138 Ga. 188 | Ga. | 1912
A writ of habeas corpus was sued out by Jacob Williman to recover from his wife the possession of their only child, a boy four and one half years old. On the hearing it appeared from the evidence that plaintiff and defendant married in November, 1904, and lived together until November 4, 1910, but for two years prior they had occupied separate sleeping-rooms in the same house. On that day the wife left her husband to visit an aunt at Grahamville, South Carolina, but, without returning home, she went to Los Angeles, California, where she was located by her husband. He found her living in a small cottage on the outskirts of the city, with a man named Taylor. Taylor and his wife had previously lived.in the same house with the plaintiff and his wife, but Taylor had separated from his wife, who was suing him for a divorce; and he had left a position in Jacksonville, Florida, and accompanied the defendant to California. Here Tay
Under the law of this State the father is the natural guardian of his minor child, and the right to the custody of the child is primarily in the father. Civil Code, §§ 3020, 3021; Miller v. Wallace, 76 Ga. 479 (2 Am. St. R. 48). In that case the rule is thus stated: “Prima facie the right of custody of an infant is in the father; and where this is resisted upon the ground of his unfitness for the trust, or other causé, a proper regard for the sanctity
Judgment reversed.