Boone v. Boone

150 F.2d 153, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 152, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2744
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 1945
Docket8873
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 150 F.2d 153 (Boone v. Boone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boone v. Boone, 150 F.2d 153, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 152, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2744 (D.C. Cir. 1945).

Opinion

MILLER, Associate Justice.

In the District Court a suit was brought on behalf of two young children, appellees *154 herein, by their next friend to determine their custody. The court found that (1) the children have resided, actually and continuously, in the District of Columbia with their father since November 1940; (2) the children have a strong attachment for their father, are thoroughly accustomed to their present home; their associations and environments are of the best; they are well established in excellent schools and reside in close proximity to excellent Army hospitals, to which they have access as children of an Army officer; (3) the older child does not wish to live with the mother but, instead, prefers to remain with his father; (4) the younger child does not even remember her mother; (5) the devoted care of the father for the last five years has brought about an adjustment in the lives of the children which insures their continued welfare and happiness; (6) the testimony of appellees’ witnesses as to the unfitness of the mother to take over the care and custody of the children is substantially true; (7) the testimony of appellant and her witnesses is unconvincing. The court concluded that the present welfare of the children would be best served by awarding custody to the father. It entered judgment accordingly; at the same time giving to the mother the right to visit them at times mutually convenient.

Appellant says that although the present action was brought in the name of the children, it was in fact a continuation of litigation between the parents; that judgments adverse to the father, both in North Carolina and in the District, 1 which he has failed to obey, are res judicata of the present case; hence, that the District Court was without jurisdiction, or, in the alternative, should have refused to exercise jurisdiction. This contention misses the point. 2 That parents have quarreled, litigated, or contested custody may constitute circumstances for the consideration of the trial court, but does not foreclose jurisdiction. 3 Neither is the question one of a convenient or inconvenient forum.

These children, being in the District of Columbia, are subject to the jurisdiction of its courts. 4 The question for the trial court is the welfare of the children. This consideration overrides all others, even where, unlike the present case, the proceeding is in habeas corpus. 5 The rights of the parents, in all cases, must yield to the interest and welfare of the children. 6 If the pleadings and evidence revealed a situation which required action, it was the duty of the court to act in behalf of these children and for their protection, regardless of anything previously said or done by any court. 7 Our function under *155 such circumstances is, only, to review the question whether the trial court properly exercised its discretion with a view to the present welfare of the children. 8

Undoubtedly, the presumption that small children are better off with their mother is entitled to weight. 9 But in the present case, Mrs. Boone voluntarily surrendered the custody of these children in 1940 when they were, respectively, five and two years old; they were taken to Washington, D. C., by their father at that time, and have lived there with him ever since. The mother had seen the children so infrequently between 1940 and the time of trial in 1944 that the younger child did not know her and the older child had no desire to live with her. The evidence is in serious conflict as to the reason for the mother’s seeming indifference to her children during their tender years; but it is apparent that neither financial inability nor conflicting duties prevented her from seeing them. The record seems clear, as the trial court found, that the children have great affection for their father and he for them; that they are happy in their home, neighborhood and school life. 10

Although the present proceeding is in the name of the children, appellant’s argument is pitched, largely, upon the adversary rights of the parents; much weight is given to judgments entered, orders issued and disobeyed. We may as well recognize that such considerations are very unreal in the case of parents and children. In doing so we do not for a moment sanction kidnapping or encourage contempt of court. The important consideration is that when a court is confronted with a question of custody, it is required to act as parens patriae. 11 Under such circumstances, children cannot be used as pawns in a game of legal chess to work out conceptions of status and property rights. 12

In some of our decisions we have spoken of changes, in the circumstances which there surrounded children, as indicating whether or not orders should be entered changing custody. 13 A necessary limitation upon the suggested test was succinctly stated by Judge Edgerton in the earlier Boone case: 14 “This is simply to say that we should not needlessly thresh over old straw, but should apply the doctrine of res judicata as far as the nature of the case permits.” A custody award is subject to change, in the court in which it was made, upon a proper showing, so long as the court has control of the child. When the child comes under the control of another jurisdiction, its courts have equal power. Whichever court exercises that power should respect the earlier judgment, to the extent that issues there presented were then judicially determined. *156 To that extent the doctrine of res judicata and the full faith and credit clause should apply. When changes in circumstances have intervened, they may indicate the need for a new award of custody. When an earlier award has been made, casually, upon a consent basis, or without full inquiry — or when the decision, and the record back of it, reveals that it is based upon considerations of illegality of detention, res judicata and other such formulae — that decision is entitled to little weight in another court which, later, faces squarely the question of the child’s present welfare. 15

Thus, in the Cook case, 16 as in the present case, a parent who had actual custody of children in the District of Columbia defied a court order.

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Bluebook (online)
150 F.2d 153, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 152, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boone-v-boone-cadc-1945.