8 Ga. App. 835 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Manning brought a writ of habeas corpus against Mr. and Mrs. J. W. A. Crawford, to recover possession of his infant daughter. Upon the hearing of the writ the trial court awarded' the custody of the child to the respondents, who are her maternal grandfather and grandmother. It appears from the record that the mother of the child was for several months hovering between life and death. She tried several times to see her mother, but circumstances prevented it. Finally she was brought to a hospital in the city of Atlanta, and, in response to a letter from her brother, her mother answered her urgent summons. She was then upon her death-bed, and was fully conscious of her condition, referring to it several times during her interview with her mother. Her husband was present when she begged her mother, in language which is touching in its pathos, to take her.little girl and only child and raise the child as her own. The appeal in which she urged her mother to let the little girl be a substitute for herself, whom death would so soon remove, was piteous in its circumstances, and we can well imagine that the husband, bending over her bedside and knowing as he did that dissolution was upon her, and unwilling, if he possessed any human instinct whatever, to. add a single pang to those she was already enduring, would not, under the circumstances, at that time have expressed his dissent or disapprobation of her wish’s fulfillment. Tt would have been indeed a brutal husband who, under such touching circumstances and in such an awful hour, could have asserted his legal authority despite- the dying wishes of his wife.' For that reason we attach but little importance to the circumstance that he was silent upon the subject, as an evidence that he at that time acquiesced and tacitly agreed to give his only child to his mother-in-law. On the contrary, we are rather inclined to believe, from his silence, that at that time he intended, if it was possible to do so, to keep the child himself; for otherwise the stress of grief and pity, and the wish -to comply with the lasl\ request of his wife and to let her know that he complied would have been so overpowering as to have been almost irresistable. Nor is this all.
The record does not show that Mrs. Crawford at that time defi
Testimony for the petitioner was to the effect that the child was only temporarily left in the custody of its grandmother, in deference to the wishes of its dying mother, but that Manning did not assent to any irrevocable gift of his child, that on the contrary it was thoroughly understood that he would not surrender his parental rights to any one. Manning admitted that he told Mrs. Crawford that his father and mother could not keep the child, but said that he told her he wanted her to keep it until he was able to care for it himself. He was at that time a young physician, just beginning
The first question then to be decided, upon review, is whether the father in the present case surrendered and renounced his parental control of the child in question. The-Civil Code (1910), § 3021, declares that any father may do this; and the first question in this case is, did this father do so ? Parental control is lost by a voluntary contract releasing the parental rights t.o a third person. In this case the evidence does not show that the petitioner in so many words gave his child to his mother-in-law. He said nothing, according to the testimony of the respondents. But, as we see it, the cir'cumstances under which he carried his child to the Crawford home and left it there were such as reasonably to preclude every other inference than that it was his intention to give the child to Mrs. Crawford, and thereby absolutely surrender all parental control. His conduct after he carried the child there evinced this, because he visited the child only at rare intervals. Where the dying mother requested her mother to take her child and raise it, the request being made in the presence of the father of the child, who thereafter acquiesced in his wife’s request by delivering the child to its maternal grandmother, this surrender of the custody of the child by the father, with full knowledge of the facts, .warrants the inference that he surrendered all his parental rights; and it was not error, upon the hearing of the writ of habeas corpus, to award the possession of the child to its grandmother. If' a mother gives her infant child to another, who takes and cares for it, and the father acquiesces in this disposition of the child, he is bound by it.
It is strongly insisted that the right of the defendants to the child is not clearly proved, and that the law requires that such a contract must be clear, definite, and certain. The contract b-y which it is sought to establish that a parent has relinquished his parental rights must be clear, definite, and certain; but though these essentials are required in order to create and constitute the contract of relinquishment, it is not required that the evidence as to the contract shall be undisputed. If the evidence by which it is sought to
It is insisted that this suit can not be maintained, because, when a prior writ of habeas corpus was brought in favor of Manning and against J. W. A. Crawford, it was compromised. We do not know the circumstances under which the compromise was effected, or its exact nature, but, according to the evidence, Mrs. Crawford was no party to this compromise. She is not bound by it, according to the testimony. There is no testimony in conflict with that view. Where a child is given to its grandmother by its father, she is entitled to the possession of the child even though she be a married woman, if her husband does not object; and she is not bound by a compromise made in the course of a former habeas corpus proceeding brought by the father of the child against her husband.
Exception is- taken upon the ground that the judgment provides that the child shall have the right to visit her father. As we held
Under the evidence, it can-not be said that the judge who tried the ease abused his discretion in awarding the custody of the child to the grandmother. There was evidence authorizing the finding that the father, in accordance with the wishes of his dying wife, and perhaps influenced thereby, but voluntarily, surrendered his parental control of the child to its maternal grandmother, and that the terms of the gift under which the child was delivered to its grandmother, and upon which it was accepted by her, though first suggested by the mother of the child, were tacitly agreed to by the father, and were clear, definite, and certain. Though there was evidence to the effect that the child was only temporarily placed in the custody of its grandmother for care and safe-keeping in its tender infancy, and until its father should call for it, it can not be said that the judge abused that large discretion with which he is invested in the hearing of a writ of habeas corpus.
Judgment affirmed.