Kirkbride v. Harvey

SHARPE, J.

“When an infant- child or minor is out of the possession and custody of the father, and habeas corpus is resorted to by the latter to obtain such custody, it does not follow as a matter of right that the prayer of the petition will be granted. The court is clothed with a sound discretion to grant or refuse relief, always to be exercised for the benefit of the infant primarily, but not arbitrarily in disregard of the father’s natural right to be preferred. If the father be 'reasonably suitable and able to maintain and rear his child, his prayer should ordinarily be granted. If, on the other hand, he be unsuitable or unable properly to care for his offspring, and *234especially if that offspring, baying sufficient judgment, prefer not to return to him, tbe court should grant no relief in the premises but leave the parties in statu quo —Brinster v. Compton, 68 Ala. 299; Ex parte BotZ, 31 Ala. 425; Ex parte Murphy, 75 Ala. 409; Neville v. Reed, 134 Ala. 320. The foregoing quotation from Brinster v. Compton, states the law of this case. The trial judge having awarded the custody of the infant in accordance with the right established prima facie by the fact of paternity, the question for review is whether out of regard for the infant’s welfare the enforcement of the right should have been denied.

Marina E. Harvey, who is the subject of this controversy, was at the time of the trial about five and a half years old. Her parents were petitioner and his former wife, Mattie G. Harvey, who was a sister of Fannie Kirk-bride, the respondent’s wife, and who, when she married petitioner", was a widow and the mother of two children of her previous marriage. Marina was born in September, 1897, at Punta Gorda, Florida, where her parents then resided and where petitioner still resides. In November, 1898, petitioner and his family, on returning* from a northern journey, visited respondent’s home which was then and still is in Mobile, Alabama. After staying there a few days, petitioner proceeded to Punta Gorda, leaving his wife and her children at respondent’s house to remain on a visit there until after the succeeding Christmas holidays. While on the northern trip the mother liad a cough and at respondent’s house her malady increased so that she remained there until the following March when she died. She left a last will in which was the following clause: “My husband has done much to alienate my affections from him by his treatment of me, and I do not desire my children to be in his custody or control. I will and desire that all of my children, including Marina, the youngest, shall be, and remain under the care, custody and control of my sister, Fannie G. Kirkbride, and of her husband, E. B. Kirk-bride, and I expressly desire my sister Fannie, to undertake the care and nurture of my youngest child Marina.”

*235Ever since the mother’s death the child has remained with respondent and his wife, and has received from them kind and careful nurture, which has resulted in restoring her from exceedingly frail health to apparently good health, but according to the evidence, she is of such delicate constitution that unusual care is requisite for preservation of her health. It appears from the record, as proved by undisputed evidence, that respondent is well able to provide for the child, that he “is a man honored and respected by his neighbors and acquaintances as a man of high character, amiable disposition and a lover of children,’’ that Mrs. Kirkbride is of like disposition and that the child is “devoted” to her. The conduct of the Kirkbrides extending over four «years of the more helpless period of the child’s infancy gives evidence that they would not be remiss in the bestowal of needed care in the future. Seemingly, from the standpoint of the child’s interest, no mistake could be made in allowing them to remain her custodians until she becomes more independent of assistance.

That petitioner can be depended upon to furnish the guidance and attention demanded by the sex, age and health of the child, admits of no question. It is shown that, he is engaged in a respectable and probably lucrative occupation, and has means, the character and value of which is not proved. But in the record there is evidence tending strongly to show that he has in the past been neglectful of paternal duties, and that his life with Marina’s mother was attended with much domestic infelicity, some details of which are referred to in a letter from him to Mrs. Kirkbride, which is in evidence. After leaving tlie mother in November, 1S98, he did not return to Mobile until July, 1899, though in the- meantime, he was several times informed of the mother’s sickness by letters and telegrams, and was informed at least once of the child’s sickness by a letter from his stepdaughter, in which she wrote, “mamma has been dreadfully sick for about three weeks in bed and besides the first time. Marina has been sick again Avith high fever and cold. She Avas sick enough to have a doctor.” On December 29, 1898, respondent Avrote petitioner of the mother’s ili *236health, stating among other things, “Dr. Ketclnnn has been to see her five or six times. He pronounces her a wreck physically, and holds out but faint hopes for her recovery. He gave peremptory orders to wean Marina and as a sequel she suffered a few days but is now all right.” In a letter from the mother to the petitioner, dated January 4, 1899, she wrote: “It seems very hard to make you understand how dreadfully sick I have been and am. In a letter to him from Mrs. Kirkbride, dated February 25, 1899, was written, “Judging from your letter to Minnie (bis step-daughter) you certainly don’t understand that her mother is seriously ill, is in the last stages of consumption, has been in bed two months, and ■will never be up again until she is carried out to her last resting place.” On March 4th, respondent wired petitioner that Mrs. Harvey dic'd on the morning of that day.

The record recites that petitioner testified, “that he and his decased wife had gotten along nicely, and had had no trouble or unpleasantness in their married life. 1-Ie also testified that he did not come to Mobile after the death of his said wife Mattie, until in July, 1899. He did not hear of his wife’s serious illness till just before her death, nor did he hear of her death till it was too late to attend the funeral.” If the petitioner failed to comprehend the import of the communications above mentioned, he might be, unfortunately obtuse in comprehending emergencies that may involve the welfare of the child in future. There is evidence indicating that he is high tempered and irritable, and such characteristics may render him in some degree inefficient for the training of a female infant; besides, it is common knowledge that efficiency in such regard is a rare attainment for one of the masculine sex. Petitioner remarried in 1901, but what offices his present wife would volunteer in the matter of nurture and training is necessarily left to conjecture. Apparently the proposed change of custody, if awarded, will result in a removal of the child to Punta Gorda, and a consequent severance of associations between her and blood relatives which have thus far served her beneficially. That the mother was without legal *237power to divest by will petitioner’s rights pertaining to the child’s custody, is conceded, yet to change as is here proposed, the conditions which have arisen in pursuance of the attempted testamentary disposition, would involve an experiment, such as the evidence does not warrant the court in promoting. The judgment appealed from will be reversed and judgment will be here rendered dismissing the petition.

Beversed and rendered.