Fuhrman v. Arvin

153 P.2d 165, 21 Wash. 2d 828
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1944
DocketNo. 29473.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 165 (Fuhrman v. Arvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuhrman v. Arvin, 153 P.2d 165, 21 Wash. 2d 828 (Wash. 1944).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying a petition in which W. J. Fuhrman and Ethel Fuhrman, husband and wife, sought to have awarded to them the temporary care, custody, and control of two minor children who were strangers to the blood of the petitioners but who were alleged to have been abandoned by their parents. We shall hereinafter refer to the petitioners as appellants, and to the chief probation officer of the juvenile court of Spokane county, who resisted the petition, as respondent.

*829 The two children involved in this proceeding are Delores Radtke, who was born April 17, 1935, and Ethel Radtke, who was born April 4, 1937. The parents of these two children are Herbert E. Radtke and Delilah J. Radtke, who were united in marriage in June, 1934, and thereafter lived in Spokane until some time in 1943. Two other children, several years younger than the two mentioned above, were born of this union, but they are not directly involved in this appeal.

Appellants, W. J. Fuhrman and Ethel Fuhrman, were residents of Spokane for many years prior to 1943. They first became acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Radtke in the latter part of 1936 or the early part of 1937, when Delores was about seventeen months old; this was a few months prior to the birth of Ethel. Mrs. Fuhrman was then about forty-one years of age, and Mr. Fuhrman was about ten years her senior. The record does not disclose whether or not Mrs. Fuhrman has been married more than once, but it does appear that she has had three children, none of whom, however, was living during the period involved in this proceeding.

At the time the two families became acquainted with each other, the Radtkes were not only in straitened financial- circumstances, but also were having considerable marital difficulties which continued steadily throughout their married life. A short time before the second child, Ethel, was born, the Radtkes were evicted from the apartment in which they lived and were destitute, being without food or money. In that condition, they came to the home of the appellants, bringing with them the infant Delores, and were given sustenance and shelter. Although the Fuhrmans were people of modest circumstances, the record is replete with evidence of their exceeding charity and kindness toward the Radtkes over a long period of time.

Shortly before Mrs. Radtke was to be confined, in April, 1937, she went to the home of one of her relatives where she remained until after the baby, Ethel, was born. In the meantime, Mr. Radtke and the infant Delores remained temporarily with the Fuhrmans and were cared for by *830 them. Mrs. Fuhrman devoted a great part of her time to preparing food and making clothes for the child.

A week or ten days after the birth of Ethel, Mrs. Radtke seems to have incurred the displeasure of her relative and was ordered to leave the place where she was then staying. She thereupon returned to the home of the Fuhrmans, bringing the new-born babe with her. The relations between Mr. and Mrs. Radtke seem to have been severely strained about this same time, however, and within a few days thereafter Mrs. Radtke departed, leaving both children with the Fuhrmans, and some time later joined a “carnival” traveling about the country. From that time forward until March, 1942, as will appear later in more detail, the Fuhrmans had the exclusive care and custody of Ethel, the younger of the two children, with-the knowledge, consent, and desire of Mr. Radtke. At various intervals, and for a great part of the time prior to March, 1942, and likewise with the desire and consent of Mr. Radtke, the Fuhrmans also had the care and custody of Delores, the older of the two children, while at other times during that same period the child was shifted about from one place to another.

In the summer of 1937, the Radtkes appear to have established a sort of reconciliation with each other and in April, 1938, a third child was born to them. However, marital difficulties soon developed again, and in September, 1938, when the third child was but five months old, Mrs. Radtke brought an action against Mr. Radtke for divorce. That action apparently never came to trial, and it appeal’s that later the Radtkes again became temporarily reconciled. On July 23, 1940, a fourth child was born to them. During all of this period, however, the second child, Ethel, remained continuously with, and was supported entirely by, the Fuhrmans. The oldest child, Delores, also spent a great part of her time during that same period with, and under the care of, the Fuhrmans, as explained above.

As time went by, the financial and marital difficulties existing in the Radtke family grew steadily worse. In September, 1941, Mrs. Radke made application to the county *831 welfare department of Spokane county for assistance to provide for the children. An investigation followed, with the result that a case worker in the welfare department filed a dependency petition alleging that the four children were destitute, having been deserted by their father, Herbert Radtke, whose residence was alleged to be unknown.

A hearing upon the petition was had before the juvenile court of Spokane county and orders were entered declaring each of the four children a ward of the court, and committing Ethel to the care and custody of the appellants, Delores to the care and custody of Mrs. Radtke’s parents, and the other two children to the care and custody of two other women, respectively. It will be borne in mind that when these orders were entered Ethel was, and for over four years had been, in the custody of the Fuhrmans. The order as to Ethel simply continued that custody in the Fuhrmans, but as a ward of the court.

In November, 1941, the Radtkes evidently had another one of their many reconciliations. At any rate, on the 26th day of that month they reported to the juvenile court probation office tíiat they were living together again. They asked for the custody of their four children upon the representation that Mr. Radtke expected to find employment and establish a home. They were directed to establish a home first and await an investigation and report to be made concerning them.

In an effort to rehabilitate the Radtke family, the four children were returned to the parents on March 27, 1942, by order of the juvenile court entered in the above-mentioned dependency proceeding. That order again declared the children to be wards of the court and further recited that such custody by the parents was to continue until the court should order otherwise. The Fuhrmans promptly delivered Ethel to the juvenile court as they had been directed to do. The custodians of the other three children did likewise.

In July, 1942, Mr. Fuhrman obtained employment as a sheet metal worker at the Lake Washington Shipyards *832 located in Kirkland, near Seattle. His wages since then have amounted to at least two hundred fifty dollars a month. Whether Mrs. Fuhrman accompanied her husband to Kirkland at that time or followed later, the record does not clearly disclose, but it does appear that they have since then established a home there, consisting of four rooms and a bath, located in a good residential district, near a school and a church.

In September, 1942, trouble again arose between Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
153 P.2d 165, 21 Wash. 2d 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuhrman-v-arvin-wash-1944.