Evans v. Lane

70 S.E. 603, 8 Ga. App. 826, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1911
Docket2864
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 70 S.E. 603 (Evans v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Lane, 70 S.E. 603, 8 Ga. App. 826, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 166 (Ga. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

Bussell, J.

Mrs. M. J. Lane sued out a writ of habeas corpus against J. H.«Evans Jr., for the possession of Willie Evans, an infant daughter of the defendant, a little over two years old. The petitioner alleged, that the mother of the child, who was her daughter, died when it was three weeks.old, and that the child was thereafter cared for and adopted by her with the consent of its father; that he had failed ever since the death of the mother of the child to provide necessaries for its maintenance, and that it had been supported and nursed in illness and in health by the petitioner and her children; that the child is delicate and requires the care of a physician, and that the petitioner is familiar with the condition of the child and its physical needs as no one else is. It is further alleged, 'that the child was fraudulently enticed away from the petitioner by the defendant, who has married a second.time, and that his second wife is youn'g and inexperienced in the care of children,' not capable of caring for the infant in its present physical condition, nor familiar with its physical needs, and that the best interest of the child demands that its custody be immediately restored to its grandmother. Upon the hearing the evidence was conflicting. The defendant denied that he had ever surrendered the parental control of his child to his mother-in-law, but stated that shé took it to take care of it temporarily; that he visited, it frequently and left money with his mother-in-law and sisters-in-law sufficient to meet its needs,' in addition to supplying it himself with some articles of clothing as well as with a cow. The evidence may be said to show that both the plaintiff and the defendant are financially able to care for the child. The testimony of the grandmother was that when Mrs. Evans, her daughter, ’died on the eighth day after the birth of the child she told “Jim” (the father) that she wanted the baby, and asked him what he was going to do with it. It does not appear that he made any decision at that time, though he said that if he could not keep it himself, lie would rather she should have it than any one else. A few days afterwards, according to her testimony, the father told her that she could get the child, that she was at Mr. Henry McCall’s, and the plaintiff sent for the infant. The [828]*828baby was quite sick at that time. The only other- child of the defendant, a little older than this baby, had died before Mrs. Evans’ death. The paternal grandmother of the infant was not able to take care of it, and the father asked his mother-in-law to send for the child two or three days after its mother died. There was testimony by other witnesses for the plaintiff that the defendant had told her in their presence that if he could not keep the baby himself, he would rather that she would have it than any other person on earth; this in response to her request that he give her the baby; and that after he had decided it was impossible for him to keep it, he requested her to send for it, which she did. A physician testified that he had treated the little girl for the past year or two, at the request of the grandmother, and the grandmother had paid him; that she was a very frail little baby, suffered with indigestion, and, when he was first called, it was in an emaciated condition; that its grandmother gave it the very best attention. These are the most maT terial facts extracted from a voluminous brief of evidence.

As we view it, the evidence would have aüthorized the judge to award the custody of the child to either party. Doubtless he awarded to the father the ultimate, permanent custody and control of the child because the testimony of the grandmother in regard to the gift of the child by its father to herself was not as clear and definite as it might have been. Though she asked the father to give her the child, and though, after considering the matter, he asked her to send for it, his language at the time of the request was to the effect that he would rather that she would keep the child than any one else. It is true that, according to the testimony, he did not offer to pay the expenses for attention, medical and otherwise, nor nurse the child when it was sick. According to some of the testimony he did not even come to see it during one of its spells of very severe illness, but it was undenied that he at various times had given different sums of money to the grandmother to be expended for it, and that he -bought some necessary articles for it/ and gave the grandmother a cow, doubtless to be used in nourishing the child, and these circumstances would support the inference that when he told her to send- for the child, that lie would rather she should keep it than any one else on earth, lie meant only to temporarily place the child in the keeping of its grandmother, and did not intend to relinquish his parental rights. The judge of [829]*829the city court adjudged the custody of the little girl to be permanently awarded to the father, subject to the conditions and restrictions following, and it is to so much of the judgment as relates to this that the father has excepted : “When said child shall attain the age of seven years her custody shall be permanently in the father, J. H. Evans 'Jr. But in the meantime the possession of said minor child, Willie Evans, is awarded jointly to both plaintiff, Mrs. M. J. Lane, and J. H. Evans Jr., to be divided as follows: The father is to have the custody of said child until one week from this day, then it is to be delivered to the said grandmother to have the child one month. At the expiration of the month the custody of said child shall be redelivered to the father for one month, and then redelivered to Mrs. M. J. Lane, the grandmother, for a like length of time. Said custody to alternate between the two parties for each succeeding month in the manner aforesaid until the child attains the age of seven years.” It is further provided that the father shall send for the child when his time to have it shall come, and its grandmother, Mrs. Lane, shall deliver the child to him, and the grandmother in like manner shall send for the child when her time comes to have possession of it, and it shall be delivered to her by the father. The plaintiff in error excepts upon the ground that the provision relating to the possession of the minor child is against the interest of the minor child, that to place it in this divided custody of different parties will render it impossible for the father to properly control or protect it, and because such division of time is contrary to law, because it is an abuse of the court’s discretion, in that, the father being entitled to the custody of the child, there is no law to compel him to surrender such possession or control at any period of the child’s minority.

We find no error in the judgment. The case is one of a kind which is not infrequent where a young man, who at the death of his wife is left with the care of a helpless babe, marries again. According to the evidence in the case, the mother of the young father was not so situated-as that she could care for the baby. Tt was sent to Mrs. McCall’s, where it stayed for two or three days. The little one was frail to begin with, and was at that time quite ill with an infantile disorder. The old grandmother, as was natural, had begged her son-in-law at the funeral to give her this eight-days old baby, the only child of the daughter she was burying. The young man, no [830]*830doubt, possessed the fatherly instinct in a strong degree, and he did not at that time consent to give up his child.

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.E. 603, 8 Ga. App. 826, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-lane-gactapp-1911.