28 Kan. 781 | Kan. | 1882
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an application in habeas corpus, brought by Joseph A. Bullen in behalf of Emily C. Evans, a little girl of the age of six yoars, against Josephine Cant-well, praying that the said Emily C. Evans' may be taken from the custody of the respondent and sent to England, to .be placed under the care and guardianship of her grandmother, Catherine Anne Evans. The questions in the case are in many respects novel and interesting, and the conclusion to which I have come has been reached with much hesitation. The facts of the case are these:
The grandparents of the ohild were residents of London, England. The father of the child (their oldest son), some
She was disappointed in this expectation, and being without means, proceeded to support herself and child by her own labor. In the spring of 1880 she was taken down with consumption, was unable to do further work, and became very destitute. In April of that year, information was received at the Home for Friendless Women, of her condition, and Mrs. Bullen and Mrs. Legate, in response thereto, proceeded to North Leavenworth and found her in the basement of a little house, in extreme destitution and weakness. Words fail me to picture clearly her forlorn and wretched condition. Wasted by sickness, weak and feeble, she was lying on a little mattress on the floor, sheltered from the cold by only a few rags. There was no furniture in the room, no fire, and the room was cold and damp. Her little child was running around scarcely half clad. These ladies removed her and her little child to the Home, where they remained a few days, and then, becoming dissatisfied with the matron, she with her child left and returned to the basement. Here, within a few days, she was found by Mrs. O’Connor and Mrs. McFarland, who soon procured her admission to St. John’s Hospital, where she remained, gradually failing, until her death, on September 5, 1880. During these last days of feebleness and disease, she was tenderly cared for by the good Sisters in charge of the hospital, and I have no reason to doubt that everything was done by them which sympathy and love could suggest to make bright and peaceful the few last days of life, and to assuage a mother’s grief at leaving her only child a lonely orphan in the world. I pause a moment in the coldness of
The testimony shows that upon the settlement of his real estate, there remained nine freeholds, now producing in the aggregate a rental of sixteen hundred and twenty dollars. It further appears that the grandmother has a comfortable home, well furnished, situated in the city of London, in which she lives with an unmarried son and two unmarried daughters. The testimony abundantly shows that her home is all that could be expected of one in ordinary circumstances of life; that the income is sufficient to maintain the family comfortably; that the characters of the inmates of the family are above reproach; that all the members of the family feel a deep interest in, and strong attachment for their little orphan relative here; and that if this child is placed in that family it will have all the advantages of personal and affectionate care, education, moral training and social position which come to those who live in ordinary walks of life.
This, I think, presents a fair summary of the facts of the
Do I demean myself by saying I shrink from this responsibility? I cannot agree with counsel, that it is never the province of the court to expatriate a citizen. In some cases I think the duty so to do is clear and absolute. As, for instance,- where parents moving to a foreign country and leaving their little child here for awhile, come back to claim it and are hindered by those who have it in possession. Nevertheless, it is a matter always to be considered. With pardonable partiality, we look upon our own land, its laws, institutions and social life, as the best; and not lightly should a child be deprived of the benefit of them. Yet we may not ignore the fact that the mother country is a land of liberty and law, of education and social refinement, of morality and religion; and it would be wrong to make the matter of expatriation an excuse for depriving this little girl of that which would promote her welfare. Neither is it clear that sending this child to England would be technically an expatriation. The child was not born in -this country, and there is nothing in the testimony which shows that either parent ever ceased to be an alien, or became a citizen. Further, the grandmother has been appointed by the courts of England the guardian of this little girl, and if now this petition is granted she will pass under the special care of those courts, the faithfulness of' whose watch in oases of this kind is a matter of universal recognition. But I place comparatively little stress on this, and turn to the. paramount question and ask, What will be best for the welfare of the child? And looking at this ques
Second, there is a pecuniary consideration. I am not so sordid as to believe that money is the one thing .to be regarded; but other things being equal, that certainly is a matter to be considered. If she remains here she will come to maturity without means, and dependent solely on her own labor or the help of others. There she will have a little property — not a great wealth, it is true, but enough to keep want away and to enable her to act freely in her choice of place and work in life. There is also a possibility, though perhaps only a remote one, of her becoming through the death of others the heir to quite a property. It is true there are conditions attached to the receiving of that property which to my mind are odious and unjust. They indicate a bigoted spirit on the part of the testator, so foreign to the free and catholic spirit of to-day, that every true man must condemn them. Yet this little girl ought to have the opportunity to decide for herself, when she comes to maturity, whether she will accept or reject the property burdened with those conditions. To-day she knows nothing of the value of the property, or the meaning and import of the conditions. It would be wrong to refuse her the privilege of an intelligent choice. When she arrives at years of discretion she may prefer to accept her mother’s faith and reject her grandfather’s proffered bequest, or she may prefer to accept the bequest and walk in the faith of her father; but unless the prayer of the petition be granted, she will never have the opportunity of accepting it.
Counsel have made a most eloquent appeal that the wish of a dying mother as to the future of her child should be respected. The precious recollections of my own childhood, with all the shapings of my life through the gentle influence of a loving mother’s care, from its first helping my infant steps, up through all the sunny days of childhood, to her dying blessing in manhood’s morning hour, send this appeal home to my heart with tremendous force. But I intefpret
If from the calm and peaceful heights of - heaven the departed look back with loving interest upon the things of earth, I can but think that she will look down approvingly upon the conclusion I have reached. I know she will approve the spirit with which I act, even though she may not the wisdom of my conclusion. The order then that will be • made, is: that the prayer of the petition be granted, and the child be given into the custody of Mr. Bullen, to be by him sent to its grandmother in London.
As the opposition of the respondent to this petition’has not been from any factious spirit, but under a sense of obligation springing from a promise to a dying mother, I think the costs of this proceeding should be paid by the petitioner.