278 A.D. 656 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1951
In a proceeding, by way of a writ of habeas corpus, to determine custody of the infant son of the parties, Myron Weberman appeals from two orders dated, respectively, October 9 and December 4, 1950, each of which sustained the writ conditionally by providing that custody would be awarded to the respondent, Rose Auster, the mother of the infant, on default by the father in complying with certain directions, contained in such orders, providing for the secular education of the infant. The parents of the infant had been divorced in 1947, by a decree obtained by the mother in an action commenced in the State of Nevada. Thereafter,, by agreement, the custody of the infant son of the parties was given to the father. In this proceeding, the mother sought custody on the ground, among others, that the infant had been enrolled by his father in a Jewish parochial school, not approved by the Board of Regents of the State of New York or the board of education of the city of New York, that the school in which the infant was enrolled did not include in its curriculum subjects required to be taught by the pertinent provisions of the Education Law, and that the infant, consequently, was being deprived of a proper education, in violation of law, and to his detriment. The father opposed the application, on the ground that, according to his interpretation of the laws of the Orthodox Jewish religion, systematic secular instruction is