said Melissa and at the time the petition in this case was filed. She was at no time after the commencement of the divorce proceeding within the State of New Jersey.

Melissa J. Hickey and the appellee Harrison, prior to the said decree of divorce, lived together as husband and wife in Cook county, Illinois, but since the decree have been married, and were, at the time of the filing of the petition in this case, living together as husband and wife and had the custody and control of said Ethel, who had lived with them as their child from the month of May, 1897, when the child was clandestinely taken by its mother from the home of its grandmother in New Jersey and brought to the home of the former in Illinois.

The appellees answered the petition for habeas corpus and produced the child before the court. ' The issues were made and a hearing had before the Circuit Court, which resulted in an order remanding the child to the custody of its mother and said Harrison, and directing that the father should have the right at all reasonable times to see and converse with the child. From this order the appeal herein is taken.

After hearing the evidence produced upon the trial, consisting of the record of the proceedings in the New Jersey court and the testimony of witnesses with regard to the character and fitness of both the father and the mother of said child to have its care and custody, and of their respective ability and capacity to properly care for, educate and maintain her, the learned judge, in deciding the case said, in part, as follows :

“Neither of the parents have been such in the past as to commend themselves to anybody very highly, but I am not going to review the past of either of them. I shall assume that both of them have, without regard to what" their past has been, intended to abstain from them so that either would be capable of taking care of this child. J think today that either one of them would take proper care and are capable of giving this child fair care and treatment, that is, I do not think the child would go very wrong if taken care of by either of them. I think that the mother is better capable of taking care of a little girl at her age than the father. This child is a very bright and intelligent little girl, as bright, probably, as any child you will find in a hundred' and the child says she would rather live with her mother than anybody else, and I have not any doubt of that from the examination I have made of the child, and I think, regardless of what the mother has been in the past, she is now living a reputable life. There is no evidence here that there ever was any misconduct with anybody except this man who is now her husband. Whether or not, the misconduct that she was guilty of with this man before % he became her husband, it is immaterial for me to determine or to decide here. They are now man and wife, living respectably and respected by the neighbors in the community in which they live. 'They have apparently taken good care of this child, and I shall leave the child with the mother.”

A careful reading and examination of the evidence in the record has led us to the same conclusion of the trial court with reference to the custody of the child. The evidence shows that the father is a steady, industrious and respectable man of good standing in the community where he lives—Trenton, N. J.—and that he earns about one thousand dollars per annum, and that his mother, to whose home he proposed to take the child and keep her, was a proper person to have the care of the child, though she was sixty years of age, a widow, and did not appear to be especially anxious to take the child into her home.

The language of the trial judge, with regard to the appellees and the child, above quoted, is amply sustained by the evidence, and we are unable to say that the result reached by the court and the order entered by him was not a proper disposition of the custody of the child and for its best interests.

The statute of this State, with regard to the care and custody of children of divorced persons, gives the court the power, when called upon to award such care and custody, to make such order “ as from the circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case shall be fit, reasonable and just; ” and it has been held by the Supreme Court that in the determination of such cases the interests and welfare of the child are the supreme and controlling considerations with the court. In Miner v. Miner, 11 Ill. 43-9, it was said, in speaking of this consideration, that “ an infant of tender years is generally left with the mother (if no objection to her is shown to exist) even when the father is without blame, merely because of his inability to bestow upon it that tender care which nature requires, and which it is the peculiar province of the mother to supply. This remark will apply with much force in cases of female children of a more advanced age.” The court then proceeds to show why this is so, and awards the custody of a girl seven or eight years old to its mother.

In Umlauf v. Umlauf, 128 Ill. 378, the same doctrine was affirmed, and the mother was awarded the custody of her boy, between six and seven years old, although the divorce was granted for her fault, and the father was found by the court to be a fit person to have the child’s custody, care and tuition.

It is contended, however, on behalf of the father, that the decree of the Hew Jersey court as to the custody of the child Ethel is res adjudicata and binding upon the parties, and should be given the same effect by the courts of Illinois as in Hew Jersey. The case of Laing v. Rigney, 160 U. S. 531-9, is especially relied upon as sustaining this contention.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Huey v. Huey
322 N.E.2d 560 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1975)
Wolfrum v. Wolfrum
126 N.E.2d 34 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1955)
People Ex Rel. Potter v. Potter
120 N.E.2d 46 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1954)
Nye v. Nye
105 N.E.2d 300 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1952)
Nye v. Nye
99 N.E.2d 574 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1951)
Dorman v. Friendly
1 So. 2d 734 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1941)
Weber v. Redding
163 N.E. 269 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1928)
Duryea v. Duryea
269 P. 987 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1928)
People ex rel. Crofts v. Wait
243 Ill. App. 367 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1927)
Barnett v. Blakley
209 N.W. 412 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1926)
State Ex Rel. Hooten v. Hooten
1 Tenn. App. 154 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1925)
Brandon v. Brandon
115 S.E. 115 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1922)
Green v. McDowell
242 S.W. 168 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1922)
Stewart v. Stewart
180 P. 165 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1919)
Kenner v. Kenner
139 Tenn. 211 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1917)
Seeley v. Seeley
30 App. D.C. 191 (D.C. Circuit, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 Ill. App. 20, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hickey-v-hickey-illappct-1899.