People ex rel. Sternberger v. Sternberger

12 A.D. 398
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 A.D. 398 (People ex rel. Sternberger v. Sternberger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Sternberger v. Sternberger, 12 A.D. 398 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Patterson, J.

The relator in this proceeding is the wife of the respondent, Louis Sternberger. Since November, 1895, they have lived apart, the wife having then separated from her husband by withdrawing from his home and taking up her abode at the house of her father. There are two children of the marriage of the relator and her husband ; one a girl, now in her eighth, and the other a boy, now in his seventh year. The relator, on leaving her husband’s house, took both children with her. On the 18th of November, 1895, the respondent, Louis Sternberger, took' his son into his own custody and away from the mother, who thereupon began this proceeding, in which, although in the beginning directly relating to the son only, it is agreed that the court shall determine to which of the parents the custody of both children shall be committed, they in the meantime, and by arrangement of the parties, remaining with their mother. The proceeding was initiated by the relator obtaining a writ of habeas corpus under the provisions of 2 Revised Statutes, 148 (§§ 1, 2 and 3), by which it is enacted that “ when any husband and wife shall live in a state of separation, without being divorced, and shall have any minor child of the marriage, the wife (by the Domestic Relations Law’ of 1896 [Chap. 272, § 40], passed after'this proceeding was begun, the provision is extended to the husband also), if she be an inhabitant of this State, may apply to the Supreme [400]*400Court for a habeas corpus to have such minor child brought before it,” whereupon “the court, on due consideration, may award the charge and custody of the child so brought 'before it to the mother, for such time, under such regulations and restrictions, and with such provisions and directions as the case may require,” and “ at any time after the making of such order the Supreme Court may annul, vary or modify the same.”

This law has stood upon the statute book for nearly seventy years, and its provisions have been invoked quite frequently by wives living apart from their husbands and seeking judicial sanction for the custody and control of their infant children. In none of the reported' cases has any question ever been raised requiring an interpretation of the words living “ in a state of separation,” as those words are used, in this statute. But now for . the first time it is earnestly argued that the remedy afforded-by this enactment is not open to a wife unless her separation from her husband without a divorce is one resulting from some arrangement or treaty placing the parties in the situation of assenting to a “ state ” recognized by law, and technically defined and established. -No authority is cited to support that novel and strained construction. The statute deals with a condition and with a condition alone. It takes the parties as it finds them — husband and wife living separated, without a judicial decree either of absolute or what is sometimes called limited •divorce. Its evident original purpose was to give a wife so situated a remedy which theretofore she did not have. It does not confer an absolute right, but a mere remedy by means of which she can seek the aid of the court in the exercise of its purely discretionary power to confide to her, for her child’s welfare, the temporary charge and custody of that child, in curtailment of what was then regarded to be, and doubtless was, the common-law right of the father to the possession of the persons of his minor children. The learned and discriminating judge who wrote for the court in the case of The People v. Brooks (35 Barb. 89) has well said “ this statute does not declare on what grounds the court shall proceed, but confides .the whole matter to its discretion, and hence the occasion, cause and circumstances of the separation and -the relative-merits and demerits of the parties may he taken into account.” If the separation must result from agreement what need can there he of investigating the causes of the [401]*401separation? There would he what Judge Oowen considered “a kind of divorce which the courts cannot very well gainsay at this day.” (People v. Mercein, 3 Hill, 411.) It would suffice that the parties" had willed it to he so, and the question of the relative fitness of the parents would alone remain to he determined in connection with that of the welfare of the child. In none of the cases has it ever been intimated that the separation must be an agreed one, and in none of them has the writ been refused on the petition of the wife who has left her husband without his consent, but upon provocation and for some reasonable cause. The strongest advocates of the right of the husband have never suggested such an interpretation of the statute. Judge Nelson, in The People ex rel. Nickerson v. --(19 Wend. 16), commenting on the statute, expresses a doubt, applying only to its intention “ where the wife withdraws from the protection of the husband and lives separate from him without any reasonable excuse ” and declares that the court should not award the custody of children to a mother who. “ had willfully and without pretense of excuse abandoned her family and the protection of her husband,” and he ádmits that “ ill-usage ” of the wife or consent would entitle the wife to the favorable judgment of the court. The general deduction to be drawn from all the cases is that the court acts upon the fact of separation, but requires that the petitioning wife shall show meritorious cause for leaving her husband, and when that is shown the foundation is laid for the exercise of the delicate discretionary duty imposed upon the Supreme Court by the statute.

It is.further urged that in the disclosure of merits connected with the wife separating herself from her husband, a case must be made out sufficiently strong to authorize a decree for some one of the causes mentioned in the statute relating to divorces. The learned judge in the court below adopted that view and said in his opinion: “If the facts in the case would not warrant the court in granting her a separation, I do not think that they are sufficient to warrant her to take her husband’s children from his house.” This limitation upon the operation of the 'statute reads into it a condition, not only foreign to its purpose, but entirely at variance with that purpose. It would liere compel the petitioning wife to present to the [402]*402■court all such convincing proofs as would be strictly required to make out'a case for separation; that is to say, to show that- she is entitled! to a decree which, in a formal action, the court would be ■compelled to make, whereas, in the particular proceeding by habeas ■corpus, the action of the court is to be purely discretionary upon the same state of facts. The construction contended for would make the statute read, that the wife, living in a state of separation without a divorce, may apply for the writ on showing that she is entitled to a divorce. The nature of the power conferred upon the court, the fact that it is discretionary, and does not compel the court to act otherwise than in its judicial discretion, the superadded consideration that that discretionary action relates merelp to the temporary custody of the children, that it is subject to be annulled or vacated* or modified at any time, all go to show that the court is to deal with proceedings of this character upon evidence directed to establish that, for the benefit and welfare of the children, their custody may be for a time committed to a wife living separate from her husband under such circumstances as furnish some reasonable ground for her refusal to continue to live with him.

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Bluebook (online)
12 A.D. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-sternberger-v-sternberger-nyappdiv-1896.