Sweet v. Johnson

1957 OK 250, 317 P.2d 231, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 563
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 22, 1957
Docket37602
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1957 OK 250 (Sweet v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweet v. Johnson, 1957 OK 250, 317 P.2d 231, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 563 (Okla. 1957).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves the custody of Carol, Raymond, Ray, Frankie and Mary Ann Sweet, minor children of the plaintiffs in error. Harry and Margaret Sweet, of Enid, Oklahoma. Ray and Raymond are twins, 11 years of age, Frankie will be 8 next December, and the girls, Carol and Mary Ann are approximately 10 and 7 years of age respectively.

During the 1954-1955 school term, all of the children, except the youngest, attended public school at North Enid. Due to the children’s condition, as regards personal hygiene and perhaps partially due to dissatisfaction with them on one or two other grounds, the school principal reported them to the school board, and subsequently, after an investigation by Mrs. Johnson, the County Juvenile Officer, followed by proceedings in the Juvenile Court, the older children, by court order entered in said proceedings on June 1, 1955, were temporarily taken from their parents and *233 placed in the custody of the Child Welfare Division of the State Department Of Public Welfare for a period of 90 days, within which the Sweets cleaned and improved their home. After this was done, the Juvenile Court, at the end of said 90-day period, entered another order restoring the children’s custody to their parents. Besides a rather general cleaning and renovating of the house, conducted under the supervision of Mrs. Johnson, Mr. Sweet, who is regularly employed as a railroad section laborer, at $1.64 an hour, or $250 to $260 per month, obtained a 90-day leave of absence and expended $1,200 adding an extra room to the house so that his sons and daughters would have separate bedrooms. Thereafter, Mr. Sweet moved his family to Helena, Oklahoma, so that those of school age might attend school there during the 1955-1956 school year; and, during this period, he commuted on weekends between his work at Enid and his family at Helena. At the end of said school term, in the spring of 1956, the family returned to their home in Enid. Thereafter, on or about August 15, 1956, the boys, Ray and Frankie, were taken into custody by the Enid police, and confessed to stealing part of $35.20 reported missing from Enid’s Becker Service Station. When Mrs. Johnson learned of this, she went to the Sweet home, talked to the boys’ mother, and thereafter instituted the present action to have all of the above-named children adjudged to be “dependent and neglected, or delinquent * * *

In the petition she signed and filed for that purpose, Mrs. Johnson alleged, as grounds for such adjudication, that the minors involved: “ * * * appeared to be dependent and neglected, or delinquent children in this, to-wit: not receiving proper parental care, picked up for stealing and mother says she can’t keep children at home.” At the trial, before a 6-member jury, no evidence was introduced to show that Mr. Sweet did not earn, or expend, sufficient funds on the children to supply them with all of the necessities of life. In fact Mrs. Johnson, hereinafter referred to as the petitioner, did not claim he was derelict in that respect, or that, from a financial standpoint, the children were public charges. Her entire objection, as far as it can be ascertained from her testimony, seems to have been to “the manner in which they are fed and clothed and took care of.” Over the objection of. counsel for the respondents, said petitioner, was allowed to testify in considerable detail as to the facts disclosed by her investi- - gation, previous to the 1955 proceedings,' concerning the dirty and unsanitary condition of the Sweet home, as well as the children. In addition, school authorities were allowed to testify to certain facts tending to show the children’s lack of parental care, all of which occurred prior to the afore-mentioned Juvenile Court proceedings and prior to the 90-day period in which respondents, by the aforesaid orders entered therein, were temporarily deprived and afterwards restored to custody of the children. The evidence introduced on behalf of the respondents tended, in the main, to show that those conditions had not existed since the custody restoration, or at the time of the trial here involved. The testimony of the Sweets’ daughter, Carol, showed that Mrs. Sweet experienced no trouble in keeping her at home, and she expressed the earnest wish that she not be taken from her parents.

After the evidence was all in, respondents moved for a directed verdict, and after this was refused and the cause submitted to the jury, a verdict was returned finding the minors “to be dependent and neglected, or delinquent children.” On the basis of said verdict, the court thereafter entered judgment placing the children in the permanent custody of the Department of Public Welfare for care and maintenance and with full authority to find suitable adoptive homes for them and to effect their adoption. After the court had entered its order overruling respondents’ motion for a new trial, and they gave notice of appeal, it entered a supplemental order “Nunc Pro Tunc” directing that, pending the determination of this appeal, the children re *234 main in the Public Welfare Department’s custody, but that no proceeding's be instituted for their adoption.

The only argument presented herein is in respondent’s behalf in support of their position that the trial court erred in overruling their motion for a directed verdict and in admitting the evidence herein referred to, concerning the condition of the children, and the Sweet home, before they were temporarily taken from respondents in 1955, more than one year before the commencement of the present proceedings. The County Attorney, as counsel for the petitioner, has specifically waived the filing of a brief on her behalf.

In respondents’ argument concerning the alleged error, in the overruling of the motion for directed verdict, they do not claim that the undisputed fact that the Sweet boys, Ray and Frankie, took money from the service station, as hereinbefore noted, would not support the jury’s verdict as’to their delinquency; but'they say there is not an iota of evidence as to any of the other children being delinquent, dependent, or lacking in parental care. On the basis of this representation of the evidence, they say it was error for the court to submit to the jury the matter of the custody of the other children, and that, instead, the court should have sustained their motion and entered judgment leaving the children’s custody in them. They further say that the court or jury had a right to determine that the two boys, Ray and Frankie, were delinquent children, and, that if determined to be responsible for their acts, to try them as juvenile delinquents, and, if adjudged to be such, to order them sent to a Boy’s Training School during their minority. They further say, however, that the statutes under which the present proceedings were brought, Tit. 10 O.S.1951 § 101 et seq., do not contemplate placing with the Public Welfare Department for adoption, children who are juvenile criminals. In view of such admission of the tendency of the evidence to show the delinquency of two of the children, and respondents’ tacit concession that the Juvenile Court, in'the 1955 proceedings, was justified in temporarily depriving them of custody until they could clean and improve their home and begin caring for the children in a manner conforming more nearly to recognized, and currently accepted standards of health and hygiene, and in further c.onsideration of the statement of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1957 OK 250, 317 P.2d 231, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweet-v-johnson-okla-1957.