Cook v. Echols
This text of 80 So. 680 (Cook v. Echols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
“The laws’of nature teach us that the relation of parent and child is sacred, that the welfare of the child is conserved by the cultivation and promotion of that affection which should exist between parent and child, and that as a general proposition no one can watch over the growth and development of the child as a loving father or mother can and will. Consequently it is recognized that, other* things being equal, the parent is not only under the sacred duty of providing and caring for his child, but that, in correlation of that duty, the parent is entitled to the care and custody of his child, unless some good cause is shown why he should not have such care and custody, not merely as a matter of right, but because the law presumes that the best interests of the child are thereby sub-served.” Montgomery v. Hughes, supra.
The controversy here is between the father and mother as petitioners, on the one. side, and the appellees, who are not in any way related to the child, on the other. The evidence shows that during the affliction of the mother with a mental derangement to such an extent that she was committed to the insane hospital for treatment, the father, not being able to properly care for the child, which was then a baby only 6 months old, committed it to the custody of appellees, who retained its custody without question until a short time before the petition in this case was filed, and have cared for it as their own covering a period of about 12 months — a neighborly charity and sympathy that is commendable, A short time before the petition was filed, the mother, having fully recovered, returned to her family, and demanded the custody of her child, and the evidence shows that the petitioners, accompanied the demand with an offer to pay the respondents for their trouble and expense in caring for the child during the time it had been in their custody, but they refused to accept this offer or to restore the child to petitioners,, and this proceeding is the result.
The only material difference in the condition in life of the parties, as shown by the evidence, is that the respondents have been more fortunate in accumulating, and own their own home, while the petitioners lived in a one-room cabin situated on the Hartselle Pike, in which they have two beds and other belongings such as are essential to their condition in life, the family consisting of the petitioners, one little girl, and the child in question. The evidence shows that the petitioners sustain a good character, that the father is a good worker, and has in the past supported his family suitable to their station in life.
Keversed and rendered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
80 So. 680, 16 Ala. App. 606, 1918 Ala. App. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-echols-alactapp-1918.