This is аn appeal from a decision of the Superior Court at a domestic relations session sustaining an order of the Juvenile Court denying an application to revoke the commitments of three children of the appellant. The only claim made by her which justifies any extended discussion is that the trial court
The rules of the Superior Court expressly provide, with reference to a hearing on an appeal from the Juvenile Court: “Such case histories and records of investigations as are in the' possession of the juvenile court shall be admissible in evidence . . . and any party adversely interested may require the presence for cross-examination of any persons whose report is before the court. . . Practice Book, с. 26A, § 2(c). The trial court, acting under this rule, did consider the reports. We could dispose of the contention of the appellant on the ground that at the hearing of the case before the Superior Court not only did she not object to such action by the trial court, as the ’court has found, but, as an examination of the evidence made necessary by attacks on the finding shows, her attorney expressly stated that he had no objection. Thе question raised upon the appeal is, however, one of such general concern as regards appeals in juvenile cases that we have decided to consider it.
In the revision of the statutes consеquent upon the adoption of the constitution of 1818, the Supreme Court of Errors was given power to make such rules of practice for the regulation of that court and of the Superior Court “as shall be deemed most conducive to the administration of justice.” Statutes, 1821, p. 137, § 5. The statute remained in force until 1855. Statutes, 1854, p. 265, § 12. In 1855 the rule-making power was taken from the judges of the Supreme Court of Errors and vested in an assembly of the judges of the Superior Court; they were authorized to “make all necessary and proper rules, not contrary to law, for the trial of causes and other proceedings in said superior court”; and they were directed to make such rules “as
As used in the statute of 1855, the word “dispatch” was clearly intended to have the meaning of a speedy disposition of matters in the court. Webster's New International Dictionary (2d Ed.). The revisers in 1902 were confronted with two laws then on the statute books, § 772 of the Revision of 1888, and chapter 5 of
Even if this were not so, it was within the power of the judges to make the particular rule in question. Apart from legislative authority, courts acting in the exercise of common-law powers have an inherent right to make rules governing procedure in them.
In re Hien,
The statute authorizing an appeal to the Superior Court from a decision of the Juvenile Court does not state the nature and sсope of the proceeding and contains only a single provision as to procedure. General Statutes § 2815. That provision authorizes the judge holding the session of the Superior Court at which such an appeаl is heard to order an investigation to be made by a qualified probation officer or county investigator, whose written report is admissible in evidence subject to the right of any party to require him to appear for сross-examination. The purpose of the provision clearly is to authorize the court, in an appeal which involves the custody of infants, to adopt a procedure which would not be proper in an ordinаry court action; it was obviously intended to be an extension of, not a limitation upon, the power of the court in such cases. The provisions of the statute fall far short of establishing a procedure for the orderly disрosition of such appeals. Even lacking statutory authority, it would be well within the inherent power of the judges of the Superior Court to make rules which would bring about an orderly, expeditious and just determination of the issues.
The appellant suggests rather than directly claims that the admission in evidence of reports of investigators which were before the Juvenile Court in itself violates basic principles of evidence. The Juvenile Court is required to make a broad investigation of relevant circumstances to determine what disposition of
The appellant attacks several paragraphs of the finding, but for the most part the ground of objection is that they are based upon the reports of investigations made for the Juvenile Court, and it follows from what we have said that these assignments of error cannot be sustained. The material paragraphs of the finding, not subject to correction, present this situation: The children in question, two boys and a girl, in 1943 and 1945 were committed to the New Haven County Temporary Home and they are now in that home or in foster homes. Subsequent to the commitments, the mother obtained a divorce from her husband. She has remarried. While the physical facilities of the home where she lives with her present husband are adequate to care for the bоys, they are not for the girl. The children are properly cared for and well adjusted to their present living conditions. The present husband of the mother has a police record which dates back to 1916 and includes a variety of charges. He has quarrelled frequently with his wife and in 1947 was sent to jail as the result of one altercation. The mother is of mediocre intelligence and both she and her husband are of an excitable temperament. Neither appeared to the court qualified to supervise adolescent children, and the husband would not be a good influence upon growing boys. The boys are easily led and require close supervision. We cаnnot find that the trial court was in error in concluding that the revocation of the commitments would not conduce to the best welfare of the children; and the appellant, as their mother, has no natural right to their custody which can prevail over such a disposition of the case as would serve their best
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
