State Ex Rel. Burleigh v. Savoie

171 So. 98, 185 La. 985, 1936 La. LEXIS 1248
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1936
DocketNo. 33467.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 171 So. 98 (State Ex Rel. Burleigh v. Savoie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Burleigh v. Savoie, 171 So. 98, 185 La. 985, 1936 La. LEXIS 1248 (La. 1936).

Opinions

FOURNET, Justice.

This is a proceeding by habeas corpus, instituted by relator against respondents to regain the possession and custody of his eight year old daughter, Gussie Burleigh, from her maternal grandparents, respondents herein. This is the sequel to the case of State ex rel. Burleigh v. Savoie et ux., 176 La. 115, 145 So. 285, 286, involving the custody of the same child and between the same parties.

Relator’s petition contains the following allegations: That under judgment of this court, rendered on June 20, 1932, he was awarded the custody of his minor daughter, and respondents were ordered to return the child to him, with the privilege granted to them to visit the child; that on rehearing the judgment was reinstated and became final on January 3, 1933; that in order to have a specific understanding relative to the visits of the child with its grandparents, an agreement was entered *987 into between relator and respondents, which was incorporated in the judgment of the district court, whereby it was stipulated that the child should be permitted to visit the respondents from the afternoon of the first Friday of each month, after school hours, until the following Monday at the beginning of school hours, and ten days during the summer vacation. The agreement provided further that should illness prevent the child’s visit on the day appointed, such visit should be made on the following Friday. It is further alleged in the petition that the first Friday of January, 1935, fell on the 4th, but because of the child’s illness on that day, she was delivered to the respondents on the following Friday, January 11th, pursuant to the agreement; that respondents, in violation and in contempt of the authority of the district court and of the Supreme Court, failed and refused to return the child on the following Monday, January 14th, and announced that they intended to keep the child permanently and deprive relator of her custody. Relator also alleged that on a previous occasion, August 11, 1934, his daughter went to respondents’ home and when he called there for her, he was not only refused his child, but respondents and their son threatened to beat him with a club if he did not immediately leave their premises, and in order to regain his child without serious difficulty, he had to resort to habeas corpus proceedings, which respondents did not even contest. But on the day following the order of court to return the child, August 21, 1934, respondents instituted a similar proceeding against relator, charging him and his father with various acts of cruelty and neglect of the child, which action the district court dismissed on August 29, 1934. Relator urges that because of the situation that exists he can no longer permit his child to visit respondents for fear that they may continue to deprive him unlawfully of her custody, and he is therefore entitled to her exclusive custody without restrictions, except the right to allow respondents to visit the child at relator’s home.

In answer to the rule issued in this case, respondents admitted their failure to return the child on the appointed day, and in justification therefor averred that the child at that time was suffering acutely from her throat and from a severe skin ailment, and that her condition was such that the doctor recommended an early operation to remove the child’s tonsils, which they had performed on the 26th of January, 1935, and in reconvention, claimed the permanent custody of the child on the grounds, in substance as follows:

(a) That since the custody of the child was awarded to relator by the Supreme Court, the relator remarried, left the roof of his parents, and has since lived alone with his second wife and the child born of •that marriage;

(b) That relator, since his marriage, has relegated his minor child in controversy here almost entirely to his parents’ care ;

(c) That the home of relator’s parents is overcrowded; that they have not the means to care for the child; and that *989 they do not want the child and abuse and maltreat her;'

(d) That Raoul Burleigh, a 15 year old brother of relator and an inmate of the paternal grandparents’ home, raped or tried to rape the child about the middle of December, 1934, and that, as a result of said occurrence, the child is still suffering from physical injuries to her genital parts ;

(e) That relator cursed and abused his child when she revealed the alleged rape and threatened to kill her if she repeated it to others;

(f) That the child does not want to live with her father or paternal grandparents and prefers to remain with defendants, who want her and are able to take care of her;

(g) That relator, since being awarded the custody of the child, has neglected her physically, mentally, and morally, and cannot and will not care for her.

On the very day that respondents filed their answer and reconventional demand, relator, with leave of the court, filed an amended and supplemental petition, alleging that respondents, in their desperate efforts to gain the custody of the child, had made maliciously false statements and charges against him and his young brother in their reconventional demand, and thereby forfeited any right which they had to enter his home or to have his child visit them, and prayed that he be given the exclusive and permanent custody of his child.

Relator also filed a motion to strike from the answer and reconventional demand those allegations contained in the paragraphs hereinabove set out, lettered (a) to (f), inclusive, on the ground that those matters were concluded by judgments of this court in the case of State ex rel. Burleigh v. Savoie, supra, and of the district court which was rendered' on August 29, 1934, and as to the allegations contained in paragraph (g), that they were too vague and indefinite to admit of proof.

The district judge overruled the motion to strike out, and on the trial of the merits, dismissed relator’s proceeding and awarded the custody of the child to respondents, but granting relator permission to visit his child at all reasonable times. From that judgment relator has appealed.

A review of the judgment in the case of State ex rel. Burleigh v. Savoie, supra, and the judgment of the district court of August 29, 1934, conclusively show that the averments in the reconventional demand in paragraphs (d) and (e) were not at issue and therefore not adjudicated upon in those cases. Moreover, judgments awarding the custody of minor children are subject to modification at any time. We therefore conclude that the trial judge correctly overruled the motion to strike from the answer and reconventional demand the averments above referred to.

When this case was previously before this court, it was said: “The question presented is whether the father of the child * * * has forfeited his parental right to its custody.” (Italics ours.) And in the case of State ex rel. Perdue v. *991 Carkuff et al., 182 La. 920, 162 So. 729, in which the same question was involved, we quoted approvingly from the case of Ex parte Lincoln, 128 La. 278, 54 So. 818, 819, as follows:

“It is the well-settled jurisprudence of this state that the courts are not authorized.

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 98, 185 La. 985, 1936 La. LEXIS 1248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-burleigh-v-savoie-la-1936.