20 Wash. 652 | Wash. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Appeal from an order granting a writ of habeas corpus. Stuart S. Neff, the petitioner, and Anna K. Neff were married January 10, 1883. There were born of this union Emily S. Neff, Clarence A. Neff and Stuart S. Neff, Jr. The marriage was dissolved on the 27th day of February, 1895, by a decree of divorce in the superior court of Snohomish county, in an action brought by Anna K. Neff. The superior court, upon the dissolution of the marriage and in the decree granting the divorce, found that the three children were then, and had been before the commencement of the action, in the care and custody of the mother, Anna K. Neff, at her residence in the city of Everett, and the defendant, Stuart S. Neff, had for more than a year before the commencement of the action entirely failed to contribute anything to the support of plaintiff and the children, notwithstanding he was receiving a large salary, or prosecuting a successful business, and was able to support the plaintiff and her children ; that the failure of defendant to support them was a violation of his marital duties and without excuse; and the court then found that Stuart S. Neff had no property and was not a fit person to have the care and custody of the children, and that the plaintiff had independent and separate property and was in all respects a fit person to have the care and custody of the children named; and ordered that the plaintiff, the mother, have the full guardianship, custody and control of the minor children, and
As observed by the superior court, there should not be any arbitrary rule that will deprive the parent of the custody and society of the children. Each case, must depend materially upon the facts shown. The deceased wife could not by testamentary disposition deprive the father of these children of their custody. He has the natural and legal right to the custody and control of the children, unless so completely unfit for such duties that the welfare of the children themselves imperatively demanded another disposition of their custody. Nothing of the kind appeared at the hearing in this proceeding. The order made by the superior court of Snohomish county, when the custody of the children was awarded to their mother in the divorce suit, was necessarily temporary in its nature, and it would require much more cogent reasons to deliver the custody of the children to a stranger than to their mother. The parents are the natural guardians and entitled to the care, control and society of their children; and when, unfortunately, the marital union is dissolved, as in this case, it may be necessary to commit the custody of the children to one to the exclusion of the other, and it will usually be done to the one least at fault, if competent. But it does not necessarily deprive the other, as against any one else, of the custody of the children. The fact that the children might be better educated, and better clothed, and have a more pleasant home with some one else than the parent can have no weight with the court as against the natural rights of the parent. But little weight, in this proceeding,
Gordon, O. J., and Dunbar and Anders, JJ., concur.