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STATE EX REL. ETHEL ELIZABETH SPRATT v. CHARLES N. SPRATT

Minnesota Supreme Court1921-07-15No. No. 22,541
150 Minn. 5

Summary

Holding. The court affirmed the district court's order granting the mother temporary custody of the children. A writ of habeas corpus is an independent proceeding that cannot be barred by a stay of proceedings in another action, and an appeal with a supersedeas bond does not annul the judgment appealed from.

A mother sought a writ of habeas corpus to obtain temporary custody of three minor children from their father following a divorce. The district court had previously awarded primary custody to the father but later amended its judgment to grant the mother custody during school vacations. The father appealed the amended judgment and obtained a stay of proceedings, then argued that the habeas corpus petition should be barred because proceedings under the amended judgment were stayed.

The court rejected the father's arguments. A habeas corpus proceeding is an independent action that cannot be suspended by a stay in another case, even if the ultimate rights of the parties depend on the outcome of that other case. Additionally, an appeal with a supersedeas bond does not annul or vacate the judgment being appealed; the amended judgment remained in force and determined the parties' rights for purposes of the habeas corpus proceeding. The district court properly ordered the children delivered to the mother for temporary custody in accordance with the amended judgment.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether a stay of proceedings in one action bars a habeas corpus proceeding
  • Whether an appeal with supersedeas bond annuls the judgment appealed from
  • Rights of parents to custody of minor children following divorce

Procedural posture

The father appealed from the district court's order granting the mother's habeas corpus petition for temporary custody of the minor children.

Authorities cited

No cited authorities resolved to law.co cases yet.

Opinion

majority opinion

Taylor, C.

The relator sued out a writ of habeas corpus from the district court of Hennepin county to recover the temporary custody of Margaret Spratt, Charles Webster Spratt and Cynthia Spratt, minor children of the relator and of the respondent who were then in the custody of the respondent. The court found that the allegations in the petition for the writ were true and ordered that the children be delivered to the relator, “to be held in temporary custody in accordance with the amended judgment and decree of this court duly entered on the 22nd day of June, 1921, in the action of Ethel Elizabeth Spratt against Charles N. Spratt.” The respondent in the writ appealed from the above order and will hereafter be designated as the appellant.

The matter was submitted to this court on the record. From the return it appears that, in an action in the district court of Hennepin county brought by the relator against the appellant, a judgment of divorce in favor of the appellant was duly rendered and entered on December 15, 1917; that in and by this judgment the custody of the children above named was confided to the appellant, their father, with certain rights of visitation on the part of the relator, their mother; that after an extended hearing the district court, on June 22, 1921, amended its judgment by providing, among other things, that during the school vacation of the present summer and each school vacation hereafter, until the further order of the court, the relator shall be entitled to, and shall have, the custody and control of the children above named, the appellant to have the custody and control of them during the remainder of the year; that on June 23, 1921, appellant duly appealed to this court from such amended judgment and gave a supersedeas bond to stay proceedings thereunder, and that the writ of habeas corpus was served on appellant on June 23, 1921. while the writ of habeas corpus was apparently served before the appeal had been perfected by filing the supersedeas bond, an order from this court staying proceedings under the judgment was served on the morning of June 23, 1921, and before the service of the writ of habeas corpus, and we shall assume that appellant is correct in his contention that all proceedings under the judgment had been stayed before the habeas corpus proceeding was initiated.

The principal question argued at the hearing was- whether this stay of proceedings operated to bar the habeas corpus proceeding. We think this question has already been answered by this court adversely to appellant in State v. McDonald, 123 Minn. 84, 142 N. W. 1051. In that case it was held, in effect, that a writ of habeas corpus is not a proceeding in any other action, but an independent proceeding in the nature of a new action brought by the relator to enforce rights then existing, and that proceedings under it cannot be suspended by a stay of proceedings, in another action, •although the ultimate rights of the parties may depend upon the result of such other action. The writ requires the court to determine whether the person concerned is illegally held in custody or restrained of his liberty under the facts as they are found to exist at the time the question is presented, and this is a right of which such person cannot be deprived. Following the McDonald case and the eases cited therein, we hold that the relator had the right to prosecute this proceeding notwithstanding the fact that proceedings under the judgment had been stayed.

It is also contended that the appeal with a supersedeas bond operated to annul the judgment appealed from, and to leave the judgment of December 15, 1917, still in force unmodified.

We are unable to sustain this contention. An appeal with a supersedeas bond does not vacate or annul the judgment appealed from, and the matters determined by it remain res judicata until it is reversed. 2 R. C. L. 117, § 94, and cases there cited; 3 C. J. 1316, 1317, and numerous cases cited in notes 37 and 38; Woolfolk v. Bruns, 45 Minn. 96, 47 N. W. 460; Allen v. Robinson, 17 Minn. 90 (113); Robertson v. Davidson, 14 Minn. 422 (554). See also Briggs v. Shea, 48 Minn. 218, 50 N. W. 1037.

The. judgment of June 22, 1921, still remains in force and determines the rights of the parties so far as the proceeding under this writ of habeas corpus is concerned. Possibly a court might interfere under such a writ if events occurring subsequent to the judgment showed that the welfare of the children required that a different disposition be made of them, but that question is neither presented nor decided here.

We find no other questions requiring special mention. Dpon the facts as they appear in the return, the learned district court reached the correct conclusion, and the order appealed from is affirmed.