Opinion by
This is an appeal in a habeas corpus action from an order of the County Court of Philadelphia County awarding custody of the minor child, Renee Thomas, to Juanita Cillard, the mother of the child, the respondent-appellee.
. The mother of the child, Juanita Cillard, was married to a James Brooks. While her. divorce from Brooks was pending she married the petitioner, Donald Thomas, in July, 1956. The Brooks divorce was not granted until 1957. The child in question, Renee Thomas, was born of this union on September 14, 1958. Later Juanita and Donald were separated. Thomas obtained a Mexican divorce in May, 1961 and in July, 1961, he married Joyce Thomas, his present wife, who bore him another child. Thereafter he secured an annulment of his marriage to Juanita. Juanita married Prince Cillard, her present husband, on November 5, 1962.
The child was in the custody of her mother from the time of her birth on September 14, 1958, until April 15, 1961, when Thomas, under the pretext of taking the child on a visit in Philadelphia, carried the child away with him to the State of California without the consent of or notice to Juanita. After frantic efforts to locate the child she finally located Thomas in California and went to his home where, with her present husband Prince Cillard they forcibly seized the child but were stopped-by the California police as they were boarding a plane for Philadelphia.
The child was then temporarily placed in an institution. On February 19, 1962, the court of Los Angeles County, California, awarded Juanita temporary custody of. the child and entered an order of support for the child against Thomas. Later, on November 18, 1962, the court awarded full custody of the child to Thomas. On December 23, 1962, Juanita took the
We have repeatedly said that in determining custody problems our policy is to give great weight to the opinion of the hearing judge who has had the opportunity of seeing the parties and the children and listening to the testimony and only where we are constrained to decide that there has been a gross abuse of discretion will we interfere with the decision of the hearing judge.
In child custody cases the paramount question is the welfare of the children and all other considerations, including the “children of tender age doctrine” and even the rights of parents, are subordinate to the children’s physical, intellectual, spiritual and emotional well being. Com. ex rel. Bradley v. Bradley,
The mother had possession of this child from the date of birth, September 14, 1958, until April 15, 1961 when Thomas surreptiously took the child to California. She was with Thomas and his wife in California until November 15, 1961, a period of only seven
As to the question of the decree of custody in California, .the Pennsylvania Courts consider all orders fixing the custody of children as temporary in nature. Com. ex rel. v. Daven,
Here, the original jurisdiction of this child was in Pennsylvania and only the abduction of the child by a ruse on the part of the father gave California jurisdiction. It is true that the mother personally appeared in California and subjected herself to the jurisdiction of that court, which makes this decision more difficult. Perhaps we are motivated by the doctrine of parens patriae but “The Commonwealth is vitally concerned with infants within its boundaries and an interested party in all matters affecting them.” Ciammaichella Appeal,
Here this Commonwealth had a vital concern in the child and the intervention of an order of a sister state came into being only because of the abduction of the child from this jurisdiction. Although not condoning the method by which jurisdiction was returned to the Commonwealth by the mother, under all the circumstances of this case the court below was justified in looking at all the circumstances at the time of the hearing and in holding that the California decree was temporary in nature and the- paramount consideration of the welfare of the child dictated his decision.
It is true that disregard of decrees of custody by sister states may lead to legalized abduction and it is also true that §§147 and 148 taken together, of the Restatement, Conflict of Laws, contemplate enforcement of the sister states’ custody awards. However, the Restatement (2d), Conflict of Laws, §144 (Tent. Draft No. 4, 1957), says that “because the welfare of the
Order affirmed.
