Ex Parte Cannon
Ex Parte Cannon
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an application on the part of the petitioner, Emma F. Cannon, for writ of habeas corpus tO' get possession of her children named in the petition, who>, she alleged, 'were unlawfully detained from her by J. P. Cannon. The writ was signed by his Honor, R. W. Memminger, Circuit Judge, on September 22, 1905, and was served on J. P'. Cannon on the morning of the same day about 10 o’clock, and commanded him to have the bodies of said children, together with the time and cause of detention, before him at the city of Laurens, in Laurens County, S. C., in the Court House, at 12.30' o’clock p. m., on the said 22d day of September, 1905.
J. P. Cannon made return as follows: “1. That the petitioner and J. B. Cannon were married, as alleged in the petition, and that the respondent now has the custody of J. Barnwell Cannon and Janie R. Cannon, infant children of J. B. Cannon and the petitioner above named; that J. B. Cannon is brother to' the respondent, J. P. Cannor, and that he *216 brought the above named children from the State of Georgia, where he was then residing and is now residing, to- Laurens County, State of South Carolina, to the respondent, the said J. P. Cannon, on the 15th day of July, 1905, and placed the said children in the custody of the said respondent, with the request and instruction that this respondent take charge of said children and keep- same for him until he, himself, came for them; he further stated to- the respondent that the. Court of the State of Georgia had given to- him the custody of the said children in some proceedings instituted therein in reference to the custody of the said children, the nature of which he did not fully explain to- this respondent, and that it was very ‘likely that the petitioner herein would come to South Carolina and demand of the respondent the possession and custody of the children, but for this respondent not to deliver said children toi the-petitioner under any circumstances, as the Courts had given him possession of the children, and he did not want the petitioner to have anything to: do1 with the children- whatever, and he has not received any instructions from- his 'brother to the contrary, and upon information he- denies that the petitioner is legally entitled to> the custody of the said children.”
Upon filing, his return to' the petition and writ, J. P. Cannon, through his attorneys, moved the Circuit Court for an order referring the questions, raised by petition and return to a special referee to take testimony thereon and report the same to the Court, or to' hear and determine all the issues involved, and that the hearing on the petition and writ be continued for that purpose. This- motion was refused by the Circuit Judge, and thereupon the attorneys for J. P. Cannon moved that a further .hearing of the matter be postponed until they could communicate with J. B. Cannon, father of the -children, and until they could procure a certified record of the proceedings in the Court of Georgia giving -the custody of the children in question to their father, the said J. B. Cannon, and which was set out in the return of J. P. Cannon to the writ. This request and motion was refused *217 by the Circuit Judge; and after hearing the petition and return, he passed an order requiring that the custody of the children be delivered to the petitioner.
It 's argued under the seventh exception that full faith and credit was not given to the judgment of the Court of Georgia in violation of art. IX., sec. 1,- of the Federal Constitution. It is manifest, however, that no' such question can arise upon-the record, as the Court did not have before it for consideration any judgment of a sister State.
Under the remaining exceptions, the contention is made that J. B. Cannon, the father, has the right to the custody of his infant children, that thé decree1 of the Court of Georgia had also given him the custody of the children, and that the father having placed his children in the custody of J. P. Cannon, the latter’s custody of the children was legal. It is argued that the return set up the Georgia judgment as awarding the custody of the children’ to the father and that the facts stated in the return untraversed must -be accepted as true. We have already called attention to the allegations of the return. There is no allegation therein alleging the existence of a judgment in Georgia awarding the children to their father as against their mother, the allegation only goes to- the effect that when J. B. Cannon delivered the children to J. P. Cannon, lie said there was a judgment awarding the children to him. On demurrer to- the return for insufficiency, or motion for judgment notwithstanding the return, *219 the Court would be bound to hold that no- judgment of the Georgia Court binding on petitioner was sufficiently pleaded.
The exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ex Parte Cannon.
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- Syllabus
- 1. Reference. — Respondent in habeas corpus cannot demand reference as matter of right, as Court usually tries such cases on pleadings and affidavits in a summary manner, but Court may order issues referred. 2. Continuance — Habeas Corpus. — Motion to continue trial of habeas corpus proceeding by wife, against a brother of a husband, until husband could arrive from Georgia, brother having charge of the children, under instructions from husband to keep from the wife, is substantially a motion for continuance on account of absence of a nonresident witness, is addressed to discretion of the Court, and will not be reviewed except in clear case of abuse. 3. Ibid. — Foreign Judgment — Pleadings.—It is not error to refuse to extend time in trial of habeas corpus writ to procure certified copy of foreign judgment which the return does not specifically allege is in existence, nor that petitioner was a party to, nor bound by, and there being no assurance that the record could be procured in a short time. Under allegation that respondent has been informed that there-is a foreign judgment,- as to the nature of which he is not informed, foreign judgment is not pleaded. 4. Appliction for Whit of Habeas Corpus for Possession of Children is a proceeding on the law side of the Court, and findings by trial Judge are not reviewable on appeal S. Parent and Child. — Under the facts here, small children are given to the mother as against the brother of the father, in whose charge he placed them, with instructions not to deliver to the mother.