— The record discloses that on May 29, 1923, the- petitioner filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to bring Elaine Madre Miller before the court, said child then being in the possession of the respondent, Harry E. Weigley. The said Harry E. Weigley produced the child in court June 2, 1923. Elaine Madre Miller is the child of Marie Weigley, now intermarried with Stanley Wilhelm. The child was born in February, 1916, and given into the custody of Harry E. Weigley, its grandfather, about Sept. 1, 1916, where it remained until the proceedings were instituted. On June 2, 1923, at the time fixed for the trial of the case, the petitioner, Marie Weigley Wilhelm, by her attorney, Mrs. Daryle R. Heckman, and Harry E. Weigley, by C. W. Walker, Esq., came into court and made representations by their attorneys, the litigants present, that it was agreed between them that the mother should have the custody of the child, the costs of the proceeding to be paid by her; whereupon the court, in the presence of the parties and their counsel, made the following order:
“Now, June 2, 1923, at four o’clock P. M., this case came on for hearing, and after delay of half an hour the counsel representing the relator and respondent come into open court and make statement that the respondent has agreed with the relator that she should have the custody of the child in question, and upon request of counsel for the respondent, the court do now order and direct that this arrangement be carried out between the parties, and that Elaine Madre Miller be delivered into the custody of Marie Weigley Wilhelm, mother of the said child, and the costs of this proceeding to be paid by the relator.”
Harry E. Weigley, the respondent, June 18, 1923, filed a petition to set aside the order of the court, and prayed to be heard on the merits of the case. To this petition an answer was filed by the original petitioner. The petition was dismissed by the court in an opinion filed June. 23, 1923.
On Oct. 15, 1923, the mother of the child presented a petition to the court, alleging that Harry E. Weigley had been threatening her, both in person and
The court is not informed by this record as to the terms of this agreement. If the contract had been put in evidence, the court might have approved the agreement nunc pro tunc; that is to say, the court might have done, after custody of the child had changed, what it would have done if the matter had been brought to the attention of the court before the custody was changed. The respondent, Mr. Weigley, to this proceeding having seen fit to exclude from this record the alleged agreement, the court will enforce its decree as made June 2, 1923. It is true the agreement was not in his possession, as he testified, but was in the possession of Mrs. Wilhelm. He had at his hand the legal right to compel the other party to produce it; not having done so, the court assumes that he and his attorney did not wish it placed upon this record.
Now, Dee. 21, 1923, the respondent, Harry E. Weigley, is hereby adjudged to be in contempt of the decree of the court dated June 2, 1923, and directs that an attachment issue unless the custody of the child is restored to its mother by Dec. 29, 1923.
From P. G. Cober, Somerset, Pa.
