This was a writ of habeas corpus sued out by Janes against the defendant, Cleghorn, to obtain the possession of an infant child named Mary H. Scott, whom the petitioner alleges the defendant, Cleghorn, detains in his custody without lawful warrant or authority. Upon the return of the writ with the defendant’s answer thereto, and after hearing the evidence submitted by the respective parties, the court ordered that the custody of the child should remain with the defendant, whereupon Janes, the petitioner, excepted.
There was a good deal of evidence introduced on the hearing before the court, the substantial points of which, in relation to the petitioner’s claim, are as follows: The child in controversy is the only child of Captain Dunlap Scott by bis second marriage, the father and mother of the child both being-dead, the mother having died when the child was seven days old, and which is now three or four years old; the mother of the child and Mrs. Janes, the wife of the petitioner, had been intimate friends, and a short time before her death she expressed her desire that in the event of her death, Mrs. Janes should take
Judgment reversed.