State v. Baird

19 N.J. Eq. 481
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 N.J. Eq. 481 (State v. Baird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Baird, 19 N.J. Eq. 481 (N.J. 1868).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

The Chief Justice.

The present motion rests on the single ground, that an appeal will not lie from an order made by the Chancellor in á proceeding by habeas corpus.

An order made strictly in pursuance of an habeas corpus, has the effect, simply to remove the unlawful restraint, and hence 'it has been a debatable question, whether such order, being of a merely temporary character, could be properly the subject of appellate cognisance. Such an order had no •efficacy in settling the right to the continued guardianship of infants. Such is not, in technical strictness, the office of this inestimable writ. In the case of Wollstonecraft, 4 Johns. C. R. 82, Chancellor Kent observed, that the object of the writ was to release the infant from all improper restraint, and not to try, in this summary way, the question of guardianship.” It is true that in some cases the court will go somewhat beyond thé mere removal of the unlawful restraint, and will transfer the person brought up by the writ, into the custody of him who has the clear legal right. Although there is much, confusion ih the precedents on this branch-, this I understand to be the correct rule of practice. And-such-, in some instances, should be the course pursued even where the subject of the writ is of an age to make an elec[483]*483tion- for himself. The case of Rex v. Delaval, 3 Burr. 1434, presents, in a very clear light, the necessity for the existence of this power. The writ in that case was issued at the instance of a father, to bring before the court his daughtei. This girl was about eighteen years of age, and had been bound as an apprentice to a musician, but it was shown that with the consent of her master, she had been put into the hands of the defendant, Delaval, for the purpose of prostitution. Under these circumstances, it would have been a strange defect in the law, if the court, having this infant in its presence, and subject to its power, could not have removed her from the influence of her seducer, and placed her, even against her will, in the care of her parent. In this class of cases, I can perceive no reason why the court has not the discretion either to let the person affected by the writ go free from all restraint, or to permit the legal custodian to put in force his authority, in the presence and with the assistance, if necessary, of the court. This was, I think, evidently the view of Lord Mansfield on this subject, for in the case referred to he considered the right of the father to the custody of the girl, and refused to award it to him only on the ground of the improper conduct of the parent. But it should not be overlooked that in taking the course here indicated, it can scarcely be said that the court puts its authority into active operation, for in truth it simply remains passive, while the legal right of custody is effectuated. And yet it is clear that this inaction, to some extent, is optional, for it has been quite habitual for the court, in the exercise of its discretion, to protect the party brought into its presence, in returning to his place of abode. This power was exerted in the case above cited from Burrow. The rule of practice, as above defined, will be1 found to be sustained or illustrated in the fallowing cases: Rex v. Clarkson, 1 Str. 444; Ex parte Hopkins, 3 P. Wms. 151; Matter of McDowles, 8 Johns. R. 328; Matter of Waldron, 13 Johns. R. 418.

It will be perceived that the course of practice thus indb [484]*484eáte'd, does not require the same stretch of power which has been exercised in the present case. By the decree now appealed from, the situation of tliese infants has been permanently fixed. Such a result cannot be justified as the legal conclusion of a procedure by habeas corpus. This is not the formula, by the use of which the right to the guardianship of infants is to be conclusively adjudicated, In the case of The People v. Mercein, 8 Paige 55, it was explicitly declared by Chancellor Walworth, that neither by the common law nor by the statutes of New York, was the writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum, a proper mode whereby to try a claim to the guardianship of an infant, and that the Court of Chancery, upon such a writ, would exercise its discretion upon the same principles which control the action of other courts and officers who have a capacity to allow the writ in similar cases. And that this, in truth,'was the rule of the common law will be clearly manifest to any one who will turn over the train of cases at law and in chancery, with his eye on this point. The course of practice, I think, was obviously this; If the simple purpose was to free from illegal restraint, the proceeding was either in the law courts, or in chancery, by the instrumentality of the habeas corpus; and in such proceeding, a court of equity had no power to make any order which was not within the competency of a law judge. But, on the other hand, when the object was to fix the status of a minor with regard to permanent custody or guardianship, and to settle, for any course of time, the rights of contending parties to such custody, then the application was to the Chancellor, by virtue of his general superintendency over the concerns of infants. The proceeding then was by petition to him, as parens patria. This distinction between the Chancellor’s jurisdiction over infants by habeas corpus, and as wards of the court, is clearly marked in the practice, and has been often noted by the court. Lord Eldon, in Lyons v. Blenkin, Jac. 245, plainly discriminates these two branches of jurisdiction; and, after directing a reference to a master to inquire as to the mode in which the infants had [485]*485been maintained, says: “ The reason why I propose to do this is, that I desire to put upon the record some of those circumstances that induce me to act in a manner different from what I should upon an habeas carpus.” And with still greater explicitness the same distinguished authority, in a case reported in a note to the volume just cited, says': “ He apprehended that the jurisdiction which he had upon an habeas corpus was exactly the same as if it was before a judge; and he apprehended a judge attended to nothing but cruelty or personal ill-usage to the child as a ground for taking it from its father,” But, on the other hand, when the application was made to that beneficent prerogative which exists in eháncery, to see to the protection and provide for the proper care of those who, from their tender years, were ofttimes helpless and undefended against cruelty and oppression, then it was that the power of the court took a wider reach, and in such a procedure the care and custody of infants could be provided for with some degree of permanence. And it was by this method, also, that the rights of the parents and relatives of the minors, with regard to their intercourse with them, o,r control over them, were regulated and secured. And it seems to me that the case now before this court on this appeal, must be classed under this branch of equity jurisdiction. Considering the proceeding in chancery as one at common law, in strict pursuance of the writ of habeas corpus, the decree which has been made could not be supported, for in such a course o.f law all that could be done was to free the infants from restraint.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.J. Eq. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baird-nj-1868.