111 P. 403 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1910
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *158 This is an appeal from a decree setting aside a judgment or order of adoption of the minor child of plaintiff and Nellie M. Stange, formerly Nellie M. Miller.
Nellie M. Miller procured an interlocutory decree of divorce from the plaintiff, John G. Miller, in the superior court of Contra Costa county on August 16, 1906, upon the ground of extreme cruelty, and the final decree was entered therein on December 2, 1907. By this decree the custody and control of Gerard Miller, a minor, the issue of said marriage, was awarded to said Nellie M. Miller until the further order of the court, subject to the restriction that said child was not to be removed from the jurisdiction of the court, and the *159 defendant John G. Miller (plaintiff here) should have the right to visit said minor child at all reasonable times. Nellie M. Miller thereafter married the defendant H. A. Stange and left the state of California, leaving the child in the custody of her mother in Contra Costa county. Whereupon the plaintiff herein, defendant in said divorce proceeding, on the second day of September, 1908, filed his petition in said superior court of Contra Costa county, setting forth the foregoing and other facts, praying for the custody of the child and the hearing of said petition was set for September 14, 1908. Witnesses were called and examined on behalf of both parties, Nellie M. Stange appearing by attorney, and the court upon the hearing indicated its intention to vacate the order theretofore made awarding the custody of the child to said Nellie M. Stange, but the child not being before the court, the court made an order directing the production of said child in court on the fifth day of October, 1908. On this latter date a further continuance was granted and another order made requiring the production of said child, and the further order that said last-named order be served upon the said Nellie M. Stange. It being made to appear on the 9th of November, 1908, that neither Nellie M. Stange nor the child could be found in the county, an order was entered modifying said decree of divorce and awarding the custody of the child to John G. Miller. During the interim between the 14th of September, and the date of the actual entry of the order of modification, to wit, on or about the sixteenth day of October, Nellie M. Stange brought the child into Los Angeles county and proceedings were instituted in the superior court of said county by M. V. Higgins, Vera H. Higgins and the said Nellie M. Stange for the adoption of such child, which proceedings the court in this proceeding finds were instituted solely for the purpose of avoiding the lawful orders about to be made by the superior court of Contra Costa county with respect to the custody of the child, and for the purpose of affording a pretext for the taking of the child out of the state of California in violation of such order. It is further found by the court in this proceeding that neither of the moving parties therein acted in good faith, that neither of them informed the judge before whom the adoption proceedings were had, nor was he made *160 aware of the fact, that proceedings were pending in the superior court of Contra Costa county relative to the custody of said child; that at the time of said adoption proceeding the only persons present in court were the said minor child, the mother, Nellie M. Stange, and the said M. V. and Vera H. Higgins; that the court, in ignorance of the fact that the superior court of Contra Costa county had assumed jurisdiction of the application to change the custody of the child, made its order of adoption, basing the same solely upon the ground that the decree of divorce awarding the custody of the child to the mother was of itself sufficient to warrant the order of adoption, without the father's consent or appearance in said proceedings of adoption; that said Higgins and wife did not assume the custody of said child and have never had the custody of said child since the order of adoption was made, but, on the contrary, the said Nellie M. Stange assumed and took the custody of said child and has ever since retained such custody and has kept and retained said child out of the jurisdiction of the court, to wit, within the state of Illinois; that in November, 1908, the father of said child, respondent herein, first obtained information of the proceedings of adoption, and in December following he filed his complaint setting forth the facts above stated and praying the court for a decree that the said adoption proceedings and the order and decree of adoption were and are illegal and void and that the same be vacated and set aside and plaintiff be decreed to be entitled to the custody of said child.
Issue was presented as to all the matters set forth in the complaint, and the superior court, upon trial and hearing thereof, found the facts as hereinabove narrated and made its order vacating and setting aside said decree and order of adoption, from which action of the court this appeal is taken by appellants.
It is claimed by appellants that the decree of adoption was valid, and that the same was set aside by the court upon the request of a stranger to the proceedings; that Miller was not entitled to notice of the adoption proceedings under section
The record discloses that the fraud practiced upon the court making the order of adoption in this case was the concealment from the court of facts affecting its jurisdiction. *163
It is unnecessary to cite authorities in support of the proposition that when a court competent to adjudicate upon the subject matter of the litigation obtains jurisdiction over the parties, within the territorial limits of its extent, such court alone has the power to adjudge upon the questions sought to be litigated in the suit, and no other court can deprive it of that power. The court finds, and it is most evident, that but for the concealment of the facts referred to it would not have made this decree of adoption in the first instance. Such concealment of facts affords ground for relief in equity. (1 Bigelow on Fraud, p. 92.) It is clear that the parties to the adoption proceedings concealed from the superior court the facts relative to the action of the superior court of Contra Costa county, and upon which facts the jurisdiction of the superior court of Los Angeles county depended. This was a fraud upon the court. (Dunham v. Dunham,
We do not regard the case of Younger v. Younger,
Judgment affirmed.
Shaw, J., and James, J., concurred.