We have here a somewhat unusual situation; the father of an illegitimate child is making a strenuous endeavor to secure its possession and custody. The father; E. B. Wade, consulted four different lawyers; his counsel here did not represent him at the hearing in the juvenile court.
The rights of a putative father and the procedure for asserting them seem to be somewhat less than crystal clear. Even the able and experienced juvenile court judge expressed the view that the father of an illegitimate child has no legal rights.
The short and easy disposition of this case would be to say, in a per curiam opinion, that Mr. Wade is attempting to appeal from an order of the juvenile court and that, since such orders are not appealable, the appeal must be dismissed. This would leave Mr. Wade still floundering in a procedural morass, and it would seem not to be amiss for us to point out some firm ground upon which a putative father may stand in an effort to secure custody of his illegitimate child. It is to be understood that, should Mr. Wade hereafter make another effort to establish his right to have custody of his illegitimate child, we do not, by what we say hereinafter, prejudge the issue of whether the child is a dependent child within the purview of Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1987-1 [P.P.C. § 359-1], the issue of abandonment of the child by its mother, or the issue of Mr. Wade’s fitness to have its custody.
Apparently the only other occasion on which this court has had before it the claim of a father of an illegitimate child to its possession and custody was in
State ex rel. Smith v. Superior Court
(1945), 23 Wn. (2d) 357,
(Parenthetically, we should note that a year earlier we had before us the question of whether the father of an illegitimate child who had not consented to its adoption was entitled to notice of the hearing in an adoption proceeding.
In re Blake
(1944), 21 Wn. (2d) 547,
While we cited no authority in the
Smith
case,
supra,
relative to the right of the father to the custody of an illegitimate child after the death of the mother, we there recognized a rule generally though no,t universally adopted, that the right of the father of an illegitimate child to its custody and control, although inferior to that of the mother, is superior to that of any other person.
People ex rel. Meredith v.
Meredith,
It must be recognized that Mr. Wade (assuming his fitness) would have a right to the custody and control of his illegitimate child if the mother had died or abandoned the child.
We come now, somewhat belatedly, to a recital of the facts in this case. After a man and wife, who need not be named, had commented an adoption proceeding, Mr. Wade filed a petition (September 29, 1950) in the juvenile court, alleging: (a) that he is the father of an illegitimate child born September 5, 1946; (b) that the mother left the child with him when it was about a year old, saying that she wanted nothing further to do with him or the child, and that from that time until August 12, 1950, the mother never visited the child or in any way expressed any affection or concern toward it; (c) that during that period he took care of the child and maintained it in the homes of friends; (d) that *747 August 12, 1950, the mother took the child surreptitiously, and that he had been unable to locate it since that date but believed it was in the home of the man and wife who were petitioning for its adoption; (e) that the child was taken from his custody by the mother for the sole purpose of punishing him, and to deprive him of the association, custody, and affection of the child. The prayer of the petition was that the child be awarded to him, and that an order be entered depriving the mother and all others of any claim to its custody, and that petitions in all matters pertaining to the child, including the petition for adoption, be heard before the juvenile court.
As we construe this petition, it says that the child was abandoned by its mother, that the father has cared for it and desires to do so, and that it was wrongfully taken from his possession by the mother and turned over to third parties.
The juvenile court does not have jurisdiction over all juveniles, nor is every child a ward of the court; its jurisdiction being limited to delinquent or dependent children.
In re Hudson
(1942), 13 Wn. (2d) 673,
However, the juvenile court assumed jurisdiction, and Mr. Wade’s petition and the adoption proceeding were consolidated for hearing by an order dated October 27,1950. Thereafter (December 15, 1950), a notice and summons was issued by the clerk of the juvenile court to both Mr. Wade and the mother, notifying them that a petition had been filed in the office of the clerk of the juvenile court to *748 have the child declared dependent, and fixing January 17, 1951, as the date on which the petition would be heard. So far as the record before us discloses, there was no petition before the court except that of Mr. Wade heretofore referred to, asking that the mother be deprived of custody of the child and that it be awarded to him.
The court first heard the testimony of Mr. Wade in support of his petition. He testified concerning the parenthood of the child, admitted an original disclaimer of parenthood during the period of pregnancy, but stated that from the time he first saw the child he was convinced that it was his and wanted to provide for it. He admitted subsequent illicit relationships with the child’s mother and his refusal to marry her. It developed that Mr. Wade had attended college; had developed a successful business; had recently sold some property for thirty-two thousand dollars; had bought a duplex house for fourteen thousand dollars with the intention of making a home for himself and the child; had bought clothes for the child and had paid sixty dollars a month for its care in three different homes; and that he loved the child and wanted to adopt it.
While his explanation of his failure to marry the mother and thus legitimatize the child was not very convincing, we find nothing in the record other than his relationships with her to warrant the juvenile court’s stigmatizing him as unfit to have the custody and control of the child, or any evidence that the child had not been well cared for while in his possession.
The juvenile court, after hearing Mr. Wade, announced that his petition would be denied and then proceeded with the hearing on the petition for adoption filed by the couple to whom the mother had delivered the child. For reasons not here material, the trial judge stated in a memorandum decision that he would deny their petition. An order was entered in the juvenile court proceeding February 9, 1951, one paragraph of which is as follows:
“It is Therefore Ordered that that portion of the petition of E. B. Wade (Earnest Wade), filed herein on the 29th day *749 of September, 1950, seeking the custody of said child . . . for himself, be and the same is hereby Denied.”
While we entertain serious doubts as to whether the child involved in this proceeding is a dependent child within the purview of Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1987-1, in the absence of facts showing that Mr. Wade is unfit to have the custody of the child abandoned by the mother, and while we do not believe that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the finding that Mr. Wade is unfit to have the custody of his child, we are “stymied” in any effort to accord him relief due to the fact that he is here attempting to do what cannot properly be done, i.e., appeal from an order of the juvenile court.
We have heretofore pointed out that there is no provision in the juvenile court law (Laws of 1913, chapter 160, p. 520, as amended; Rem. Rev. Stat., §§ 1987-1, 1987-3 to 1987-11, 1987-14 to 1987-18, inclusive, Rem. Rev. Stat., (Sup.), § 1987-2, Rem. Supp. 1945, §§ 1987-12, 1987-12a, 1987-13) for an appeal to this court.
State ex rel. Gray v. Webster
(1922),
To say that there is no appeal from the juvenile court does not mean that its orders and judgments are not subject to review and its errors may not be corrected, certiorari and prohibition having been utilized for that purpose on numerous occasions.
For instances of review on application for writs of prohibition, see
State ex rel. De Bit v. Superior Court
(1918),
For instances of review by writs of certiorari, see
State ex rel Raddue v. Superior Court
(1919),
(It must be conceded, with some embarrassment, that we did entertain and dispose of an appeal from a custody order of a juvenile court in
Fuhrman v. Arvin
(1944), 21 Wn. (2d) 828,
Where children have been adjudged dependent and were under the control of the juvenile court, applications for writs of
habeas corpus
have been treated as applications for change of custody.
State ex rel. De Bit v. Mackintosh
(1917),
*751 It appearing to the court that Mr. Wade had no right to appeal from the order of the juvenile court complained of, the attempted appeal is dismissed.
