110 Wis. 625 | Wis. | 1901
The following opinion was filed June 20, 1901:
The only question which can be reviewed upon the writ of habeas corpus is the jurisdiction of the circuit court making the order for the guardianship and custody of this minor. In re Meggett, 105 Wis. 291. In this limitation of the question, the word “ jurisdiction ” must be understood in its fullest and most comprehensive sense. If the circuit court had jurisdiction of the parties and authority over the subject matter, that must be the end of the inquiry; for in this respect that court sits in no sense as a mere magistrate or statutory tribunal, only ^wasi-judicial in its character, where jurisdiction depends not alone upon having the subject legally within the scope of its powers, but also upon procedure in accordance with law, and where jurisdiction is lost by disregard of legal duty, of which illustrations are found in State ex rel. Wood Co. v. Dodge Co. 56 Wis. 79; State ex rel. Heller v. Lawler, 103 Wis. 460; and State ex rel. Durner v. Huegin, ante, p. 185. The circuit court, in dealing with the subject of guardianship and custody of minors, acts as a court, and judicially, in the broadest and highest sense of
The petitioner does, however, insist that in the case under consideration no jurisdiction over the subject existed, for the reason that such subject matter had already been adjudicated in another forum, and in the same forum but in another proceeding, to wit, by the county judge, under sec. .45875, S. & B. Ann. Stats., and the review of his order upon the habeas corpus proceeding, and by the circuit court in a divorce action between the parents of this child. The latter circumstance is especially dwelt on, as excluding the jurisdiction of the circuit court upon the present application, for the reason that the custody of the child is still an open controversy, within the control, decision, and regulation of the circuit court, in the exercise of its powers of revision and modification of the judgment in the divorce action. We need not consider whether the circumstance that a subject has already been decided or is pending for decision in another court or proceeding excludes it from the jurisdiction of other courts, in a strict and technical sense, or whether, where such rule is laid down, the word “ jurisdiction ” is not used loosely, merely to declare the impropriety or illegality of a second court taking cognizance of the subject matter; as, for example, when it is said that
Distinct from this question of relative rights and duties of the parents upon the severance of the marital relation between them and disintegration of the family, there is the interest of the public that children shall not be exposed to abuse or to perverting and debauching influences, tending to their injury and disabling them to become fit members of society. The right and duty of the government to take precautions to this end is but an exercise of the police power, and in the performance of that right and duty and the exercise of that police power is sec. á-5875, S. & B. Ann. Stats., vesting in the county judge authority to remove the child from the custody of those who otherwise would be entitled to and charged with its custody and nurture. But there is still a third and broader aspect of the situation, and that is the right of the child to have its own welfare considered ; and upon that right rests the power, now under
From these definitions of the purposes for which the various jurisdictions are exercised, it is obvious that none of the antecedent proceedings have forestalled or exhausted the field upon which the circuit court entered in making the order now assailed. That order is not dependent either upon the police power of the state, or upon the right of either parent- as against the other, but rests upon considerations of the welfare of the child itself, is higher and more ample than either of the others, and calls for a wisdom and breadth of view equaled by few judicial functions. FTothing appears which in any respect excluded the circuit court from considering and deciding, under its power as a court of equity, that the welfare of Lillie Stittgen required her withdrawal from the control and custody of her mother, and committal to that of the respondent. We cannot, on habeas corpus, review that decision, but must remand the child to be held in obedience thereto.
Even were the respondent’s custody of the child unsupported by any order of court or other legal right, we should reach the same conclusion. This court, as indeed most others, has consistently held that, upon habeas corpus proceed