Creech v. Lewis

211 S.W.2d 812, 307 Ky. 799, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 785
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 11, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 211 S.W.2d 812 (Creech v. Lewis) 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
Creech v. Lewis, 211 S.W.2d 812, 307 Ky. 799, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 785 (Ky. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court bt

Morris, Commissioner

Reversing.

Appellant, who was Peggy Ann Warf, was married in 1943 to James Creech, a son of appellee. The girl child, who is the subject of controversy, was born in June 1944, at a time when the husband was in the Army, and who is still in service in Germany. About one year after the birth of the child Peggy Ann secured a divorce from James Creech. It appears that the child’s custody was not determined in the divorce judgment, but following the divorce the child and mother remained with the *800 family of appellant’s mother, Mrs. Enla Warf, until December 1947 when under some court proceeding between Mrs. Lewis and Mrs. Warf (maternal grandmother) the court awarded custody to Mrs. Lewis. We take it that the move on Mrs. Lewis’ part was occasioned by the fact that Peggy Ann had theretofore signed a paper in which she released the custody of the child Phyllis to Mrs. Lewis “to be cared for and educated according to her ability and standing in life” with right of visitation by the mother at intervals. This paper was signed in April 1946.

It is not clear that Mrs. Lewis took custody of Phyllis upon execution of the paper, but it seems that following its execution Peggy Ann went to Baltimore to work, but returned to her mother’s home in Cumberland in the early part of December 1947, upon hearing of the litigation between the grandparents under which custody was awarded to Mrs. Lewis.

In explanation of the execution of the contract mentioned appellant said when it was made she was about 17 or 18 years of age; she was working and her mother and father had gone to Virginia, and she asked Mrs. Lewis to take care of the baby over the week-end, and she said she would not unless appellant signed a writing saying “I would let her take care of the baby.” She testified that she did not read the paper and was under the belief that the custody was only temporary, and she did not intend to release the child forever. The record shows that the father of Phyllis makes a monthly allotment of $42 for the child; each contesting side asserting that the handling of this money is the real casus belli, not a far-fetched assumption.

On December 30, 1947, appellant obtained a writ of habeas corpus in the quarterly court, which was returned to the circuit court. In her petition she alleged some of the foregoing facts, and plead that she being the mother of the child was legally entitled to its custody; that the defendants Mrs. Lewis and her husband were not suitable persons to have her custody; that the home where the family lived (at Sand Hill) was an immoral home, setting out specific instances of law violations. She stated that she was amply able to work and support the infant, and that she has a good home with *801 her parents, who have a good income. She said that appellee was an elderly woman, and nnahle to give the child proper attention and care. The response of defendants was merely a denial, and affirmative assertion that they have a good home and are properly caring for the child and her best interest will be served by their retention of control, and that appellant is an unfit person to have her custody.

At the hearing more than 25 witnesses testified, and from much of the testimony it may be said that considerable ill-feeling existed between the parties. At the conclusion the court dismissed the writ. In his memorandum opinion, made part of the record, the court aptly and correctly refers to the matter as “one of those unfortunate cases where the grandparents on one side and the parent on the other have a controversy over custody •of this child.” He referred to the case of last December when the child was turned over to Mrs. Lewis. The court stated the rule to be that ordinarily the parent of a young child is entitled to its custody as against the grandparent “unless the parent has made an agreement to turn the child over to its grandparent, and this is one of those cases, and an exception to the rule.” The court expressed the view that “both sides are good families and I think perhaps the child would be in good hands of the grandparents.” He said “the mother had no settled place to board, at any rate she has been in Baltimore for quite a while and her parents have had the care of the child, but before she went up there in April she made this arrangement and turned over the child to them, and though she is a minor she is the mother of the child.”

It seems that the court gave more consideration to. the effect of the agreement than to what would be to the best interest of the child, though he did conclude that the child would be in good care with the grandparents ; we may take this to mean both the grandparents on paternal and maternal sides; we further gather that it was the expressed intention of appellant to remain in Cumberland with her parents, who seem to be able and willing to accept such an arrangement.

It would serve no great purpose to detail the testimony of the numerous witnesses pro and con. The *802 proof does not show an eminently satisfactory situation on either side, and, as in many of such cases, this court is confronted with a difficult problem in reaching a conclusion as to what appears to be the best welfare of this child, who will soon be four years of age.

Some dozen or more witnesses testified for the mother and about an equal number for the grandparent, and we are to undertake the striking of a balance from what is presented for our consideration. The witnesses, aside from the two parties, were members of the families, or friends and neighbors, with some who were apparently disinterested.

Prom appellant’s testimony we gather that the Warfs (parents of appellant) have a good home at Cumberland. The father and one brother of appellant are coal miners and say they average wages at around $350 per month, and appear to be willing to assist in the care and upkeep of the child. Appellee, about 44 years of age, owns and operates a grocery store at Sand Hill, the store being located on a highway. The family, appellee and her husband, to whom she has been married about 5 years, have living quarters in the store building, consisting of a sitting room, one bedroom, kitchen, and bath.

A number of witnesses said that the general reputation for morality of the Lewis family was bad. It was testified that Mr. Lewis had served a term in Atlanta for violation of the liquor laws, and also a short jail sentence for a like violation. These charges were-admitted, though with what to him appeared reasonable-excuses. It was also shown that a son of Mrs. Lewis and two stepsons had prison records, though she says-they strayed from proper paths after she had lost control of them. It was shown that Mrs. Lewis had had trouble with neighbors, one the family of Sco-tts, which resulted in a shooting out of her store windows while Scott was shooting at her, and also in having Mrs. Lewis-placed under a peace bond. She had a fight with another neighbor striking her on the head with a bottle. There-was proof that the Lewis folks had a reputation for-bootlegging. There had been several raids on the store- or home, but nothing of incriminating nature was found. There was a bit of evidence by the mother of Peggy *803

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Related

Paul v. Paul
211 S.W.2d 865 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1948)
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211 S.W.2d 412 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.2d 812, 307 Ky. 799, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creech-v-lewis-kyctapphigh-1948.