57 Neb. 158 | Neb. | 1898
Annie J. Norval sued ont a writ of habeas corpus against Jacob Zinsmaster, alleging the unlawful restraint by him of the applicant’s two minor children. The district court, after a trial, awarded the custody of the children to the respondent, their paternal grandfather. From this order the applicant prosecutes error. The assignments of error reduce themselves to a question of the sufficiency of the evidence.
There is little real controversy as to the facts. The children are two girls, aged respectively eight and five, the offspring of a marriage between the applicant and George Zinsmaster, son of the respondent. In February, 1897, the applicant was awarded a decree of divorce on the grounds of drunkenness and extreme cruelty, and given the custody of the children. A little more than six months thereafter the applicant intermarried with Walter Norval. The former husband was opposed to this step, and filed an application in the divorce case for a modification of the decree so as to award him the custody of the children. This application does not seem to have been brought to hearing; but apparently influenced thereby Mrs. Norval wrote to a son-in-law of respondent suggesting that the latter take the children. The letter not receiving an immediate response she addressed the respondent directly as follows: “I thought, it best I should write to you about the girls. We have gotten word that George [the father] is working in an underhanded way to get them, and rather than have any fuss and go to law about them I will be willing for them to have their home with you. He can provide for them as much as he likes, but never have control over them to take them away in some other home, and that they can come and see me in vacation, providing they will stay there contented and happy. Now let me know right away if this is satisfactory and I will bring them down. They have a good home here and will always
No serious attempt is made to prove that either claimant is an unfit person to have the custody of the children. All the proof tends to show that the mother and the grandparents are estimable persons, exhibiting a deep affection for the children, and willing to provide for them to the extent of their respective means. Mrs. Norval resides with her husband in a small house at Avoca, Cass county. Norval is a section-hand on a railroad and derives his income chiefly from his wages as such. The grandparents own a farm of 210 acres near Tecumseh, and reside thereon. At each point good school facilities are convenient. The testimony of strangers as to the situation in either household is enlightened by that of the two little girls themselves, the innocent subject-matter of the controversy. Each testifies, with apparent candor and freedom and with manifest intelligence, that she has received uniformly kind treatment in each place, and that her wants have been supplied and gratified. The elder does not know which place she would prefer to live; the younger at one time says she wants to go home with grandma, in another that she does not care. The only objection made by the mother to the custody of the grandfather, and based on the welfare of the children, is that their father resides there and is an habitual drunkard. The only objection based on similar grounds made to their mother’s custody is that Norval’s income is quite limited and that he is addicted to drink. The
We are not unmindful that the letter of Mrs. Norval, already quoted, indicates an intention, at the time it was written, of surrendering the children to their grandparents; but parentage in its full import is not to be so lightly surrendered. If, relying on the letter, the grandfather had maintained the children for a considerable period, using extensively of his means and energies, and forming deeply-seated ties of affection growing out of the association, such facts might be of controlling force. But, regarded as a contract, the letter is indefinite, and the motive of writing it was plainly to avoid the jeopardy of an attack by the father on the mother’s rights. The children had remained but a few months, and the grandparents had not expended largely of their time or means on the faith of their continued control of the children. The right to custody of children implies a correlative duty of the very highest obligation. It cannot be divested or forfeited beyond recall by a letter written in a moment of caprice or discouragement. It is also to be observed that, under the circumstances, to award the custody to the grandfather is in effect to take the children from their mother and place them in constant asso
Reversed and remanded.