Governale v. HALEY

87 So. 2d 686, 228 Miss. 271, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 513
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1956
Docket40066
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 87 So. 2d 686 (Governale v. HALEY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Governale v. HALEY, 87 So. 2d 686, 228 Miss. 271, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 513 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

*274 Kyle, J.

The appellant, Mrs. Annie Frances Governale, filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Grenada County for a writ of habeas corpus directed to the appellees, Mrs. Kate Haley and her husband, K. D. Haley, seeking to obtain the custody of Lee Ann McKinion, minor child of the petitioner 12 years of age. After the service of process the circuit judge set the case for hearing at Ackerman, Mississippi, on March 14, 1955. The circuit Judge then entered an order recusing himself from the hearing, and the Honorable Lunsford Casey, Circuit Judge of the 18th District, was called in to hear and determine the cause. After all motions and preliminary pleadings had been disposed of and an answer filed by *275 the defendants, the cause was heard upon its merits by Judge Casey on May 9, 1955. At the conclusion of the hearing the presiding judge dictated into the record his findings of fact and his conclusions of law and entered a judgment denying the relief prayed for and dismissing the petition.

From that judgment the petitioner prosecutes this appeal.

The record shows that the appellant was married to Rufus McKinion, the father of Lee Ann McKinion, at Philadelphia, Mississippi, sometime prior to McKinion’s entry into the military service in 1942, and that Lee Ann McKinion was born on December 26, 1943. Rufus Mc-Kinion, the child’s father, was in the United States Army at that time. When the child was only a few months old the appellant went to New Orleans and carried the child with her, and for a period of several months the mother and child made their home with the appellant’s sister, Mrs. Kate Haley, and her husband, K. D. Haley, the appellees herein, who were living in New Orleans at that time. The appellant obtained employment with the New Orleans Public Service, and Mrs. Haley attended to and cared for the child. The appellant had another sister, Sally Hickman, who was also living in New Orleans, and after a period of four or five months the appellant and her sister, Sally Hickman, moved into a separate apartment. Mrs. Haley kept the child, however, and continued to care for her. The appellant’s husband was discharged from the military service about that time, and he and the appellant were divorced in October 1945. About two weeks after the divorce was granted, Mrs. Haley and her husband left New Orleans and moved to Grenada, Mississippi, and Mrs. Haley, with the consent of the child’s mother, carried the child with her to Grenada.

Mrs. Haley testified that she had cared for the child since the child was about one year old, even while the *276 mother was off from work; and when she got ready to leave New Orleans she asked the child’s mother what she was going to do with the child, and the mother said to her it was all right for her to bring the child to Mississippi. The appellant said nothing at that time about expecting to take the child back, and nothing was said about the child’s support. After their return to Mississippi the Haleys lived in the home of Mr. Haley’s mother not far from Grenada for a period of about two years, and then built a house for themselves in Grenada. Mrs. Haley testified that the appellant did not visit the child at any time during those two years, and the appellant sent only one ten-dollar bill to her for the baby. When-the Haleys moved into their own home in Grenada, they carried the child with them; and it was about this time, Mrs. Haley stated, that the appellant wrote her a letter in which she told Mrs. Haley that she was never going to take the baby, that she was sick and had too many doctor’s bills, and that she definitely could not take care of the baby.

In 1948 the appellant married Michael Governale, and she and her husband visited the Haleys on their honeymoon. Mrs. Haley testified that, when they left, they told her that they would send her $5 a week for the child’s support, but the promise was not fulfilled. The child remained with Mrs. Haley during the next three years, and in 1950 the child started to school. It was about this time that her mother began to express a desire to take the child back, and during the summer of 1951, the appellant filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to obtain custody of the child. No formal hearing was ever had on that petition. But an order was entered on June 29, 1951, which recited that the parties had agreed that the child should remain in the custody of Mrs. Haley, subject to the right of the mother to have • the child visit her until September i, 1951, at which time the child should be returned to Mrs. Haley’s home in *277 Grenada. The court approved the agreement and ordered that it be cárried out. The child visited her mother in New Orleans during the months of July and August and returned to Grenada in time for the opening of school, and a formal order was later entered dismissing the petition for the writ of habeas corpus upon the request of the petitioner.

The child remained in the custody of Mrs. Haley during the next two years, and in July 1953, Mrs. Haley agreed that the child’s aunt, Mrs. Oneida Eobinson, might take her to New Orleans for a two-week’s visit with her mother, it being understood that Mrs. Eobinson would bring her back after the two-week’s visit. Mrs. Eobinson did not bring the child back with her, however, and Lee Ann remained in New Orleans with her mother during the twelve months period from July 1953 to July 1954, and attended school in New Orleans. During the month of July 1954 the appellant visited her mother and her sister in Philadelphia and carried Lee Ann with her. Mrs. Haley also visited her mother about the same time, and while the family reunion was in progress Mrs. Haley got' a taxicab and brought the child back to Grenada. The petition in this case was filed about four months later.

Lee Ann was called to testify as a witness during the hearing on the habeas corpus petition, and was examined by the court. She stated that she was forced to live in New Orleans with her mother from the summer of 1953 until the summer of 1954, that she wanted to come home where she had always lived and that her mother told her she could not come home. She said, “I wanted to come back, back to my home, and they said ‘you are at your home,’ and they tried to force me to believe that, and to see it, and it wasn’t my home, and this is the only home I have ever had. ’ ’

At the conclusion of the hearing the court dictated into the record its findings of fact. The court found *278 “that the situation that now exists with reference to the relation between the parties was brought about directly by a failure of the mother to assume her proper parental relationship at a time when it was most necessary to do so,” and “that in fact there is now an equitable estoppel, if not an abandonment, to reclaim the child as her own.” The court was of the opinion that, “in this case it would work a phychological error and perhaps make a psychiatric case for the child to be permanently displaced from the custody of Mr. and Mrs. Haley, due to the number of years which she was permitted to be reared under that environment, which is considerably different from that of petitioner’s.” And the court held that under the facts disclosed by the record the detention of the child by Mrs. Haley was not an illegal detention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 So. 2d 686, 228 Miss. 271, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/governale-v-haley-miss-1956.