35 S.E.2d 896 | Ga. | 1945
The custody of the minor children by the defendant in error is not illegal or void for any reason assigned by the plaintiff in error in her petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
In her petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Mrs. Virginia F. Fortson asserts that the custody of the children by the defendant, Mrs. Jean S. Fortson, is illegal and void because the act of 1915 (Ga. L. 1915, pp. 35-37; Code, §§ 24-2402 — 24-2440), under which the juvenile court awarded custody to the defendant "was not intended to apply to children under 16 years of age, [of] whose custody, as children of a dissolved marriage, a superior court of Georgia has, on divorce granted, assumed actual jurisdiction, and with respect to which divorce it is under the Constitution of the State of Georgia (art. VI, par. I, of Code, § 2-3201) vested with exclusive jurisdiction, and with respect to the custody of the children of which said dissolved marriage it is vested under section 30-127 of [the] Code . . of Georgia, in the exercise of a sound discretion, with exclusive jurisdiction;" and because the act of 1915, supra, modifies and repeals section 30-127 of the Code, and contravenes and violates art. III, sec. VII, par. XVII of the State Constitution. *117
On the trial the court found for the defendant, and the petitioner brings the cause to this court for review.
Art. 6, sec. 4, par. 1 of the Constitution (Code, § 2-3201) provides: "The superior courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction in cases of divorce: in criminal cases where the offender is subjected to loss of life, or confinement in the penitentiary, in cases respecting titles to land, and equity cases." It is clear that judges of the superior courts in this State have exclusive jurisdiction in all cases of divorce under the above paragraph of the constitution. It is equally clear that the paragraph above cited makes no reference to the custody of minor children in such divorce cases. Section 30-127 of the Code confers upon the judge of the superior courts the right to fix the custody of the minor children "in all cases of divorce granted." Section 30-206 provides that the judge may hear and determine who shall be entitled to the care and custody of the children pending the litigation. Prior to the act of 1913 (Ga. L. 1913, p. 110), now section 74-107 of the Code, there was a prima facie right in the father for the possession of minor children. In the act of 1913 (§ 74-107) it is provided that, in all cases where the custody of minor children is involved between parents, there shall be no prima facie right of custody in the father, and that the court may exercise its sound discretion and determine solely what is the best interest of the child or children and what will best promote their welfare and happiness. The Supreme Court in a number of cases has cited the above sections of the Code as the basis for the jurisdiction of a judge of the superior court to decree the custody of minor children in divorce cases. See Duke
v. Duke,
The jurisdiction of a judge of the superior court in such an instance, however, is not exclusive as to a future determination on material conditions and circumstances, substantially affecting the interest and welfare of the minor children, arising after the date *118
of the award in such decree. In Williams v. Crosby,
In view of the above authorities, it can not be said that a judge of the superior court, by awarding the custody of minor children in a decree of divorce, acquires exclusive jurisdiction as to their future custody, under the provisions of art. 6, sec. 4, par. 1 of the Constitution and § 30-127 of the Code. The interest and welfare of the minor children being the paramount issue, "even in a contest between parents, or by other persons against the parents, the State is also parens patriae, and neither the child nor the State is finally concluded by the divorce proceedings." Williams v. Crosby,
It is asserted that the act of 1915 (Ga. L. 1915, pp. 35-37; Code, §§ 24-2402 — 24-2440) contravenes art. 3, sec. 7, par. 17 of the Constitution, in that such act modifies and repeals the Code, § 30-127. Neither in the caption of the act of 1915, nor in the body thereof, is there any direct reference to section 30-127. If it could be said that the act of 1915, creating the juvenile court, in any way modifies or repeals section 30-127, it is by implication only, and it is a well-settled principle that repeals by implication *120
do not come within the provisions of art. 3, sec. 7, par. 17 of the Constitution. In Durham v. State,
Repeals by implication not being within the inhibition of art. 3, sec. 7, par. 17 of the Constitution, and, as stated, there being no direct reference in the act of 1915 creating the juvenile court, to the Code, § 30-127, the assertion that such act modifies and repeals section 30-127, in violation of such paragraph of the Constitution, is without merit.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.