146 Ark. 356 | Ark. | 1920
Appellant filed a petition to recover the custody of Clara Neeley from the respondent. From the pleadings and exhibits thereto it appears that on December 11, 1917, Clara Neeley, who was then thirteen years of age, was a resident of Mississippi County, Arkansas, and on that date the county judge, as judge of the juvenile court of that county, made an order appointing appellant guardian for said minor. That order recited that the minor had no one to care for her, and adjudged “that the said Clara Neeley be taken from its said custodian (whose name does not appear in the order), and that the said Arkansas Children’s Home Society be appointed guardian of the said minor, and shall have the care and custody of said minor, with full authority to appear in court in any proceeding for the adoption of said child, and to consent to such adoption. ’ ’ This order was made under the authority of act 215 of the Public Acts of 1911 (page 166), creating juvenile courts in the several counties of the State.
In some manner, which does not appear from the briefs, Clara Neeley became a resident of Boone County, and on April 5, 1920, filed a petition in the probate court of that county, in which she recited that both her parents were dead; that she was 15 years, 10 months and 22 days old; that she had been furnished a good home by respondent and his wife, and she prayed that she be allowed to name respondent as her guardian pursuant to her right under the statute (§ 3772, Kirby’s Digest) to select her own guardian. The probate court made the order prayed for, and thereafter this proceeding was commenced.
The chancery court found that Clara Neeley was a resident of Boone County; that she was'over fourteen years old, and had been permitted by the probate court of that county to exercise her statutory right to select a guardian; and dismissed the petition for habeas corpus, and this appeal is from that order.
It is first insisted for’ respondent that the order of the juvenile court of Mississippi County appointing petitioner guardian was void, for the lack of authority under the act creating the juvenile court to appoint as guardian a corporation. But we pretermit a discussion of that question.
It is insisted, for petitioner, that the juvenile court act should be read in connection with act No. 170 of the Acts of 1909 (page 518), in which last named act authority is given to appoint as guardian the Arkansas Humane Society, or other similar society incorporated under the laws of this State. But, if this be true, it is also true that in section 9 of the act of 1909 it is provided that “when appointed guardian of any such children, the said society shall have all the powers and duties of guardian of the persons of said children until they reach the age of fourteen years, when they shall be permitted to choose their guardian for themselves, subject to the approval of the court.”
It will be observed that. Clara Neeley is not a delinquent child, but was a dependent one, and there is no allegation that the juvenile court committed her to the Arkansas Children’s Home Society. Upon the contrary, that society was named guardian, just as some individual might have been. There is no allegation that the child escaped, or fled from the custody of the society, or that she is now being held against her will by respondent, or that her present surroundings are objectionable.
It is insisted for appellant that the decision of this court in the case of Ex parte King, 141 Ark. 213, js decisive of the instant case, and calls for the reversal of the order of the chancery court. Counsel quote the statement from that opinion that the provisions of the Constitution vesting in probate courts original, exclusive jurisdiction in matters relating to guardians refer to the private guardianship of the person and estate of minors, that is, the guardianship as it affects the person and estate of the individual minor, and not the interests of the public, and that the jurisdiction over infants, so far as their conduct and condition might affect, not only themselves, but also the welfare of the communities in which they reside, was vested in some other tribunal. The minor in that case, who sought release by habeas corpus, had been adjudged a delinquent by the juvenile court of Independence County, and had been committed as a delinquent to the State’s Industrial School for Girls. The point there decided was that it was competent for the General Assembly to confer on the county court the jurisdiction there given to the juvenile courts, and it was therefore held that the confinement of the petitioner was not illegal.
But here we have no adjudication of delinquency, nor order of confinement. An ordinary guardian has been appointed, which (if it has authority to act) is subject to the control or order of removal by the probate court as other guardians would be.
It is quite obvious that the act creating juvenile courts makes a distinction between a dependent and a delinquent child. Section 17 of the act, in defining the purpose of the act, emphasizes this difference. It is there declared to be the purpose of the act, in all cases of dependency, when it can be done, to have the dependent child placed in an approved home, to there become a member of the family by adoption, or otherwise; whereas, in cases of delinquency, the child may, if it is found necessary, be placed in a suitable institution for detention.
It is apparent, from the record before us, that Clara Neeley was never delinquent, and is no longer dependent; that she is past fourteen, and has been pérmitted by the probate court to select her own guardian; the result of all of which is to promote the declared purpose of the act creating the juvenile court. The court was correct, therefore, in dismissing the petition for the writ of habeas corpus, and that order is therefore affirmed.