Bridges v. Matthews

122 S.W.2d 1021, 276 Ky. 59, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 531
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 16, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 1021 (Bridges v. Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridges v. Matthews, 122 S.W.2d 1021, 276 Ky. 59, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 531 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Affirming.

. We are faced with the unpleasant task of deciding whether the parent or grandparent is entitled to the custody of a child.

*60 The appellant, J. G. Bridges, married Sabra Matthews, the daughter of appellee, Nettie Matthews, and to this marriage one child, Robert Ellis Bridges, was born July 12, 1926. Sabra Matthews died January 28, 1930, in Gary, Indiana, where her husband was employed. She was buried at Glasgow, Kentucky, and a few days after the funeral appellant returned to Gary, Indiana, leaving his child with the latter’s grandmother, Nettie Matthews. For several years thereafter appellant had no regular employment, but worked from time to time in Kansas, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. He married in October, 1935, and since then he and his wife have lived in Newport, Kentucky, where he is regularly employed as a truck driver. His wages average about $125 a month. On June 26, 1936, he brought this action in the Barren circuit court against Nettie Matthews, alleging that he was a moral, sober, discreet, and fit person to have the care and custody of his child, Robert Ellis Bridges, and asking for a mandatory injunction ■requiring the defendant to surrender the child to him. In her answer, the defendant pleaded and relied upon a contract, alleged to have been entered into a few days after her daughter’s death, by which appellant gave to her the care and custody of the child upon condition that she would rear him. She also alleged that it was essential to the future welfare of the child that his care and custody should be retained by her. The suitability and fitness of appellant to have the custody and control of the child was contested, but the proof shows he is sober, honest, and industrious, and a fit and proper person to have charge of his child. His. wife is a woman of exemplary character. A large amount of proof was taken, much of it directed to the suitability of the respective parties to have the custody of the child, but the only matters worthy of consideration are the alleged contract concerning the child’s custody and the effect to be given to it, and the welfare of the child. The chancellor found that appellant and appellee entered into an agreement shortly after the death of the child’s mother whereby the appellee should take the child and rear him and have custody of him. He also found that the welfare of the child would be better served by leaving him with his grandmother.

The appellee lives in a four-room cottage situated five miles from the city of Glasgow. Her daughter, Clarine Matthews, and her son, Virgil Kincheloe, half *61 tmele of Robert Ellis Bridges, live with ber. The ap-pellee was 57 years of age when ber deposition was taken. The title to the bouse and 1% acres of land on which it is located is in the appellee’s son and daughter, who contribute out of their earnings to the support of the family. Clarine Matthews works at a garment factory in Glasgow and earns $11 to $13 a week, while Virgil Kincheloe works at a sawmill and earns $12 a week. Their home is located in a good neighborhood, near a school and church, and the proof shows they have provided amply for the comfort of Robert Ellis Bridges during all the time he has lived with them. The appel-lee, her son and daughter, though poor, are persons of good moral character, and are devoted to the child and he to them. When Robert Bridges was asked if he wanted to go to Newport and live with his father and stepmother, he replied: “No, sir; I had rather die than to go.” The appellee testified as follows concerning the alleged contract:

“Q. How long has Robert Ellis Bridges been living with you? A. Seven years.
“Q. Tell the circumstances under which he ■came to live with you Mrs. Matthews. A. Well, when my daughter died and when she was buried, Garland stayed in a few days and he was going back to his home in Gary, Indiana. I was sitting by the stove in my room giving Robert a bath, and Garland said ‘Well, it will be kinda hard to go back without Sabra or Robert either,’ and I said, £Oh! are you going to leave Robert with me?’ He said, ‘Tes, Sabra has told me several times that if you outlive me, I want Mama to have Robert,’ and of course, I was glad, and Garland said he wanted me to have him too. Garland, you said it child to me that morning that you left for Gary.
“Q. Did you rely upon his promise to leave the child with you? A. Yes.
‘ ‘ Q. What did he say in promising to leave that child with you? I mean what did Garland Bridges say? A. Well, he said he wanted me to have him too; that he wanted me to raise him; that he could be better satisfied with Robert with me than he could with anyone else.
“Q. Did he say anything at all about whether *62 he was coming back for him? A. No, and of course, after G-arland went home, it might have been two weeks, he sent Sabra’s trunk and all of Robert’s clothes and playpretties, and of course, I taken it for granted, of course, that he meant what he told me.”

Appellant denied that such a contract was made, but we are not disposed to disturb the chancellor’s finding in that respect. Conceding for present purposes that the contract was made as claimed by appellee, it appears that she, aided by her son and daughter, has faithfully performed the duties ordinarily incumbent upon a parent. The child has had a happy home life, has been surrounded with wholesome influences, and his affection for his • grandmother, uncle, and aunt is deep and sincere. Speaking of their care of him, the chancellor, in his opinion, said:

“The boy shows the results of their training and appears to be a fine, manly, healthy little fellow who will be much better off in this country home than he would be in the custody of the plaintiff.”

The appellant, probably through no fault of his own, has seen little of his child during the last nine years, and has been able to contribute only nominally to his support. Now that he has a home and is able to support his child, it is only natural that he should desire to regain his possession, but, under the circumstances of this case, the child’s welfare is the paramount fact to be considered. Section 2016 of the Kentucky Statutes provides that the surviving parent, if suited to the trust, shall, have the custody, nurture, and education of his or her infant child, and this court has rarely given the custody of a child to a grandparent or stranger in pref-. erence to the parent. Johnson v. Cook, 274 Ky. 841, 120 S. W. (2d) 675, and cases therein cited. In Thompson v. Childers, 231 Ky. 179, 21 S. W. (2d) 247, a contract whereby a father surrendered the custody of his children to others was upheld, and, in the opinion, it was said that once having surrendered possession of children voluntarily and freely a parent may not take them away from those to whom he surrendered them without first showing that it would be for the best interest of the children to do so. The evidence in this case shows that the child, now 12% years of age, has a good home in a good community, and that those with whom *63 he has lived nearly all of his life are devoted to him and willingly performing for his welfare all that eonld he desired.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W.2d 1021, 276 Ky. 59, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridges-v-matthews-kyctapphigh-1938.