47 Cal. App. 128 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
This is an appeal from an order of the superior court of the county of San Diego, sitting as a juvenile court, declaring Guadalupe and Elvira Gutierrez, minors, to be wards of said court, and taking them from the custody and control of their father, Tomas Gutierrez, appellant herein.
It was shown by the testimony, without dispute, that at the time of commencing this proceeding the minors, who are girls aged respectively one and three years, were in the custody of their father. The mother is dead, and the children had for some time been in the immediate care of the maternal grandmother, with the father’s consent, and under an arrangement whereby he paid for their keep. Some two or three months prior to this proceeding the father took them from the grandmother, owing to some personal differences which had arisen between the two. He at first kept them at his home, with the help of a woman he employed, but later sent for and paid the transportation of a brother and his family, who lived in New Mexico, to come to San Diego and live with him and make a home for himself and the children. They were all living together under this arrangement when this proceeding • was commenced. It is undisputed that the father is an industrious man, earning good wages, affectionate with the children, spending his money freely to provide for them, and able and willing to care, for them. There is nothing to indicate that the care and custody given these minors by their father is not as good as ordinarily falls to the lot of families in the same station in life. There was some evidence tending to show that the children were well and affectionately cared for by the grandmother, and that she was so situated as to give them better attention and more wholesome surroundings than they were likely to receive under the arrangements made by the father. It is quite evident from the remarks of the trial judge, shown in the transcript of the proceedings, that it was this circumstance that influenced his decision to take the children from the father and place them
Moreover, we question if the evidence presented in the record is sufficient to justify a finding that the welfare of the minors requires that their custody be taken from the father, if such an allegation had appeared in the petition, or such finding had been made. The juvenile court law certainly does not contemplate the taking of children from their parents and breaking up family ties merely because, in the estimation of probation officers and courts, the children can be better provided for and more wisely trained as wards of the state. Probably from mere considerations of healthful and hygienic living and systematic education and training this would be true in the cases of thousands of families of wealth and respectability. We 'think it is only in instances where there is demonstrated incapacity or something akin to criminal neglect that the law is justified in interfering with the natural relations of parent and child.
The order is reversed.
Finlayson, P. J., and Thomas, J., concurred.