The petition for habeas corpus filed in this case by W. A. Brown seeks to recover the possession or custody of a minor child about 3 1-2 years of age, Eugene Brown, Jr., by name, who is in the custody of his mother, Mataline Brown; the petitioner being a paternal grandparent of the child.
The petition was denied by the judge of the circuit court of Jefferson county, by whom it was heard, and petitioner brings this appeal for review of the ruling of the lower court; and the question here presented for review is whether, in deference to the infant’s welfare,
The office of the writ of habeas corpus is to release one illegally restrained of liberty and generally is used as a “writ of liberty,” but in this case the writ is used for the purpose of contesting private rights; the illegal restraint complained of being only in the sense that the custody or restraint is illegal, in that it is not for the child’s best interest or welfare.
. The respondent, Mataline Brown, married the son of the petitioner, W. A. Brown, in June, 1906, and lived with her husband at the home in Birmingham of the petitioner and his wife, the parents of her husband, until after her baby, Eugene, Jr., for whose custody the petition is filed, was born. The father was improvident, intemperate, and addicted to other bad habits, and shortly after the child was born family differences arose that resulted in the young couple and their baby leaving petitioner’s home and going to live to* themselves in a home provided by petitioner in Graymount, a suburb of Birmingham. While living in this home the husband’s habits did not improve, nor did he provide for his family, and, after living thus unhappily together for some eight months in the house at Graymount, the husband deserted the Avife and child, leaving them entirely unprovided for, and Avent first to New York, and afteiuvards, returning through Birmingham and staying there a short period only, Avent to California, or somewhere in the West, Avhere he had been for about two years at the time this petition avus filed. After deserting his Avife and child and leaving them unprovided for, the father has con: tributed nothing to the support of the deserted wife and child, and the Avife and mother is without property, in
The evidence, while in conflict with respect to the cause and details of the family troubles, and whose fault occasioned them, as is to be expected in a narration of domestic differences by the parties, yet leaves standing-out in bas relief practically uncontroverted one wholesome fact, and that is that either party to these proceedings may properly be intrusted with the care and custody of this infant child and that both are fit, proper, and suitable persons in so far as their good moral character is to be considered. There are, however, other matters of grave importance vitally affecting the infant’s present and future welfare that must be considered.
The status of the parties to the proceedings is fixed by settled principles of law. The general doctrine of the common law is established and followed by an unbroken line of decisions that the obligation to maintain, support, care for, and educate the child rests primarily upon the father (Ex parte Boaz, 31 Ala. 425; Neville v. Reed, 134 Ala. 317, 32 South. 659, 92 Am. St. Rep. 35), blit, having abandoned the infant without providing means for .its support he thereby, through his misconduct, forfeited his right to its care and custody (Neville v. Reed, supra; Winslow v. State, 92 Ala. 78, 9 South. 728), and, this duty and obligation of support and the rights of control having devolved upon the mother (Englehardt v. Yung’s Heirs, 76 Ala. 534), she became prima facie by the fact of maternity entitled to the custody of the child (Kirkbride v. Harvey, 139 Ala. 231, 35 South. 848).
The mother, thus having the prima facie maternal right to care for and have the custody and control of this infant child, transferred the custody of the child, as
The petitioner, the grandfather of the child, and its grandmother, petitioner’s wife, are both people of good character and habits, past the meridian of life, and reasonably endowed with this world’s goods, their fortunes being shown to aggregate about $150,000, of which the
The proposition for the court to determine, put in question form, is this: “Will the best interests and welfare of the infant child, which we have seen are to be the primary considerations in controlling the court’s action, be sufficiently advanced and served by remanding its custody to the petitioner to outweigh the prima facie
The judgment appealed from will be reversed and' judgment here rendered granting the petition of appellant in so far that the custody of the minor child, Eugene Brown, Jr., is remanded to the petitioner on the condition that the respondent shall have the right, if she desires to exercise it, of visiting the child on one day in each week.
Under changed conditions, the respondent would not be estopped, after a reasonable lapse of time, from having her rights passed upon under such subsequent conditions and circumstances as might arise. In re King, 66 Kan. 695, 72 Pac. 263, 67 L. R. A. 783, 97 A. St. Rep. 399.
Reversed and conditional judgment rendered remanding custody of minor to appellant.