State Ex Rel. Canfield v. Porterfield

292 S.W. 85, 222 Mo. App. 553, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 180
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 85 (State Ex Rel. Canfield v. Porterfield) 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. Canfield v. Porterfield, 292 S.W. 85, 222 Mo. App. 553, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 180 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

— -This is an original proceeding in prohibition seeking to prohibit the Hon. Edward E. Porterfield, Judge of the juvenile court of Jackson county, Missouri, from proceeding under section 2611, Revised Statutes 1919, against the relator in the cause of State of Missouri v. Glen Canfield, therein pending, by decreeing that the relator support or contribute to the support of his child, the said Glen .Canfield, who was born opt of lawful wedlock.

The undisputed facts show that Glen Canfield was born on February 14, 1924; that the child’s mother and relator, the father, have not since, interinarried and that relator has never taken said child into his home to live with him nor had the custody of the' child nor contributed to his suppox’t and, so far as the record shows, has doxie nothing to recognize the child as his. own. However, thé mother of the child brought a proceeding in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, under section 311a (see Laws of 1921, p. 118) seeking-'a decree establishing the paternity of the child and that eourtj' on January 25, 1926, decrees that tlxe child was begotten out of lawful *555 Avedloek and that relator and plaintiff therein were his father and mother. Thereafter, on April. 1, 1926, a petition ivas filed ip the juvenile court, over which respondent presides, charging that the child at as. destitute and’abandoned by his father; that" he Avas dependent upon the public for support; that lie was suffering from the cruelty and depravity of .his father and that his father would not support him. The relator was duly summoned and appeared in the cause. The court found that the circuit court had decreed, that relator was the father of the child and that the petitioner in the circuit court proceeding Aras the mother; that the mother and relator had not since intermarried; that relator had never taken and did not have the custody of the child nor had he contributed in any Avay’to his support and that the child Avas dependent on the public for support. It Avas ordered that the child be adjudged a neglected child Avithiu the meaning of section 2591, Revised Statutes 1919, and that he he made a Avard of the court. The cause was continued until June 7, 1926. for further hearing. ’

On the last-named day the cause again came on for hearing for the purpose of determining whether or not relator ivas able to support or contribute to the support of the child hut the relator filed a plea to the jurisdiction of the court on the ground, among others, that he Avas not the parent of the child and not liable to contribute to its support Avithin the meaning of Article 6 of Chapter 21, Revised Statutes 1939. being the juArenile court laAV. This plea Avas overruled and the cause Avas then continued until June 21, 1926. In the meantime, relator applied to this-court for a Avrit of prohibition against the respondent and a’temporary writ Avas issued on June 28, 3926.. The matter now comes up before us on the question as to whether the temporary Avrit of prohibition should he made permanent.

rt is substantially conceded hv the parties that the sole question before us is Ai’hether the jrrvcnile court of Jackson county, Missouri, under the prolusions of the juvenile court act, mentioned, supra, and, particularly, section 2611 thereof, is empowered to require relator to support or contribute to the support of the child, Glen Canfield, in determining this point it is proper to give the history of the status of illegitimate children and to sIioav the statutory modification that has been made in this state rclatHe to that status.

At English common Mav a bastard or illegitimate child was .considered the child of no one, It Avas not able to inherit property from either of its parents or anyone else and Avas not entitled to .the support of its father and it is very questionable if even its mother was required to support it. The sin of its parents Avas idsited, without mercy, upon its innocent head. It was a social outcast and Avas barely given the status of a member of the human family. [.See 1 Schouler’s Marriage, DiA’oree, Separation and Domestic Relations (6 Ed.),.pp. 736, 747; 7 C, J.. pp. 955, 956, 959.] . However, under .the common *556 law of Missouri the mother of an illegitimate child is under the primary duty to support it although the putative father is not. [Easley v. Gordon, 51 Mo. App. 637; Sponable v. Owens, 92 Mo. App. 174, 178; see, also, 1 Schouler’s Marriage, Divorce, etc. (6 Ed.), p. ’ 743; 7 G. J. 955.] However, the mother ivas given the custody of such a child by statute. [See section 371, R. S. 1919.] At an early day an illegitimate child was given the right to inherit from its mother . and in 1915 an act was passed providing that if a man, having by a ■. woman a child or children, should afterward intermarry with her and <¿ .recognize such child or children as his own, they should thereby bo ' legitimated “and capable of inheriting.” [Gates v. Seibert, 157 Mo. 254, 277, 278, 279.] The Act of 1815 with the exception of the words ... quoted, is found in section 312 of the Revision of 1919, In 1822 an ■ pact,- was passed providing that the issue of all marriages decreed null-..in law or dissolved by divorce, should be legitimate. [See Gates v. Scibert, supra, l. c. 277.] This last act is the same as section 313, Re- ■ vised Statutes 1919. Later an act ivas passed concerning the legitimat,ing of children born of slave parents. [See section 314, R. S. 1919.] Some other acts relating to the status of illegitimate children were passed b3r the legislature in 1921, which will hereinafter be referred to. In some States what are called “Bastardy Acts” have been passed under which the putative father of an illegitimate child may be arrested and required to give security for the support of such child, but no such law has ever been enacted in this state.

The juvenile court act of Jackson county ivas passed in 1911 (see Laws of 1911, p. 177) including section 2611 under which respondent was attempting to proceed at the time he ivas prohibited by us. This •section provides as follows:—

* “In any case in which the juvenile court shall find a child neglected or delinquent, it may in the same or a subsequent proceeding, upon .¡the parents of said child, or either of them, being duly summoned, or voluntarily appearing, proceed to inquire inio the ability of said (.parent or parents to support the child, or to contribute to its support, and if the court shall find that such parent or parents are able to ■ support the child, or contribute thereto, the court may enter an order ,> or-decree requiring said parent or parents to support said child or contribute thereto, and may enforce the same b3r execution; otherwise the neccssaiy support of the child shall, until the court shall commit the child to a person or institution willing to receive it without charge, be paid out of the funds of the county, onty, however, upon the approval of the judge of the juvenile court.”

Respondent insists that he has jurisdiction under the provisions of this section to proceed against relator in the manner we have described. In construing statutes, the rule is that illegitimate children are not especially favored and will not be brought under a Statute except Avhere it purports to cover such children, but AAdieri the *557

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 85, 222 Mo. App. 553, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-canfield-v-porterfield-moctapp-1927.