This writ of error, awarded on the petition of Thurman Nestor and Jasper Nestor, his father, is to a vacation order of the judge of the circuit court of Tucker county, awarding to Carrie Nestor, the wife of said Thurman Nestor, the custody of their three year old son Kenneth Nestor, in a hateas corpus proceeding instituted by her. There has been no decree of divorce, and no suit for divorce is pending. The parties were married in Tucker county, West Virginia, in May, 1912, and for some time thereafter continued to reside in said county, living a part of the time on the farm of the husband’s father and a part of the time on the farm of the wife’s father. They then moved to Canton, Ohio, rented some rooms and did light housekeeping for a while, and later rented a house,' and the wife kept boarders and the husband worked and earned from $18 to $27 per week, which, he says, he
The welfare of the child is the guiding principle by which the court must be governed, and although the law recognizes the father as the natural guardian of his infant children, and generally prefers him to the mother as the one entitled to their custody, still this is not an inflexible rule. If the mother is better qualified, morally and physically, than the father to perform the trust, the court may properly entrust the child to her. Cariens v. Cariens, 50 W. Va. 113; Dawson v. Dawson, 57 W. Va. 520; and Buseman v. Buseman, 83 W. Va. 496.
If the testimony of the mother in this case is to be taken as true, the father is not morally fit to raise the child; and, on the. other hand, if his testimony is true the mother is equally unfitted for so sacred a responsibility as the proper rearing of a child. But his charges of her immorality are denied by her and are not sustained by him, as he bears the burden of proving them. But her charges against him are, in part at least, admitted by him. He admits he had a loath,some disease, which, generally, originates from immoral habits. True he accuses her of giving him that disease. But she denies it, and there is no other evidence that she ever had such disease.
Furthermore, he has failed utterly to prove his financial ability to provide for the child. He is living with his father and working on his place and admits he is eaiming no wages. The mother of the child swears she has a good place to live in Canton, Ohio, the place where she and her husband last cohabited, and is earning $10 per week, and can take good care of the child. It also appears that she is the more intellectual of the two, is fond of reading and, therefore, the better qualified to give the child proper mental training.
In view of all these circumstances, the judge was justified in committing the care and custody of the child, Kenneth, to its mother, and we affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.