153 P. 412 | Or. | 1915
Opinion by
Mr. and Mrs. Grant have no children of their own. They have cared for Marion Bowers as though she were their own offspring, and they are able, ready and anxious to continue properly to support, maintain, and educate her. The Circuit Court evidently considered and undertook to promote the best interests of the child when it dismissed the writs of habeas corpus and committed the custody of the minor to the defendant until further ordered. If the County Court of Polk County, as a juvenile tribunal, had jurisdiction of the subject matter September 25, 1914, and was authorized to order Marion Bowers returned to the custody of Mr. and Mrs. Grant as set forth in the journal entry hereinbefore quoted, the determination of the trial court would be entitled to great consideration.
These provisions confer upon the County Court, which first secures original jurisdiction of the matter of a dependent child, the sole power to hear and determine the question. The petitioner, Mollie Bowers, and her daughter, the ward, Marion, were before the County Court of Polk County, September 25, 1914, when the order was made that the child remain in the care of Mr. and Mrs. Grant. This appearance may have conferred jurisdiction of the person of the mother and her daughter, but not of the subject matter, the right to dispose of the ward, which power remained in the Juvenile Court of Multnomah County. Courts of that kind find homes for dependent children in various counties of the state, and to permit another court to interfere with a ward when duly adjudged to be such would create interminable difficulties. An alleged dependent infant, who has, pursuant to a duly verified written petition setting forth the necessary facts, been brought before a juvenile tribunal and
“Between courts of concurrent jurisdiction, the court first acquiring jurisdiction will retain it, and will not be interfered with by another court.”
This rule is so elementary as to require no further citations of authority supporting the legal principle. The Juvenile Court of Multnomah County having first secured jurisdiction of the subject matter and never having dismissed the proceedings or released the ward, the County Court of Polk County, a tribunal of concurrent power, had no authority to intermeddle with the custody of the child, and its decree attempting to affect such custody is void.
It is argued by defendant’s counsel that, if an adjudged dependent child should be taken to another county by his guardjan to be placed in a home, such ward might be imposed upon and suffer injury unless relief could immediately be granted by the Juvenile Court of the county in which the infant might be found. This argument is forceful, and if it were addressed to the legislative assembly an amendment of the statute, regulating the procedure in the Juvenile Courts, might possibly be secured. No power is lodged in the courts, in counties other than that in which the original jurisdiction was secured, to correct such supposed abuses, for the statute commands in general that in case of a decree in respect to the per
The action of the Circuit Court in denying the petition, dismissing the proceedings, and awarding the custody of Marion Bowers to the defendant is erroneous, and in consequence thereof the judgment is reversed, and one will be entered here restoring the liberty of the ward and surrendering her to the petitioner, Mollie Bowers, until the further order of the Juvenile Court of Multnomah County in the matter.
Reversed.