Blankenship v. Brookshier

420 P.2d 800, 91 Idaho 317, 1966 Ida. LEXIS 279
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1966
Docket9841
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 420 P.2d 800 (Blankenship v. Brookshier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blankenship v. Brookshier, 420 P.2d 800, 91 Idaho 317, 1966 Ida. LEXIS 279 (Idaho 1966).

Opinion

SMITH, Justice.

This is a habeas corpus proceeding, commenced by respondent, the natural father of David Laurence Blankenship, a male minor child, 10 years of age, to obtain custody of the child from appellants, the child’s maternal grandparents. At the conclusion of a hearing the trial court entered judgment sustaining and adjudging permanent a writ of habeas corpus theretofore issued and awarded custody of the minor to respondent father.

Appellants have appealed from the judgment. Essentially, their assignments of error question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings and judgment.

Respondent married appellants’ daughter, Pearl Brookshier, on August 7, 1955. Their marital relationship was tempestuous, and after six days, Pearl left her husband and returned to her parents’ home. In November 1955, Pearl obtained a divorce. The terms of the divorce decree directed respondent to pay $100 monthly support to Pearl, who was then pregnant, until one month after the birth of the child. When respondent failed to comply with the decree, the court issued an order directing. him to show cause why he should not- be , held in contempt. Respondent testified that, as a result of the contempt proceedings, he agreed to pay Pearl whatever he could afford, which amounted to $250 until the child was born March 30, 1956. Respondent also paid the hospital and medical bills incurred during Pearl’s pregnancy.

After David’s birth Pearl and her son lived with appellants in Grangeville. Pearl returned to high school and worked parttime during the next four years. Appellants cared for David during their daughter’s school or working hours. In the spring of 1960 Pearl married Bruce Wallace and bore her second child, Bruce Wallace, Jr. Pearl, Wallace, and the two children moved to Massachusetts in November 1962, but within two months Pearl, alone and divorced, returned with her children to appellants’ home.

David remained with his mother and half-brother in appellants’ home until December 1962 when Pearl married Gene Mager. Pearl moved to a trailer court with her new husband, leaving the two boys with appellants. Not until July 1963 did David reside with his mother, but even then Pearl’s recurrent poor health compelled the return of David to appellants’ home. In 1965 David briefly resided with his mother, until Pearl gave birth to her third child, Michele Mager, in April of that year.

The ensuing summer Pearl and her husband, accompanied by David, moved to New Meadows. There, on November 14, 1965, Pearl died. Appellants again took David into their home.

During Pearl’s lifetime, respondent maintained a continuing interest in the welfare of his son. The evidence shows that respondent visited Pearl and the infant soon after his birth; that respondent frequently visited David while he was in either appellants’ or Pearl’s care, and that David, on several occasions, visited responden! at his home.

*320 Respondent testified that he paid $35 per month in support payments until April 1960, when Pearl married Bruce Wallace. According to respondent, Pearl stated that “as long as she was married, she wouldn’t need the money, and [respondent] wouldn’t have to pay it.” After divorcing Wallace, Pearl remained single for ten months, living with her two children. During that interval, respondent neither paid nor offered to pay any support to Pearl, nor did Pearl request any support money. After Mager married Pearl, Mager not only volunteered to support the two children, hut declined to accept support money from respondent.

Respondent served in the United States Army during the Korean War. Upon his return to civilian life, he was implicated in minor criminal proceedings. In 1956, apparently while intoxicated, he created a disturbance at a restaurant where Pearl worked, but the charges growing out of that incident were dropped. In February 1957, he was charged with reckless driving. Finally, in July 1957, he was charged and convicted of petit larceny for stealing gasoline from a parked vehicle for which offense the court imposed, and then suspended, a three-month jail sentence.

Respondent’s primary source of income is from his work as a logger. The trial court found that he averages nine months’ work each year and earns a gross average of $162 a week. For approximately three months each year, due to the seasonal nature of employment in the logging industry, he is unable to find work and draws unemployment compensation.

After respondent’s divorce from Pearl, he married his present wife, Deanna, in August 1957. Respondent and Deanna, whose ages are thirty-one and twenty-six years respectively, have five children of their own, ranging in age from one to seven years.

Early in respondent's second marriage respondent commenced divorce proceedings against Deanna. A separation agreement followed. Respondent and Deanna lived apart for two weeks and then became reconciled. Since that time, the two have enjoyed a harmonious marital relationship. Their children receive religious training from their mother and have frequent family picnics and outings.

Respondent, his wife, and their five children live in an enlarged and converted former lumber yard office. The structure presently has two bedrooms, but respondent intends to add two additional bedrooms which will double the size of the accommodations.

Appellants, at the time of the hearing, were fifty-five years of age. They have been married thirty-seven years and have reared four children. They own a three-bedroom home in Grangeville. They presently care for David’s half-brother, Bruce Wallace, Jr. The parties stipulated that appellants were fit and competent people to have custody of David should the court grant them that right.

The best interests of a child being of paramount importance, the court will consider myriad factors bearing upon the child’s welfare, including the child’s age and sex, its prior custody and all other circumstances affecting its future well-being. In Nelson v. Standefer, 87 Idaho 83, 90, 390 P.2d 838, 841 (1964), the court stated that “The child’s welfare as a normal human being and future citizen is the polar star by which the court must be guided in awarding its custody.” See also Freund v. English, 83 Idaho 140, 358 P.2d 1038 (1961); Application of Altmiller, 76 Idaho 521, 285 P.2d 1064 (1955); Roosma v. Moots, 62 Idaho 450, 112 P.2d 1000 (1941).

The jurisdiction of the trial court to determine child custody under a writ of habeas corpus .is of an equitable nature, and the court is given large discretion in the matter. Application of Altmiller, supra; Andrino v. Yates, 12 Idaho 618, 87 P. 787 (1906). This is not to say, however, that each habeas corpus proceeding is decided simply by weighing the plaintiff’s parental merits against those of the defendant. The *321 legislature and courts of this 'state have recognized that a parent has a natural right to the care, custody and control of his child against other lineal or collateral relatives. Freund v. English, supra, 83 Idaho at 144, 358 P.2d at 1041; Moss v.

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Bluebook (online)
420 P.2d 800, 91 Idaho 317, 1966 Ida. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenship-v-brookshier-idaho-1966.