State ex rel. Ahrens v. Rassieur

171 S.W. 688, 186 Mo. App. 214, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 642
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 688 (State ex rel. Ahrens v. Rassieur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Ahrens v. Rassieur, 171 S.W. 688, 186 Mo. App. 214, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 642 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

— At the April term, 1911, of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, one Lee H. Mallalieu filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus for the possession of his daughter Jessalee, then about two years old and in the custody of Henry Ahrens, Sr., her grandfather, and Alvina Ahrens, her grandmother, her mother being dead. The prayer or demand for relief in the petition is:

“Wherefore, your petitioner prays that a writ of habeas corpus may be issued to bring the said Jessalee Mallalieu before the _court that she may be released from the restraint and keeping of the said Henry Ahrens, Sr., and Alvina Ahrens, his wife, and that the care, custody and control of said child be awarded to your petitioner.”

The return of Ahrens and his wife to the writ concludes thus:

“Respondents having fully made return ask to be discharged of the writ aforesaid and that the said Jessalee Mallalieu be restored to their care, custody and control as heretofore.”

The cause was duly assigned to division number 9 of the circuit court, then presided over by the Honorable Leo.S. Rassieur, respondent here. At the hearing of the case on this petition and return it appeared that the child had been committed to the custody of the grandparents at the request of their daughter, then about to die, and with the assent of the father, the petitioner for the writ. At the conclusion of the hearing and on the last day of the April, 1911, term of the [216]*216circuit court, the court denied the. prayer of the petitioner, holding that the best interests of the child would, be conserved by leaving her in the custody of her grandparents. It, however, granted to the petitioner, Mallalieu, the' right to visit and have the custody of the child at certain stated intervals. The court further embodied as.part of its judgment this: “And the court doth retain jurisdiction of this cause, for the purpose of making such other and further orders, from time to time, with reference to the custody of the child aforesaid, as in the judgment of the court, the best interest and welfare of the said child may require.”

Nothing further transpired in the cause until June 27, 1914, when at the June term of the circuit court, apparently on the ex parte application - of Mallalieu, the petitioner in the original cause, and without any notice to the respondents in that cause, the judge then presiding in division number 9 of the court entered an order transferring the cause to division number 4 of the court, that being the division to which the Honorable Leo S. Rassieur had in the meantime been assigned and over which he was then presiding. Thereafter and in this division number 4, a motion was filed by Mallalieu, entitled in the original case, praying the court to make an order altering and amending the decree theretofore made by the court in division number 9, on June 3,1911, as above stated, as to the custody of the child, and to give Mallalieu exclusive custody of his daughter, free from any interference or control of the grandparents. The Honorable Circuit Judge, then presiding in division number 4, passed this motion until July 14, 1914, announcing his determination then to hear and determine the motion upon the merits.

It was to prohibit that judge from entertaining jurisdiction of the cause that the present action was brought, a petition being filed in our court in vacation, upon which an alternative writ was issued prohibiting [217]*217the Honorable Circuit Judge from further proceeding, or to show cause to the contrary. To this alternative writ .the Honorable Circuit Judge made a return setting up what had been done in the matter and justifying his right to proceed in it under that part of the original order in the case by which it is claimed jurisdiction over the cause had been retained. On the coming in of this return the relator here prayed that the alternative writ be made permanent.

There is no dispute as to the facts, a question purely of law being presented and argued. That question turns on the validity of that part of the order entered in the habeas corpus proceeding which we have quoted above.

The relator here contends that this, part of the order was without authority and beyond the jurisdiction of the court; that in the habeas corpus proceeding which was before the court, its attempt to retain jurisdiction for the purpose of making further orders in it was coram non judice- that the proceeding under the petition for habeas corpus having passed into judgment, the cause was at an end. The contention o'f the respondent as to the right to retain jurisdiction over the proceeding seems to rest chiefly upon section 2510, Revised Statutes 1909. That section provides:

“In all cases where it shall appear from the evidence in any proceedings in habeas corpus, instituted between husband and wife for the custody of their children under the age of fourteen years, that by reason of insanity, drunkenness, cruelty, or other cause, the party against whom the complaint is brought is unit to have the care and government of the child or children in controversy, it shall be lawful for the court hearing said cause to award the custody of the same to the complainant or other guardian, as shall be deemed best in the premises, and to make such other orders touching the custody and control of such child or children as the court may deem proper; and the order [218]*218or decree of court touching said custody shall be valid and remain in force during any period within the minority of said child or children, which shall be fixed by said court; and any person at any time violating said order or decree may be dealt with summarily for contempt. ’ ’

This section appears in article 6, chapter 22,’ Revised Statutes 1909, the article being our statutory provision for proceedings under the writ of habeas corpus. It first appeared in our law in 1873, the title of the act being, “An Act to Provide for the Custody of Minor Children in Proceedings in Habeas Corpus Between Husband and Wife.” [Acts 1873, p. 53.] It is obvious that this section has no application here. This is not a proceeding in habeas corpus' “between husband and wife.” It is said in argument that in drafting this section the General Assembly had in mind the welfare of the child and that although the precise words refer only to the husband and wife, it would seem a harsh construction to say that the lawmakers did not intend the statute to extend to those who stand in the position of parents, whether husband and wife or not. It is further said that the order was made in conformity with early practice in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis.

We cannot assume that the General Assembly, the lawmaking power, in so specifically confining this exception to cases arising between husband and wife, expressing that idea both in the entitling' clause and in the body of the act, intended to extend it to any other cases. There is no room here for judicial construction which would have the effect of extending it.' To indulge in such construction would not be a judicial act but legislative and beyond the power of the court. Nor can long usage, if that is a fact, and of this we have no information beyond the claim of counsel, make the' law otherwise than as enacted. Prom this it necessarily follows that in attempting to preserve juris[219]*219diction over the subject-matter, that is the custody of this child in the habeas corpus

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 688, 186 Mo. App. 214, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ahrens-v-rassieur-moctapp-1914.