95 Wis. 406 | Wis. | 1897
The following opinion was filed January 12, 1897:
The question vital to this controversy depends, we think, upon the proper construction and effect to be given to sec. 3964, E. S., which has been in force ever since 1849, providing that “The father of the minor, if living, and in ■case of his death, the mother, while she remains unmarried, being themselves respectively competent to transact their own business, a/nd not otherwise unsuitable, shall be entitled to the
Certainly the court did not decide, or intend to intimate, that the suitableness of the respondents for the care and custody of the child constituted^^ se, or tended* to show, unsuitableness on the part of the father; for it is entirely clear that the statute is not susceptible of so absurd a construction as to permit the custodian to withhold from the father the custody of his child, when he was not unsuitable to care for and educate it, simply because such custodian was equally, or perhaps more, able or competent. Such a ruling would be destructive of parental rights and authority, and subversive of social order, founded so largely on the sanctity of the home and family relations. In the subsequent case of Schiltz v. Roenitz, 86 Wis. 31, 37, it was said, after quoting the statute, that “ the statute intervenes only upon the. destitution and necessity of the child, and in all cases of controverted right to its custody its welfare is a matter of primary consideration,” and is especially applicable to cases such as Johnston v. Johnston, 89 Wis. 416, which was a controversy between the parents who had separated and were living apart, for the care and custody of their children (and such are many of the cases relied on by the respondents), and where the right'of the father was affirmed, if he was not an unfit person for the trust; but, it being conceded that he was unfit, it was held that the court rightly refused, at his request, to take them from their mother, in order to give them to their paternal grandfather, who was wealthy, and évidently attached to them, and had done
The petitioner testified as to the occurrence after the funeral services; that he asked to be left alone with the remains; that both the Pereles brothers remained, and said something
The respondent Jennie W. Pereles testified to a conversation with the mother of the child, after its birth, when she urged witness, and said, “ Jennie, if ever anything happens to me, will you take care of my baby?” And that she told • her she would, if that was any satisfaction to her, but she was perfectly healthy under the circumstances of the case; that she told her she must not think of these things, but, if
It further appeared from the testimony of the petitioner that after his second marriage he rented a house in New York for $1,200 a year, which was ready for occupancy, and
¥e cannot give our assent to the conclusion that what took place between the parties at the close of the funeral services ought to be regarded or enforced as a binding contract, precluding the petitioner from thereafter claiming the care and custody of his child, even if it be conceded, as a matter of law, that the father might, by an oral contract, cede away his parental rights, and finally conclude himself in respect to them,— a proposition denied by -the great weight of authority. Brooke v. Logan, 112 Ind. 183; Ex parte Clark, 87 Cal. 638; Weir v. Marley, 99 Mo. 484; In re Stockman, 71 Mich. 199; State v. Libbey, 44 N. H. 321; State v. Richardson, 40 N. H. 272. In these cases, the questions here discussed in relation to the rights of the father to the care and custody of his infant children are fully considered, and many authorities are cited. The petitioner had asked to be left alone in the room with the remains of his wife, about to be taken to the place of burial. The brothers, however, remained, and at that juncture, and in the painful and solemn presence of his dead wife, he was asked to give away the care and custody of all that remained of his little
By the Court.— The order and judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded to that court, with •directions to award the care and custody of the infant child, Fannie P. Markwell, to the said petitioner.
A motion for a rehearing was denied March 16, 1897.