Edwards v. Edwards

295 S.W. 581
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1927
DocketNo. 790-4790
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 581 (Edwards v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Edwards, 295 S.W. 581 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

POWELL, P. J.

The nature and result of this case have been admirably stated by the Court of Civil Appeals. See 288 S. W. 634. So far as the appeal is concerned but oné issue is involved, and that is a contest between the. mother of W. K. Edwards, Jr., born February 23, 1921, and Norma Evelyn Edwards, born May 11, 1922, and their paternal grandparents, over the care and custody of said children. The father and mother of the children were separated, and the father was making no effort to secure custody of his children. The parents of the father, however, alleged that the mother of the children was disqualified and unfit to rear them.

Upon a trial before the district court he awarded the boy to the grandparents and the girl to its mother. When such judgment was rendered, counsel for the mother asked the court to file findings of fact and conclusions of law. He did so. He found that neither the father nor mother of the children “had any means of support except gratuities from their respective relatives.”

The other material finding was as follows:

“Third. I find that it is to the best interest of the minor Will Knox Edwards, Jr., to be placed in the care and custody of his grandparents W. P. Edwards and wife; and that, on. account of the tender age of the little girl, Norma Evelyn Edwards, it is to her best interests, at present at least, that she be placed in the care and custody of her mother, the defendant herein.” - j

It will be observed that the" court made no finding, unless impliedly, as to the moral fitness of the mother to be awarded the custody of her children. He did say that the only means of financial support would be from relatives of their parents. Upon this point the grandparents were shown to be wealthy. They both testified they were fond of the children, and would give them the same financial assistance no matter who might be awarded their custody. So it would seem that they were to have financial support, in any event.

Being dissatisfied with the meager findings of fact aforesaid, counsel for the mother filed a request for additional findings. Among the requested findings are the following:

“First. That the defendant, Ruth Edwards, is a suitable and proper person to have the custody and care of the minor girl, Norma Evelyn Edwards.”
“Third. That the defendant, Ruth Edwards, is a suitable and proper person to have the custody and care of the minor, Will Knox Edwards, Jr., and is not disqualified to have such custody and care of said minor.”
“Sixth. That the defendant, Ruth Edwards, during her marriage with plaintiff Will Knox Edwards, has not been guilty of cruel treatment, excesses, or outrages of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable.”
“Tenth. That the defendant, Ruth Edwards, is a kind and affectionate mother, and is deeply attached to both of her children, and suffers great grief as the result of her separation from her son, Will Knox Edwards, Jr., and that she has never neglected said children or either of them, and has at all times performed the functions of a loving and attentive mother; that [582]*582the continued separation of Will Knox Edwards. Jr., from defendant, Ruth Edwards, will continue to grieve her.”

But, so far as the record shows, or so far as any one contends, the trial court refused to make aforesaid requested findings, or in any way to enlarge his original findings.

It seems to us that, at this late day, no teal controversy can arise as to the law which must govern district courts in awarding the custody of minor children. Perhaps no stronger case was ever written by our Supreme Court than that of Wood v. Dea-ton, 93 Tex. 243, 54 S. W. 901, quoted at length by the Court of Civil Appeals herein. Less than 30 days ago, this section of the Commission cited that, and other Supreme Court cases, with approval in rendering its decision in the case of Henry Castro v. Rosa Vasquez Castellanos et al., 294 S. W. 525. And it must be assumed, in all reason, that the learned trial court in the case at bar was familiar with this line of decisions which we cited in the Castro Case. And we must assume also that the trial court was endeavoring to award these children under these well-settled rules of law. If his judgment can be harmonized so as to conform to the law, it should he so construed in all fairness. In passing upon this judgment of the trial court, the Court of Civil Appeals says:

“In view of the award of the little girl to the mother, it cannot be assumed the court considered her as laboring under any disqualification to properly discharge her duty to the boy. If ■the mother was a fit person to care for her daughter, she was by the same token a fit person to care for and rear her son. The trial court seems to have attached some importance to the tender age of the little girl in awarding her custody to the mother. Upon the date of the trial the girl lacked only a few days of being three years old; the boy was only fifteen months older. We can see no reason why this slight difference in the ages of the children should have had'bearing upon the issue. Furthermore, upon an examination of the whole evidence we are convinced that it does ‘not establish with that certainty which the courts must require that the interest of the child, or of society itself, demands that he should be taken from his mother and continued in the possession of another.’
“It will serve no good purpose to state the evidence disclosed by the record. It is .sufficient to say that in the opinion of this court, after full and mature consideration of the same, it fails to show that this mother is disqualified or incompetent to properly discharge her full duty to her son, as well as her daughter; that it is to the best interest of the son that he receive the care and affection which only a mother can give him, and which his mother is fighting to bestow upon him.
“The judgment decreeing the care and custody of the minor, William Knox Edwards, Jr., to the intervenors, is reversed, and here rendered in favor of the appellant. In no other respect is the judgment of the lower court disturbed.
“Reversed and rendered.”

The grandparents, plaintiffs in error here, contend that the Court of Civil Appeals exceeded its authority in rendering final judgment ; that the extent of its authority was to remand the case, upon reversal, because the evidence as to the mother’s moral unfitness was highly conflicting, and, in any event, raised the issue upon which the trial court rendered its contrary judgment. We think this assignment must be sustained.

The Court of Civil Appeals, just prior to its language used in the last preceding quotation, referred to the fact that the Supreme Court, in the Deaton Case, reversed both lower courts, and rendered judgment for the mother of the child there involved. That is true, but the case was governed by findings of fact agreed to by all on appeal. And those findings specifically found that the mother there involved was in every way qualified to have her child. In that case there were some equities in favor of outsiders who had taken the child when the mother was unable to care for it, and under a promise from the mother that they could keep the child. ■ Since these outsiders were also qualified to raise the child, as found by the trial court, these equities were allowed to prevail in both of the lower courts.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-edwards-texcommnapp-1927.