Rives v. Sneed
This text of 25 Ga. 612 (Rives v. Sneed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By the Court.
McDonald, J.
delivering the opinion.
The Constitution of this State has been amended by adding a section to the first Article, declaring that the Legislature shall have no power to change names, nor to legitimate persons, &c., but shall, by law, prescribe the manner in which such power shall be exercised by the Superior and Inferior Courts, and the privileges'to be enjoyed. Acts of 1855 [620]*620and 1856, page 106. The Legislature, at the same session, passed a statute prescribing the manner in which the Courts should exercise the power. Page 260. Under this Act, Dudley Sneed applied to the Superior Court of Lee county, making known his desire to adopt John Needham Massey, an infant son of Needham Massey, deceased, and to change his-name to John Needham Sneed.
The child’s mother was dead. The child having neither father nor mother, no notice of the application was given to any one. The Court passed an order to the effect prayed for, and further establishing the relation of parent and child between the said Dudley Sneed and the said John Needham Massey, by the name of John Needham Sneed, the same as if he had been the natural legitimate child of the said Dudley Sneed.
The majority of this Court are of opinion that the Superior Court had the power, under the Constitution and law, to pass the original order, and that it was passed in conformity with both. If the same Court has the power to rescind the order when passed, it is a matter entirely within its discrecretion, and this Court will not attempt to control that discretion, and therefore it affirms the judgment of the Court below.
As the opinion which I entertain would leave the action of the Superior Court without affirmance or reversal here, it would stand, as a matter of Course, for whatever it may be worth. The opinion of the majority of the Court must be ■certified to the Court below, which is a judgment of affirmance.
Judgment affirmed.
The residence of the child, however occasioned, was, at the time of the appointment ol the guardian, in the county of Lee; and the Ordinary of Randolph had uo jurisdiction of the case. Cobb’s Digest, 286. The letters of guardianship, therefore, conferred no authority on Rives. A majority of this Court is of opinion that Dudley Sneed, in consequence of his established relation of parent to the child, had a right to the custody of his person; even if the letters of guardianship had been good and valid. It is the opinion of this Court thatthe presiding Judge in the Court below ought to have ordered the child into the custody of Dudley Sneed.
Judgment reversed.
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