135 A. 322 | R.I. | 1926
Petitioner is asking for process analogous to the writ ofhabeas corpus. *52
He petitioned for divorce in the Superior Court and that court, after hearing, entered a decree providing for the support of his wife pendente lite. Gen. Laws 1923, Chap. 291, Sec. 14. Before the case was ready for trial petitioner discontinued the action. Thereafter his wife, acting pursuant to further provision of the above statute, procured on affidavit an execution for the amount of unpaid allowance. This execution ran against petitioner's goods and chattels and for want thereof against his body. Under it he was committed to jail where he has remained since July, 1926.
The execution even though not sought until after discontinuance of the divorce petition was granted properly for the amount unpaid at the time of the discontinuance. Grattage,Petitioner,
Petitioner has come directly to this court with the present petition termed "petition to amend order for allowance". It recites in almost identical language the averments made in the petition filed with the Superior Court on the application for modification of the decree and asks this court, as it asked the Superior Court, to "alter, modify or annual" the decree for support. It sets forth the refusal of the Superior Court to grant a modification and asks this court to adjudge that petitioner's imprisonment thus far has satisfied the execution. It prays for a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum.
As a petition originally filed in this court seeking modification of an order for allowance in a divorce case the present application has no standing. Exclusive original jurisdiction *53
of divorce and alimony resides in the Superior Court. Gen. Laws 1923, Chap. 323, Sec. 6 (4626). Mowry v. Bliss,
We are asked, however, to consider petitioner's insufferable plight because it is set out that he is unable to secure his freedom except upon performance of conditions which he can not meet and that he is unable to secure a review of the order of the Superior Court because its decree was interlocutory and as the petition for divorce has been discontinued never can be reviewed by any other legal process. Upon the contention that a refusal to modify an interlocutory divorce decree, can under no circumstances be reviewed we express no opinion. Whether it be true or not petitioner has made no attempt to secure a review. He has come directly to this court asking us to exercise an original jurisdiction which we do not possess to modify a decree and arguing that under our power to issue prerogative writs we can and ought to relieve him from further imprisonment.
We are clear that this proceeding is improper. If claimed to be analogous to habeas corpus, such inquiry at common law, 31 Car. II, p. 2, was closed by showing that the prisoner was held under process from a court of competent jurisdiction. Frank v.Mangum,
This proceeding in substance is nothing more than an attempt to get a hearing de novo of the facts asserted in petitioner's application for modification because he thinks the Superior Court incorrectly decided the case. While no hard and fast rule exists as to what the court will consider in habeas corpus
proceedings, they can not be used as substitutes for the functions of the trial court in passing upon disputed questions of fact. Henry v. Henkel,
Without passing upon the question whether the decision refusing to modify the interlocutory order of the Superior Court is reviewable in some manner we are clear that we can not review it by habeas corpus or on a petition analogous thereto like the present one, without departing from well settled rules of law.
From what has been said it is obvious that no occasion exists to grant the petitioner's prayer for a writ of habeas corpus adtestificandum.
The petition is therefore denied and dismissed.