Tanner v. Tanner

62 N.E.2d 654 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1945

This is an appeal from orders of the Court of Common Pleas, Division of Domestic Relations.

The essential facts to an appreciation of the question presented are that the plaintiff and her husband, William Tanner, were parties to a divorce case in which she was the plaintiff. A decree of divorce was granted to the plaintiff but the custody of their four children was awarded to the defendant. Later he died and thereafter plaintiff made application, under the original action for divorce, for the custody and control of the minor children. The form and language of that application are not in the transcript of docket and journal entries, but it is recited as having been made in the entry determining the custody of the children. The custodial entry recites that upon the evidence *179 adduced the court finds the plaintiff is not a fit and proper person to have the custody and control of the four minor children, and further that it would be for the best interest of the children to award their custody and control to four persons who are named and who appear on this appeal as appellees and custodians of the children.

Within three days plaintiff, who since the divorce decree has married and whose name is now Retha Jones, by motions sought a new trial and to have the custodial decree set aside. In the motion for new trial plaintiff asserted that she was appearing only for the purpose of raising the question of jurisdiction of the court to make the custodial order and in both motions she asserted that the order was contrary to law.

The motion for new trial was sustained and the cause came on for hearing to the judge of the Domestic Relations Court. The bill of exceptions made upon that hearing is before us and consists only of statements of counsel and the court's presentation of authorities and argument. The court advised counsel for the plaintiff that he would hear testimony touching the fitness of the plaintiff to have the custody of her children, but counsel elected to stand upon his claim that the court was without jurisdiction to determine the question of custody against the right of the plaintiff. The court then overruled both motions and from that action the appeal is prosecuted.

The one question urged in the trial court is made the basis of the appeal, namely, that upon the death of plaintiff's former husband, William H. Tanner, Jr., the court in which the divorce proceedings were had lost all jurisdiction to make an order which would take from the plaintiff her right to the custody of her children which right arose upon the death of her husband.

Plaintiff, appellant herein, cites and relies upon two *180 sections from 14 Ohio Jurisprudence, Section 138, page 541, and Section 147, page 551, the first of which is:

"The jurisdiction of courts to award the custody and control of minor children to one of the parents in a divorce or alimony proceeding, being merely incidental thereto and operating onlyinter partes, terminates upon the death of either of the parents, and the surviving party is thereby relegated to his or her natural rights with respect to the custody of such children." Citing Weiss v. Fite, 19 Ohio App. 309; In re Guardianship ofGerbig, 11 N.P. (N.S.), 529.

The latter section is:

"A decree awarding the custody of children in a divorce or alimony proceeding terminates upon the death of either of the parents, and the natural rights of the surviving parent, which have in the meantime been merely held in abeyance, are thereby revived." Citing the aforementioned cases and also In reLutkehaus, 22 N.P. (N.S.), 120.

The plaintiff may not be heard to question the jurisdiction of the court which made the order to which she objects, if it had power to accept the jurisdiction, for two reasons — by her application for a custodial award, and by the motion for a new trial she invoked the jurisdiction of the court.

We may concede that the decree awarding the custody of the children to the husband ceased to be effective upon his death and that thereupon the plaintiff, the mother of the children, primafacie had the right to their custody, but the actual custody was in others. Therefore, she, to regain it, was required to take some legal action. She could have instituted proceedings inhabeas corpus, which action would logically have been lodged in the Common Pleas Court. The judge of the Court of the Division of Domestic *181 Relations is a judge of the Common Pleas Court and we have held in Miami Conservancy District v. Silvey, 8 Ohio Law Abs., 668, that, although not ordinarily exercised, the court has jurisdiction over and beyond that which is commonly understood as being included in the term "domestic relations."

Counsel for plaintiff claims something for the fact that the case had not been certified to the Court of the Division of Domestic Relations. Section 8034-1, General Code, relates to certifications of cases involving the award of the custody of minor children to the Juvenile Court, which court did not elect to act here.

If habeas corpus had been instituted the court probably would have done nothing more than to determine whether the plaintiff was entitled to the writ, but such determination would be made upon the application of the same principles as were controlling upon her application for an order in the original divorce case.

An examination of the authorities cited, we believe, goes no further than to announce the principle respecting the right of a surviving parent to children which we have heretofore indicated. It is announced in the second and third paragraphs of the syllabus of Weiss v. Fite, supra, and in the second, third, fourth and fifth paragraphs of the syllabus of In re Coons, 20 C.C., 47, 11 C.D., 208, and in the syllabus of In re Lutkehaus,supra. The most exhaustive discussion of the subject is found in an annotation to Leclerc v. Leclerc (85 N.H. 121, 155 A. 249), in 74 A.L.R., 1352. Among other citations is found In reHampshire, 17 Ohio App. 139, which expressly holds that where one of the parties to whom custody of their children had been awarded died, the surviving party had no right to the custody of the children until and unless the custodial order is modified in the court entering the original decree. It is not necessary for us to determine whether *182 that decision or the decision in Weiss v. Fite, supra, which is in conflict with it, is controlling because there is no doubt that the Common Pleas Court had jurisdiction, whether in the original action or by separate proceedings, to act upon the application of the plaintiff to determine whether she was entitled to an award granting to her custody of her children.

We find no authorities which hold that this right is absolute but that the question presented to the court without respect to the form of the proceeding is primarily what is for the best interest of the children. In Ohio under specific statute, Section 8033, General Code, defines what is to be controlling upon the court in determining what is for the best interest of the children. While this section is set up particularly to control custodial orders during divorce hearings and after divorce decrees, it is persuasive, if not controlling, of the test which the court should apply whenever custody of the children is involved.

As a prerequisite to an order depriving either parent of the custody of his or her children the court must find that such parent is an improper person to have the care, custody and control of his or her children. This finding and determination the trial court made and upon the record we must assume that there was sufficient support in the evidence before the court to support that finding. No authority is cited and we find none upon independent investigation which would hold that the court erred in refusing to award the custody of the children to the plaintiff.

Judgment affirmed.

GEIGER and MILLER, JJ., concur. *183

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