188 P. 1004 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
This application for a writ of habeas corpus for release of two infant children from the custody of the probation officer of San Diego County was made by the father of the minors. The infants, aged three years and one year, respectively, were committed to the custody of the probation officer by an order of the juvenile court, in proceedings under the juvenile court law. The petition on which the commitment was made charged that the minors "have no parent or guardian capable of exercising proper parental control," and that they are within the provisions of subdivision 2 of section 1 of the act. The court found, in making the commitment, "that the allegations of fact contained in the petition are true." *96 [1] The jurisdiction of the court is attacked for alleged insufficiency of the petition and findings.
Although the statement of facts upon which jurisdiction in this matter must rest is rather meager, we think it sufficient to confer jurisdiction.
Subdivision 2 of section 1 of the juvenile court law provides that its terms apply to any person under the age of twenty-one years "who has no parent or guardian; or who has no parent or guardian willing to exercise or capable of exercising proper parental control." Section 9b of the act provides that "no ward of the juvenile court as defined in this act shall be taken from the custody of his parent or legal guardian without the consent of such parent or guardian, unless the court shall find such parent or guardian to be incapable of providing, or to have failed or neglected to provide proper maintenance, training and education for said person." The finding of the court that the allegation of the petition that these minors had "no parent or guardian capable of exercising proper parental control," was true, substantially meets the requirements of these provisions.
[2] The writ of habeas corpus is not intended to perform the functions of a writ of error for the purpose of reviewing mere errors or irregularities of proceedings of a court having jurisdiction of the person and subject matter involved. [3] The petition filed under the Juvenile Court Act is a pleading filed in a court of record. And even where the petition is obviously open to demurrer for an insufficient statement of the facts, if it appears from the declarations that there is a purported or attempted statement of facts which would confer jurisdiction, the question as to such sufficiency of statement will not be examined into on habeas corpus. (Matter of Application ofClifton,
The case of In re Brodie,
In the application of the general rules governing habeascorpus proceedings to juvenile court acts, we find no enlargement of the power of the courts on habeas corpus to go behind the record of the commitment to review the evidence. It may be said that even a larger discretion is recognized in the courts in dealing with matters pertaining to children than in other cases. The objection that the informal procedure of juvenile courts does not constitute due process of law, and hence that the parental rights to the child's custody cannot be taken away by order or *98 commitment has almost uniformly been overruled. The wider discretion here recognized arises from the fact that it is not alone the rights of the parent, but the welfare of the child that are presented to the court for determination. It is well to bear in mind, however, that it has long been a salutary rule of the domestic life of this country to recognize the rights of parents, in the absence of radical abuses, to bring up their children in their own way. The family is the fundamental basis of civilized society, divinely instituted, and mere incidents of poverty, or ignorance, or inadequacy in high ideals or standards in the homes should not be made to justify taking young children from their natural guardians to make them wards of the state, or to give them to other relatives better qualified, in the estimation of the courts, to bring them up.
The comments of the learned judge who made this order of commitment, as contained in the record, indicate that he had these considerations clearly in mind, and we would not in any event in this proceeding be justified in calling in question the correctness of his conclusions from the evidence before him. We are, therefore, expressing no opinion on that point.
The writ is discharged.
Finlayson, P. J., and Thomas, J., concurred.