State Ex Rel. West Virginia Department of Public Assistance v. See

115 S.E.2d 144, 145 W. Va. 322, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 33
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1960
Docket12029
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 115 S.E.2d 144 (State Ex Rel. West Virginia Department of Public Assistance v. See) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. West Virginia Department of Public Assistance v. See, 115 S.E.2d 144, 145 W. Va. 322, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 33 (W. Va. 1960).

Opinion

*323 Given, Judge:

This original proceeding in prohibition, instituted by the State of West Virginia at the relation of the State Department of Public Assistance, is prosecuted against the Honorable Ernest A. See, Judge of the Twenty-first Judicial Circuit, and Judge of the Juvenile Court of Tucker County, and Forest Isner and Edith Isner, for the purpose of prohibiting further proceedings in the matter pending in the Juvenile Court of Tucker County, before the respondent judge, on a petition of respondents Isners, filed on April 11,1960. A rule was issued by this Court, returnable April 22,1960, but, on petition of the respondent judge, the hearing was continued to May 2, 1960. The matter is disposed of on the petition of the relator and exhibits filed therewith, the answer of the Isners, the answer of the respondent judge, the demurrers of respondents to the petition of relator, on brief and oral arguments of relator, on brief and oral arguments of the Isners, and on separate brief and oral argument of the respondent judge.

The proceeding sought to be prohibited involves questions relating to the custody and guardianship of the child mentioned in the opinion of this Court in the proceeding styled In Re: Adoption of Rosemary Bailes Johnson, an Infant, reported in 144 W. Va. 625, 110 S. E. 2d 377. The pertinent facts detailed in that opinion need not be restated here. We here state only such facts as are deemed necessary to a consideration of the issues now involved.

Subsequent to the filing of the opinion in the prior case, in accordance with the mandate issued in that case on October 6, 1959, but not until February 24, 1960, the child was delivered by the Isners into the custody and care of the relator. According to allegations of the petition, not denied, the child has been placed and now is in a home in some county other than Tucker, in the home of “reputable persons who are in the process of adopting said child”.

*324 According to allegations of the Isners in the petition filed in the proceeding sought to be prohibited, the mother of the child executed an instrument ‘ ‘ purporting to release all her parental rights to the custody and guardianship of said child to the” relator, and that a child welfare worker for relator, on December 20, 1956, filed a petition in the Juvenile Court of Tucker County, ‘ ‘ seeking to have the said infant adjudged a dependent and neglected child”; that the court entered an order so adjudging, on January 3, 1957, and committed the child to the custody and guardianship of the State Department of Public Assistance, but that such order was set aside, by that court, on June 20, 1957, and that such proceeding is still pending in that court, and for such reasons, and by virtue of provisions of Article 5 of Chapter 49 of the Code, as amended, that court has continuing jurisdiction to hear and determine such questions.

The petition filed by the Isners in the proceeding sought to be prohibited alleges these further facts: That the child had remained in the home of the Isners for a long period of time, and was well cared for by them; that relator acted “arbitrarily and capriciously in its refusal to leave the said child in” such home; that the child is now a “neglected child”, and has been “abandoned by her mother”; that the “best interest of the said child will be served by this Court terminating the custody” of the relator; that the child is “no longer in need of care by the” relator; that the action of the relator in the manner of taking possession of the child, pursuant to the mandate mentioned, “was cruel to the said child and detrimental to her well being”; that the relinquishment agreement signed by the mother transferring custody of the child to relator is “null and void”, was obtained “contrary to the laws of West Virginia and is without force and effect”; that relator has no power “to accept a child or children for care from a parent or parents ’ ’; that the welfare of the child “demands a change of custody”; that relator “can not and will not furnish the said child a *325 home with the love, care, understanding, and security that will he and has been furnished by” the Isners; and that the Department of Public Assistance can not “give a valid consent for anyone to adopt the said child”.

The petition of the-Isners prayed that relator “be required to immediately deliver custody” of the child to the Isners; that the child be present at the hearing; that temporary and permanent care of the child be awarded to the Isners; that the contract executed by the mother “be declared null and void”; that the child “be adjudged an abandoned and neglected child”; and for general relief.

The respondent judge, on April 11, 1960, entered an order setting a time for hearing of the matters arising on the petition, for April 29; 1960, requiring that a copy of the petition be served on the county department welfare worker and on the Department of Public Assistance of West Virginia, and that such service “shall be sufficient notice and authority for the” county department welfare worker and the said Department of Public Assistance to have the child “present at the said hearing”.

The petition in the instant proceeding, after alleging facts concerning the former litigation and the delivery of possession of the child as directed by the mandate, further alleges that the child is not in Tucker County, alleges the filing of the petition of the Isners by the respondent judge, and the attempted exercise of jurisdiction over the matters by the respondent judge, and says that the respondent judge did “exceed his authority, discretion, power, and "jurisdiction in entertaining jurisdiction of this matter”, and prays that further proceedings in connection therewith be prohibited.

The facts alleged in the petition filed in the proceeding sought to be prohibited are, in effect, reiterated in the answers filed herein, the respondents admitting the filing of -the petition' and the entry of *326 the order in the proceeding sought to be prohibited, the prior litigation mentioned, the delivery of possession of the child to relator, but say that they are without knowledge as to whether the child has been removed from Tucker County. They deny that the respondent judge lacks jurisdiction of the matters, or that he has exceeded his authority or jurisdiction in relation thereto, deny that relator “has legal custody” of the child, and say that relator “retains custody of the said Child by virtue of a null and void contract”. The answer of the respondent judge, in much detail, informs of facts involved in the prior proceedings, including the proceeding instituted by the department for the purpose of having the child adjudged a dependent and neglected child, alleging that the Juvenile Court of Tucker County has jurisdiction to hear and determine the matters brought before that court by the petition of the Isners filed in the proceeding sought to be prohibited; that changed circumstances since June, 1957, entitle the Isners to further litigate the right of relator to the custody of the child; and that such custody can not be acquired by relator except by commitment by an order of a court having jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.E.2d 144, 145 W. Va. 322, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-west-virginia-department-of-public-assistance-v-see-wva-1960.