124 Cal. 677 | Cal. | 1899
The respondents are the twin daughters of defendant. Their age at the time of the trial ivas sixteen years. They base this action against their father upon section 203 of the Civil Code, which provides as follows: “The abuse of parental authority is the subject of judicial cognizance in a civil action brought by the child . ... . and when abuse is established the child may be freed from the dominion of the parent, and the duty of support and education enforced.” The judgment is that plaintiffs be freed from the parental dominion of their father, and that he pay to their guardian twenty-five dollars a month for their support and education. From this judgment and from an order denying a new trial defendant appeals.
The evidence shows that defendant is a hard-working man, a machinist by trade, and as such earns from sixty to eighty dollars a month; that his wife died some ten years before the trial of this case, and that since her death he has had sole care of plaintiffs until they ran away from home; that his family, of late years, has consisted of these two girls and his son Willie, who was some ten or twelve years of age at the time of the trial; that defendant, by reason of his occupation, was necessarily away from home much of the time. In December, 1895, the father was obliged to leave his home in San Francisco and remain absent from the city for several months. During such absence the daughters drew his wages from his employer and invested much of them in clothes and theater tickets. When the father returned and learned of this he upbraided his daughters, ivhipped them, and sent them to bed. On the next morning he again whipped them and kicked one of them because they did not have breakfast ready at the usual time. They then decided to run away and hid themselves in the basement of their divelling, where they stayed three days, after Avhich they went to the Orlando House, and after staying there one night they were arrested by the police and taken to the police station, and from there the father took them home, accused them of having men with them at the Orlando House, which they stoutly denied, struck them with his hand and sent them to bed. A few days after this, in March, 1896, the defendant missed a silver Avatch and inquired of the daughters concerning it; their answers Avere unsatisfactory to him, whereupon he charged them Avith lying
On this evidence the court found, as to defendant’s treatment of plaintiffs, as follows: “That plaintiffs are mild, gentle, well-behaved and obedient children. That defendant has not, at all times, treated the plaintiffs herein with the utmost kindness and affection, but, on the contrary, that he has cruelly and brutally chastised them without sufficient cause, and in a manner wholly unnecessary to the enforcement of proper discipline. That the allegation in defendant’s answer that he administered to said plaintiffs moderate and reasonable chastisement in order to induce them to speak the truth concerning the whereabouts of a certain watch, which he believed them to have stolen, is untrue; but, on the contrary, on this occasion defendant cruelly and brutally kicked and beat said plaintiffs, in a manner wholly unnecessary to attain the ends which he sought. That defendant has abused his parental authority over said children in this, that at various and numerous times during the months of February and March, 1896, he brutally, cruelly, unnecessarily, and with undue severity, beat, struck, and otherwise abused and maltreated them; that in said maltreatment, beating, and abuse he used his closed fists, a tea-cup, a frying-pan, a strap, a cane, an iron hammer, an iron stove-poker, and a cat-o’-nine-tails.”
It is argued on this appeal that the findings do not support the judgment, that there is no finding of facts as to the abuse of parental authority, and that the evidence does not support the findings. The judge of the trial court had all the parties interested before him, and was in a much better position than this court can be to judge, not only of the weight that should be given to the testimony of each of them, but also as to their character and disposition in other respects pertinent to the case. The first consideration of the trial court in a case of this character is or should be the welfare of the children. The statute upon which the action is based is enacted for the benefit and protection of children. The circumstances of the case as developed by the evidence were amply sufficient to convince the trial judge that the father had lost the confidence of his ehil
The findings of fact set out herein were not mere conclusions of law as contended, but were amply sufficient on the question of “abuse of parental authority” to support the judgment, and this is the only respect in which the sufficiency of the findings is challenged.
We see no error in the court refusing to allow defendant to prove particular instances of falsehood and deception practiced by plaintiffs prior to January, 1896. The court was fully enlightened as to their traits of character and disposition in that regard by the evidence as' to their conduct more immediately preceding their running away from home.
Seeing no reason to disturb the decision as it stands, I advise that the judgment and order denying a new trial be affirmed.
Chipman, C., and Britt, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order denying a new trial are affirmed.
Harrison, J., G-aroutte, J., Van Dyke, J.