186 A.2d 811 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1962
The custody of Raymond Edwin Chatfield, born out of wedlock in Waterbury on May 27, 1958, is placed in issue by this habeas corpus proceeding.
The absent William H. Wright, who at the time of the institution of these proceedings was described in paragraph one of the application for the writ as the "putative father," now has acknowledged his paternity of the child in accordance with General Statutes § 52-442a. This was the second child born out of wedlock to the mother, the defendant Martha Chatfield Davis, hereinafter called the defendant, and each had a different father. Custody of Raymond is sought by the plaintiff, the mother of William H. Wright, and this is opposed by the mother of the child. Considerable evidence was offered by both parties, and in certain details it seemed to extend beyond the actual issues. The propriety thereof is not questioned in a matter such as this, where the removal of a child from the custody of his parent is contemplated. "No other occasion can call more loudly for judicial vigilance in reaching for the exact truth, and in putting aside with an unsparing hand the mere technicalities of procedure." Corrie
v. Corrie,
During November, 1960, the defendant actually gave Raymond, her then two-year-old child, into the sole and exclusive maintenance and care of the plaintiff, with the expressed understanding that the plaintiff, the child's grandmother, was thenceforth to continue, uninterruptedly, such care at her own effort and expense. There is evidence that the plaintiff, who is now forty years old, assumed this undertaking seriously and performed it creditably. The defendant is now married and presently lives with her husband and their four children. From January 16, 1957, to October 30, 1962, she has received $7824.11 in welfare aid. Her husband had left his *78 family for considerable periods of time, and though they are living together now, he has not been employed for some time and is not now employed. The income of the Davis family at the time of trial continued to be derived from the temporary aid to dependent children program of the welfare department of Connecticut. It is in evidence that for a period of about four months the defendant collected A.D.C. funds for the maintenance of Raymond while he was in the care of his grandmother, the plaintiff.
The defendant made no effort to see the boy or telephone the plaintiff concerning his welfare from Christmas, 1960, to May, 1961, though both parent and child continued to live in Waterbury. Subsequently, there were other considerable lapses of time in this respect. Intermittently, while the plaintiff had the child and as she required it, the child's mother would act as baby sitter for him and would be paid by the plaintiff therefor. The defendant did not once suggest or ask for the return of the child to her in the almost two years which the plaintiff had him before the retaking of the boy by the defendant, which act precipitated this proceeding. The several separations of the defendant and her husband, and the nature of and source from which is derived the limited sustenance for the family which includes these parents and four other children, in itself would indicate some domestic intranquillity, actual want and an otherwise trying existence. The court did not observe, nor was there evidence presented, that the defendant or her husband, who also appeared as a witness, suffered from any type of physical infirmity. Their continued unemployment presented no apparent concern to either of them.
There is some evidence that the codefendant Ann Walton, who is the sister of the defendant, agitated for the removal of the child from the maintenance *79
and care of the plaintiff even after the plaintiff satisfactorily cared for the child and exercised control and custody of him from the tender age of two to his presently imminent school age. Some evidence discloses that Ann Walton now desires to have this child in her otherwise childless home. It is clear that the defendant, at the time she offered and turned over her son Raymond to the plaintiff in November, 1960, then told the plaintiff that she never wanted the boy. The fact that the mother has apparently changed her mind and now attempts to withdraw her promise does not in itself relieve her of her agreement. See Bailey v. Mars,
Legitimacy or illegitimacy of offspring does not alter the problem of who is entitled to custody. Our state has not followed the common-law rule that a bastard is nullius filius. Pelak v. Karpa,
Our Supreme Court has repeatedly held that in any proceedings regarding the custody of a child the welfare of the child must be the controlling consideration.Scott v. Furrow,
It is the conclusion of this court that the best interest of Raymond Edwin Chatfield requires that this situation be resolved with the custody of the child resting in the plaintiff, to whom he had been returned, just before the trial was commenced, pending the outcome of this litigation.
Judgment may enter accordingly.