Gordon v. Gordon

59 N.E.2d 5, 317 Mass. 471, 1945 Mass. LEXIS 465
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 59 N.E.2d 5 (Gordon v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Gordon, 59 N.E.2d 5, 317 Mass. 471, 1945 Mass. LEXIS 465 (Mass. 1945).

Opinion

Lummus, J.

This is an appeal from a decree appointing the petitioner guardian of the person and estate of Patricia Ann Gordon, the six year old daughter of Walter B. Gordon and Katherine Gordon who are the appellants. The evidence is not reported, but the judge reported the material facts found by him with the statement that all “material subsidiary facts are stated herein and upon them . . . the court finds that the respondents are jointly unfit to have custody of this child and that her welfare will be better promoted if custody be awarded to the petitioner.” The report therefore has the same effect as one made under the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 215, § 11.

The material facts found by the judge are these: The petitioner and her husband, who is a paternal uncle of the child, are “in the fifties” and have no children. The petitioner’s husband earns $50 a week, and “they” are fully competent to give the child good care, proper training and education. The parents of the child “seem to be in the thirties,” and have two other children, a daughter, Jane, now seven years of age, and a son twenty months of age. The father earns about $30 a week. “The child will be more secure economically with the petitioner than with her parents.” In July, 1939, her mother suffered an injury to her hand and the petitioner took the child and cared for her for nine months, at the expiration of ydiich time her mother “took her back.” On May 31, 1940, the child was returned to the petitioner with whom she has remained since. The petitioner and her husband since then have borne all the [473]*473expenses of the child and have no intention of claiming recompense for her past or future maintenance and education. “They wish to continue to support and to educate her because of their love for her. The child has for them the usual affection of a child for its natural parents. For three and one half years she has had only casual contacts with her parents. To take her from the only environment that she knows would violently disrupt the only experience of life that she has known. The child’s interests would be badly served by placing her in the custody of the respondents. The parents have been content until recently that the child should be in the de facto custody of the petitioners [sfc]. The evidence does not disclose a reason for their change of mind. The mother as a witness showed a feeling to the petitioner that is definitely spiteful. She testified that if the child is returned to her, she will not allow the petitioner to visit the child, or the child to visit the petitioner, and that she will not permit the child to go back to see her present playmates. She further testified that she meant to destroy the child’s love for the petitioner and that she would insist on her right to have the child even if that would conflict with the child’s best interests. The petitioner’s sincere wish to do her best for the child warrants the inference that she will do nothing to prevent her from having an appreciation of her parents and a normal relationship to her sister and brother.” With respect to the care that the mother of the child gives to her other two children, the judge found that she has managed those children and her household reasonably well, but that in certain instances she has not performed her full duty; that the “three children have some maladjustment, possibly malformation of the feet which requires correction which the petitioner has furnished to the subject child and which the parents have not furnished to the other children who now need it”; that they have “somewhat” neglected the teeth of Jane, which are defective; that the mother has left the two children in the house alone for periods of at least ten minutes and probably somewhat longer while she went to a nearby shop, relying on the doubtful oversight of a neighbor in the next house, [474]*474that no harm resulted, but that she lacks a full appreciation of the risks involved; and that in February, 1940, she was slow in attending to Jane’s infected glands which finally became so bad that she asked and received the aid of the petitioner and the latter’s physician in getting the proper medical care for Jane. With relation to these findings concerning the mother’s management of her household, the judge concluded, however, that if “the issue depended solely on the evidence of the mother’s management of the two children the court would not find her unfit.” The judge further found that the mother has definitely failed to appreciate her duty to the child in question, since she has refused to give her consent to having the child’s tonsils removed, although they are infected and the petitioner upon medical advice has sought without avail to obtain her consent to the operation, the expense of which the petitioner proposed to bear; and that the mother has no justifiable reason for her uncompromising attitude. With respect to the father of the child, the judge stated that he appeared in the present proceeding by counsel but that, so far as the evidence discloses, he was not present in person; that no explanation was offered for his absence; that there was no direct testimony as to his “fitness”; that there is nothing in the evidence “to rebut the inference which the court makes, either that he knew of and acquiesced in his wife’s dealing with the premised facts, or that he is careless of the child’s interests”; that, if “he sincerely believes that the child’s welfare requires her return to him, he owes her the duty to present himself personally in court to support that belief with all the facts known to him”; and that the “only evidence that shows him to have given any consideration to the child’s situation while in the petitioner’s care is that he made a single visit to her on one birthday.” In conclusion the judge found that the respondents are “jointly” unfit to have custody of the child, and that her welfare will be “better promoted” if custody be awarded to the petitioner,

We concur in the conclusion of the judge that the findings relating to the mother’s management of her two children and her household, standing alone, would not warrant [475]*475a finding that she was unfit to have their custody. Applying those findings to the other facts found by the judge, we are of opinion that they do not serve to fortify the ultimate conclusion that the parents of Patricia are unfit to have her custody. See Commonwealth v. Ball, 259 Mass. 148, 152; Bottoms v. Carlz, 310 Mass. 29, 35.

The determination of the present case is governed by the basic principles set forth in Richards v. Forrest, 278 Mass. 547, following many prior decisions of this court. The findings of the judge in the present case to the effect that the petitioner and her husband love Patricia, that for three and a half years she has had but casual contacts with her parents, that she holds the petitioner and her husband in the usual affection that a child would have for her natural parents, that to return her to them would violently disrupt the only experience of life she has known, that if Patricia is returned to her parents her mother will not permit the petitioner to visit Patricia nor Patricia to visit the petitioner, and that the petitioner will do nothing to prevent her having an appreciation of her parents and a normal relationship to her sister and brother, do not furnish valid grounds for depriving her parents of her custody. Substantially the same findings were made by the judge in Richards v. Forrest, 278 Mass. 547.

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.E.2d 5, 317 Mass. 471, 1945 Mass. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-gordon-mass-1945.