Piccolo v. Piccolo

38 So. 2d 12, 251 Ala. 483, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 791
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 23, 1948
Docket4 Div. 520.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 12 (Piccolo v. Piccolo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piccolo v. Piccolo, 38 So. 2d 12, 251 Ala. 483, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 791 (Ala. 1948).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

Henry Daucey Piccolo filed a bill in equity in the Inferior Court of Houston County against her husband, Samuel T. Piccolo, seeking a divorce and custody of their four and one-ha-lf year old daughter. The respondent, Samuel T. Piccolo, filed answer and cross bill.

The complainant was a resident of Houston County. The respondent lived in Pennsylvania.

Testimony in the cause was taken ore tenus before the court. Final decree was rendered on August 12, 1948. Complainant was denied divorce. The custody of the child was awarded to respondent, Samuel T. Piccolo, from the date of the decree until September 1, 1948; from June 1, 1949, until November 1, 1949; and from June 1, 1950, until September 1, 1950. Complainant was awarded the custody of the little girl from December 1, 1948, to June 1, 1949, and from November 1, 1949 to June 1, 1950. The matter of the custody of the little girl beyond September 1, 1950, when she will be of school age, was left undetermined, the decree providing that the court retain jurisdiction of the cause for the purpose of making future orders and decrees as the circumstances might require. The complainant, Henry Daucey Piccolo, took an appeal to this court.

*486 Samuel T. Piccolo’s right to remove the child from Alabama was conditioned upon the execution by him of a bond in the sum of $1,000. He executed such bond and it was approved on August 16, 1948. On that date the Inferior Court of Houston County entered a supplemental order or decree directing that Henry Daucey Piccolo, the mother, in whose custody the child had been since the separation of the parties in February, 1948, forthwith deliver the child to her husband, Samuel T. Piccolo. The effect of this order or decree was to permit the said Samuel T. Piccolo to remove the child from the jurisdiction of the courts of this state, although the cause was then pending on appeal.

Counsel for the mother, Henry Daucey Piccolo, advised her that he was immediately going to Montgomery to present to the Chief Justice of this court a petition for an order of supersedeas so that she could keep the child in the State of Alabama until this court could review the decree of the trial court; otherwise the little girl would be removed to the State of Pennsylvania before this court could act on her appeal. Upon advice of her counsel the said Henry Daucey Piccolo did not immediately surrender the child to her husband, and in fact hid the child until her counsel had had an opportunity to present the aforementioned petition for order of supersedeas to the Chief Justice of this court.

Such petition was presented the Chief Justice at about five o’clock on the afternoon of August 16, 1948. The Chief Justice immediately ordered that the decree of the Inferior Court of Houston County be suspended during the pendency of the appeal and until final disposition of the cause on appeal, upon the said Henry Daucey Piccolo entering into bond in the sum of $750. Such bond was executed.

On August 18, 1948, Samuel T. Piccolo, through his counsel, presented to the Chief Justice a petition wherein he prayed that the Chief Justice vacate, annul, and withdraw the supersedeas order which he had made on August 16, 1948, on the grounds: (1) That this court and its Justices are without authority to make such an order and (2) that at the time the said Henry Daucey Piccolo presented her petition to the Chief Justice on the afternoon of August 16, 1948, she was in contempt of the Inferior Court of Houston County in that she had failed to deliver the child to the said Samuel T. Piccolo. After considering the sworn petition and hearing argument of counsel for both sides, the Chief Justice denied the petition, thereby refusing to vacate, annul and withdraw the supersedeas order made by him on August 16, 1948.

On October 4, 1948, Samuel T. Piccolo, through his counsel, filed in this court a petition praying that the court vacate, annul, and withdraw the supersedeas order made by the Chief Justice on August 16, 1948. This petition is in all material respects identical with the petition which was presented to the Chief Justice on August 18, 1948, and which, as before indicated, the Chief Justice denied.

The taking of an appeal from a decree awarding the custody of a minor to a party other than the one in whose custody the child had been prior to the decree does not operate as a supersedeas of the decree so as to permit the appellant who originally had the child to retain its custody pending the appeal. Ex parte Wright, 225 Ala. 220, 142 So. 672. Otherwise expressed, the party to whom the custody of a minor child is awarded by the decree of a court of competent jurisdiction is not deprived of the right to immediate custody of the child merely by the taking of an appeal and the execution of an appeal bond by the party who was unsuccessful in retaining the custody of the child.

There is no statutory authority for a supersedeas bond in cases of this character. Ex parte Roberts, 17 Ala.App. 538, 85 So. 871.

But this court, irrespective of statutory authority, has the right to preserve the status quo pending the appeal from a decree awarding the custody of a minor child upon a prima facie showing that the best interests of the child will be served thereby. Section 140 of the Constitution of 1901 confers upon this court the “power to issue writs of injunction, habeas corpus, quo warranto, and such other remedial and original writs as may be necessary to *487 give it a general superintendence and control of inferior jurisdictions.” This court has the power to adopt its own methods and mode of proceeding, in exercising the powers conferred upon it by the above-quoted portion of § 140 of the Constitution, and to so mold and fashion it, as to meet the exigencies of each particular case. The legislature has no power to limit or prescribe the mode and manner in which this court must exercise its power to issue writs therein named, and such other remedial and original writs as may be necessary to give it a general superintendence and control of inferior jurisdictions. Ex parte Bibb, 44 Ala. 140; Ex parte Candee, 48 Ala. 386.

The order of the Chief Justice of August 16, 1948, was actually a writ of supersedeas which we think this court is empowered to issue under § 140 of the Constitution.

In the case of Page v. Page, 166 N.C. 90, 81 S.E. 1060, the Supreme Court of North Carolina held that it had the authority to issue a supersedeas in a case very similar to that here under consideration, under the authority of a section of the constitution of that state which provided that the Supreme Court “shall have the power to issue any remedial writs necessary to give it a general supervision and control over the proceedings of the inferior courts.” Const.N.C. Art. 4, § 8. See Tate v. Tate, 163 La. 1047, 113 So. 370.

On September 18, 1939, in a cause then pending on appeal in this court, wherein Verlie Allen was appellant and G. P. Allen was appellee, the present Chief Justice, then an Associate Justice, made an order, in part as follows:

“Entertaining the view the child should not be removed beyond the court’s jurisdiction pending a consideration of this cause on appeal, it is ordered that upon appellant executing a supersedeas bond in the sum of $1,000.

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Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 12, 251 Ala. 483, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piccolo-v-piccolo-ala-1948.