Lead Opinion
1. In this haheas-corpus proceeding brought by the mother for two minor children after her divorce from the father and her marriage to another man, it was error to admit in evidence, over timely objection on the ground that it was hearsay and damaging to the petitioner, a letter written by the father of the petitioner to the defendant in which he stated, “I certainly don’t consider her [the mother] qualified physically, mentally, or morally fit to have full control of those precious little ones.”
2. While the evidence was sufficient to support the judgment awarding custody to the defendant, the paternal grandmother, under the Code, § 74-106, nevertheless it did not demand such judgment, and consequently the error in receiving the inadmissible evidence requires a reversal.
3. The decisions in
Stephens
v.
Crawford,
1
Ga.
574 (
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The evidence as to the fitness or unfitness of the mother to have the custody of the child is in conflict. This case is being reversed because of the admission in evidence of a letter from Green, the father of the mother, the defendant in error, in which he made this statement: “I certainly don’t consider her [the mother] qualified physically, mentally, or morally fit to have full control of those precious little ones.” I think that no sufficient cause has been shown for reversal. In the first place, the writer of the letter, as a witness on the stand, had testified that: “I wrote the letter, which you have exhibited to me, to Mrs. Batts. The plaintiff is my daughter. I do not consider her mind perfect. I know Mrs. J. W. Batts, the respondent, and I consider her to be better fitted morally and mentally to have the custody of the children than my daughter.” While his statement in the letter went farther than his testimony quoted above, the two are, in my opinion, near enough alike to fall within the
well-recognized
rule that testimony illegally admitted is no ground for new trial when it appears from the record that practically the same testimony, unobjected to, from other sources was admitted. While
Town of Adel
v.
Woodall,
122
Ga.
535 (supra), was an interlocutory-injunction case, the reason behind the rule there announced nearly forty years ago would make it applicable in the trial of a habeas corpus.
Town of Adel
v.
Woodall
does not stand alone, but like statements may be found in a number of other cases that are cited in the leading opinion. In both injunction cases and habeas-corpus eases, the judge himself is the trier of the facts. In both, affidavits may be used.
Robertson
v.
Heath,
132
Ga.
310 (
