63 N.Y.S. 497 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The appeals are wholly without merit. The relator, on the 12th day of January, Í 899, sued out a writ of habeas corpus to secure the •custody of his daughter, a minor, who, he alleged, was imprisoned and restrained of her liberty by Angelo Ciarcia, and by his son, the respondent, Vincenzo Ciarcia. The writ was never served. on Angelo. It was served on Vincenzo, who duly made return denying the possession, custody or restraint by him of the relator’s daughter as alleged in the petition, which return the relator duly traversed, and the issues so raised were sent to a referee to take proof and submit the same to the court writli his opinion. The referee reported the evidence, with his opinion, to the effect that the allegations 'of the relator’s petition were not sustained; whereupon the petition was dismissed by the court, with costs and disbursements, and subsequently a judgment was granted and entered to the like effect, with the costs and disbursements inserted as taxed.
The petition on which the writ was issued asserted that the relator’s daughter, Mary Oprandy, was unlawfully deprived of her .liberty by Angelo and Vincenzo Ciarcia, and that by persuasion or force they had induced her to leave her father’s house, and to remain and live with Vincenzo Ciarcia under circumstances as to injuriously affect her reputation.
The evidence presented to the referee conclusively established the
Manifestly the court was not required, under these circumstances, to violently take this young woman, who will be eighteen years old in less than five months, away from the home of her adoption and drive her to her father’s house. Conceding the power, its exercise would involve serious practical difficulties. But the writ of habeas corpus is not vested with any such office. As was said in People
The appellant’s daughter is exercising her own volition. The respondent is exerting no influence or control over her. The appellant cannot say, nearly a year after a marriage which he has forced upon her, that she is too young to have a will of her own. The case is barren of proof that her interests or welfare require a change in her status or disposition, and she is, under the circumstances of the case, beyond the discipline or control of the court. The order dismissing the writ was, therefore, proper, and it was in the discretion of the court to award costs. (Matter of Barnett, 11 Hun, 468.) The case of People ex rel. Van Riper v. N. Y. C. Protectory (106 N. Y. 604) is distinguishable. There the child was committed by a police justice after an examination of charges under the provisions of the Penal Code. The proceedings being criminal in their nature, there was no authority to impose costs upon the institution to which she was committed, in habeas corpus proceedings designed to secure her release. So in People ex rel. New York Soc. for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children v. Gilmore (88 N. Y. 626) where the proceeding was for a criminal contempt.
The so-called judgment entered in the proceedings on the 19th day of June, 1899, was, perhaps, unnecessary, and may be regarded-in form as unauthorized. As was said of it, however, by the learned justice at Special Term, it declares no rights founded on error, but merely reiterates the dismissal of the writ as embraced in the order of the court, entered May 24, 1899, and embodies the taxation of the costs and disbursements in a specific amount, as to which the appellant alleges no error. It may be reasonably regarded as the-final order in the proceeding.
The orders should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs in all, and' the disbursements.
All concurred.
Orders affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.