53 So. 262 | Ala. | 1910
This is a habeas corpus proceeding by 1 he father to obtain possession of his infant child. The wife of petitioner died several months prior to the filing of the petition, and left a child 4 or 5 months old. The child has been kept and cared for by the mother and father of its mother since her death. The petitioner is 22 years old, unmarried, and lives with his father and mother. He states that he intended to take the child 1o the home of his parents to be there cared for. He owns no property, and is a day laborer, earning about 60 cents a day when he works. The family of his mother and father is already so large that the dwelling house and smokehouse are full of children and grownup people. They own nothing, and the mother of the said petitioner does not want the baby except for the fact that the father, her son, wants it, and she wants to please him. The testimony tends to show that she
Under these facts to whom should the law award the custody and care of the child? As said in the case of Brinster v. Compton, 68 Ala. 299, and quoted approvingly in Kirkbride v. Harvey, 139 Ala. 231, 35 South. 848: “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 be granted. If, on the other hand, he be un
Reversed and rendered.