143 N.W. 953 | S.D. | 1913
This is an appeal from a peremptory writ of prohibition issued by the circuit court of Beadle county, S. D., to the judge of the county court of said county and the sheriff of said county. A child, now known as Celeste Issenhuth, was born August, 1901, in Cleveland, Ohio. When six years old she was taken from her mother, Kate McGaugh, by the order of some court in Cleveland and placed in the St. Joseph’s Home for Children. In the month of August, 1909, the said child was adopted by John Issenhuth and wife, by proceedings had in the county court of Spink county, S'. D. In August, 1912, a proceeding entitled “State of South Dakota ex rel. Frank C. Kron-schnabel, Plaintiff, v. John Issenhuth and Celeste Issenhuth, Defendants,” was begun in the circuit court of Beadle county, S. D. It is claimed by the parties that this proceeding was had under chapter 28, Pol. Code. For anything that appears in the record it may have been brought under article 8, chap. 13, Probate Code.
We are of the opinion that the first three grounds of contention must be decided adversely to appellants. These questions relate to practice, not to jurisdiction. They are matters that might be properly urged in the trial court. That court in its discretion held adversely to those contentions. We see no reason
This contention that the writ should not have issued until an application for relief had been made to the county court amply justifies this court in reviewing" the extraordinary situation presented by such return.- It justifies calling attention to the relation which the judge of the county court had borne to the previous legal proceedings out of which the one then before it seems to have grown. It justifies reference to a matter certainly novel in a court's return to a writ — we refer to the findings of fact contained in such return, being in effect findings of fact in a matter instituted in such court, which findings were rendered prior to the time when any issue of fact had- been raised, and which findings amount to a prejudgment on the merits of the cause before it. The -petition of Kate McGaugh, upon which she asked for the return of the child to her, admitted her unfitness to have the custody of such -child at -the time it was taken from her by the Ohio court; alleged the adoption of the child by Issenhuth; also set forth in detail facts showing changed conditions rendering her, as she claimed, a fit and proper person to -have the custody and care of such child. The petition recited the proceedings in the circuit court wherein the said child had been taken from its foster parent and committed to the care of the Children’s Home and alleged that it was about to be taken to such home; that after such child had been taken from Is-senhuth, in a crininal action against Is-senhuth, he had been found not guilty of the offense toward such child, for which offense petitioner claimed said child had been taken from Issenhuth by said circuit court. Said petition closed by -claiming" a right, by law, to ask for the return of such -child to her and prayed the county -court to direct such child to be returned to her. The petition -of John Issenhuth was in similar form, except that it contained matter tending to show his fitness to have the custody of the child and omitting those matters peculiar to the claim of Kate McGaugh. The return of the defendants to the alternative writ of prohibition recited, in substance, the petition of Kate McGaugh and amounted to a finding that all the facts set forth in said petition were true. Said re
The query naturally arises: How did the judge of the count}'- court judicially ascertain the truthfulness of .the facts set forth in Kate McGaugh’s petition, and in what manner were the additional facts found by him brought to his judicial attention in the proceeding brought in his court? The petition presented to the the circuit court upon which such court made its order removing the child in question from" the custody of its foster parent and committing it to the custody of the Children’s Home Society was before this court in the mandamus proceedings brought in tlii-s court and hereinbefore referred to. From such petition it appears that such foster parent was charged with many other acts of improper conduct toward such child besides that act of which he was acquitted in the criminal proceeding. How was the judge of the county court able to find that the circuit court assumed said foster parent guilty of the offense for which he was tried in the criminal action? How did he know that such circuit court did not find the foster parent guilty of the other misconduct charged against him, and did not assume him innocent of the charge of which the jury acquitted him? How can the judge of the county court say that, if the .issue of such foster parent’s guilt of this
The fact is that the county court assumed jurisdiction under rhe theory that the child had been legally committed to the guardianship of the home, and that it had the power to terminate
The peremptory writ of prohibition is affirmed.