941
136 F. 941
WADLEIGH
v.
NEWHALL.
(Circuit
Court, N. D. California, March 13, 1905)
No. 13,640.
1. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW -- CIVIL RIGHTS -- MATTERS WITHIN PROTECTION OF FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT.
The rights, privileges, and immunities which the fourteenth
constitutional amendment and Rev. St. § 1979 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1262],
for its enforcement, were designed to protect, are such as belong to citizens of the United States as
such, and not as
citizens of a state.
[Ed.
Note. -- For cases in point, see vol. 10, Cent Dig. Constitutional
Law, § 625.]
2. PARENT AND CHILD -- RIGHT TO CUSTODY OF INFANT.
Parents have no right to the custody of their infant children,
except subject to the paramount right of the state, to be exercised whenever
deemed for the best interest of the children.
[Ed.
Note. -- For cases in point, see vol. 37, Cent. Dig. Parent
and Child, § 4.]
3. CIVIL RIGHTS UNDER FEDERAL CONSTITUTION -- CUSTODY OF CHILDREN.
Code Civ. Proc. Cal. § 1747, which
authorizes proceedings for the appointment of guardians for the persons and estates
of minor children
942
having no guardians by will or deed, is a lawful exercise of
the state's power; and proceedings based thereon, by which parents are deprived
of the custody of their children, do not give them a right of action against
the persons instituting the proceedings, under Rev. St. § 1979 [U. S. Comp. St.
1901, p. 1262], for depriving them of rights, privileges, or immunities secured
to them by the Constitution or laws of the United States.
4. PLEADING -- STRIKING COMPLAINT FROM FILES -- SCANDALOUS MATTER.
A complaint in an action to recover damages for depriving
plaintiff of rights in violation of the federal Constitution considered, and
held to, contain allegations and charges against not only the defendant, but
also other persons, not parties, which rendered it scandalous to such an extent
that it would be struck from the files; it having been previously determined
that it did not state a cause of action.
At Law. On demurrer to
complaint and motion to strike the same from the files.
Horace W. Philbrook,
for plaintiff.
Martin Stevens and R. T. Devlin, for
defendant.
MORROW, Circuit Judge. This is an action to
recover from the defendant the sum of $50,000 damages, alleged to have been
sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the defendant maliciously subjecting
the plaintiff, and causing him to be subjected, to the deprivation of rights,
privileges, and immunities secured to him by each, respectively, of the
following provisions of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the
United States, to wit:
"(1) Nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law; (2) nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
It is alleged that the plaintiff was deprived of these rights,
privileges, and immunities of the Constitution under color of section 1747 of
the Code of Civil Procedure of the state of California. This section provides
that the superior court, when it appears necessary or convenient, may appoint
guardians for the persons and estates, or either of them, of minors who have no
guardian legally appointed by will or deed.
The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that he is a citizen of
the state of Washington, and now residing in said state, and that the defendant
is a citizen of the state of California, and an inhabitant of the Northern
judicial district thereof. The complaint was filed July 29, 1904. The plaintiff
alleges that prior to the 29th day of January, 1903, there had been born to the
plaintiff and his wife, and of their marriage, five children, as follows: (1)
May, born on the 18th day of September, 1887, and of the age of 15 years on the
29th day of January, 1903. (2) John, born on the 18th day of September, 1889,
and 13 years of age. (3) Sarah (who until she was about 5 years of age was
named Florence), born on the 26th day of November, 1891, and 11 years of age.
(4) Solomon, born on the 16th day of September, 1894, and 8 years of age. (5)
Helen, born on the 25th day of January, 1901, and 2 years of age. It is alleged
that for more than a year prior to January 29, 1903, the plaintiff and his wife
and these children resided together in California, except that John had been in
charge of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society in San Francisco since about
December 24, 1902; that defendant, during the month of January, 1903, and,
during the year next prior thereto,
943
was the president and executive head of the corporation known
as the California Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, a
corporation organized under an act of the Legislature entitled "An act for
the incorporation of societies for the prevention of cruelty to children,"
approved April 3, 1876 (Civ. Code Cal. § 607); that
during the month of January, 1903, M. J. White was the secretary and executive
agent of said corporation, and as such subject to the defendant's domination
and control; that on or about the 29th day of January, 1903, the defendant and
the said M. J. White and one Herbert J. Lewis, who was then and ever since has
been the superintendent of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society --
"Contriving and maliciously intending,
and with the purpose and design, to gratify the crafty and evil inclinations
and to magnify the importance of the defendant and of others of his said
confederates, and to wrong, injure, and oppress the plaintiff and his wife and
their children, and to abduct the said children from the plaintiff and from his
wife, and maliciously, forcibly, and fraudulently to take away the said
children, with the intent to detain and conceal them from the plaintiff and
from his wife, and to separate the said children from one another, and to break
up and destroy the plaintiff's family, and to hold the said children falsely
imprisoned, and to estrange the affections and to poison the minds of the said
children against the plaintiff and his wife, and to deprive the plaintiff of
the services and of the society of each, respectively, of his said children,
and to brand falsely the said children John Wadleigh
and Solomon Wadleigh as criminals, and to corrupt and
destroy the morals of the said child May Wadleigh,
and to corrupt and destroy the morals of the said child Sarah Wadleigh, and to seduce and pervert her affections to the
defendant and for his wrongful gratifications, and to give out to the public
and induce the public to believe that each, respectively, of the said children
was not in truth the offspring of the plaintiff or of his wife, and
fraudulently to induce the said children to believe that they, respectively,
were not the offspring of the plaintiff or of his wife, and to obtain and hold
for effectuating their said intended wrongdoing a false judgment of the
superior court of the said city and county of San Francisco to be made under
color of the said statute contained in section 1747 of the Code of Civil
Procedure of California, and by means of causing the said guaranties of the
Constitution of the United States to be violated against the plaintiff and his
wife and their children, and purporting to appoint the said M. J. White
guardian of the persons of the said children, and to use the name and the
pretended exercise of the corporate powers of the said the California Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children as a means and shield by and. under
which to effect their said intended wrongdoing, entered into and together
formed a combination and conspiracy, with the common design to effect by their
concerted action their said intention and purposes, and thereupon in
furtherance of- their said common design proceeded" as stated
in the complaint.
The complaint then alleges the filing of an unverified
petition in the superior court of the state of California in and for the city
and county of San Francisco, by the defendant and by his confederates, for the
appointment of M. J. White as the guardian of the plaintiff's children. It is
alleged that the petition was filed without probable cause. A copy of the
petition is annexed to the complaint. The material allegations of this petition
are denied, and declared to be as follows: It is alleged that upon this
petition the court, without notice and without hearing or opportunity for
hearing, without proof, or evidence, or probable cause, and entirely upon the said
false and unverified petition, made an order purporting to authorize the said
M. J. White instantly to seize and arrest and take said children away from the
plaintiff and from his
944
wife, and to hold and keep the said children in person. Thereupon the defendant
and his confederates, with the assistance of two police officers, forcibly,
maliciously, and feloniously seized and arrested four of the children, May,
Sarah, Solomon, and Helen, and took them from the plaintiff and from his wife,
just as the plaintiff and his wife, together with the children, were about to
depart from San Francisco for Seattle, in the state of Washington. It is
alleged that the child John was also to have gone with the other members of the
family, but was detained by the defendant and his confederates at the home of
the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society, and thereupon and thereafter the defendant
and his confederates held and kept the said children falsely imprisoned at
various places as in the complaint set forth; that Sarah, on the 3d of
February, 1903, and May, with the youngest child, Helen, on the 5th day of
February, 1903, escaped from the defendant and his confederates and fled to the
plaintiff and his wife; that John and Solomon were held by the defendant and
his confederates until they were produced in the superior court on February 7,
1903; that after the plaintiff and his wife had made and entered their
appearance in the superior court on February 7, 1903, there was a pretended
trial and hearing of the said suit or proceeding, and solely upon said
petition, which had been filed by the defendant and his confederates in the
said superior court on the 29th day of January, 1903, as before stated; that
this trial and hearing was held in department 9 of said superior court, in the
courtroom thereof in the City Hall of the city and county of San Francisco;
that the said pretended trial and hearing was the only trial and hearing of the
said proceeding that was had at any time in or before the said superior court,
and that neither at the said pretended trial or hearing, nor at any other time,
was any evidence given in support of the allegations concerning the plaintiff
or his wife, or concerning any of their children, stated in the said petition
as grounds for the appointment of guardian for the person of any of said
children; that four of the said children, namely, May,. John, Sarah, and
Solomon, were in the said courtroom during the said pretended trial or hearing;
that the said children John and Solomon were brought to the said courtroom and
to the said pretended trial or hearing by the defendant and his confederates
and in their custody; that May and Sarah were brought there by plaintiff and
his wife; that Helen was not present in said courtroom, but was at the lodgings
of the plaintiff and his wife in the said city and county, sick with a severe
cold which she had contracted while she was in the custody of the defendant and
his confederates.
The proceedings in the court upon the hearing are described in
the complaint in detail. These proceedings resulted in the declaration of the
judge presiding at the hearing that he would appoint, and the subsequent
appointment of, M. J. White as guardian of the persons of plaintiff's children,
and thereupon it is alleged that the defendant and his confederates seized and
arrested the four children, May, John, Sarah, and Solomon, and took and
abducted them from the plaintiff and his wife, and held and kept them
imprisoned at various places until in the month of January, 1904, when
plaintiff's wife petitioned the Supreme Court of the state for the discharge of
the four children from the custody :of the defendant and his confederates, for
their restoration to
945
plaintiff, and for leave to take the children without delay to
the plaintiff in the city of Seattle; that a writ of habeas corpus was granted,
and on the 12th day of January, 1904, the said children May and Sarah were
discharged from the custody of the defendant and his confederates, and restored
to the custody of the plaintiff's wife. No order was made with respect to the
children John and Solomon, as they were not then in the custody of the
guardian, M. J. White; but subsequently, and on January 20, 1904, they were
also surrendered into the possession of plaintiff's wife, and thereupon she, with
the four children, May, Sarah, John, and Solomon, departed for Seattle, where
they have since resided.
The complaint does not state the grounds of the action of the
Supreme Court in discharging the children May and Sarah from the custody of the
guardian appointed by the superior court, and no opinion in the case appears to
have been filed or published. What defects, if any there were, in the
proceedings, have not been brought to the attention of the court, unless the
following allegation of the complaint may be construed as such a statement:
"No citation or process or notice in the said suit or special proceeding was at any time served upon the plaintiff herein, or upon his wife, or upon any of the plaintiff's said children; that no citation or copy of a citation, or process or copy of process, in the said suit or proceeding, was at any time delivered or shown to the plaintiff herein, or to his wife, or to any of their children at any time in the year 1903."
But this allegation is qualified by the further allegation
that the hearing of the petition for guardianship was after the plaintiff and
his wife had "entered their appearance in said superior court in the said
suit or special proceeding," and the allegation that they were present at
each hearing. It would seem that a voluntary appearance in the proceeding would
amount to a waiver of notice in a collateral attack upon the proceeding; but,
however that may be, the regularity of the proceedings
in the state court is not a matter for present consideration.
In the preceding references to the allegations of the
complaint, many matters charged therein have not been noticed, for the reason
that they are not necessary to a general understanding of the cause of action,
which it is the present purpose to point out and consider. The ultimate claim
of the plaintiff is that the defendant and his confederates, in furtherance of
their common design, and by means of the acts done by them in furtherance
thereof, and under color of section 1747 of the Code of Civil Procedure of
California, have maliciously subjected plaintiff, and have maliciously caused
him to be subjected, to the deprivation of rights, privileges, and immunities
secured to him by each, respectively, of the provisions and guaranties of the
Constitution of the United States, referring to the provisions of the
fourteenth amendment relating to due process of law and the equal protection of
the laws. From this statement it very clearly appears that the plaintiff's
complaint against the defendant is based upon proceedings in the state court
resulting in the judicial appointment of a guardian for his minor children and
the taking of the children into custody under such guardianship. These acts, it
is said, were done under color of law, but were not due process of law, and
deprived the plaintiff of the equal protection of the laws.
To this complaint the defendant has interposed a demurrer upon
a
946
number of grounds, but it will only be necessary to notice the objection that the
complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The
defendant has also interposed motions (1) to strike from the files of the court
the entire complaint and suppress the same, and (2) to strike out certain
portions thereof.
In support of the complaint, against the demurrer and the
motions interposed by the defendant, the plaintiff asserts that the case is a
civil-law action, where the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of interest
and costs, the sum or value of $2,000, and arising under the Constitution
and/or laws of the United States, and as such is within the jurisdiction of a
Circuit Court of the United States; that the law under which the suit arises is
section 1979 of the Revised Statutes of the United States [U. S. Comp. St.
1901, p. 1262]. That section provides as follows:
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage, of any state or territory, subjects, or causes to
be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the
jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or
immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party
injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for
redress."
The plaintiff alleges in his complaint, and has urged in
support of it, that section 1747 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California,
providing for the appointment of guardians by the superior court for the
persons of minors residing in the state who have no guardians legally appointed
by will or deed, is invalid and void, for the reason that it deprives persons
of life, liberty, and property without due process of law, and denies to
persons within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, and that the
defendant, proceeding under color of this invalid and void statute in securing
the appointment of a guardian for the four minor children of the plaintiff,
brought himself within the provisions of section 1979 of the Revised Statutes
of the United States [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1262], and is liable thereunder. This contention of the plaintiff as to his
cause of action limits the issues involved, and enables the court to determine
without much difficulty the real questions to be considered, notwithstanding
the voluminous recitals of irrelevant and immaterial matter.
The rights, privileges, and immunities which the fourteenth
amendment to the Constitution of the United
States guaranties, and which this section of the Revised Statutes was designed to
protect, were the rights, privileges, and immunities which belong to citizens
of the United States as such, but not the rights, privileges, and immunities
which belong to the citizens of the state. There are privileges and immunities belonging
to citizens of the United States in that relation and character, and it is these, and these alone, that a state is forbidden to
abridge. Bradwell v. The State, 16 Wall. 130-138, 139, 21 L. Ed. 442.
This brings me to the consideration of the question whether
the state had authority to confer upon the superior court the power to appoint
a guardian for the plaintiff's minor children. In United States v. Green, Fed. Cas. No. 15,256, the father of an
infant petitioned the court for a writ of habeas corpus to bring up the body of
an infant
947
daughter alleged to be wrongfully detained in the custody of the
defendant, who was her grandfather. The court (Mr. Justice Story), in
discussing the right of the father to have the custody of his daughter, said:
"As to the question of the right of the father to have the custody of his infant child, in a general sense it is true. But this is not on account of any absolute right of the father, but for the benefit of the infant; the law presuming it to be for his interest to be under the nurture and care of his natural protector, both for maintenance and education. When, therefore, the court is asked to lend its aid to put the infant into the custody of the father, and to withdraw him from other persons, it will look into all the circumstances, and ascertain whether it will be for the real, permanent interests of the infant; and, if the infant be of sufficient discretion, it will also consult its personal wishes. It will free it from all undue restraint, and endeavor, as far as possible, to administer a conscientious, parental duty with reference to its welfare. It is an entire mistake to suppose the court is at all events bound to deliver over the infant to his father, or that the latter has an absolute vested right in the custody. The case of Rex v. De Mandeville, 5 East, 221, is not inconsistent with this doctrine, but on the other hand, supposes its existence. The court there thought it for the interest of the child to give the custody to the father. The judges thought there was no reason to suppose the father would abuse his right, or injure the child. Lord Eldon, in De Manneville v. De Manneville, 10 Ves. 52, avowed his approbation of the doctrine, and said he had, exercising the authority of the king as parens patriae, removed children from the custody of their father, when he thought such custody unsuitable. The case of In re Waldron, 13 Johns. 419, is directly in point; and to the same effect is Rex v. Smith, 2 Strange, 982."
The law upon this subject in this country is stated in section
10 of Hocheimer on Custody of Infants as follows:
"The general result of the American cases may be characterized as an utter repudiation of the notion that there can be such a thing as a proprietary right or interest in or to the custody of an infant, or that a claim to such custody can be asserted merely as a claim, and the general drift of opinion is in the direction of treating the idea of trust as the controlling principle in all controversies in relation to such custody."
In 2 Story's Eq. Jur. § 1341, that author
says:
"The jurisdiction of the court of chancery extends to the care of the person of the infant, so far as necessary for his protection and education, and, as to the care of the property of the infant, for its due management and preservation, and proper application for his maintenance. It is upon the former ground, principally -- that is to say, for the due protection and education of the infant -- that the court interferes with the ordinary rights of parents, as guardians by nature or by nurture, in regard to the custody and care of their children. For although, in general, parents are entrusted with the custody of the persons and the education of their children, yet this is done upon the natural presumption that the children will be properly taken care of and will be brought up with a due education in literature, and morals, and religion, and that they will be treated with kindness and affection. But, whenever this presumption is removed -- whenever (for example) it is found that a father is guilty of gross ill-treatment or cruelty towards his infant children; or that he is in constant habits of drunkenness and blasphemy, or low and gross debauchery; or that he professes atheistical or irreligious principles; or that his domestic associations are such as tend to the corruption and contamination of his children; or that he otherwise acts in a manner injurious to the morals or interests of his children -- in every such case the court of chancery will interfere, and deprive him of the custody of his children, and appoint a suitable person to act as guardian, and to take care of them and to superintend their education."
948
In Mercein v. People, 25 Wend. (N.
Y.) 64, 35 Am: Dec. 653, there was a controversy between the father and mother
with respect to the custody of a minor child. The father and mother lived apart
under a voluntary separation. The child had been left in the custody of its
mother. Subsequently the father sought to obtain the possession of the child by
a writ of habeas corpus. In the Court of Errors, Senator Paige, discussing the
rights of the respective parents to the custody of minor children, said:
"By the law of nature the father has no paramount right to the custody of his child. By that law the wife and child are equal to the husband and father, but inferior and subject to their sovereign. The head of a family, in his character of husband and father, has no authority over his wife and children; but in his character of sovereign he has. On the establishment of civil societies, the power of the chief of a family as sovereign passes to the chief or government of the nation; and, the chief or magistrate of the nation not possessing the requisite knowledge necessary to a judicious discharge of the duties of guardianship and education of children, such portion of the sovereign power as relates to the discharge of these duties is transferred to the parents, subject to such restrictions and limitations as the sovereign power of the nation think proper to prescribe. There is no parental authority independent of the supreme power of the state. But the former is derived altogether from the latter. In the civil state there is no inequality between the father and mother. Ordinarily a child, during infancy, is entirely under the discipline of its mother, and very frequently wives discharge the duty of education of their children better than the husbands. De Felice, Lectures on Natural Rights, lecture 80. It seems, then, that by the law of nature the father has no paramount inalienable right to the custody of his child. And the civil or municipal law, in setting bounds to his parental authority, and in entirely or partially depriving him of it in cases where the interests and welfare of his child require it, does not come in conflict with or subvert any of the principles of the natural law. The moment a child is born, it owes allegiance to the government of the country of its birth, and is entitled to the protection of that government. And such government is obligated by its duty of protection to consult the welfare, comfort, and interests of such child in regulating its custody during the period of its minority."
The provisions of section 1747 of the Code of Civil Procedure
of California are a part of the procedure provided for the execution of this
supreme power of the state, and there is nothing in the argument of counsel for
plaintiff to show that this law is unconstitutional. It must, therefore, be
treated as valid, and within the legislative authority of the state. The conclusion
follows that no right of action under section 1979 of the Revised Statutes [U.
S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1262] or the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution can
be predicated upon the enforcement of this statute in a case that comes within
its provisions. The demurrer to the complaint is therefore sustained.
There remains the further question presented by the motion to
strike this complaint from the files. This motion is based upon the grounds
that the complaint is scurrilous, scandalous, and devised to publish a libel
under color of law, and that the scurrilous, scandalous, impertinent, and
irrelevant matter is so interwoven with the relevant matter that it cannot be
separated therefrom. Having determined that the
complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, we
are concerned only with the character of the irrelevant matter contained in
this complaint. Among other things, it contains recitals of articles published
in the newspapers concerning the guardianship pro-
949
ceedings in this case in the superior court, and charges and
innuendoes concerning the action of the court and others. It is alleged that
during the month of January, 1903, and during 10 years or thereabouts next
prior thereto, one George A. Newhall, the defendant's brother, was, and ever
since has been, and now is the intimate personal friend and business associate
of the defendant; that from the 30th day of December, 1899, or thereabouts,
until the 1st day of October, 1903, or thereabouts, the said George A. Newhall
was a duly appointed, qualified, and acting police commissioner, and member of
the board of police commissioners of the said city and county of San Francisco;
that in the evening of the 29th day of January, 1903, while the plaintiff and
his wife and their four children, May, Sarah, Solomon, and Helen, were, at the
Ferry Depot Building in San Francisco, waiting to depart thence upon their
intended journey of removal to Seattle, the defendant and his confederates,
with the assistance of two police officers of the city and county of San
Francisco, whose presence there and assistance they had wrongfully procured by
means of the defendant's influence and his connection with the police
department of the said city and county hereinbefore stated, and all of them
armed with deadly weapons, waylaid and stole upon the plaintiff and his wife
and their said four children, and then and there, with force and violence,
maliciously and feloniously assaulted them all, and then and there, without any
warrant, or any regular process, or any authority therefor,
forcibly, maliciously, and feloniously seized and arrested the said four
children. This is the only reference in the complaint to the said George A.
Newhall. There is no averment that he is one of the conspirators, but he is
charged by innuendo and inference with the violation of law, and being
connected with the crime of false arrest and false imprisonment.
It is further alleged that the defendant, and his confederates
forcibly, maliciously, and feloniously assaulted the children May and Sarah,
and feloniously cut off the hair of the said two children. It is alleged that
the trial and hearing in the superior court was destitute of any element of
fairness, good faith, or candor, and was a travesty upon justice; that at the
pretended trial defendant caused himself to be made a witness, although he knew
nothing, and feigned to give testimony against plaintiff, and to prejudice the
court wrongfully against plaintiff; that defendant testified that the wife of
plaintiff had once borrowed two dollars of defendant, and had tried to sell him
a collie dog; that the defendant and his confederates fraudulently repeated and
made to the treasurer of the city and county, of San Francisco their false and
fraudulent representations and pretenses, and by means thereof obtained from
him and out of the public treasury of the said city and county, and thereupon
fraudulently and feloniously converted to their own private use, $250 and
upwards belonging to said city and county; that the defendant and his
confederates gave the child Sarah many presents of clothing and trinkets,
caused her teeth to be filled, and kept her at various schools.
There are many other allegations and charges contained in this
complaint of the same character; and in plaintiff's brief in support of the
complaint it is admitted that the complaint charges that the
950
defendant and his confederates committed 12 crimes of felony
and 39 crimes of misdemeanor, as follows: Five crimes of child stealing (5
felonies); 2 crimes of kidnapping (2 felonies); 5 crimes of false imprisonment,
effected by violence, menace, fraud, and deceit (12 felonies in all); 12 crimes
of assault, 2 crimes of assault and battery, 8 crimes of false arrest, 7 crimes
of libel, 7 crimes of criminal contempt of court, and 3 crimes of criminal
conspiracy (in all, 39 crimes of misdemeanor). It will not be necessary to
refer to these charges more in detail. It is sufficient to say that they are
irrelevant and immaterial to the main charge, which has been considered, even
if that charge could be sustained as a statement of a cause of action.
The court is of the opinion that this complaint, containing
these scurrilous and scandalous charges, ought not, under the circumstances, to
be allowed to remain on the files of the court. The motion of the defendant to
strike the complaint from the files is therefore granted.