108 Kan. 460 | Kan. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The custody of two little girls and the fitness of their mother, Mabel Jendell, to rear them are the questions involved in this litigation. The girls are respectively nine and seven years of age, and upon the testimony the district court held that the mother was not an unfit person to have the care of her children and awarded their custody to her. The respondents are the grandparents of the children in whose custody they had been placed for a time, and they appeal from the judgment.
It appears that about eleven years ago the petitioner was married to Lloyd Dupree, the son of the respondents, and to them the two children were born. They lived a somewhat transitory life for some time, moving from place to place; the husband worked in a garage as foreman of a motor company, engaged in railroading, conducted a drug store, studied medicine, and located upon a land claim in Colorado and was seized with an illness which caused his death in October, 1918. After the children reached school age they were left with the respondents a part of the time and were sent to,school, and during these periods the respondents appear to have furnished them clothing and schoolbooks. At one time when they were in school their father paid the respondents twelve dollars per month for their care during the school year, but at other times they appear to have been cared for by the respondents without compensation. After the death of Dupree the petitioner attended a school of pharmacy, graduated therefrom and is now a registered pharmacist. On May 13, 1919, she was married to Charles Jendell, when they set up a home in Wichita, and the children were kept with them for a time. In September of the following year after a disagreement with his wife, Jendell left home and there is testimony tending to show that it arose over the care of the children. She remarked that he was jealous because of her love for the children. About that time a sister of the petitioner apparently without petitioner’s knowl
“Courts will not disturb the family relation nor take a child from its parent merely because a third person seeking its custody may have larger means and is therefore able to give the child greater comforts, wider education and the promise of a larger inheritance.” (Syl. ¶ 3.)
While the petitioner and her husband are of quite limited means, they have procured a modest but comfortable home and her husband is employed as á mechanic and is earning from $175 to $200 a month. They appear to be able as well as willing to make reasonable provision for the care and education of the children.
As to the fitness of the mother to care for her children it is contended that she is quick tempered and quarrelsome, that she indulges in coarse and profane language, has not a permanent and suitable home, and is not a woman of good moral character. The charge that the petitioner had immoral relations with other men was not sustained, and apart from the use of improper language at times, it cannot be said that she was immoral in character. That she had quarrels with her husband is conceded but she testified that these were not provoked by her misconduct. There was testimony that on occasions she had shown exhibitions of temper and indulged in language more vehement than wise or elegant. On the other hand, a number of her neighbors and persons closely associated with her testified that they had never heard her use profanity or coarse language. She admitted that when provoked to anger she had in the past used improper language, but said that she had determined to exercise self-control and had ceased to use such language. In its opinion, the trial court in weighing the evidence on the charge said:
“Now considering all the evidence in this case, while the evidence shows that this plaintiff swears sometimes when she gets mad, and she is a woman of rather high temper, yet people disagree as to what constitutes swearing. Nobody told what she said, except some of them said she would say ‘Oh, darn,’ or ‘damn,’ or something of that kind. That would not be classified as swearing. It is reprehensible and it is a thing that ought to be avoided.”
A number of witnesses testified in favor of the fitness of the petitioner to maintain and care for her children and the court who had a closer view of the parties and witnesses, had determined that she is not unfit for the trust. In a somewhat similar case it was said:
“Since the trial court found that the father was a fit person in all respects to have the custody of his infant son, and the mother was dead, the law of the land accords with the law of nature, and there is no just law under the sun which would deny him that custody, no matter how reluctantly an affectionate grandparent may yield thereto.” (Crews v. Sheldon, 106 Kan. 438, 439, 186 Pac. 498.)
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.