106 Cal. 541 | Cal. | 1895
Appellant and respondent are husband and wife. This action was brought by the husband to have awarded to him the exclusive custody and control of Lillie W. Sargent, the minor daughter of the parties, aged thirteen years—the sole issue of the marriage—then living with the mother.
The court found that the parties, in April, 1890, entered into a contract of separation, wherein it was agreed that by reason of unhappy differences the parties should live separate and apart during the continuance of their
The court further found that on September 12, 1892,
Tjpon these findings, and others relating to the conduct and character of the respondent which we do not deem material to the question involved, the court concluded, as matter of law, that said agreement of separation “was revocable at the option of either of the parties thereto”;-that the same was revoked by respondent by virtue of the letter above referred to declaring such revocation; that respondent, was entitled to have the same canceled and annulled, and that he was entitled to the custody and control of said minor.
Judgment was entered in conformity with these findings, and from it this appeal is prosecuted.
The only question presented by the appeal is whether the findings support the judgment.
The solution of the question, in the view taken and presented by both parties to the controversy in their briefs, depends upon the question whether the articles of separation between the parties were, or could be, revoked in the manner attempted. And this is the only question argued. The position taken by respondent,
We do not regard the provision in question as having any such effect as was here attributed to it. That section is found in the chapter of the code entitled “Divorce”; and under the subdivision or title “Dissolution of Marriage,” defining the causes for divorce. The six sections immediately preceding relate to desertion, and define what circumstances will, and what will not, constitute desertion. Section 99 provides that: “ Separation by consent, with or without the understanding that one of the parties will apply for a divorce, is not desertion.” Section 100 provides: “Absence or separation, proper in itself, becomes desertion whenever the intent to desert is fixed during such absence or separation.” Then comes the section in question, 101, which provides: “ Consent to a separation isa revocable act, and if one of the parties afterward, in good faith, seeks a reconciliation and restoration, but the other refuses, such refusal is desertion.”
It is obvious to our minds that, regarding the connection in which this latter section is placed, and the logical relation it bears to the antecedent provisions on the subject, it was intended simply to declare the effect of such revocation upon the legal status of the parties, as affecting that particular ground of divorce. Its effect is to put the recalcitrant spouse in default, and to give to the other a right which he did not have under the previously existing circumstances; a right which, if such refusal be persisted in for the statutory period, will ripen into a cause for divorce. That the effect of the section, and its only effect, is that declared in the language of the section itself, as above italicized, is, we think, plain.
The contract in question is in conformity with the right given by section 159, and, until avoided by the mutual resumption of marital duties, or the divorce of the parties, it remains binding and obligatory upon the parties thereto as effectually as any other contract, subject only to the limitation imposed by section 101, as above indicated. In all other respects the contractual relation subsists intact. To hold that one competent to contract, who, upon a subject matter good in law, and for a sufficient consideration, enters into written stipulations and covenants of the most solemn character with another, should, the next moment, without pretense of fraud, mistake, or undue influence, or other cause than a mere change of mind, be permitted to absolutely withdraw from, and set at naught, such obligations, without regard to the desire of the other contracting party, would, to say the least, be a strong departure in the law of contracts.
And this binding character runs to the provision with reference to the custody of the child equally with any other feature. Parents have a right to contract with each other as to the custody and control of their offspring, and to stipulate away their respective parental rights; and such contracts are binding upon them. (Schouler’s Domestic Relations, sec. 251; Bishop’s Marriage, Divorce, and Separation, sec. 1169; State v. Smith, 6 Me. 462; 20 Am. Dec. 324; Hunt v. Hunt, 28 Ch. Div. 606.)
Whether such a contract could be permitted to interfere with or impede, in a proper case, that wide discretionary power given to courts in the disposition of the custody of children, in accord with their best interests, independently of the desire of a parent, may well be doubted. But that question does not arise in this case. While there are some matters of a loose and vague character in the pleadings tending to raise some such issue, it was apparently abandoned, since the findings and judgment proceed solely upon the theory that the contract had been revoked by respondent’s act, and is therefore to be entirely disregarded for any purpose.
Nor does the question arise here as to the power of the court over the disposition of the child in the event of an action for divorce being instituted between the parties. Divorce is one of the contingencies under which, by the terms of the contract itself, its provisions
It follows, from what has been said, that the findings do not warrant the annulment and setting aside of the articles of separation; nor was the plaintiff entitled thereunder to the custody of the child. The findings, therefore, do not sustain the judgment.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., McFarland, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.