187 So. 551 | La. | 1939
This is a proceeding by habeas corpus, by which the relator is seeking to have his child taken from her mother and placed in his care and custody. The child is a girl only three years of age. The parents had quarreled and were separated for about five months, the father living with his parents and the mother and child with *211 the mother's parents, when the writ of habeas corpus was granted. On the day fixed for the hearing of the suit the wife filed a suit for separation from bed and board, on the ground that her husband had been guilty of cruel treatment of such a nature as to render her living with him insupportable. She prayed for and obtained an order from the judge giving her the provisional care and keeping of the child pending the suit for a separation from bed and board. The child was already in the care and keeping of the mother, having been with her continuously during the five months in which she was living with her parents, separate and apart from her husband. The trial of the habeas corpus suit was postponed to and heard on the next day after the suit for separation from bed and board was filed. A few days later the judge decided the habeas corpus suit, holding that the child should be given into the care and keeping of her father. The mother then obtained from this court a writ of certiorari and an alternative writ of prohibition.
Mr. Martinez, as respondent in the present proceeding, contends that Mrs. Martinez had a remedy by way of an appeal from the judgment making the writ of habeas corpus peremptory, and hence that this court had no authority to issue a writ of certiorari or prohibition. It is true that the general rule which forbids an appeal from a judgment making a writ of habeas corpus peremptory is not applicable to a case where the writ is employed only as an ancillary proceeding in a contest over the right to the care and *212
keeping of a minor child; but, inasmuch as an appeal in such a case would not stay execution of the judgment, the only adequate remedy of the party complaining of the judgment is to invoke the supervisory jurisdiction of the supreme court. Tate v. Tate,
On the merits of this case, Mr. Martinez relies upon article
The judgment complained of, dated February 9, 1939, granting to John F. Martinez, Jr., the custody and care and keeping of his child, is annulled and reversed, and the order dated January 31, 1939, granting to Mrs. Modest Hattier Martinez, wife of John F. Martinez, Jr., the provisional care and keeping of the child, is now reinstated.