161 Mass. 70 | Mass. | 1894
The question presented in this case is different from that which arose in Farnham v. Pierce, 141 Mass. 203, or Kelley, petitioner, 152 Mass. 432. In the former case it was whether the rights of the father, who had had no opportunity to be heard, were concluded by the findings of the district court, so that he could not be allowed to show that the object of the commitment had been accomplished. In the latter case, it was whether the mere fact, which was set up in the answer of the Board of Lunacy and Charity, that in its judgment the object of the commitment had not been accomplished, deprived the father, without his having been heard upon the matter, of the right to show that the object of the commitment had been accomplished, and that the child should be discharged. In this case the question is whether the mother, who is the surviving parent and the guardian, and whose petition has been heard by the commissioners and denied, as the report states, “after a full 'hearing of the petitioner and her witnesses,” is entitled to have the issues of fact thus passed upon heard anew in this court, and again and again — for that must follow — as often as she shall petition the commissioners and they after a hear
In the case of Kelley, petitioner, 152 Mass. 432, the Board of Lunacy and Charity refused to hear the father on the question
In each of these cases the right of the parent to be heard was properly deemed, on the facts presented, to turn on the question whether the adjudication of the district court had operated as a forfeiture of the parent’s rights during the time for which the child was committed, and that was the question principally discussed. And it was held in both cases — in the former by the full court and in the latter by a majority — that the adjudication did not forfeit his rights as parent. But it may well be that, though his rights as parent are not forfeited by the adjudication, he should be concluded by the decision of the' board or officers having custody of bis child, and having the power of discharge, if after a full and fair hearing it is decided that the object of the commitment has not been accomplished, and the child ought not to be discharged. His rights as parent are protected, first, by the presumption that the board or officers having custody of the child will do their duty faithfully and without interest or bias, and, secondly, by the liberty which he has to apply to this court by habeas corpus for the discharge of the child in case his rights are prejudiced by errors in law or wrongful conduct on their part.
We discover nothing unconstitutional in the statutes relating to this matter. • Especial care is taken to see that the child should not be improperly committed, Notice of the hearing is to be given to the father, if living and resident in the State, if