94 Pa. Super. 86 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1928
Argued April 24, 1928. This is a contest between husband and wife over the custody of their infant son born February 12, 1924. The parties were married September 4, 1920. Feeling that her husband was unkind to her, the wife left his home when the child was about two months old and went to the home of her parents. She returned to him about a month later and remained with him until April 2, 1927. On the morning of that day, after he went to his place of business, she left his home again, taking the child with her, and accepted employment as a housemaid in the home of H.H. Hopwood at Uniontown, Pennsylvania, doing "general all around maid's work," including cooking, dishwashing and scrubbing of floors, for $9 a week. She has no other means of support. She and the child occupy a servant's quarters, consisting of a room with a bath, over the garage connected with the house and take their meals with the family of the employer. About a *88 month after she left him, the husband learned where she and the child were. A little later he had an interview with her and tried to persuade her to return to live with him. She agreed to give him a final answer at the end of a week. On the evening of the second day thereafter, he went to the Hopwood home and finding the child on the lawn put him into an automobile and took him to his home in McCandles Township, Allegheny County. Thereupon, she filed her petition for a writ of habeas corpus and, after hearing, the court made an order that the father deliver the child to his mother. The father has appealed.
The paramount consideration is the best interest and permanent welfare of the child. The court below found that the mother is a good woman and a proper person to have custody of him. All the evidence is to that effect. This being so, it follows, other things being equal, that the child owing to its tender years, being but three and a quarter years old at the date of the order, was properly given to its mother. Com. ex rel. Keller v. Keller,
The order is affirmed at the costs of appellant. *90