135 Ky. 418 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
On April 29, 1907, the appellee, Sarah Shelby Shall-cross, was, by a judgment of the Jefferson circuit court, chancery branch, second division, divorced from her husband, the appellant, Harry M. Shall-cross, and given the custody of their son and only child, Vernon Lewis Shallcross, an infant of tender years.
The judgment in question is as follows: “This action having been heard and submitted upon the plaintiff’s petition- and defendant’s answer herein and upon the proof, and the court being advised, it is adjudged that the plaintiff, Sarah Shelby Shall-cross, be and she is hereby divorced from the bonds of matrimony with Harry Mason Shallcross, and it is further adjudged that the said plaintiff is given the custody and control of her son, Vernon Lewis Shallcross, and it is further adjudged that the defendant, Hairy Mason Shallcross, shall have the privilege of seeing his child at such reasonable times as will not interfere with the education of the child and that he shall have the privilege of having the child with him at least two days during each month during school season, and shall have the privilege of having the child with him during vacation for periods ranging from one to two weeks at a time such periods of visit to his father to be, however, at such times as shall be mutually agreed on between the plaintiff and the said defendant, and will not in any wise interfere with the health or welfare of the said
It does not appear from the foregoing judgment, or any subsequent order found in the record before us, that the case was ever stricken from the court’s docket. At any rate on June 30,1909, the same court on motion of the appellant, Harry M. Shallcross, based on his affidavit then filed, granted and issued a rule against- appellee, Sarah Shelby Shallcross, returnable July 5, 1909, requiring her to show cause, if she had any, why she should not comply with the judgment of April 29, 1907, by permitting him to see and be with their infant son as provided therein, In the affidavit for the rule appellant stated that the appellee had not, since November 26, 1908, permitted him to see his son, Yernon Lewis Shallcross, and had repeatedly refused him the right to do so, or to have the child with him at any time, and had announced that she did not intend, in the future to permit appellant to see or have him in custody.
Appellant by a pleading entitled an answer controverted all the affirmative statements of the response. Thereupon the court heard all the evidence introduced by the parties and thereafter rendered the
His able counsel earnestly insists that the judgment complained of is but a modification of the first judgment, rendered in the action for divorce at a previous term, and that the court was without jurisdiction, and had not the power, upon mere motion, to modify or vacate the former judgment after the expiration of the term at which it was rendered. Section 2123, Ky. St. (Carroll Edition 1909), provides: “Pending an application for divorce, or on final judgv ment, the court may make orders for the
It is not denied hy counsel that the court rendering such a judgment as that referred to can modify or vacate it, after the expiration of the- term at which it was rendered, but contended that, in order to .enable it to do so, the power to that end must be reserved in the judgment itself, or its exercise invoked by the petition of a parent of the child to be affected. In all cases respecting the custody of a child the welfare of the child is the governing principle with the courts. The right of the father to have the custody of his child is, in its general sense, admitted, but, this is not on account of any absolute right of the father, but for the benefit of the infant; the law presuming it to be for its interest to be under the care of its natural protector, both for maintenance. and education.
Neither the father nor mother, however, has -any right that can be allowed to seriously militate against the welfare of the child. If the father be unfit to have the custody of his child, the courts will promptly declare his rights forfeited. The same is true of the mother, and neither parent is entitled to the custody, if it is manifestly against the child’s welfare. In such a case the custody of the child will be awarded to a third person. If the child has reached years of discretion, its wishes will be considered, but will
In this state courts of equity are given practically exclusive jurisdiction over the persons and property of infants, and the jurisdiction attaches from the very fact of the institution of an action or proceeding affecting the person or property of an infant, and at once makes him a ward of the court. When such jurisdiction is invoked in the infant’s behalf, there are few, if any, inflexible rules of procedure. Even section 2123, Ky. Stat., which gives to the parent of an infant the right to apply by petition to a court of equity for the vacation or modification of a judgment with respect to the custody of the infant, rendered at a previous term, should not be so interpreted- as to exclude any other remedy or course
Exercise of the power possessed by a court of equity with respect to the custody of an infant in such a case is not therefore dependent upon action upon the part of either of the divorced parents, or upon a reservation in the judgment- of. authority to subsequently change or modify it. The court need not have waited for either parent to take the initiative, but possessed the power to modify, upon its own motion, the previous judgment as to the custody of the infant, upon the state of facts appearing-in the response and established by the proof. We do not mean to say that the _circuit court should at any time enter a judgment, or change one rendered at a previous term, as to the custody of a child without notice to the. parents. In this case, however, both had notice.
We deem it unnecessary to discuss in detail the evidence upon which the circuit court acted in modifying the judgment as to the custody of the child, but we think it was sufficient to show that appellant is unfit to have the custody, even temporarily, of his son.
The circuit court did what it could and was authorized to do to protect the child. Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.