Edwards v. Edwards

227 P.2d 975, 191 Or. 275, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 184
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 227 P.2d 975 (Edwards v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Edwards, 227 P.2d 975, 191 Or. 275, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 184 (Or. 1951).

Opinion

*277 WARNER, J.

This is an appeal from a divorce decree granting plaintiff a divorce from defendant and the custody of their only child, a son then fifteen months old. The decree also gives plaintiff the right to take the child to Australia and there live with her mother.

While the defendant concedes that the court below was right in giving the mother custody of their boy, he claims that it erred in conferring on her the right to take the child beyond the continental limits of the United States, contending that it will be contrary to their son’s welfare to do so. That is the sole question before us.

The plaintiff was born and reared in China and is the daughter of British parents. She had spent her entire life in the Orient before becoming the defendant’s war bride. For many years prior to his death in 1949, her father was manager in China for Chrysler Motors, an American concern. Her mother resides in Australia and appears not only to be in affluent circumstances but able and anxious to furnish a home for her daughter and grandson and without any contribution from the defendant.

The defendant is a man of fine academic background, regularly employed as a teacher in the public schools of this state. He was a lieutenant, in the United States Army when he married plaintiff in Calcutta in 1946.

The question raised by this appeal brings before us a tragic aftermath of a war-time marriage between parties of different nationalities who discover too late that they are unable to successfully live in harmonious *278 accord and share in common the joy of raising and educating their child. Even though this young boy is the object of our earnest solicitude and the subject of our sole concern, we are compelled to admit that the law has no perfect answer for problems such as the one which this appeal presents. At best, we can at this time only consider and apply currently known facts and having done so, hope that time and favorable circumstances will so enrich and endow the life of the unfortunate child that our present judgment will thereby be vindicated.

We repeat, our sole concern here is with the welfare of the infant son of plaintiff and defendant. The right to his custody is not a pawn to be employed as a reward to one parent nor must it be allowed to be applied as a punishment to the other. The situation confronting us is indeed unique, as is attested by the paucity of precedents for our guidance.

The only alternative to an affirmation of the lower court’s judgment is to deny plaintiff the right to remove the child from the court’s jurisdiction, and this we would have no hesitation in doing if his removal would subject him to political and social ideologies or conditions in conflict with those which have been traditionally esteemed in this country. We take judicial notice that Australia, as a place of residence, does not suggest such objections. On the other hand, if we deny plaintiff the right to establish a new home for her son beyond the borders of the United States, we are convinced that her manifested maternal devotion will never permit her to abandon her son and go thence alone. She will reluctantly and unwillingly remain in this country — a country where she has lived for so few years and those few in an unhappy environment. If *279 we should do so, we would in effect penalize her by a species of exile from a life and place for which she rightfully and naturally yearns and to which she is by training and experience adapted. We learn from the record before us that if the mother is so coerced to live in the United States with her boy, she will have to support herself and during her working hours be compelled to entrust the care of her child to the supervision of strangers or possibly relatives of defendant now unfriendly to her. We believe the consequent unhappiness of a mother so required to live and labor in a strange world to which she is linked against her will by judicial decree would undoubtedly tincture and perhaps eventually warp unfavorably the life of the child entrusted to her custody. The resultant atmosphere, under such circumstances, might be far less conducive to the welfare of the child than the promise of a more idyllic pattern of life and living offered by a new home in Australia. Had the child’s mother been a native of this country with friends and relatives here and a familiarity with our ways in the sense that she is familiar with those of her own ancestral training and background, we might find it difficult to approve the lower court’s decree.

The defendant’s repeated assertions insisting that plaintiff support herself without his financial help have tended to tarnish the sincerity of his claim to an unselfish interest in the welfare of his infant son and suggest to us that they may be the reflection of a vindictive spirit which seeks to harass and punish the mother of his boy. We are not impressed that he could not, if he would, make some contribution to that end. Defendant apparently has not learned that one who seeks equity must do equity.

*280 The authority for the circuit court’s action is found in § 9-914, O.C.L.A., as amended by ch. 228, Or. Laws, 1947, reading:

“Whenever a marriage shall be declared void or dissolved, the court shall have power further to decree as follows:
“1. For the future care and custody of the minor children of the marriage, as it may deem just and proper, having due regard to the age and sex of such children, and unless otherwise manifestly improper, giving the preference to the party not in fault.”

It has been held that the courts of this state, in the exercise of their discretion, may properly relinquish jurisdiction over the child of divorced parents and permit it to go to another state where one of its parents resides. Levell v. Levell, 183 Or. 39, 44, 190 P. 2d 527; Phillips v. Phillips, 175 Or. 14, 27, 149 P. 2d 967. This may be done even though such removal may render it inconvenient for the other parent to visit the child. Griffin v. Griffin, 95 Or. 78, 87, 187 P. 598. We also believe that the circuit courts have power in exceptional cases to permit such a child to be taken to a foreign country when the court believes it will be conducive to the best interest of the child. Wilson v. Mitchell, 48 Colo. 454, 111 P. 21; Lane v. Lane (Mo. App.) 186 S.W. 2d 47, 48.

We have not only carefully examined the record before us but, in coming to our conclusion, have given much weight to the opinion of the learned judge in the court below. He is one of the senior judges of the circuit court in terms of service with a broad experience in domestic problems requiring judicial answer. He not only had both parties before him but gave the novel *281 problem presented by this matter long and serious deliberation before coming to his final conclusion. We think that the welfare of the child will be best served by allowing the plaintiff to take her son to Australia and that the lower court did not abuse its discretion in authorizing her to do so.

There remains but one further matter for our consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P.2d 975, 191 Or. 275, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-edwards-or-1951.