Di Giorgio v. Di Giorgio
Decision Date | 18 May 1943 |
Citation | 13 So.2d 596,153 Fla. 24 |
Parties | DI GIORGIO v. DI GIORGIO et al. |
Court | Florida Supreme Court |
Appeal from Circuit Court, Pinellas County; John U. Bird judge.
Giles & Gurney, of Orlando, and Alfred P. Marshall, of Clearwater, for appellant.
Dayton Dayton & Dayton, of Dade City, for appellees.
Appellee proceeded by habeas corpus to gain the custody of her minor son, age six.
She predicated her right to custody upon a separation agreement entered into between her and appellant, the father of the child. She also alleged her fitness and the father's want of fitness to have custody of the child. On this allegation appellant's return joined issue. As to the agreement appellant admitted its execution but repudiated it on the basis that after making the agreement he learned of his wife's infidelity.
These parties were married in the State of California. They had marital differences which resulted in an interlocutory divorce decree in California. Before the decree became final, a reconciliation was effected. An agreement was made relative to custody of this child and other matters. Immediately after this agreement, appellee left for Reno, Nevada, to establish residence and procure a divorce. While she was away, appellant discovered some documents which he said convinced him, for the first time, that his wife had a clandestine love affair which justified him in rescinding the agreement. He notified her of his intentions whereupon she returned to California and filed an action for divorce and custody of the child. Before process was served appellant took the child and came to Florida.
At the beginning of the hearing the trial judge said, addressing appellant
Thereupon appellant was examined and cross-examined. At the conclusion of appellant's testimony the following occurred between appellant's counsel and the trial judge:
'The Court: Yes, but this is on a different point from the one I am deciding it on.
'Mr. Gurney: Ours is on the point of the fitness of the petitioner and also the welfare of the child and its custody.
'The Court: Yes, and I think those are things that the Court out in California should litigate and determine.
'The Court: All right, sir.'
Thereupon a judgment was entered awarding custody to appellee with permission to return to California and without prejudice to either party to litigate the matter in the courts of California. Throughout the limited proceeding in the lower court, which cannot be termed a trial because testimony was not allowed on the issues, much emphasis was placed on the parties' residence in California. This, to our mind, is one of the immaterial factors which led the trial court into error. The law is and has been from time immemorial that each state is not only empowered, but is charged with the duty, to regulate the custody of infants within its borders. This is true even though the parents may be residents of another state. Woodworth v. Spring, 4 Allen, Mass., 321, 323; White v. White, 77 N.H. 26, 86 A. 353; Hanrahan v. Sears, 72 N.H. 71, 72, 54 A. 702; Matter of Hubbard, 82 N.Y. 90, 93. For this, the residence of the child suffices, though the domicile be elsewhere. Finlay v. Finlay, 240 N.Y. 429, 148 N.E. 624, 625, 40 A.L.R. 937.
The reason for this law is to protect the incompetent where they are because it is there where the protection is needed and there alone where a judicial order may be executed.
The judgment entered here was evidently entered on the theory that the court had the jurisdiction of the res which was the child but the court in the exercise of its discretion declined to fully exercise such jurisdiction because in the opinion of the court the ends of justice would be better served by leaving it to the California courts to pass on. The question then arises what happens in case the child is not returned to California by the mother? Suppose the mother remains in Florida or returns to Nevada. The California court has no jurisdiction now of the child or the father in any case. If the California court should attempt to exercise jurisdiction it would find virtually the same case we had in State ex rel. v. Clark, 148 Fla. 452, 4 So.2d 517, where the mother of the children wrongfully took them to Georgia and returned to Florida to...
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