1. In the plaintiff father’s habeas, corpus action against his divorced wife for the custody of their nine-year-old daughter, the applicable law is
Code
§ 74-107 (Ga. L. 1913, p. 110, as amended), rather than
Code
§ 50-121.
Harwell v. Gay,
2. The provision of
Code Ann.
§ 74-107, as to no prima facie right to the custody of the child in the father, did not enlarge
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the rights of third parties, which are governed by
Code
§ 50-121.
Hill v. Rivers,
3. When the custody of a minor child awarded by a divorce decree is forfeited in the mother by reason of her unfitness, the custody automatically inures to the father, unless it be lost in one of the modes provided by law
(Hill v. Rivers,
supra, p. 357), or unless he is “unfit” to have custody.
Perkins v. Courson,
4. There was evidence that the mother was hallucinatory and in need of psychiatric treatment, which authorized the court to award custody to someone else, even if her condition did not make her “an unfit person to exercise custody.” There was no evidence that the father had lost his right of custody in any of the modes provided by law.
5. It is not a ground upon which to deny custody to the father, who has not lost his right to it in any of- the modes provided by law, that he may feel it his duty to bring his child up in his own faith, even though the child has been taught a different faith heretofore under her mother’s custody. See
Sloan v. Jones,
6. Nor can the father be considered unfit merely because he has not maintained a close relationship with his daughter during his former wife’s custody of the child, it appearing that such relationship was made difficult, if not impossible, by the attitude and behavior of the mother.
7. The record shows that the trial court rendered its judgment, denying the grant of the writ of habeas corpus and awarding the custody of the child to her adult stepbrother, upon the erroneous theory that the court’s discretion permitted the award of custody to the third party even where one or both of the parents were morally fit and custody had not otherwise been lost in one of the modes provided by law.
This judgment is therefore reversed and a new trial granted, in order that custody can be awarded in accordance with the principles set forth in this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
