69 S.E. 217 | N.C. | 1910
Petition for writ of habeas corpus.
The petition was filed by Nannie Green, mother of the child, (313) who was and has been for some time in the care and custody of respondents, Prince Jones, uncle of petitioner, and his wife Laura.
On the hearing, the court found as facts among other things, that the child was an illegitimate child of the petitioner, Nancy Green, and would be nine years of age in May, 1910; that she was being properly and well cared for by respondents, who are reputable colored people; Prince Jones, being a minister, having a church under his charge, owning about fifty acres of land which he has bought, but not fully paid for; that Laura Jones, his wife, is a reputable colored woman, and that she and her husband are capable of raising and properly providing for the child and are greatly attached to it; that the child has been and is being well and properly cared for and maintained, and she has become greatly attached to the said Prince Jones and his wife, and says she does not wish to leave them. It appears from examination of the child that she has been sent to school and to Sunday-school, and is now well advanced in her studies for one of her age and condition in life; that Nannie Jones, the mother, with her children, had been living for some time as a member of the family with Prince Jones and his wife, paying no board, but working as a member of the family until about five years ago, when she married Simon Green and went to live with him; "that Simon Green and his wife are respectable colored people and are capable of rearing and providing for the child; that they have from the date of their marriage, from time to time and repeatedly, applied to respondents to let them have the child, but they declined to do so. Upon one occasion they attempted to take the child away from them by force, and when they had the child in the buggy the child screamed, and the wife of Prince Jones took her out of the buggy."
Upon these the controlling facts relevant to the inquiry, the court entered judgment as follows:
(a) That the child is not illegally restrained of its liberty.
(b) That the welfare and interests of the child would best be promoted by permitting her to remain with respondents. *256
(c) And the court doth adjudge and decree that the said Prince (314) Jones and his wife, Laura Jones, are entitled to the care and custody of said Mary Jane Jones until she attains the age of fifteen years, at which time she may select between the petitioner and the respondents; but the court doth further adjudge that petitioner and her husband shall have the right at all proper hours to visit the child, and that the child shall be permitted to visit them whenever she should so desire.
Petitioner excepted and appealed. After stating the case: In hearings of this character on habeas corpus, the parents of a child who are living together as lawful man and wife haveprima facie the right to the control and custody of their infant children.
When divorced, the right to the children and their placing is more usually dealt with in the decree, and where they live apart, without being divorced, questions concerning the disposition of their offspring must be decided under the provisions of the Revisal, 1905, sec. 1853, to the effect: "The court or judge, on the return of such writ, may award the charge or custody of the child or children so brought before it either to the husband or to the wife, for such time, under such regulations, and with such provisions and directions as will, in the opinion of such court or judge, best promote the interest and welfare of the children. At any time after the making of such orders the court or judge may, on good cause shown, annul, vary or modify the same." In the case of illegitimate children, this same prima facie right exists, perhaps to a lesser degree, in the mother, and has been recognized in several decisions of the court where she has evinced a capacity and disposition to properly care for her children. Ashby v. Page,
In the present case, the court finds that Simon Green and his wife, the petitioner and mother of the child "are respectable colored people and are capable of rearing and providing for the child."
There has been no abandonment of the child by the mother, such as would forfeit her rights under the Revisal, sec. 180, nor are there any facts found from which such abandonment could be inferred.
On this finding, therefore, the authorities cited and the reason upon which they are properly made to rest are decisive and require (317) that the judgment of the court below be reversed and the child awarded to the petitioner.
We were referred by counsel for the respondents to the case In reParker,
On the authorities referred to and for the reasons given, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the child awarded to the mother.
Reversed.
Cited: Howell v. Solomon,