In re Phillips

Grubb, J.:

—Although we might hold the want of jurisdiction, upon a habeas corpus application in relation to proceedings under this particular act, to be sufficient ground for discharge, yet we do not consider a defect in the commitment, or any other mere irregularity in said proceedings, such a ground.

Objection is made by the petitioner to the regularity of this commitment; that the commitment does not set forth expressly the . judgment or finding of the Municipal Court concerning the charge upon which the commitment is based. We do not regard this such *136a defect as this Court, under this particular act, should make a ground for granting the petition for the discharge of the child from the custody of the Ferris Industrial School.

Under this Act (Chap. 495, Vol. 17, Laws of Del.,) applicatian is first made to the Municipal Court, a Justice of the Peace, or the Court of General Sessions, for the commitment to said school. The framers of this statute manifestly considered that the Municipal Court might commit error or an arbitrary act of injustice, and therefore, by the provisions of the act, the Legislature took the precaution to provide that the Municipal Judge or Justice of the Peace should not have the sole and exclusive determination of the question as to whether a child should be taken from its parent and committed to said institution.

Therefore it provided a Court of Appeal—the resident Judge of the county, a Judge of the highest Court of the State—who shall rehear the case; not merely upon the testimony taken or recorded below, but upon any evidence that either he or the representatives of the child should think necessary for justice in the case; and who shall make his determination accordingly, either to remand to custody or to discharge.

That provision having been made, under this act, Judge Pennewill and I consider that it was not the intention of the framers of this act, or of the Legislature which passed it, that on Habeas corpus we should in this Court take jurisdiction of matters of irregularity or go into a hearing upon even the merits of the case at all. Of course if it plainly appeared to us and was clearly manifest that the Court below had no jurisdiction at all—that a case was not brought before it upon allegations of fact which brought it within the jurisdictional grounds prescribed by the statute—we might, on habeas corpus, take hold of, consider and adjudge the matter and discharge the child from said industrial school and not remand it. But we have not such a case here. We have here the affidavit made by William P. McCracken, the agent, setting forth specifically every ground for the commitment to said school, and, in the language of the act, that the said Carl Marshall Phillips was *137incorrigible and that his parents could not exercise authority or control over him. Those sworn allegations brought the case fully within the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court; they being all the jurisdictional facts necessary to be presented to the Municipal Court for its consideration and action. It is true that this commit-

ment does not set forth the judgment found by the Court on those jurisdictional facts, but it does show that the case was before the Municipal Court under the above charge with all of those jurisdictional facts alleged in the affidavit supporting said charge, and it also shows that the Municipal Judge acted thereon. It further shows that he signed this commitment and that the seal of the Court is affixed thereto. We say, in view of that affidavit and of the action of the Municipal Court under this particular act, that we will presume that the Municipal Judge, being a sworn judicial officer, having all the jurisdictional facts thus presented to him, and having made out the commitment performed his duty and did find the essential facts to warrant him under the law in committing, and that he followed the law and obeyed the law. And we will consider that presumption a conclusive one in the case now before us and will not entertain the vague and immaterial testimony of Mr. Winchester offered before us here to impeach or contradict what the record from the Court below shows, and the just, fair and legal inference which we draw from it.

Therefore we order that this child be remanded to the custody of the Managers of the Ferris Industrial School, and we dismiss the petition and put the costs upon the county.

We will here observe that in reaching this conclusion we have considered habeas carpus procedure in its relation only to cases arising under Chapter 495, Volume 17, Laws of Delaware (Rev. Code, 356).