142 Me. 78 | Me. | 1946
A hearing was held by a justice of the Superior Court on a writ of habeas corpus petitioned for by a father who sought to obtain custody of his son of the age of three and a half years. The respondents are the maternal grandparents of the child, the child’s stepfather, and the child’s maternal aunt. After a lengthy hearing, during the course of which the justice presiding had the opportunity of seeing all of the parties, the child was ordered discharged from the custody of the respondents and custody was awarded to the father. The respondents bring the case here on exceptions and on a motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. There is no dispute as to the essential facts.
THE EXCEPTIONS
The petitioner, James G. Stanley, and Catherine Jane Thompson, the daughter of the respondents, Dr. and Mrs. Thompson, and the sister of the respondent, Mrs. Foss, were married April 26, 1941. A son, James G. Stanley, Jr., was born February 22, 1942. About two weeks after the birth of the child, while the mother after her return from the hospital was staying at the house of the Thompsons, the petitioner left his wife and, except on one occasion, did not thereafter see his child. Five months later a separation agreement was drawn up in contemplation of a libel for divorce to be brought by the wife. Under the terms of this agreement, the mother was to have the sole care and custody of the child, and the father was to purchase a home, the title to which was to be placed in the mother and child as joint tenants. There were other provisions relating to support and maintenance, counsel fees, and a division of property. Jane T. Stanley was granted a divorce from the petitioner at the October Term, 1942, of the Superior Court for the County of Cumberland for the cause of cruel and abusive treatment, and-the care and custody of the child was granted to the mother, and provision was made for alimony for the wife and support for the child. In February 1943 the petitioner married Mildred Holland and a son was born in
The final result was that the father petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus. The issue thereby presented to the court was whether custody of the child should be awarded to the grandparents, Dr. and Mrs Thompson, who were supported in their claim to the child by their daughter, Mrs. Foss, and by their son-in-law, Howard D. Penley, or whether custody should be awarded to the child’s father, James G. Stanley. A writ of habeas corpus is a proper remedy for a parent who claims to have been unjustly deprived of the custody of a child. Merchant v. Bussell, 139 Me., 118;
A parent has a natural right to the care and custody of a child, and, though that right is not absolute, it should be limited only for the most urgent reasons. Merchant v. Bussell, supra.
The claim of the grandparents is that in this instance the natural right of the petitioner to the custody of his child is not controlling, because, they say, neither he nor his second wife are proper persons to rear the child. No evidence is offered in support
The justice, who heard the evidence below, who had the advantage of seeing and talking to the parties, concedes that the grandparents are cultured, home-loving people who would to the very best of their ability rear this child. But they are respectively seventy-four and sixty years of age. The chances are that should they attempt to bring up this child a readjustment would have to be made later when attachments would have been formed on the part of the child which would then be difficult to break. Penley and Mrs. Foss, though they express a willingness to assist, have their own problems, and their own lives are ahead of them. The evidence amply justifies the conclusion of the presiding justice that this is the time to make the change. It is the interest of the child which is paramount.
Counsel for the respondents cite the case of Merchant v. Bussell, supra, in support of their contention. The facts in the two cases are utterly different.
THE MOTION
The petitioner in his testimony said that he was married the second time in February 1944, and his first child was born in July 1944. Both of these dates should have been 1943. There is nothing to indicate that this was an intentional misstatement. The
Exceptions overruled.
Motion overruled.