123 Minn. 508 | Minn. | 1913
Appeal by relator from an order of the district court, in habeas corpus proceedings, awarding custody of a female child 11 .years old to respondent. The cause was tried here de novo, pursuant to G. S. 1913, § 8312, on the record made below.
It appeared that prior to January 4, 1911, the child’s mother died, and on that date, after hearing duly had, the juvenile department of the district court of Hennepin county adjudged her dependent under Laws 1905, p. 418, c. 285,
These contentions cannot be sustained. We are not here considering the case of a delinquent child, nor an application to discharge one from a state institution. The purpose of the act, so far as concerns this child, was merely to provide her a proper home, and this the state proceeds to work out under its general power and jurisdiction over children. True it is that the act authorizes the court to commit children to associations similar to relator, and in such case they become their wards, subject to their guardianship, and they are vested with power to place them in family homes, with or without indenture, and may also assent to adoptions; and likewise, by other statutory provisions, the board of control has supervision of these associations. But the state, by this legislation, made the association merely one of its agencies to assist in carrying out its policy with respect to dependent children and in finding homes for them, and, notwithstanding relator’s temporary custody of the child here concerned, retained general control over her. Eelator, being the creature of the state, the latter has the right of visitation, exercisable through the instrumentality of its courts; and habeas corpus is a proper remedy to determine rights to custody, whether the association be relator or respondent therein, when new facts materially affecting the child’s interests have occurred subsequently to prior adjudication concerning its custody. Ordinarily the object of this writ is to inquire whether one is legally restrained of his liberty ; but in cases like the present, the personal freedom of the infant is not involved, infants, from humane reasons, being presumed to be in custody of some one until their majority. In such cases,
In the second case cited, a corporate foundling hospital of New York state, empowered to receive and keep children under its charge, custody, and management, in the exercise of its powers sent ,a number of its wards to Arizona, where they were placed in charge of alleged improper persons, subject, however, to the supervision of officers and agents of the corporation. One of the children. was forcibly taken from the custodian. The corporation attempted to regain custody by habeas corpus in the local courts. Its right being denied in the Territory (79 Pac. 231, 7 L.R.A.(N.S.) 306), it appealed to the United States Supreme Court. The latter, after quoting the principle that, in habeas corpus proceedings instituted for such purpose, “infants ought to be left where found, or be taken from that custody and transferred to some other, at the discretion of the perogative guardian (the state), and according to its opinion of their best interests and safety,” continues [p. 439:]
“It was in the exercise of this jurisdiction as parens patrice that the present case was heard and determined. It is the settled doctrine that in such cases the court exercises a discretion in the interest of the child to determine what care and custody are best for it in view of its age and requirements. Such cases are not decided on the legal right of the petitioner to be relieved from unlawful imprisonment or detention, as in the case of an adult, but upon the court’s view of the best interests of those whose welfare requires that they be in custody of one person or another. In such cases the •question of personal freedom is not involved except in the sense of a determination as to which custodian shall have charge of one not •entitled to be freed from restraint.”
So also, in Green v. Campbell, 35 W. Va. 698, 702, 14 S. E. 212, 214, 29 Am. St. 843, it is said:
*513 “But it is not to be forgotten or overlooked that such use of this writ is of an equitable nature, and therefore the welfare of the infant is the polar star by which the court is to be guided in the exercise of its discretion; and the court, when asked to restore, is not bound by any mere legal right of parent or guardian, but is to give it due weight as a claim founded on human nature, and generally equitable and just.”
In line with these principles, this court, in State v. Flint, 63 Minn. 187, 65 N. W. 272, awarded a child to its mother instead of father, though the latter had the statutory right to custody. See also State v. Greenwood, 84 Minn. 203, 87 N. W. 489; Gauthier v. Walter, 110 Minn. 103, 124 N. W. 634; Townsend v. Kendall, 4 Minn. 315 (412); In Matter of Welch, 74 N. Y. 299; Hurd, Habeas Corpus, 461; 77 Am. Dec. 534; Church, Writ of Habeas Corpus, § 440a et seq; 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. (2nd ed.) 187; 21 Cyc. 330.
The legislature, by the act referred to, cannot be held either to have abrogated or limited the function of the writ, even if the power so to do be conceded, nor to confine jurisdiction to the juvenile courts.
The disposition we make of this child is not necessarily final. Respondent and his family should not, moreover, attempt to influence the religious training of the child contrary to the doctrines of the church of her parents, but should afford her opportunity to embrace them so far as such may be done consistently with her attendance in our public schools.
Ordered that the order appealed from be affirmed, and respondent retain the case, custody, and control of the child, and of her education and training, subject to the right of visitation on the part of relator, its officers, and ministers, until further order.
[See G. S. 1913, §§ 7162-7175]
[See G. S. 1913, § 7174]