State ex rel. Harner v. Karpe
State ex rel. Harner v. Karpe
Opinion of the Court
This is a habeas corpus proceeding at the instance of Mr. and Mrs. Harner, residents of Illinois, who seek to obtain possession of a six year old boy from the defendants, Dr. and Mrs. Karpe, residents of Shreveport, in this state. The child, whose name is Harvard A. Smith, is an orphan, and has no property. Mrs. Harner is the sister of his mother; and Mrs. Karpe is the sister of his father. He was confided to Mrs. Karpe by his father, to be taken care of, and to he brought to Louisiana, because the climate better suited him. This was in October, 1920. The mother was then dead, and the father died a few months later, in March, 1921. Seven days after the father’s death, the present petitioners, Mr. and Mrs. Harner, applied to the probate court of the county in Ohio, where the father was living at the time of his death to be allowed to adopt the child, and that court so ordered, and decreed that—
*587 “From the date of this order the said Harvard-A. Smith be and is to all intpnts and purposes the child of the said petitioners, George W. and Edna O. Harner.”
The date of this judgment is March 16, 1921. On the previous day, March 15, 1921, Dr. and Mrs. Karpe had adopted the child in Louisiana.
Learned counsel for the petitioners have argued the case as if the Ohio judgment, to which full faith and credit must be given, had passed upon the question of the custody of this child. But it has not. That question was not submitted to that court for decision. If it had been, non constat that the custody would not have been given to the present defendants. Indeed the probability is that it would have been, since the future welfare of the child would seem to so require, and, as just stated, the welfare of the child must be the predominant consideration. Ex parte Ryan, 126 La. 450, 52 South. 573; State v. Michel, 105 La. 741, 30 South. 122, 54 L. R. A. 927; 39 Cyc. 1594; State ex. rel. Bush v. Trahan, 125 La. 312, 51 South. 216; Lamar v. Micou, 112 U. S. 452, 5 Sup. Ct. 221, 28 L. Ed. 751; Re Hugh Alderman, 157 N. C. 507, 73 S. E. 126, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 988. A case involving guardianship, but in all other respects strikingly like the present, is Woodworth v. Spring, 4 Allen (Mass.) 321.
We do not stop to investigate the interesting point whether such a thing as a double or quadruple adoption is possible — in other words, whether, after this child had been adopted on the 15th by Dr. and Mrs. Karpe, the adoption of it on the 16th by Mr. and Mrs. Harner was possible — but pass to consider the facts.
The judgment appealed from which maintained the writ of habeas corpus herein is set aside, as well as the said writ, and the present application of the petitioners, George W. Harner and Mrs. Edith O. Harner, is dismissed at their cost in both courts.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE ex rel. HARNER et ux. v. KARPE et ux.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Adoption Adoption, being a matter of statutory law, has only such legal effect as the statute of its creation attributes to it. 2. Habeas corpus 99(3) — Welfare of child whose, custody is involved is predominant consideration. In habeas corpus by persons adopting a child in another state, in which the child’s father lived at the time of his death, to obtain the child’s custody from persons adopting him in Louisiana, the welfare of the child must be the predominant consideration. 3. Habeas corpus Where the sister of a boy’s father, to whom the father confided his custody in his lifetime, and also by will, was married to one of the leading dentists of a city, who was a man of wealth, and they had no children of their own, and were sending the boy to school, and were attached to him, while the present financial ability of the mother’s sister to provide for the child, or her husband’s financial standing or employment, or whether they had any children, were not shown, the custody of the child should not be taken from the father’s sister and given to the mother’s sister. 4.Evidence In habeaá corpus involving the custody of a child, both of whose parents were dead, where the father’s will, expressing the wish that his sister should have the child, is in the record, it will be noticed though not offered in evidence.