Davis v. Hadox

114 S.E.2d 468, 145 W. Va. 233, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 23
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1960
Docket12009
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 114 S.E.2d 468 (Davis v. Hadox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Hadox, 114 S.E.2d 468, 145 W. Va. 233, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 23 (W. Va. 1960).

Opinion

Given, Judge:

The petition of Maxine Marion Sayre Davis, filed in the Circuit Court of Marion County, against Jack L. Hadox and Dorothy Hadox, husband and wife, prayed that a writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum be directed to defendants, requiring them to deliver custody of an infant daughter of petitioner, Donna Lee Sayre, to petitioner. The trial court, after considering evidence adduced by the parties, awarded custody of the child to petitioner.

The child was born July 12, 1952, out of wedlock, in a foundling home in Pittsburgh. After eleven days, the home, with the understanding of the mother, made an arrangement with the Department of Public Assistance of West Virginia, whereby the child was taken to Fairmont, West Virginia, by the mother, and placed in a foster home. The mother of the child agreed to, and apparently did, reimburse the Department of Public Assistance for the sum paid to the foster home for the care of the child. After two and one half months the child was, by the Department of Public Assistance, with the consent of the mother, removed to the home of defendants, where it remained for approximately fourteen months. The mother reimbursed the Department of Public Assistance, at least in part, for the amount paid by it for the care of the child during the fourteen months. At the end of the fourteen months, petitioner took the child from the home of *235 defendants to the home of her brother, where petitioner was living, where it was kept for approximately one month, until November 30, 1953. There is testimony to the effect, though denied, that defendants, at the time the mother took the child from the home, requested that they be permitted to permanently have the child, if the mother ever decided to permanently surrender its custody. The Department of Public Assistance apparently had no connection with the placement of the child subsequent to the time the mother removed it from the home of defendants to the home of the brother. The record discloses no agreement of the mother to transfer, either temporarily or permanently, custody of the child to the Department of Public Assistance.

On November 30, 1953, the mother telephoned a Mrs. Vernon, stepmother of Mrs. Hadox, that she, the mother of the child, desired that defendants come to the home where the child was being cared for and take it into their custody. The litigants have different versions as to the purpose and effect of the telephone conversation, petitioner contending that it was understood that defendants were to have only temporary custody of the child, and defendants contending that it was definitely understood that they were to have permanent custody.

The message delivered by telephone to Mrs. Vernon was immediately conveyed to defendants who, on the same evening, went to the home of the brother and found the child in the care of a Mrs. Sayre, sister in law of petitioner, and its clothes, ready for delivery to defendants. It has remained in the home of defendants since November 30, 1953. The mother, at the time of delivery of custody of the child to defendants, absented herself from the home of her brother, apparently for the purpose of avoiding observance of the actual delivery of the child.

Petitioner, on being asked as to the telephone conversation concerning delivery of the child to defendants, stated: “I explained the conditions as they *236 were. I told her I had no money. I did not want to put the child in an institution of any kind. I asked her if she would take the child temporarily. I explained to her my financial condition. I said I would do what I could. She said that was all right. ’ ’ Though petitioner testified that the telephone conversation was with Mrs. Hadox, it is clearly established that it was with Mrs. Yernon. Mrs. Sayre, sister in law of petitioner, who was present at the time the mother of the child telephoned the request for defendants to come for the child, was asked: “On that occasion, did you hear what was said by Maxine in that connection?”; to which she answered: “Yes, she explained the circumstances and asked them if they would take Donna Lee and take care of her until circumstances permitted her to take her back.”

Mrs. Yernon, stepmother of Mrs. Hadox, who received the telephone message from the mother, testified that the mother stated that “she would like for Dorothy to come and take the baby or the child, take her as her own; that things couldn’t go on like they were; that there had to be some changes ”. Mr. Yernon, father of the defendant Mrs. Hadox, was present with Mrs. Yernon at the time of the telephone conversation and was asked: “What was the substance of that conversation between your wife and this woman on that occasion?”, to which he answered: “She called and wanted to know if Dorothy and Jack would like to take Susie back and keep her; she told her yes, she would be glad to take her and we would be there immediately and take her”. The defendant, Jack L. Hadox, testified to the effect that it was their understanding that when he and Mrs. Hadox took the child the last time, they were to “keep her as our own”. The defendant Mrs. Hadox testified that at the time the child was delivered to defendants, on November 30, 1953, Mrs. Sayre, who delivered the child for the mother, was told to thank the mother “for letting me have the child to keep her as our own child”. The statement is denied by Mrs. Sayre. Other testimony, *237 vigorously denied, though to some extent corroborated, is to the effect that the mother made certain statements, about 1957 or 1958, indicating that she had at the time of the delivery of custody of the child intended defendants to permanently retain its custody.

Two qualified witnesses, not mentioned above, testified to the effect that the best interests of the child required that it he reared in the home of defendants. Defendants were precluded by the trial court from producing other testimony to like effect, hut no witness was produced by petitioner who denied the testimony offered by the two witnesses. The trial court stated: ‘ ‘I want the record to show as far as this Court is concerned this child is in a perfectly fine good home; it has been well cared for; just as good or better than it would in Maine, so far as I am concerned, and the people in it.”

The mother of the child was thirty years of age at the time of the taking of the depositions. Prior to the birth of the child involved she gave birth to an illegitimate boy, May 29, 1949, the father of both children being a married man. The boy was placed in a home for care and subsequently a nonsupport proceeding was prosecuted against the father, wherein the father agreed, September 15, 1952, to pay the sum of thirty five hundred dollars for the support of the boy, to he paid in monthly sums of fifty dollars. Subsequently the mother received from the father, on the contract, at least, the sum of fifteen hundred dollars and the sum of four hundred dollars, part of which was used by her to pay for the care of the boy and to reimburse the Department of Public Assistance for certain sums expended for the support of the child here involved, before November 30, 1953. Apparently the mother attempted to obtain no support from the father for the child here involved. It is clear that petitioner contributed nothing toward the care or support of the child here involved subsequent to November 30, 1953, and that defendants requested no assistance as to such care or support.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.E.2d 468, 145 W. Va. 233, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-hadox-wva-1960.