State Ex Rel. Rickli v. County Court of Dane County

123 N.W.2d 908, 21 Wis. 2d 89, 1963 Wisc. LEXIS 529
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 123 N.W.2d 908 (State Ex Rel. Rickli v. County Court of Dane County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Rickli v. County Court of Dane County, 123 N.W.2d 908, 21 Wis. 2d 89, 1963 Wisc. LEXIS 529 (Wis. 1963).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The county court of Dane county had jurisdiction, as the divorce court, to determine whether or not a change in custody would promote the child’s welfare. 2 Upon Phyllis’ application, the Dane county court began its proceeding to make that determination. The questions presented here are (1) whether the county court of La Crosse county, in its capacity as the juvenile court, obtained jurisdiction over the same matter, and (2) what effect its proceedings had on the jurisdiction of the Dane county court, founded on the divorce action.

1. Jurisdiction of the La Crosse county court as juvenile court. It appears that the child was present in La Crosse county on September 16th when the petition was filed in juvenile court. Presence of the child in the county is sufficient under sec. 48.16, Stats.

Sec. 48.19, Stats., contemplates a preliminary consideration of a child’s case by the juvenile court before the court authorizes the filing of a petition, and the court may dispose *94 of the matter without the filing of a petition. This section provides that “an investigation shall be made by persons designated by the court to determine the facts.” In the present case, Judge Toepel required no investigation by a caseworker “because of the representation made to the court by counsel for the petitioner as to the needs of the child and the intention of the court to have an independent mental examination and evaluation made of the child.” The court had been informed that the evaluation already made indicated need of treatment. We consider that although the word “shall” is used, the judge has discretion to treat his own consideration of the information presented to him as a sufficient preliminary investigation. Failure to have some other person make an investigation is therefore not deemed to be a jurisdictional defect.

The requirements of a petition are set forth in sec. 48.20, Stats. The petition appears adequate on its face. The facts which allegedly bring the child within the jurisdiction of the court were stated in the exact language of sec. 48.13 (2) (b), although such statement does not specify the nature of the treatment needed, the condition causing it, nor the inability of the parents to provide it. We know from the rest of the record that the child’s residence was not correctly stated, that the child was in the legal custody of his father; and that the mother appears really to claim that she can better provide for the child’s needs than the father. None of these criticisms of the petition, however, prevent it from arousing the jurisdiction of the court.

2. Effect of the institution of the La Crosse county juvenile proceeding upon the jurisdiction of the Dane county court. Sec. 48.13, Stats., describes the jurisdiction of the juvenile court over a child alleged to be dependent as “exclusive,” Sec. 48.15, however, makes it clear that a court with a divorce action before it nevertheless has jurisdiction to determine legal custody of children as an incident of the *95 divorce action. It goes on to provide: “But the jurisdiction of the juvenile court shall be paramount. . . .”

A note by the 1955 revision committee reads:

“The first sentence of this section is now the last sentence of s. 48.01 (5) (am). It clearly preserves the jurisdiction of other courts over the awarding of legal custody in habeas corpus proceedings or in other proceedings before them, as for example, the right of the divorce court to award legal custody of a child of divorced parents. The second sentence is necessary, however, because problems have arisen regarding the extent of the right of other courts to determine the legal custody of children. Problems have arisen principally in relation to the divorce court since that court has continuing jurisdiction over the legal custody of the children of divorced couples [s. 247.24]. For example, some persons have questioned the right of the juvenile court to take jurisdiction over a child alleged to be delinquent when that child is under the continuing jurisdiction of the divorce court because his parents are divorced. This section makes it clear that the jurisdiction of other courts over the legal custody of children does not interfere when facts have arisen which support the exclusive jurisdiction of the juvenile court as spelled out in ss. 48.12, 48.13, and 48.14.”

The word “paramount” has been defined:

“1: Having a higher or the highest rank or authority . . . 2: Superior to all others (as in power, position, or importance) : chief, supreme, preeminent ...” 3

The statutes make it clear that if the La Crosse county juvenile court were to find that Carl II is dependent, as alleged, and make a disposition of his case as authorized by sec. 48.35, Stats., such finding and disposition would control, and the Dane county court would be powerless to make a contrary finding or different disposition as an incident of the divorce action.

Such finding and disposition have not, however, yet been made, and the problem before us is whether, at this stage, *96 and to what extent the commencement of the juvenile proceeding ousts the Dane county court of its jurisdiction over custody, founded upon the divorce action. 4 The jurisdiction of a juvenile court over child custody and the jurisdiction of another court as an incident of a divorce action overlap, but are not identical in scope. A divorce court is authorized by statute to determine that a child of the parties to a divorce action is dependent (where the parents are unable or unfit to care for it adequately) and to make disposition of the custody of the child on that basis. 5 In the absence of a finding of dependency, however, a divorce court has the power to place the child in the custody of one parent or the other, according to its determination of the child’s best interests. The jurisdiction of the juvenile court, in the absence of a finding of dependency, does not extend so far. 6 The problem which Phyllis presented to the Dane county court appears to have involved only a determination of the child’s best interests, as between placement in the custody of his mother or of his father. Her allegation to the La Crosse county juvenile court posed the further problem of dependency: i.e., whether he needed treatment which his parents or legal custodian were unable to provide.

Although there are a number of decisions in other states dealing with the conflict between the jurisdiction of a juvenile court and of a divorce court over child custody, they do not appear to deal with statutes similar to ours. 7

The statute makes the jurisdiction of the juvenile court paramount to that of the divorce court. This means at least *97 that the burden is on the divorce court to avoid taking action which is or is likely to be in conflict with action taken by the juvenile court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 N.W.2d 908, 21 Wis. 2d 89, 1963 Wisc. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rickli-v-county-court-of-dane-county-wis-1963.