This was a writ of habeas corpus sued out of the Circuit Court of Monroe county on the 18th day of August, 1890, on petition of Robert Green, the father, against James A. Campbell, the grandfather, to compel the latter to give up to the father the custody of Green’s infant son, Thomas Campbell Green, then three and a half years old, as unlawfully detained by the grandfather. The Circuit Court, having heard the evidence of witnesses and the argument of counsel, was of opinion that the infant was not unlaw
The facts are as follows : Robert Green, the plaintiff, married the daughter of James A. Campbell, the defendant. Thomas Campbell Green, the infant, the right to whose custody is the matter here in dispute, is now three and a half years old. Ilis mother died when he was sixteen months old, when he was committed by his father to the care and custody of his grandmother and grandfather, the defendant, who have raised, supported, and had the sole care and custody of the child from that day to this. Campbell, the grandfather, and his wife are sober and industrious, of high moral character, Campbell owning considerable property, including a farm 01Twhich he lives, in the county of Monroe, and is well able to take care of the child according to its condition in life. Both these grandparents are devoted to the child, and the child devoted to them, and they have no living children of their own except a son over twenty one years of age, a young man well raised and of high moral character. Thus far.the grandparents have provided everything for the comfort and well-being of the child, as they are well able to do. Robert Green, the father, is thirty two years old, sober, industrious, of high character, good family, and capable of providing for and raising his child according to its station in life, is warmly attached to it, and it to him. At the death of his first wife he was living in the same house with his father-in-law, and cultivating a part of Campbell’s farm as his tenant. He married a second wife in May, 1890, about twenty two years of age, who has no children as yet, and who desires to have this child with her and to cave for it, it •being her husband’s only child. He owns a farm about three miles from Campbell’s, on which he now lives with his second wife, of what kind or of what value we are not informed. . Thus far there is no controversy about the facts.
The grandparents of the child claim and testify that, upon the death of the mother, Green’s first wife and their daugh
Mrs. Campbell, the grandmother, during this conversation about keeping the child, told Mr. Green that “she had seen some old people have trouble enough in taking children to raise, and then having to give them up, and that she did not intend to be treated in that way.” Green does not deny this, and it is a very strong circumstance tending to confirm their understanding of what took place.
“The father of the minor, if living, and, in the case of his death, the mother, if fit for the trust, shall be entitled to the custody of the pei’son of the minor, and to the care of his education.” See section 7, chapter 82, Code (Ed. 1891.) But The right of the father or mother to the custody of their minor child is not an absolute right to be accorded to them under all circumstances, for it may be denied to either of them, if it appears to the court that the parent, otherwise entitled to this right, is unfit for the trust.” State v. Reuff, 29 W. Va. 751 (2 S. E. Rep. 801.) The father is the natural guardian of his infant children, and in the absence of good and sufficient cause, such as ill usage, grossly immoral principles or habits, want of ability, etc., is entitled to their custody, care and education. Rust v. Vanvacter, 9 W. Va. 600; State v. Reuff, 29 W. Va. 751 (2 S. E. Rep. 801.)
The courts of equity of this State, in granting divorces, may decree as it shall deem expedient concerning the care, custody, and maintenance of the minor children, * * * and may revise or alter such decree, as the circumstances of the parents and the benefit of the children may require— see section 11, chapter 64, Code (Ed. 1891) p. 614, showing the discretion given the court in that class of cases — -but that such discretion is to be guided by considering what will be of benefit to the children rather than by any legal right of the parent; and such is the manifest tendency of the modern doctrine on the subject.
This writ, with so memorable a history, and now so highly prized among English-speaking people everywhere, designed and admirably adapted to secure individual freedom, without which a vital part of the great charter itself might have been but a solemn asseveration of abstract right, has come to be applied to other uses, and, among them, to the ascertainment and enforcement of the right of custody of infantmhildren. Mathews v. Wade, 2 W. Va. 464. But it is not to be forgotten or overlooked that such use of this writ is of an equitable nature, and therefore the welfare of the infant is the polar star by which the court is to be guided in the exercise of its discretion ; and the court, when asked to restore, is not bound by any mere legal right of parent or guardian, but is to give it due weight as a claim founded on human nature, and generally equitable and just. Armstrong v. Stone, 9 Gratt. 102-107; Church, Ilab. Corp. §§ 440-442.
“The court is in no case bound to deliver the child into the custody of any claimant or of any other person, but may leave it in such custody as the welfare of the child at the time appears to require.” Iiurd, Hab. Corp. (2d Ed.)
Looking at the question before the Court in this light, and applying these principles, there are some reasons why the father should not have asked for what he is here seeking, and still more why the court should not grant it. These I shall endeavor to give briefly in the language of the facts of the case, for there really can be no serious controversy about the only material disputed poiut, which is not the turning point in my view in any event.
Iiow could Robert Green, the plaintiff, have misunderstood the meaning and intent of the mother of his dead wife, when she told him in advance, and as a condition of her taking this infant, then sixteen months old, to raise it, she did so with the express understanding that it was not to be given up to him, only in the unexpected and improbable contingency named by her, and was not to be taken from her and her husband after they had had the trouble of raising it, when, as the child of their old age, they had become more attached to it than to any child of their own. Plai ntiff handed her the child, and she took it. To say that this was not his agreement because he did not in so many words assent to it is a little like a man denying his bond, because when he delivered it he kept silent and said nothing.. On this branch of the case, see Coffee v. Black, 82 Va. 567; Merritt v. Swimley, Id. 433; Clark v. Bayer, 32 Ohio St. 299 (30 Amer. Rep. 593); Chapsky v. Wood, 26 Kan. 650 (40 Amer. Rep. 321) and editor’s note, citing and commenting on the following cases, among others : Verser v. Ford, 37 Ark. 27; Lyons v. Blenkin, Jac. 245; U. S. v. Green, 3 Mason, 482; Wilcox v. Wilcox, 14 N. Y. 575; Matter of Waldron, 13 Johns. 417; Pool v. Gott, 14 Law Rep. 269; Durmain v. Greynne, 10 Allen, 270; State v. Libbey, 44 N. H. 321, qualifying State v. Richardson, 40 N. H. 272. See, also, In re Scarritt, 76 Mo. 565 (43 Amer. Rep. 768 and
(1) The father during his lifetime, and after his death the mother, is entitled to the custody of the person of their infant child, because, by the law of nature, it is theirs to care for and bring up, and this right is recognized and enforced by our statute.
(2) But such right is not absolute, for the welfare of the infant may require the court, in the exercise of its sound discretion, to leave or intrust the custody to another.
(3) The feelings and rights of one whom the father has put in the place of parent, and between whom and the child such relation has created mutual affection, are not to be subject to the whim and caprice of the father; but, unless it appears that the best interests of the child imperiously demand it, the court, in dealing with relations so delicate, so easily set ajar irreparably, will follow the discreet course of letting well enough alone.
(4) And, to enable them to do this, the writ applied to this class of cases is of an equitable nature, and we should turn our back at once upon this qualified estoppel, if the infant’s moral or physical welfare clearly pointed another way.
In this case it does not, but, on the contrary, plainly leads us in a direction which does not.involve any breach of faith on the part of the father. This little boy, now nearly five years old, is himself, no doubt, attached to his grandmother — he has known no other mother; to his grandfather; to his grown-up uncle; to the quiet, sober old homestead with its abounding comforts and plenty. Human nature and human experience are parts of the common law; there is no need that this child should speak. Can the plaintiff'take him to a better home — -to one as good, for his present moral training and his physical comfort, pres
Akfirmed.