32 Fla. 499 | Fla. | 1893
Henry Reams in his petition for habeas corjms presented to the Circuit Judge alleged that E. P. Marshall, without lawful authority, held in custody one Edward Reams, a minor, and that petitioner was entitled to the custody and control of said minor. The right, to the custody and control of the minor is based upon the alleged fact that his mother before her death gave him to petitioner, his uncle, as his own child, to raise and educate until he became twentjr-one years old, and that petitioner has raised him from the age of three years up to the time of filing the petition, when he was between fifteen and sixteen years old. The mother of this child was unmarried, and the petition alleges that he had no father.
In his return to the writ F. F. Marshall states that he held in his care and custody the person of Edward Reams by virtue of an order, judgment and decree of the court of the County Judge of Duval county granting and assuring the custody of said minor to him by an indenture of apprenticeship then in full force and effect. That the minor, Edward Reams, was over sixteen years old and desired to remain in the care and custody of him, said Marshall, who is able and willing to care for, educate and prepare him for future useful
The Circuit Judge after hearing the evidence, awarded the care and custody of the person of Edward Reams during his minority to the petitioner, Henry Reams, as it appeared that he was a proper person to have such care and custody, and that Mari shall pay the costs of the proceedings. Marshall has sued out a writ of error.
The testimony tends to showy and we accept it. as sufficient to sustain the conclusion, that the boy, Edward Reams, when not over three years old, was given by his mother just before her death to her brother, Henry Reams, to raise and care for during minority, and that with the exception probably of one or two years immediately after the mother’s death,' this boy has remained continuously in the family and under the control of his uncle up to the time lie went into the employment of plaintiff in error, which was some time in May, 1898. The boy’s mother was unmarried and he had no father.
The mother has the superior legal right over all others to the custody and control of her minor illegitimate child. No claim of the father is presented in the case before us, and it is perfectly clear from the authorities that the mother of Edward Reams had the legal right to transfer his custody to. her brother Henry. Some of the English cases say that the right of the mother to the control of an illegitimate child continues until it
The case of Jones vs. Harmon, 27 Fla., 238, 9 South. Rep., 245, recognizes the right of the mother of an illegitimate dhild to transfer its custody to another, and we need not stop to cite authorities to sustain this well established rule of law. The result is that the custody of Edward “Reams by his uncle, Henry Reams, was rightful as being derived from the mother who had the right to transfer such custody. But this legal right in the mother or her transferree is not absolute and beyond the control of other circumstances that may surround the case. In applications for the custody of children it may be stated as a general rule sustained by the law that the court is not bound to deliver the child to the claimant, but may, where the interest of the child demands it, leave it where its welfare will be best promoted. “It is the benefit and welfare of the infant to which the attention of the court ought principally to be directed.” Tills, it. hi said, is the “pole star” by which courts are guided in all such cases, whether the contention be between father and mother, or between them and a third person, or between strangers. Mercein vs. People, 25 Wendell, 64, 35 Am. Dec., 653; State vs. Smith, 6 Greenleaf, 462, 20 Am. Dec., 324 and notes; Church on Habeas Corpus (2nd ed.), Section 446 and authorities cited in note 1.
The ties of nature and of association, the character of the applicant for the child, its age, health and sex, the moral or immoral surroundings of its life, the benefits of education and development, and pecuniary prospects, as well as many other considerations, enter into
An application of the foregoing rules to the facts of the case before us impresses us with the view that the Circuit Judge committed an error in awarding the -custody of the person of Edward Reams to the petitioner, Henry Reams. In arriving at this conclusion it is not necessary that we determine the legal effect of the apprenticeship jmoceedings before the County Judge as a bar to the relief asked in this suit, and we do not decide anything in reference to this phase of the case.
We will not go into a minute discussion here of ail the testimony, but confine ourselves to a statement of what is the effect of if. It shows, in addition to the gift and custody of the boy as already stated, that Henry Reams has a large family consisting of eight children, and has twenty-three acres of land on which he raises truck. Henry testified that he had brought up in his own family the boy, and had clothed, fed and educated Mm as one of his own children, and in
We do not desire to be understood as denying the right of a parent, or one standing in loco parentis, to moderately chastise for correction a child under liis or
While we think that the court erred on the showing-made here in awarding- the custody of Edward Reams to his uncle, it is. not to be inferred from what we decide that Marshall is entitled to any coercive control over the boy by virtue-of the-apprenticeship proceedings before the County Judge. This is a question not determined here, and we do not intimate any approval of the proceeding's in the apprenticeship, or adjudicate any rights under them.
Judgment reversed for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.