Roussel v. State

274 A.2d 909, 1971 Me. LEXIS 300
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 3, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 274 A.2d 909 (Roussel v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roussel v. State, 274 A.2d 909, 1971 Me. LEXIS 300 (Me. 1971).

Opinion

WERNICK, Justice.

Petitioners — plaintiffs, husband and wife, (hereinafter designated Roussels) have appealed to this Court from a final judgment of a single Justice sitting in the Superior Court. The judgment dismissed Roussels’ petition for a writ of habeas corpus and their complaint, conjoined with *911 the petition, seeking a declaratory judgment and coercive relief by injunction.

To achieve habeas corpus remedy, Roussels allege that on or about February 20, 1964 the child, then three weeks of age and already a legal ward of the State, had been placed in their home in Portland, Maine, by the Department of Health and Welfare under the State’s so-called foster-home placement program. 1 The child had remained with Roussels continuously thereafter for four and one half years until, on August 22, 1968, representatives of the defendant Commissioner of Health and Welfare removed her from the Rous-sels’ home. The child has never been returned to them even though Roussels, as they allege, “made continuous demands for the return of custody.” Roussels delayed for approximately one and one half years after the child had been taken from their home before they initiated, on February 25, 1970, the court proceedings with which we are presently concerned.

Roussels predicate their claim for habeas corpus relief upon allegations that for four and one half years they raised the girl “as their own”, she “developed and grew to know [them] as her own natural parents”, they

“had given the child their love and affection, reared her as their own child, presented to her the benefits of their adequate home and provided her with the necessary education and religious guidance.”

On this basis, they have asked the Superior Court, under its habeas corpus jurisdiction, to evaluate the best interests of the child and adjudicate that her welfare requires that she be removed from the custody, (as a legal ward of the State), of the defendant Commissioner of Health and Welfare and that she be “placed in the care and custody of * * * petitioners.”

Roussels have brought, additionally, an action for declaratory relief and injunction in which they incorporate the allegations of their petition for habeas corpus. They allege, further: (1) “passage of time” has “estopped,” defendant Commissioner, and his agents, “from exercising any prior existing right of removal”; (2)

“the removal * * * from the home of plaintiffs was a deprivation of the liberty of the plaintiffs and [the child’s] without due process of law, and a denial of the enjoyment of the civil rights of the plaintiff [s] and hence is unconstitutional and void”;

and (3) the child having been allowed to remain

“in the home of plaintiffs from the age of three weeks to the age of four years, six months an implied contract to adopt in favor of plaintiffs”

had come into being which defendant Commissioner had dishonored “in removing [the child] from the home of plaintiffs.” Contending that they have “no adequate remedy at law” and that danger persists that irreparable harm and injury will be done to the child if her removal from their home becomes final, Roussels have invoked a Superior Court jurisdiction, other than habeas corpus, (1) for the issuance of a declaratory judgment that

(a) “plaintiffs are entitled to * * * custody * * * until the child reaches her maturity” and (b) “a contract of adoption exists between plaintiffs and defendant * * * binding upon both parties”;

and (2) for injunctive relief

(a) “to impel the defendant to return [the child] to the home of plaintiffs and to leave said child in the care, custody and control of plaintiffs until such time *912 as the child is emancipated without further interference by defendant Commissioner”, and (b) “compelling defendant to authorize the adoption of [the child] by plaintiffs, in accordance with their contract to adopt.”

By granting a motion to dismiss filed by defendant Commissioner, the presiding Justice (1) sustained the position of defendant that the face of the petition revealed the inapplicability of habeas corpus jurisdiction, and (2) adjudicated that the complaint for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief, as directed to some other jurisdiction of the Superior Court, failed “to state a claim against defendant upon which relief can be granted.”

We decide that the presiding Justice acted without error in dismissing both the petition for writ of habeas corpus and the complaint seeking declaratory judgment and injunctive relief.

We consider, first, the resort by Rous-sels to habeas corpus as a mechanism to have the Superior Court adjudicate that the right to custody of the child should be given to them. Counsel for Roussels commences with the foundational premise that:

“The development of Maine law shows clearly habeas corpus lies not only to obtain the release of an infant from an illegal detention, but also to< determine the right of custody.” (emphasis supplied)

Counsel maintains that a showing by petitioners for habeas corpus that they have a pre-existing right to custody of the child is immaterial and unnecessary. He argues:

“ * * * the focus of Maine law is not on the technical parties to the suit, but the paramount concern is the best interest of the child or children.”

Immediately thereafter, however, counsel pronounces:

“Equity has not concerned itself with such dispute over custody in relation to the disputant, but rather has expressed its concern for the child.” (emphasis supplied)

An initial intimation thus appears that the argument of counsel for Roussels rests upon an intermixing of the habeas corpus and the equity jurisdiction of Maine courts. Counsel seems to compound the confusion when he asserts:

“It is * * * clear that in Maine * * * the office of the Supreme Court has descended from King to Chancery and from Chancery to the Supreme Court and Single Justices of the Supreme Court. Regardless of the origination of the power, it should be clear * * * that foster parents * * * should have the right or standing to seek habeas corpus, since this power must be available * * * so that ‘errors of heart or errors of judgment on the part of officers can be remedied by the Court’.” (emphasis supplied)

The portions italicized reveal a repetition of the conception that when the control of infants is at issue, the habeas corpus power of Maine courts is to be deemed undifferentiated, and indistinguishable, from the equity power. 2

*913

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274 A.2d 909, 1971 Me. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roussel-v-state-me-1971.