In re Sedgwick

Smith, J.:

The appellant and one W. Parker Sedgwick were husband and wife. The appellant had possession of their two children. The petitioner obtained a writ of habeas corpus commanding the appellant to produce the children to determine the right to their custody. ■ That writ of habeas corpus was served upon the appellant while she had the custody of the children within the State of New York, and was returnable at a later date. Upon the return day the appellant did not appear, but counsel appeared for her specially, arguing that the court was without jurisdiction. This argument was had upon two separate occasions, neither the appellant nor the children appearing in the State of New York upon those two days, but the appellant being represented by special counsel who appeared specially for that purpose. After argument of counsel upon the question of jurisdiction to issue the writ, the court determined that it had jurisdiction and adjudged the appellant guilty of contempt in failing to produce the children in accordance with the command contained in the writ of habeas corpus, but determined that she might purge herself of such contempt by producing such children. She has appealed from this order.

That she was in contempt in failing to produce said children appears prima facie from the fact of her not appearing herself and not having the children before the judge who issued the writ. While she is thus in contempt, she should not be heard to appeal *62from an order made in the proceedings, and for that reason the appeal should be dismissed.-

It can hardly be held that the order was an ex parte order, because the order assumes to overrule objections to jurisdiction which were made by attorneys appearing for the appellant.

While the court should refuse to hear this appeal while appellant is thus defying the writ, for the guidance of the parties it may be well to say that the practice is entirely irregular. The practice was regulated in the Code of Civil Procedure by section 2028, and the same provision is carried into section 1248 of the Civil Practice Act. The appeal should be dismissed, without costs.

Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Merrell and McAvoy, JJ., concur.

Appeal dismissed, without costs,