81 So. 2d 754 | Fla. | 1955
Lead Opinion
. Appellant Charles B. Sparks was petitioner below in a habeas corpus proceeding whereby as natural . father he sought to obtain the custody of his two minor children from appellee (respondent . below) Mrs. A. E. Reeves, their maternal grandmother. The natural mother of the children and late wife of the appellant died early in December, 1952. At that time one of the children, Charles Andrew Sparks, was 21 months old, and the other, Morrie Inez Sparks, was 3 • da'y-s oíd.'
The appellant, his late wife and the two children resided in California at the time of the death of the mother. ' About two weeks after her death, he brought the.two infants, to Leon County,.'Florida where he left them with: the appellee • grandmother, stating, that he did- not have the facilities to take care of them. There is a conflict as to whether on that occasion he stated that he intended to leave the children with the grandmother permanently. We do -not consider the present record sufficient . to sustain any conclusion that there was a permanent relinquishment of the rights of the natural parent. The father then returned to California but around April or' May, 1953, he returned to Leon County, Florida, to file a petition for writ of ha-beas corpus against the appellee seeking custody 'of the children. This -culminated in an order of May 1, 1953, wherein the Circuit Judge awarded custody to the ap-pellee, allowed the appellant reasonable visitation privileges' and retained jurisdiction for the purpose of determining the fu-' turé welfare of the children. No 'appeal was taken from that order. ■
On September 7, 1954, appellant filed in the Circuit Court of Leon County a petition to.modify the order of May 1, 1953, alleging that in June, 1954, he had remarried and .maintained a home in Cocoa, Florida; that it was a suitable place to raise the children; that’he had a good job'; and that his new wife stood ready, able and willing to. share the care of the children with him.
As might be expected, the grandmother resisted the petition to modify, contending, with evidence to support her contention, that the father had paid little or no attention to the children; that he was delinquent in his contributions to the support of them; that he had been to see them on only two occasions since their mother’s death, both occasions being when he came to the area to file the two petitions; that he seldom, if ever, wrote to them or inquired about them; that for all practical purposes he had demonstrated little, if any, genuine parental affection for them; that the children were being well cared for; that they were being raised in a good spiritual atmosphere; that their future education had been provided for by the appellee; and that as a matter of fact on the last occasion when the father did go by to see them, they did not even know him. The father asserted the legal right of a natural parent to enjoy the custody and control of his children and contended that on this basis and the fact that his circumstances had changed, the order of May 1, 1953, should be modified.
After hearing all of the testimony, the Circuit Judge concluded that the original order should remain-in full force and effect on the ground that the petitioner-appellant had failed to show that the best interests of the minor children required that their custody be taken from the appellee and awarded to the appellant. On the contrary, he found that it would be to the best interests of the children that they remain in the custody of the appellee.
We hold that no error has been made to appear in the ruling of the Circuit Judge. He heard all of the testimony and had an opportunity to view the witnesses as they testified and in the light of the evidence offered before him, he evidently concluded that a showing sufficient to justify a change in his original order had not been made.
The record shows that the present home life of the children involved is sound and happy. Under the circumstances indicated by the record, it would be an unjustifiable experiment at this point .to transfer custody of these children of very tender -years, at least until such time as the appellant has more clearly demonstrated his parental interest -in, and desire to care for, his children. Although the facts are not strictly analogous because in the instant case there is no question raised as to the moral stability of the father, we find that in some measure this case is governed by the rule announced in State ex rel. Bonsack v. Campbell, 134 Fla. 809, 184 So. 332.
We do not read from the present record that the father has permanently relinquished his right to enjoy the custody of his children. We do hold that he should more clearly demonstrate and give evidence of his right to enjoy this privilege by his conduct to be based on his interest in the children in the future and the effort that he makes to establish that he is and will be the type of father that he portrays himself to be by his petition.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
The foundation on which the lower court rested its order denying the father the custody of his two infant children was that it would be to the best interest of said children to have their custody remain in their maternal grandparents. In affirming the action of the lower court, the majority opinion rests upon the premise that “Under the circumstances indicated by the record it would be an unjustifiable experiment at this point to transfer custody of these children of very tender years, at least until such time as the appellant has more clearly demonstrated his parental interest in, and desire to care for, his children.” I fear that the action of the lower court in denying custody to the father at this time and of the majority of this Court in upholding that decree will result in far greater harm to the welfare of these small children than would result in a contrary action. I think the circumstances of the case have unconsciously blinded the lower court and the majority in this Court.
The mother of the youngest of these children died in California when the child was only three days old. There in a strange land, faced with the tragic death of his wife an left with these two small children, the actions of the husband were naturally not those of a man under normal conditions. Whether the events which followed, as related in the majority opinion, were influenced by the tragedy which had been visited upon these young people is not clear from the record. In any event, the actions of the husband in the two or three years which followed clearly indicate a lack of parental interest in the welfare of the children. It is established by the record that the husband has now remarried, has a comfortable home and a good job. The older boy is with him and he now is desirous of regaining the custody of his younger children — his own flesh and blood. I am convinced that the best interest of all concerned will be achieved by granting the custody to him.
Surely this Court in the face of a record that establishes from the testimony of the grandmother that the husband is a fit and proper person to have his children is not going to deprive the father of such children forever. If custody must be taken from the grandmother, who has looked after them with loving care and tenderness and who the record established will be wounded by removing them from her possession, the sooner this is accomplished the lesser the injury will be to these good people who have looked after these young children and to the children themselves.
This is not the kind of a case where the children are old enough to be substantially affected by a change in custody as was the case in Hart v. Howell, 154 Fla. 878, 19 So.2d 317. Nor is it a case where the parent had allowed the child or children to remain with other relatives for the first ten years of its life and the child at the time of the hearing was of sufficient age to express a desire in the matter as appeared in the case of Myers v. Stewart, 117 Fla. 173, 157 So. 499. In Little v. Franklin, Fla. 1949, 40 So.2d 768, the child was eight years old and had lived with her grandmother for the last seven years and preferred to stay with her.
I think it is clear that the three children of this father should be raised together. This is a natural law. It is cruel not only to the parent who undoubtedly still loves his children but to the children themselves to remove them from each other in their childhood. The record convinces me there is a strong likelihood that these three children can henceforth be raised in one family as brothers and sisters by their natural father and have a future of the kind that children should have. Moreover, the grandparents are of advanced years. They have raised their family and such close relationship between grandparents and small children over a long period of years is not conducive to the happiness and well being of either.