111 Ky. 264 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
This action was instituted by apppllee, the mother o’f 'John Craig Stapleton, to recover his possession of appellants, his paternal grandfather and grandmother; the lad being then about nine years of age. Appellee is a widow. The father of the boy bad died some years previous, leaving no estate, and the widowed mother had none. Appel
When appellee was first abandoned, and was face to face with the proposition of earning her own living, she was induced to sign a contract with appellants concerning her children. This contract is as follows:
“An article of agreement between Christina Stapleton, oí*266 the first part, and Ed Stapleton and Elizabeth Stapleton, his wife, of the second part: The party of the first part agrees to give her two children, Craig and Della, to the party of the second part, to keep and control as their own until they become 21 years old, unless the party of the first part and her husband should live together again. Then she is to have her children, and not till then. She also gives to the party of the second part all her household goods, and horse and cow, to be used to the benefit of raising said children, ánd also what W. R. Stapleton, her husband, left in the house of Mr. Gee, which she was to have in provisions to live on; and the party of the second part agrees to try to give said children a common education. This April 30, 1893. Christina Stapleton. Ed Stapleton. Elizabeth Stapleton.
“Att.: Ellen Stapleton.
“I do agree to the above contract. W. R. Stapleton.”
Her husband, some time after, by his indorsement, approved it.
After the death of her husband, the boy now having grown in size, years, and usefulness, and therefore helpfulness, she seeks to recover possession of him, and, indeed, has sought at frequent intervals before this suit to do so, but unsuccessfully until now.
The defense is summed up by counsel for appellants, in their brief, as follows: “(1) The appellants, the grandparents of the child, John Craig Stapleton, are the proper persons to have the care, custody and control of said child, and appellee is not. (2) That they (appellants) are financially able to.care for and educate said child in a manner suited to his station in life, and that appellee is not. (3) That said child is possessed of sufficient intelligence and age to judge for himself where he should live, and that it is
The welfare of a child, its life, health, and moral and intellectual being, should be, and are, kept well in view by the courts in determining its legal_ disposition in litigations over it. This is not upon the ground, sometimes supposed, that courts of equity will overrule the claims of nature, or substitute their discretion as to the child’s welfare for the responsibilities imposed by God upon the parent. We apprehend, and, from an examination of the authorities, we gather, this course is justified and applied only in cases where a parent asks the court to change the child’s possession, basing his claim upon a legal right, — such, for example, as the legal right of the parent to the custody of his child. Then, and then only, will the court look to the welfare of the child, in withholding its aid; basing its action upon the principle that equity will not do a wrong
The record discloses that appellants are estimable and worthy old people, who doubtless would bestow on this grandchild every fair opportunity within their power for its material advancement. Their love for it, natural and cultivated, is clearly shown by the circumstances put in evidence. 'The separation decreed by the circuit court must seem to them, viewed from their standpoint, as a hardship.' These facts are argued by their counsel here as presenting an equity entitled to be regarded by the court, in connection with the child’s welfare, in decreeing its custody. The utmost the court could be expected to do would be to measure the equities of these contending parties. It requires no judicial determination to properly estimate the mother’s love, — probably the strongest instinct of the species. This temporary separation, enforced by conditions beyond her control, instead of weaning her from the child, appears to have intensified her yearning. As between the two — the grandparents and the mother — we do not feel at liberty to change the responsibility of the parent, and the privilege and duty of the child, from where God has placed them. The judgment of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.