Court Opinion

ID: 8655853
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 21:15:51.987954+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:42.675782
License: Public Domain

McOARTY, C. L
(after stating tbe facts as above).
1 Samuel J. Parrish is a farmer and is tbe owner of a valuable farm and a good home in Centerville. Tbe evidence shows and tbe court found tbat “tbe Parrishes are-well-to-do people, cultured and refined, capable in every way of rearing and taking care of tbe child in tbe very best manner and providing it with an ideal home. They are people of middle age (Samuel J. being fifty-six and Caddie R. Parrish fifty-three years of age), have no children at home of their own, and have become very much attached to tbe child, more so than its real mother, and tbe child is very much attached to them.”
Tbe court, in rendering its decision, also made tbe following observations, which were fully warranted' by tbe evidence :
“In 1911 petitioner (appellant) married John Hummel and moved to Salt Lake. Sbe was met at tbe depot by her-sister (Mrs. Walters) and other relatives to whom sbe stated sbe did not desire ber husband to know anything about the-child; that sbe bad decided to let it remain with the P'ar-risbes until it was old enough to choose for itself. It is apparent, therefore, tbat tbe mother’s attachment for tbe child was not so great at tbat time as sbe now claims. She . and ber husband are also in rather bumble circumstances. She goes out washing several times a week, and, while it is claimed they have some money on deposit, it is questionable in the-*380mind of tbe court whether she is able to properly care for the child or whether she is a proper person to hare the custody thereof. . . . The difficulty with the court has been whether it should disregard the welfare of the child and consider only the natural right.”
It seems that the court, in rendering its decision denying the writ, proceeded upon the theory: First, that appellant had surrendered and delivered the child into the care and custody of its grandmother; and, second, that it would be for the best interest of the child for it to remain in the care and custody of the respondents.
It is earnestly contended that the evidence wholly fails* to show a surrender of the child by appellant to Sophia Lambing, or that she ever intended to or did in effect abandon the child or in any way waive or forfeit her right to the care and custody of the child. And it is further contended that the evidence fails to show that the interests and welfare of the child would be best subserved by permitting it to remain with respondents, and that the court erred in so deciding. The evidence without conflict shows that appellant, when the child was not more than fourteen months of age, placed it in the care and under the control of its grandmother, Sophia Lambing, who kept and cared for the child for about one year in Hungary before bringing it to America. During this time appellant “worked out” but came home on Sundays, sometimes for an hour, to see the child. The grandmother testified that during the time the child was. left with her in Hungary appellant did not pay or contribute anything for its support, and that appellant requested her to bring the child with her to America. While appellant admitted that ■she consented for her mother to bring the child with her to this country, she denied that she failed to contribute anything for its support. .The trial court, however, found against appellant on this last point. In rendering its decision, the court, among other things, made the following observations regarding the reliability of the mother’s testimony as compared to that given by her daughter, appellant herein.
*381“The mother’s testimony all through seems to me to be the more reasonable. Furthermore, I cannot conceive that she should fabricate her entire testimony and commit willful perjury to deprive her own daughter of the custody of the child as against strangers in whom she has no interest. I prefer, therefore, to believe the mother’s testimony as against that of her daughter.”
Taking into consideration the indifference of appellant for the welfare of the child after it was brought to this country by the grandmother, as shown by her failure to contribute to its support, and in failing to even write to her mother and' other relatives in Cincinnati about the child for a period of about five months, and permitting the child to remain with respondents for more than five years before commencing proceedings to recover possession of it, we think the conclusions .reached by the court regarding the reliability of the grandmother’s testimony as compared with that given by her daughter on this point were amply justified Moreover, Mrs. Walters, appellant’s sister, testified that when the Hummels arrived in Salt Lake City, July, 1911, she, in company with other relatives met them at the depot and appellant requested her not to say anything about the child to Mr. Hummel “because he didn’t know she had a child,” and that a little later, on the same day, appellant said to her that she had decided to leave the child where it was until it should be able to decide for itself as to whether it would remain with respondents or return to appellant. Appellant, as we have herein-before observed, denied making these statements, but the court found as a fact that she did make them. And we think that the court was warranted in so finding. Hummel testified that during the four or five weeks that he and appellant lived at the home of Sophia Lambing after their arrival in Salt Lake City the child was not mentioned by either of them; that about one or two weeks after they had left the home of Sophia Lambing and were maintaining a home of their own he went to Mrs. Lambing for information concerning the whereabouts of the child. Appellant knew, and had known for four or five years, that the child was at the *382borne of the Parrishes in Centerville. Now, if it were true,, as testified to by appellant and Hummel that they had conversed between themselves about the child and the conditions, under which it was born before they were married, and that their purpose in coming to Utah was to get the control and custody of the child, the question arises: Why did they,, after arriving in Salt Lake City, remain silent regarding the-object of their quest for six or seven weeks? And then when they did finally decide to move in the matter, why was it necessary for Hummel to go to the grandmother of the child for information about the child which could have been furnished by appellant ? The trial court evidently believed, and it was justified in believing, that Hummel never heard of the-child until several weeks after he and appellant arrived in Salt Lake City, July, 1911, and that the claim made by them that they talked about the child before they were married' and that the object they had in view in coming to Utah was to get the child was an afterthought, a “frame up” on their-part to make it appear that appellant never intended to abandon the child or waive her right to its care and custody, and further to try and make it appear improbable that she-made the statements attributed to her by her sister Mrs.. Walters that she had decided to leave the child with respondents until it was old enough to decide for itself as to whether' it would remain with them or return to appellant. We have-examined the record in this case with care and are satisfied that the greater weight of the evidence tends to show that appellant abandoned the child to the care and custody of' others without any intention on her part of reclaiming it,, and that the trial court did not err in so deciding.
2 The legal presumption is that it is for the best interests of the child and of society for the child to remain with its-natural parents during the period of its minority and be-maintained, cared for, and educated by them and under their supervision and direction. But this is not an absolute right of the parent. The decisions rendered in this class of cases almost universally hold that where, as here, a parent has surrendered the control of his child when *383it was a toddling infant to other parties, and permitted them to maintain, clothe, feed, and care for it until it is eight or nine years of age, and a strong reciprocal mutual affection has grown up between the child and its foster parents, as in the case at bar, and the parent seeks to recover possession of "the child, the natural or presumptive right of the parent cannot prevail if the interests and welfare of the child forbid it. The law in such cases regards the welfare and permanent interests of the child much more important than the natural •or presumptive right of the parent. In other words, the paramount consideration in such cases is the well-being of the •child. If it appears to the court that the physical, intellectual, social, moral, and educational training and general welfare and happiness of the child will be best promoted by leaving it with the foster parents, the presumptive right of the natural parent must yield to the interests of the child.
The general and, as we think,, correct rule is well illustrated in the case of Smidt v. Benenga, 140 Iowa, 401, 118 N. W. 440, in the following language:
“Generally speaking, tlie natural parents are entitled to tide care, ■custody, and control of their minor children; but they may by agreement or conduct deprive themselves of this natural right and ■confer it upon others. And when the scales are equally balanced, or the court is in doubt about the abstract right of control, the interests of the child are paramount and will prevail. We do not wish to in any way throw doubt upon the paramount right of a- father to the custody of his offspring; but where he has neglected to assert that right for many years, and the child knows him not, but has formed other attachments which are almost as sacred as the natural ones, and in effect quite as strong, courts are reluctant to make any change, particularly where, as here, these attachments were formed with the consent of the natural parent.”
In Clark v. Bayer, 32 Ohio St. 299, 30 Am. Rep. 593, it is said:
“In this country there is quite a uniformity in the decisions in relation to the rightful custody of infant children. The general spirit of modern adjudged cases on this subject, both in England and the States, does not essentially differ. As a general rule, the father is considered as being entitled to the custody of his minor •children. ... In cases of controverted custody, the present and *384future interests of the minor control tlie judgment and direct the discretion of courts. While the legal rights of parents are to he respected, the welfare of the minor is of paramount considera* tion. ... It sometimes happens that parents have abandoned their minor children, or by act and word transferred their custody to another. In such cases, where the custodian is, in every way, a proper person to have the care, training, and education of the infant, and the court is satisfied its social, moral, and educational interests will be best promoted by remaining in the custody of the person to whom it was transferred, or received, when abandoned, the new custody will be treated as lawful and exclusive. After the affections of both child and adopted parent become engaged, and a state of things has arisen which cannot be altered without risking the happiness of the child, and the father wants to reclaim it, the better opinion is that he is not in a position to have the interference of a court in his favor. His parental rights must yield to the feelings, interests, and rights of other parties, acquired with his consent.”
Tbis doctrine was recognized and approved' in tbe case of Stanford v. Gray, 42 Utah, 228, 129 Pac. 423, recently decided by tbis court. In addition to tbe authorities there cited we invite attention to tbe following cases in which tbe principle was adhered to and followed: In re Stockman, 71 Mich. 180, 38 N. W. 876; Jones v. Darnall, 103 Ind. 569, 2 N. E. 229, 53 Am. Rep. 545; United States v. Green, 3 Mason, 482, Fed. Cas. No. 15,256; Schneider v. Schwabe (Tex. Civ. App.) 143 S. W. 265; Stringfellow v. Somerville, 95 Va. 701, 29 S. E. 685, 40 L. R. A. 623; Kelsey v. Green, 69 Conn. 291, 37 Atl. 679, 38 L. R. A. 471; Sturtevant v. State, 15 Neb. 459, 19 N. W. 617, 48 Am. Rep. 349; Fields v. Deming, 56 Wash. 259, 105 Pac. 466.
Tbe trial court saw tbe parties in tbis proceeding, including tbe child in question, beard appellant and her husband and each of tbe respondents testify, observed their appearances, their manner of testifying, their general deportment, and tbe way in which tbe respective parties demeaned themselves in and about the courtroom during tbe trial, all of which no doubt impressed tbe court and materially aided it in determining tbe issues involved, because, in rendering its decision, the court made tbe following observation:
*385“Certainly from appearances in the courtroom, if the welfare of the child only is considered, the court would not take the child and place it with its parent.”
The evidence is undisputed that the child has been and is being well and kindly treated by respondents, and that it is happy and contented and desires to remain with them. And there can be no question but that the child’s physical, moral, intellectual, and educational training will be all that could be desired if it remains with the respondents. Upon the other hand, appellant is uneducated and speaks the English language very imperfectly. She and her husband have no home of their own and live in a rented house of three rooms only. Hummel earns a livelihood by his daily labor and is capable of earning from $2.50 to three dollars per day when employed. Appellant testified that she “goes out washing and does needle work.” In fact, the record shows that they are industrious, hardworking people, which is commendable and speaks volumes in their favor. It is, however, apparent that appellant has neither the facilities nor the time to give the child the care and the attention that it requires and should receive. Moreover, appellant and her husband are, comparatively speaking, young people, and children may, and probably will, be born to them. Should this occur, the unfortunate circumstances under which the child in question was born would, to say the least, tend to make its welfare and happiness a matter of secondary consideration with Hummel. Let that be as it may, the most that can be said in favor of appellant’s contention is that the effect that a change in guardianship of the child from respondents to appellant would have on its future welfare and happiness is problematical only; the probabilities being that a change under the circumstances would be detrimental rather than beneficial to the interests and future welfare of the child.
The facts in this case are somewhat similar to the facts in the case last above cited (Fields v. Deming). In that case a child about nine months old that was born out of wedlock was left by its mother at a place which the mother was in*386formed was a “child hospital.” The mother testified that she “did not intend to do more than to leave the child at the hospital for a short time and until she should be able to take oare of it herself; that in about three weeks from the time she left it, she went to see the child and was informed that it had been placed in a family.” About two years thereafter (in 1898) the mother commenced legal proceedings to regain the possession and custody of the child. Issues were joined, but the case never came on for trial and was finally dismissed. No further action was taken by the mother until June, 1908, when she again commenced an action to get possession of the child. A trial was had and the court there, as here, found that it was to the best interest of the child to remain in the care and custody of its foster parents. The Supreme Court of Washington affirmed the decision. The reasoning of the court in that case completely answers the argument and contention made by appellant in the case at bar. The court, after reviewing the facts, in part said:
“It is not proper to consider the material wealth possessed by either the natural or foster parents or to make comparisons in that regard; ... at the same time it must be apparent that, where a child has been brought up by foster parents in an environment that is distinctly different from the environment to which he would be submitted by a change of guardianship, a revulsion of feeling would be liable to occur which would lead to embarrassments and misery. In this case, looking at the question strictly from the standpoint of the boy’s welfare, the mother would not be able to give him the attention which at this age he sadly stands in need of. . . . And if he were uprooted from the home and affection which now warm and protect him, and transplanted to the environment described by the mother as her home, the probabilities are that it would result in discontent and misery to both mother and son.”
So, in this case, to take tbe little girl (now ten years of age) from ber present bappy borne and tbe refined, congenial, tbe elevating influences witb wbicb sbe is surrounded and give ber into tbe care and custody of those whose social environments, way and style of living may be, and probably are, materially different from that to wbicb tbe child is, and during tbe last seven or eight years of ber life has been, ac*387customed would probably tend to have a blighting rather than a benign influence on the child and her future career.
Counsel for appellant in their brief invite attention to the fact that respondents have taken no steps to adopt the child. Counsel for respondents, in their oral argument of the case, stated, by way of explanation of this apparent oversight or neglect on the part of respondents to carry out their part of the agreement under which they obtained the custody of the child, that no steps had been taken by respondents in this regard because they were uncertain as to whether they could legally adopt the child without the consent of its mother. Under present conditions, the legal status of the little girl is nothing more than that of a homeless waif living on the charity of those who are under no legal obligations whatever to support and care for her.
The order of this court is that the judgment of the lower court be affirmed, provided respondents proceed within thirty days after receiving notice of the filing of this opinion to procure an order from the district court of Davis County permitting them to adopt the child as provided by statute; and this opinion will be sufficient authority for the district court to make an order permitting respondents to adopt the child. Should respondents fail to apply for the order mentioned within the time above specified, the district court of Davis County is directed to set aside the judgment heretofore rendered and enter and make such order regarding the custody of the child as it may, under the statute, deem meet and proper for the best interests of the child. The respective parties to pay their own costs incurred on this appeal.
Since the foregoing was drafted as the opinion of this court, it has been suggested in a dissenting opinion that “it is not made to appear that the appellant is an improper or unfit person to rear the child.” But that on the contrary “it is shown that she is a proper and fit person to rear the child,” and that therefore she is entitled to its custody. The trial judge, in rendering the decision denying the writ, said:
*388“It is a question in the mind of the court whether she (appellant) is able to properly car© for the child or whether she is a proper person to have the custody thereof.”
We did not review nor comment upon the evidence which undoubtedly prompted the court to make these observations and which tended to show that appellant, during at least a part of the time that her child was being supported and cared for by others, was wayward and somewhat, if not wholly, indifferent to the then present as well as the future welfare of the child. We thought, and still think, as undoubtedly the trial court believed, that it would be for the best interests of all concerned to cover appellant’s past in that regard with the mantle of charity, and not pei’petuate it by referring to it in this opinion. But, since it is in effect claimed that there is no evidence tending to show “that appellant is an improper or unfit person to rear the child,” we feel impelled to invite attention to the evidence which, if believed by the court (and it affirmatively appears that the court did at least give it some credence), tended to show that, while appellant may not be wholly unfit to have the care and custody of the child, we think it conclusively shows that the present and future welfare of the little girl will be best sub-served by leaving her with respondents, surrounded as she is with all the necessary material comforts of life as well as an elevating, congenial, and moral atmosphere in which she is happy and contented.
Sophia Lambing (appellant’s mother) testified that, after the child was left with her in Hungary, appellant, “went out dancing every night and spent all the money; . . that she came home on Sundays sometimes and for an hour and brought bad girls;” and that she said to appellant, “I don’t want those bad girls in my house.” The witness also testified that when appellant first came to Utah (1907) in quest of the child she had a conversation with appellant regarding the child, which was in part as follows: “Q. You told Katie (appellant) she could not have the child, didn’t you? A. Well, she was here and going back to Hungary with this child and I told her, What will you do in Hungary with this *389little child ? Going in a poorhouse ?’ And she says, ‘She can be a- (making use of a word sometimes used to characterize or designate a lewd woman), what I am.’ ” Counsel for appellant vigorously contend that this testimony is wholly unworthy of belief and ought not to be considered. It was, however, for the trial court to determine what weight, if any, should be given to this testimony, and it would seem from the remarks of the judge in rendering the decision that he gave it some credence.
Gertrude Pleiffei*, another witness for respondents, testified in part as follows:
“Reside in Salt Lake City. Knew Katie Lambing Hum-mel in Hungary. . . . Had a conversation some time in November with Katie Hummel. ... I said, ‘Katie, you leave the child where it is now. It is a good place.’ I said, ‘What are you going to do with the child V Katie says, ‘After I get the child it don’t matter to me what becomes of the child just so I get the child, even if the child is going to be where I am.’ ” On cross-examination the witness, among other things, said: “She (appellant) said she could' take care of the child and raise it until it became what she was.” And the undisputed evidence shows that a few weeks after appellant and her husband came to Salt Lake City and made their home with the appellant’s mother, Sophia Lambing, a quarrel arose between appellant and her mother because of the unclean condition in which appellant kept the room occupied by her and her husband, and because of this they left Mrs. Lambing’s home and obtained lodging elsewhere. This circumstance of itself would not be sufficient to justify the court in denying the writ, but it nevertheless is a circumstance which the court might well consider in connection with all the other facts and circumstances in determining whether it would be for the best interests of the child to take it from its present refined and ideal home and give it into the care and custody of those who are thus shown to be careless and indifferent of the condition and appearances of their home and are lacking, if not wholly wanting, in the culture and refinement which surround and will continue to sur*390round tbe child so long as it remains and makes its home with respondents. Of course, if the interests, claims, and legal rights of the parties to the proceedings as between themselves only are to be considered, regardless of the effect that the determination of these legal rights may have on the present and future welfare of the child, the circumstance last referred to should not be considered by the court. But, as we have stated, the more recent authorities, which include the best reasoned decisions on the subject practically all hold that the interest and welfare of the child in cases of this kind, where the parent in effect abandoned the child when it was a toddling infant and others have supported and cared for it until it is nine or ten years of age, the interests of the parent must yield to those of the child, and any fact or circumstance admitted or established by the evidence, that will assist the court in determining this paramount question may and should be considered by it.
According to appellant’s own testimony, after she gave the child into the care and custody of her mother she earned twelve dollars per month in Hungary and was able to and did save ten dollars per month which she gave to her mother for the support of the child before it was brought to this country. Notwithstanding her ability, as she claims) to save and lay aside ten dollars per month of her earnings, she did not contribute anything towards the support of the child after it left Hungary, and for five years after she came to America she did not pay or contribute anything for its support. And the evidence without conflict shows that during the first six or seven weeks after she and her husband arrived in Salt Lake City (July, 1911) she made no effort to see or to get possession of the child. And, so far as shown by the record, the only occasion during that time that she mentioned the child, if she mentioned it at all, was the day on which she and her husband arrived. The trial court, after reviewing these circumstances in rendering its decision, remarked and in effect found “that the mother’s attachment for the child was not so great at that time as she now claims.” We have again referred to this part of the record because it tends to show a lack of in*391terest and an indifference on the part of appellant towards tbe child, which is inconsistent with the claim made that, so far as she is concerned, her attachment for the child overshadows every other element in the case. The court might well have concluded, in view of the fact that appellant’s earning capacity was such that it enabled her to save and lay aside ten dollars per month of her earnings, and that she waited more than five years after she was advised that the child had been given to respondents for adoption by them before commencing legal proceedings to get possession of it, and that during this time she contributed nothing for its support, and her indifference towards the child for six or seven weeks after she arrived in Utah (July, 1911), that she was prompted by a selfish rather than a generous motive to commence these proceedings. The little girl was, at the time these proceedings were commenced, eight years of age and would soon be able to materially assist her mother in general housework and in looking after the home. As stated, the court might well have concluded that it was the material benefits to appellant that would inure to her by regaining possession of the child rather than a desire on her part to further its interests that prompted her in these proceedings.
After a careful and thorough examination of the record in this case, we are not prepared to say that the trial court would not be warranted in finding that appellant, under the peculiar circumstances of this ease, is not a proper person to have the care and custody of the child, even though the Par-rishes should waive all claim to it. We therefore reaffirm the order hereinbefore made in remanding the cause to the trial court.