50 S.E.2d 906 | N.C. | 1948
Proceeding by writ of habeas corpus to determine the custody of an infant.
Freda Mae Phipps is an infant nine years of age. Her mother is dead and her father resides in Buncombe County. Prior to her death, the mother had custody of the child and it lived in the home of its maternal grandparents. After the mother's death, the child continued to reside with said grandparents, and the petitioner, the father, contributed to its support until the institution of this proceeding.
On 12 June 1948, Nettles, J., on application of petitioner in Buncombe County, issued a writ of habeas corpus directed to respondents to determine the controversy respecting the custody of said child of petitioner. At the hearing, it being made to appear that at the January Term, 1946, of Wilkes County, in a divorce action there pending, the custody of the child was awarded to the mother, Nettles J., transferred the proceeding to Wilkes County to be heard as a motion in the cause in the divorce action.
When the cause came on to be heard before Clement, J., in Wilkes County, he, on motion of respondents, dismissed the writ for that "an action of this kind will not lie for the reason that the Juvenile Court has *631 original exclusive jurisdiction in this case." Petitioner excepted and appealed. The petitioner stressfully contends that the father, being a fit and suitable person, has sole right to the custody of his child "as a rule of law," and that therefore a controversy respecting the child's custody such as would confer jurisdiction upon the juvenile court cannot arise in the absence of proof of abandonment or other special fact not here appearing.
This position cannot be sustained. The right of petitioner to the custody of his child is not at issue on this appeal. The sole question is one of procedure which, on this record, is jurisdictional. Furthermore, the contention is made in the middle of a controversy in respect to the custody of said infant. The cause of petitioner may be just and the contention of respondents may be unfounded and unwarranted — nonetheless, there is a controversy. Otherwise there would be no need to seek the aid of the courts.
We have four separate statutory provisions respecting the manner of determining the right to the custody of an infant when custody is the only question at issue. G.S.
The provisions of the first two, G.S.
When the parents are living in a state of separation without being divorced a controversy between them over the custody of a child born of the marriage may be adjudicated under a writ of habeas corpus. G.S.
So soon as the "state of separation" between husband and wife resolves itself into, brings about, or is followed by an action for divorce in which a complaint has been filed, the jurisdiction of the court acquired under a writ of habeas corpus as provided by G.S.
When, however, the parents were divorced outside this State, either parent may have the question of custody as between them determined in a special proceeding in the Superior Court. G.S.
In all other instances in which the custody of an infant less than sixteen years of age is the subject of the controversy, the juvenile branch of the Superior Court of the county where the child resides or is to be found has exclusive original jurisdiction. G.S.
It is to be noted that the exceptions include only cases in which the controversy is between the parents of the infant. In such cases the family relations are involved and each party has some natural as well as legal claim to the child. The child itself is under the protective custody of the court which exercises its sound discretion in providing for its welfare. For these reasons, perhaps, the Legislature, in adopting General Statutes, Chap. 110, Art. 2, saw fit to leave G.S.
It follows that the court below correctly concluded that it was without jurisdiction to hear the matter either as upon a writ of habeas corpus or as a motion in the divorce action theretofore pending in Wilkes County.
The cases cited and relied on by petitioner are not in conflict with the conclusion here reached. In the TenHoopen case,
The judgment entered in the court below was in accord with the decisions of this Court and is
Affirmed.