51 Wash. 333 | Wash. | 1909
— The respondent and appellant were formerly husband and wife, at which time there was born to them a girl child, who is the subject of this controversy. The parties were divorced by a decree of tlie superior court of King county, entered on February 17, 1905. At that time the child was in her seventh year, and her custody was awarded to one O. It. Oliver, a brother of the mother,, to be placed by him in the House of the Good Shepherd, in the city of Seattle, there to be reared and educated at the expense of the father. On March 16, 1906, there was a modification of this decree to the extent that the place for-keeping the child was changed, and the parents were allowed to take the child to their respective homes for brief periods of time. This is an application by the father for a further modification of the decree respecting the custody of the child. He asks that he be awarded its sole care and custody,.
The mother answered, denying the allegation of the respondent’s petition, and filed a cross-petition in which she asked that the custody of the child be awarded to her. A reply was filed denying the allegations of the cross-petition, and on these issues a hearing was had, which resulted in a further modification of the decree to the effect that the child be awarded to the father during the school season of the year, and to the mother during the vacation period. Both parties ask to have the decree modified.
At the hearing the evidence was allowed to take a wide range. The conduct of each party, as viewed through the eyes of the other and through the eyes of that other’s partisans and friends, was exposed and laid bare before the court. The story thus unfolded is not an edifying one, and it would serve no useful purpose to enter upon its review in this opinion; but we do not think, even were we to accept all of these evidently exaggerated tales as strictly true, that either parent has established that the other is an unfit person to have the custody of this offspring of their unfortunate union. The evidence makes it plain that this method of caring for the child, that the constant association brought about by the necessity of carrying the child from the one home to the other, is uncongenial to the parties, but it is a situation they have brought upon themselves, and by themselves it must be borne. Should the order, in the future, when carried out in its intent and spirit, prove detrimental to the child, or should it prove that either of the parents refuses to accept the situation as it is, or refuses to act in good faith towards the other, and that such conduct affects the welfare of the child, then the court will be justified in taking it entirely from the one that is most blamable and
Crow, Mount, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.