126 F. 818 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana | 1904
(orally). There are several reasons why this court has no power or authority to issue this writ, and there
“The Legislature, as parens patrise, may, to some extent, make provision for the care of those who are unable to take proper care of themselves, as in the case of insane persons and neglected children.”
In Mormon Church v. United States, 136 U. S. 1, 10 Sup. Ct. 792, 34 L. Ed. 481, in the syllabus, it is stated:
“In this country the Legislature has the power of parens patrise in reference to infants, idiots, lunatics, charities, etc., which in England is exercised by the crown.”
In the opinion itself the court says:
“Lord Chancellor Somers, in Cary v. Bertie, 2 Vernon, 333, 342, said: ‘It is true, infants are always favored. In this court there are several things which belong to the King, as pater patrise, and fall under the care and direction of this court, as charities, infants, idiots, lunatics, etc.’ ”
And again in the same opinion the court said:
“In Fontain v. Ravenel, 17 How. 369, 384 [15 L. Ed. 80, 86], Mr. Justice McLean, delivering the opinion of this court in a charity case, said: ‘When this country achieved its independence, the prerogatives of the crown devolved upon the people of the states. And this power still remains with them, except so far as they have delegated a portion of it to the federal government. The sovereign will is made known to us by legislative enactment. The state, as a sovereign, is the parens patrise.’ ”
The court further says:
“This prerogative of parens patrise is inherent in the supreme power of every state, whether that power is lodged in a royal person or in the Legislature, and has no affinity to those arbitrary powers which are sometimes exerted by irresponsible monarchs to the great detriment of the people and the destruction of their liberties. On the contrary, it is a most beneficent function, and often necessary to be exercised in the interests of humanity, and for the prevention of injury to those who cannot protect themselves.”
In that case, arising as it did in the territory, as it then was, of Utah, the Supreme Court held that the national government had this power of parens patrise in the territory of Utah; that this power,
In the case of Fontain v. Ravenel, 17 How. 369, 15 L. Ed. 80, Chief Justice Taney, in a concurring opinion, says :
“Blackstone, in his Commentaries (3d vol., 47), enumerating what he states to be the extraordinary powers of the Chancellor, says: ‘He is the general guardian of all infants, idiots, and lunatics, and has the general superintendence of all charitable uses in the kingdom; and all this over and above the vast and extensive jurisdiction which he exercises in his judicial capacity in the court of chancery.’ * * * So, too, Cooper, in his chapter on the jurisdiction of the court, says: ‘The jurisdiction, however, in the three cases of infants, idiots, or lunatics and charities, does not belong to the court of chancery as a court of equity, but as administering the prerogative and duties of the crown.’ * * * The second section of the third article of the Constitution declares that the judicial power of the United States shall extend to all cases in law and equity specified in the section. These words obviously confer judicial power, and nothing more, and cannot, upon any fair construction, be held to embrace the prerogative powers, which the King, as parens patrias, in England, exercised through the courts. And the chancery jurisdiction of the courts of the United States, as granted by the Constitution, extends only to cases over which the court of chancery had jurisdiction in its judicial character as a court of equity. The wide discretionary power which the Chancellor of England exercised over infants, lunatics, or idiots, or charities, has not been conferred. These prerogative powers, which belong to the sovereign, as parens patrise, remain with the states.”
So it seems that in the case at bar there is involved a peculiar jurisdiction, which remains in the states, and is not conferred upon the courts of the United States at all. And in the case of King v. The McLean Asylum of Massachusetts General Hospital, 64 Fed. 325, 12 C. C. A. 139, 26 L. R. A. 784, relied upon by petitioner, Judge Putnam uses this language on page 351, 64 Fed., page 165, 12 C. C. A., 26 L. R. A. 784;
“Whatever a state tribunal, having jurisdiction as parens patriae, might accomplish, especially in Massachusetts, where the statute authority given to judges of the higher courts touching the committing of insane persons to asylums would cover the case of a prior informal committal, and enable them to apply an immediate and practical remedy by a new one, the Circuit Courts [meaning the Circuit Courts of the United States] have not the machinery to deal suitably with a person in the condition in which the petitioner is alleged in this return to be, and would therefore be prohibited, both by public policy and humanity, from merely discharging him from the custody in which he might be found. In such circumstances a court would be called on to exercise more than ordinary judicial powers, including those possessed by the Chancellor, as representative of the sovereign, or by virtue of his sign manual.”
This is the case, as I understand it, that petitioner relies upon.
It is said by one of the counsel for petitioner that they do not want this court to take this unfortunate person from the custody of his father, and give him in custody to the guardian appointed in Cincinnati. It is said by another of counsel for petitioner that they do expect this court, if it should find the facts upon the hearing to be as they claim, instead of turning him loose on the world, to turn him over to the guardian appointed in Cincinnati.
It has been urged with a great deal of earnestness, with reference to the “great writ of habeas corpus,” that the question here is one of personal liberty. Now, that does well enough for counsel, but surely
Judge Putnam, in the case relied upon by petitioner, said that the United States courts would not pass upon the question as to who should have the custody of King. Yet this court is asked to take this insane person out of the hands of the person in whose custody he now is, and either turn him loose in the world — which counsel who last occupied the floor for the petitioner disclaimed — or put him in the possession of another person; and that, as I.understand it, is asking this court to pass upon the question as to who shall have possession of this insane person, and to exercise that discretion which Judge Putnam expressly disclaimed the power of the United States courts to do, in the case relied upon by petitioner.
In the petition it is alleged, with respect to the proceeding commenced and now pending in the Tippecanoe circuit court, that the only notice that was served on this unfortunate person was the summons which is set out in the petition. What further notice could have been served, counsel for the petitioner have not stated, and this court does not know.
Now, in the last two months this court has heard a great deal of argument upon the jurisdictions — the different .jurisdictions — of the state and federal courts; and the court has had occasion to decide some important questions, and to take some pronounced grounds upon the cases as presented. In this case the petition shows that on the 16th day of April, 1903, a petition was filed in the Tippecanoe circuit court — a court which has jurisdiction of the subject-matter — alleging that Moses Fowler Chase was an inhabitant of the county of Tippecanoe, and that he was a person of unsound mind. That case is still pending. The Tippecanoe circuit court has the right and the power to decide both of those questions; and to ask this court now, right upon the eve of that hearing, as was done last Saturday night, and as is done now by reason of che postponement of the hearing in the state court until to-morrow — to ask this court now to issue this writ under the circumstances is equivalent to asking it to decide in advance that the state court, which has full, complete, and exclusive jurisdiction to try those questions and decide them, will decide wrong. The Tippecanoe circuit court, upon the face of this petition, has jurisdiction of the subject-matter — not only of the subject-matter, in the sense that it has jurisdiction of that sort of questions, but it has jurisdiction of this case; it has jurisdiction of the person whose sanity is in question; and, if this proceeding had not been brought, that question would have been already determined by the Tippecanoe circuit
The only claim that is made that gives this court any appearance of jurisdiction is the claim that stows out of diverse citizenship. To my mind, the case of Kurtz v. Moffitt, 115 U. S. 487, 6 Sup. Ct. 148, 29 L. Ed. 458, is conclusive of the question here. It is well enough to read the statutes and the Constitution, which in general terms speak of the powers and jurisdiction of the United States courts, but, after all, these courts have no jurisdiction except that which is distinctly given. And in reference to diverse citizenship, in every section, -in every clause, conferring jurisdiction because of diverse citizenship, there is included the element of the amount in controversy. Counsel for petitioner have not pointed out any exception to this. If it be true that a habeas corpus proceeding brought in a state court, where the defendant is a nonresident of that state, cannot be removed to the United States court, because, although being between citizens of different states, the controversy does not involve $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs, the conclusion seems irresistible that this court is without original jurisdiction. See, also, Cross v. Burke, 146 U. S. 82, 87, 88, 13 Sup. Ct. 22, 36 L. Ed. 896.
The petition for the writ is denied.