Arbona v. Torres

DISSENTING 'OPINION OP

CHIEF JUSTICE HERNANDEZ IN WHICH JUSTICE HUTCHISON CONCURS,

As rightly contended by the defendant in her brief, the present case involves no question as to the one entitled to the patria potestas over the two acknowledged natural children of the litigants, for there is no doubt that it belongs to the father. It is simply a question of the conditions of its exercise — i. e., whether notwithstanding the fact that the patria potestas over the children pertains to the plaintiff, he has the right that they be surrendered to him by the mother, in whose custody they are. Such is the question of law submitted to this court.

On May 20, 1915, the father filed a verified complaint against the mother in the District Court of Ponce, claiming the custody of their natural children Jaime and Rosa, who, as alleged by the plaintiff and admitted by the defendant, *429were aged seven and two and a half years respectively at the time the action was brought, Jaime having been born in 1908 and Rosa in 1912. There is another child named Maria Magdalena, one and a half years old, whose custody the plaintiff does not claim although he had acknowledged'it as well as the other two.

The said children have lived with their mother since they were born, the father having provided for their maintenance and support. The plaintiff had contracted lawful marriage with another woman and one child was born of that union. The defendant is an honest woman and is so regarded by the plaintiff.

The case should be governed by the law in force at the time of the birth of the children Jaime and Rosa. Section 222 of the Revised Civil Code, as amended by the Act of March 14, 1907, was operative when both Jaime and Rosa were born — that is, in 1908 and 1912 — and section 190 of the said code was also in force when Jaime was born, but was repealed by Act No. 73 of March 9, 1911, or prior to the birth of Rosa.

Section 222, as amended, and section 190 read as follows:

“Section 222. — The patria potestas over the legitimate children not emancipated belongs in the first place to the father, and in case of his absence, legal incapacity or death, to the mother.
“Illegitimate children and adopted minors shall be under the potestas of the father or mother acknowledging or adopting them. Where they have been acknowledged or adopted by both parents, the provision of paragraph 1 of this section shall be applicable.”
“Section 190. — The father of the illegitimate child shall support the mother and the child until the latter has arrived at the age of eighteen years, including the expenses of education, and giving the child a profession or trade, in accordance with his social conditions. If after the age of eighteen years, the child cannot work, because of some physical or mental imperfection, his father shall continue to support him. The support shall consist of a monthly pension in cash paid in advance.”

In amending section 222 of the Revised Civil Code as *430above, the result of which was that from the time of such amendment the patria potestas ceased to pertain to the father and mother conjointly, as originally provided by said section, the Act of March 14, 1907, neither expressly nor impliedly repealed section 190; therefore while under the said act plaintiff Arbona had the first claim to the patria potestas over his son Jaime and the child’s mother, Margarita Torres, the second, he was required to support the mother and child until the latter reached the age of eighteen years, by paying a monthly allowance in cash in advance. That right was acquired conjointly by the mother and the child under section 190 of the Civil Code at the time of the birth of the child in 1908.

If that section was compatible with the original provisions of section 222 recognizing the joint right of the father and mother to the patria potestas, we see no reason in law why it should not be compatible with section 222 as amended, which recognizes the prior right of the father to the patria potestas and that of the mother in case of his absence, legal incapacitjq or death. It is not the mother’s but the father’s patria potestas which originates the right created by section 190. Its application has not the effect of depriving the father of the patria potestas and conferring it upon the mother. On the contrary, it affirms and ratifies it in the father as it formerly did when the patria potestas was conferred upon the father and mother conjointly. Section 190 regulates the exercise of the right of parental authority by the father in relation to the support of his illegitimate children, but does not extinguish or suspend the right of the father to the patria potestas. Sections 235 and 236 of the Civil Code refer to the deprivation or suspension 'of the right of patria potestas and therefore are not applicable to the present case, which, as to the child Jaime, should be governed by the doctrine laid down and applied by this court in the case of Vargas v. Gispert, 15 P. R. R. 132.

It is true that the Act of March 9, 1911, repealed section *431190 of tlie Civil Code, but according to section 3 of tlie same code, providing that laws shall' not have a retroactive effect unless they expressly so state, and that in no case shall the retroactive effect of a law operate to the prejudice of rights acquired under previous legislative action, the said act is not retroactive. The Act of March 9, 1911, contains no retroactive provision, and, moreover, defendant Margarita Torres and her son Jaime had acquired a right under section 190 of which they could not be deprived.

The judgment appealed from is in accordance with law in so far as it affects the child Jaime.

As to the child Eosa, when she was born in 1912 section .190 of the Civil Code, which we have.held to be applicable to the case of the boy Jaime, had been repealed by the Act of March 9, 1911, but as by virtue of the said act section 190 was substituted by article 134 of the Spanish Civil Code, which provides that a natural child has a right to .bear the surname of the person acknowledging it, to receive support from the same, and to receive the lawful hereditary portion, without prescribing the manner in which the support shall be received, we are of the opinion that the court, in the exercise of its discretional power, should ascertain and determine whether in a case like the present the father should be given the custody of the child so that he may comply with the parental duties imposed upon him by the patria potestas, or whether the mother should be allowucl to retain it for that purpose.

We should take into account that in determining the effects of the patria potestas regarding the persons of the children, section 223 of the Civil Code apparently refers to a normal condition in which the husband and wife live together with their children, whether legitimate or natural, under the same roof. The said section reads as follows:

“Section 223. — The father and the mother have, with respect to their children not emancipated:
“1. The duty of supporting them, keeping them in their com*432pany, educating and instructing them in accordance with their means, and representing them in the exercise of all actions which may redound to the benefit of such children.
“2. The power to correct and punish them moderately.”

The Act of March 14, 1907, amended section 222 of the Revised Civil Code and revived article 154 of the Spanish Civil Code, which gives the patria potestas to the father and, in his absence, to the mother; but section 223 continued in force as originally enacted, conferring rights upon both the father and the mother with regard to their unemancipated children, without any reservation that the mother should exercise such rights in the absence of the father, as prescribed by article 155 of the Spanish Civil Code, which is the same as section 223 of the Revised Code.

In case of a suit for divorce interrupting the marriage relations, section 166 of the Revised Civil Code provides that if there are children of the marriage whose provisional custody is claimed by both parties to the marriage, they shall be placed under the custody of the wife during the time the suit is pending, unless there be strong reasons in the discretion of the court for depriving the wife of the custody of her children, either wholly or in part; and in case of a decree of divorce, section 175 directs that the minor children shall be placed under the patria potestas of the party who has obtained the decree, the other spouse having the right to continue family relations with his or her children.

The Legislature has made no express provision for eases of dissolved illicit relations between a man and a woman during which natural children were born, and it seems to us to be contrary to common reason and equity that the mother of a natural child should be denied all rights during the life of the father who acknowledged the offspring of such relations, and that the father who without cause deserts the woman who has borne him children should be allowed privileges which are denied to a man who begets children in lawful wedlock and abandons his lawful wife. Such a theory *433would lead to the absurd conclusion that a father, more unnatural than natural, has the right to tear his acknowledged child from the arms of its mother during the first days of its existence when it still requires nursing.

Nor does the preference of the father over the mother in the exercise of the patria potestas prescribed by section-222 of the Revised Civil Code, as amended by the Act of March 14, 1907, alone support the claim of the plaintiff to-be given the custody of his child Rosa. In commenting* on article 154 of the Spanish Civil Code, which is similar to section 222 of our code, Scaevola expresses himself as follows:

“Like the codes of most other countries, the Spanish code gives' the father preference over the mother in the exercise of the patria potestas. But the mother is placed on .an equality with the father in the exercise of some rights and in the performance of certain, duties inherent in the patria potestas. The support of the children; their custody; their correction and punishment at home; the right to earnings, are powers common to both the father and the mother. The preference given to the father is manifested in his right to'represent his children legally. What the statute means to say is that the father assumes the entire juridical capacity which he does not share with the mother. This is the faculty which the mother may exercise only in ease of the incapacity of the father — that is, by reason of his death, absence, or for any of the reasons included in sections 169,. 170 and 171.”

And further on, in commenting* on article 155 of the Spanish Civil Code, which is. similar to section 223 of our Revised Code, Scaevola says:

“In specifying the rights and duties of the parents regarding the persons of their children, article 155 of the code bestows and imposes-them upon the father and, in his absence, upon the mother. But a close scrutiny will reveal that not always does such preference or precedence exist in connection with some of the effects of the patria potestas. The duty of supporting the children is imposed on the conjugal partnership, pursuant to subdivision 5 of article 1408. The-children must remain in the custody of both and not of one of the parents, for article 155 prescribes that the spouses shall live together. *434There is no doubt that the mother also has the power to correct and punish the children moderately. True, the father takes precedence in all that affects the legal representation of the children; in the correction defined by article 156 and in the management of the ■estate — that is, in that which does not relate to the instruction of the family.”

It is not possible to lay down as an absolute and inflexible principle that a natural child must live with the father -who acknowledged it and exercises the right of patria potestas over it. The conditions of the exercise of that right should be regulated by the courts in accordance with the special circumstances of each case, always bearing in mind that the patria potestas under our present law is not for the benefit of the father or the mother, but for that of the child which requires it.

When the plaintiff sued for the custody of the child Rosa, it was only two and a half years of age, and, as is natural for a child of such tender years, still required the loving care and watchful solicitude of the mother who gave it birth. The child had always lived with its mother who naturally has more affection for it than the father. The father acknowledges the present morality of the mother. The lawful marriage of the father, already resulting in the birth of a child, must create difficulties of a moral character in - the continuation of the relations of mother and daughter. In view of these special circumstances, the plaintiff should be denied the right to separate the child from its mother, in whose custody and under whose protection it should continue, without prejudice to a modification of that decision when warranted on reasonable grounds. The right of the father to the patria potestas would not be divested thereby in any essential particular.

The judgment appealed from should be affirmed as to the boy Jaime and reversed as to the girl Rosa, dismissing the complaint in all its parts.