162 N.C. 283 | N.C. | 1913
Tbe plaintiff entered into a contract with bis wife, tbe defendant Edith Howell, • and tbe defendant G. A. Briggs, her father, that tbe daughter of tbe plaintiff, Lucy Howell, might remain with her mother, Edith Howell, at the home of said G. A. Briggs until said child should reach-the age of 6 years, when she should 'be returned to her father. The plaintiff, soon after said contract, obtained a divorce from his wife on the ground of her .adultery, and the decree provided that the custody of the child should be left open for further orders of the court. There has been no decree fixing the custody of said child.
The complaint asks judgment against the defendant G. A. Briggs for damages, and against both defendants for the custody of said child, if she can be located, and for a rule upon the defendant Briggs requiring him to disclose the present whereabouts and residence of the plaintiff’s child.
Abduction is usually prosecuted on the' criminal side of the docket. But there are many cases in which damages have been recovered for wrongful abduction. The court having dismissed the action upon the pleadings, we ‘must take the statements in the complaint to be true, because by the dismissal of the action the plaintiff has been debarred the opportunity of proving his allegation to be true. The question is whether the complaint states a cause of action.
In Harris v. Harris, 115 N. C., 589, it was held that a father who was entitled to the custody of the child might recover damages on a bond given for the return'of the child to his custody, for failure to do so. A grave wrong was done the plaintiff if, as the complaint avers, his child was taken out of the State or secreted by the mother with the aid and assistance of the defendant G-. A. Briggs. If the child were in the State, this action can be maintained for the production of the child before the judge, who upon hearing the evidence would award her custody. As to the defendant G. A. Briggs, if the allegations of the complaint are proven to be true, he is clearly liable for damages.
It is true that at common law abduction of a female for immoral purposes was not an offense (S. v. Sullivan, 85 N. C., 506), but as Judge Settle remarked in S. v. Oliver, 70 N. C., 60 (referring .to the common-law right of a husband to whip his wife), “We have advanced from that barbarism,” to some extent, by Laws 1879, ch. 81, now Revisal, 33-58, which makes abduction under some circumstances an offense if the child is under 14 years of age. S. v. George, 93 N. C., 567; S. v. Chisenhall, 106 N. C., 676; S. v. Burnett, 142 N. C., 579.
In Brown v. Crockett, 8 La. Ann., 30, it is held .that in an action for the wrongful abduction of a minor the jury has a right to award damages for mental anguish as a part of the compensatory damages for such wrong. In Baumgartner v. Eigenbrot, 100 Md., 508, it was held that if the child was kept in defendant’s custody in a clandestine manner an action would lie.
In Steele v. Thacker, 1 Ware (U. S., 85), it was held that “A parent may maintain a libel in- admiralty for the wrongful abduction of his child, being a minor, and carrying him beyond the sea.” This has been cited with approval in 22 Fed. Cases, 13, 348, where the above case is reprinted. The subject is very interestingly discussed in Everett v. Sherfey, 1 Iowa, 356, and Schouler Dom. Rel. (3 Ed.), sec. 260; 2 Hilliard on Torts (3 Ed.), 519,, 521, which sustain the proposition that a parent can maintain damages for the abduction of his child. To same effect R. R. Co. v. Showers, 71 Ind., 451; Sargent v. Mathewson, 38 N. H., 54, and other cases.
The most usual case in which this action is brought has been upon the abduction of a daughter for marriage or immoral purposes. But the modern authorities, as we have said, have advanced, and now the parent can recover damages for the unlawful taking away or concealment of a minor child, and is not limited to ca'ses in which such child is heir or eldest son, nor to cases where the abduction is for immoral purposes, nor are the
Tie law is summed up with citation of numerous autiorities in 1 A. and E. (2 Ed.), 167, as follows: “A fatier ias a rigit of action against every person wio knowingly and wittingly interrupts tie relation subsisting between iimself and iis ciild or abducting iis ciild -away from iim or by harboring tie ciild after he ias left tie house.”
It can make no difference tiat tie ciild at tie time she was carried away was not in tie immediate ciistody of tie fatier. She was temporarily with her mother, but he was legally entitled to her custody or to have it adjudged by tie court, and to take her out of tie jurisdiction of tie court, or secrete ier, was an injury for which he was entitled to' damages. Tie allegation of tie complaint tiat tie defendant Briggs “procured, aided, assisted, and advised tie taking off of tie ciild and conceals its whereabouts and ias thereby caused tie plaintiff great and agonizing distress of both mind and body,” states a good cause of action against iim.
Tie judgment dismissing tie action is
Reversed.