209 P. 340 | Utah | 1922
The plaintiffs, on February 15, 1921, filed in the district court of Salt Lake county a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to issue against the defendants, requiring them to produce before that court an infant child, alleged to have been wrongfully and unlawfully taken from the custody and control of its natural mother, the plaintiff Dorothy A. Kurtz. A writ issued, and in due time a return was made, whereupon the district court, on May 21, 1921, after hearing the evidence, ordered that the defendants be discharged of the writ, and that the child be remanded to the care and custody of the defendants.
The plaintiffs appeal. As grounds for a reversal they allege that the trial court’s findings are not supported by the evidence, that error was committed in the admission of certain documentary evidence, and that the decree and judgment are against law.
The findings of the trial court are especially assailed, and,
“(1) That the plaintiffs and the defendants are residents of Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, state of Utah, and have been such for several years prior to and immediately next preceding the commencement of this action; that the defendants, Otto W. Christensen and Anna B. Christensen, are husband and wife, and have been such since the 6th day of August, 1907, upon which date they intermarried; that the said Otto W. Christensen was born at Draper, Salt Lake county, state of Utah, and is now 35 years of age, and that the said Anna B. Christensen was born at Gunnison, Sanpete county, Utah, and now is 32 years of age; that Otto W. Christensen and Anna B. Christensen have had no children born to them.
“(2) That the plaintiffs became acquainted first in the latter part of 1915, soon after which an illicit sexual relationship commenced and continued until the latter part of 1917, and that about the 1st of September, 1917, a child was conceived, and about two months later the said J. P. Kurtz, at which time he knew that said child had been conceived, entered the military service of the United States and went to France, from whence he returned to Salt Lake City, Utah, on June 13, 1919, and that he and Dorothy Fox, the other plaintiff in the above-entitled cause, intermarried on July 3, 1920, and are now husband and wife.
“(3) That a female child was born out of wedlock to the plaintiffs on the 5th day of June, 1918, at St. Marks Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah; that the said Dorothy A. Kurtz, then known as Dorothy Fox or Dorothy Lloyd, was 24 years of age, and was then, and for about 3 years prior thereto had been, and ever since the birth of said child has been, residing in Salt Lake City, state of Utah; that her mother died when she was about 5 years old, shortly after which she left the place of her birth, Avoca, N. Y., and went to Rochester, N. Y., where she resided with her sister until she came West, in about 1915; that she worked as a housemaid and in restaurants as a waitress from the time she came West until her marriage to the plaintiff, John P. Kurtz.
“(4) That before said female child was born to the plaintiff Dorothy Fox, she decided that she would give it away, and requested her attending physician, Dr: Warren Benjamin, to procure or find suitable parents for the child, who would have it adopted; that this decision on the part of the mother continued and persisted after efforts had been made by various parties to dissuade her from giving the child away; that said attending physician, Dr. Benjamin,
“(5) That the mother of said child was in good health at the time of the birth of said child, and during her pregnancy, and was in possession of all of her faculties, and knew and well understood what she was doing when arranging for the giving of said child away for adoption, and that neither she nor the other plaintiff, her husband, have made any effort to obtain said child since its birth until about the middle of January, 1921, a few days preceding the commencement of the above-entitled action, and that they have contributed nothing to or towards the-support of said child during any of said time, and if it had been their desire to locate the said child during any of the said time it would have been an easy matter for them to have done so.
“(6) That said plaintiffs have willfully deserted and abandoned said child ever since its birth, and that said child has been solely supported and cared for by and in the custody of the said defendants during all of the said time.
“(7) That the welfare of said child will be best promoted and it is for the best interests of said child that it be remanded to and left in the custody and care of said defendants.
“(8) That except as hereinbefore set forth the petition and reply of plaintiffs are untrue; that all of the allegations of defendants’ answer and reply herein, except as hereinbefore expressly set forth, are true.
“(9) That the legality of the restraint of said child has not already been adjudicated upon prior proceedings of the same character as the above, and that no application for a writ of habeas corpus has been before made to, or refused by, any court or judge within the state of Utah or elsewhere, affecting the liberty, custody, or control of said child.
We have read tbe somewhat voluminous transcript of the evidence in this case with more than ordinary care, and, after doing so, we conclude that the case was tried upon the theory that the best interest of the child should be controlling, and have no hesitancy in saying that the trial court’s findings in that regard, in every instance, are supported by substantial, if not by the overwhelming weight of, evidence. Legal controversies in which the right to the care and custody of a little child 'are involved seldom fail to engender intense feelings on the part of the participants, more especially where there are foster or adoptive parents on the one side and the natural parents on the other. This case in that regard affords no exception. In these cases the duty of the courts to decide fairly and impartially the paramount question — the best interests of the child — is always attended with grave responsibility, and oftentimes is a very difficult matter to determine. After reviewing the record in-this ease we are satisfied that any extended discussion of the evidence on the part of this court would subserve no good purpose whatsoever. The principles of law controlling are generally understood. The difficulty arises in their application to the facts and circumstances of a given case. Humanity is not the subject of barter and sale. While the courts at times discuss and give some consideration to what is frequently referred to as the equities of the contending parties, nevertheless, in the last analysis, the best interest of the child is always the prime factor in the case, and of necessity overshadows all others.
In this case we are constantly reminded, in the brief and argument of plaintiffs’ counsel, that by reason of the fact that the plaintiffs are natural parents the law favors them. It is also contended in plaintiffs’ behalf that their social station and their financial ability to care for and properly rear
But, for all that the father neglected and failed to do, it may not be rightfully said that the mother was in the least to blame. There are, however, some things connected with her conduct, after she was left in the unfortunate situation she found herself in after the father had left that are not satisfactorily explained by the record before us. The evidence, we think, very clearly shows that she might have retained the custody of the child had she been disposed to do so. No one importuned her to give up her child, nor was there even a suggestion made by any one that it might be best for her to do so. Confronted, as she was, by the very unfortunate circumstances in which she had been left, months before the child was born, she deliberately arrived at the conclusion that it would be for the best to give it away to some good people who would be able to provide it with a proper home, to be cared for and adopted as their own. She confided with and made known her circumstances and her desire for the welfare of her unborn child to Dr. Warren Benjamin, a physician of the highest standing and of splendid reputation. To him she expressed a desire to give her baby away. He, under the circumstances, enlisted the services of his wife, Mrs. Gertrude Benjamin. She, too, became solicitous for the welfare of the unborn, and sought to impress upon Mrs. Kurtz the fact that if she gave the baby
If as a matter of law there was no abandonment of this child on the part of its natural parents, under the facts and circumstances it would be difficult to conceive how the conduct and expressed intention of parents might constitute an abandonment. The mother knew, her child was to be given away. She directed her physician to do that which he did do. She made no reservation of a right to reclaim her baby. No conditions whatever were imposed upon those who were to receive it. Undoubtedly she had full confidence in Dr. Benjamin that he would see to it that her baby was placed with good people who would love and adopt it as their own. That confidence has not been betrayed. True, some four or five weeks after Mrs. Kurtz had left St. Marks Hospital where she had been confined she made some inquiry of Dr. Benjamin concerning the baby’s whereabouts, but nothing was said that would lead any one to believe that she seriously thought of reclaiming it. Even long after that, when she was advised that able and reputable attorneys had expressed an opinion that she might recover her baby, she took no action, nor until the watchful waiting of its foster parents led them to believe that no claim would ever be made for it against them, and, as a matter of duty and right, they had been impelled to go before the district court and attempt to adopt it as their own on the theory that it was an abandoned child. At that time the defendants did not know, and had no means of ascertaining, the names of the natural parents.
As has been said, the principles of law applicable to_ the facts and circumstances of this case are well understood. They have already been announced by this court in Stanford v. Gray, 42 Utah, 228, 129 Pac. 423, Ann. Cas. 1916A, 989, and in Hummel v. Parrish, 43 Utah, 373, 134 Pac. 898, particularly the latter case, wherein it was held, quoting from the syllabus:
“Though tlie presumption is tliat it is for the best interests of a child and of society that it shall remain with its natural parents during minority [nevertheless] where a parent has surrendered her child to others in infancy and it has been allowed to remain with others until new ties of mutual affection are formed, the child’s welfare will control the parent’s rights in habeas corpus proceedings for its return.”
The impulses of the plaintiffs to regain possession of their child are most natural. After reading this record one can readily concur in the findings of the district judge, who in passing upon the facts of the case commented that—
The plaintiff, Mrs Kurtz, “would make a commendable mother to this child, but the welfare of the child is better subserved and will be better promoted with the Christensens than with its natural parents.”
The plaintiffs should bear in mind that it was their shortcomings that brought about this unhappy condition of affairs, and bear the burden of it all uncomplainingly. Their consolation should be that it is now for the best interests of their child that it remain with the splendid people who provide for it and love it as their own, precisely as its mother designed when she thought that such would be for the best.
We have pointed out that in the .trial of this case the district court proceeded upon the theory that the best interests of the child should be subserved. The defendants were
Without passing upon the legality of the adoption proceedings they were competent evidence for the purpose of showing that defendants were assuming a right attitude toward the child, and that their intentions were of the best. The evidence was therefore properly received for that purpose if for no other.
Therefore, upon the sole ground that the best interests of the child will be the better subserved by its custody remaining with the defendants, the judgment of the district court will stand affirmed. Defendants to have their costs.