Hawkins v. Merritt

192 P. 30, 183 Cal. 568, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 443
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 17, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 9029.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 192 P. 30 (Hawkins v. Merritt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawkins v. Merritt, 192 P. 30, 183 Cal. 568, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 443 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

Petition by John T. Merritt for letters of guardianship of the person of Helen Anthony Hawkins, a minor. The petition was granted. George W. Hawkins, the father of the minor, contested the petition, and has taken two appeals—one from the order appointing petitioner guardian, and the other from the decree that letters of guardian *570 ship issue to him. The record of the appeals is presented under the alternative method.

Helen Anthony Hawkins is the only child of appellant and Ethel A. Hawkins, the deceased daughter of respondent. The minor was born in 1913. Her father and mother were married in 1905, and for at least one year prior to March 22, 1917, were living in Arizona. On the last-mentioned date Mrs. Hawkins obtained a final decree of divorce from appellant, the validity of which is not questioned. By this decree the custody of the little girl was awarded to the mother, with whom the child lived until October 14, 1918, when the former died. Within a few days thereafter petitioner caused the minor to be brought to his home in Petaluma, Sonoma County, and on October 24th he filed this petition in the superior court for that county, setting forth that the minor was a resident therein. On October 22d appellant sued out a writ of habeas corpus, seeking the custody of the child. Both proceedings were heard together, and the writ was discharged. In the matter of the guardianship the court found inter alia that appellant had “knowingly and willfully abandoned” the minor; that appellant was “not a fit or proper or competent person” to have her care or custody, and that respondent was fit and competent to be appointed guardian. Accordingly, the court ordered on December 31st that respondent be appointed guardian, and on January 13, 1919, that letters of guardianship issue.

[1] 1. We shall first consider appellant’s claim that “the pleadings are insufficient to raise the issue of abandonment or incompeteney. ” In making this contention appellant has apparently ignored the allegations of his answer that he “is the father of the above-named minor . . . and is in all respects capable, ready, and willing . . . and under the laws of the state of California entitled to obtain the care, custody, and control of said minor, and that he is capable, ready, able, and willing to properly provide and care for said minor.” These allegations were deemed denied, and it thus became an issue whether appellant was “capable, ready, able, and willing” to assume the duties of guardianship. The pleadings were, therefore, sufficient to raise the issues of appellant’s abandonment and incompetency.

2. Appellant’s second contention is that there was “no showing that the father was unfit or incompetent to discharge *571 the duties of guardianship.” We think the evidence was amply sufficient. Mrs. Theodore Kohn testified that she had been acquainted with appellant and his deceased wife; that on one occasion the witness and her husband had visited the wife at her home in Arizona prior to the divorce; that on this occasion, in appellant’s absence, the wife had told the witness that appellant neglected the child; that the witness had seen appellant kick and otherwise abuse his wife; and that the witness saw a letter written by appellant to the mother in which he made no mention of the child.

The evidence was uncontroverted that, prior to the divorce, appellant mistreated his wife and habitually neglected the child, and that for a considerable time he occupied questionable relations with an unmarried woman whom he has since married and who is his present wife, residing with him in the state of New York.

Regarding appellant’s life in Arizona, J. H. Knost testified that, according to his knowledge, appellant occasionally associated with lewd and depraved women at Globe, Arizona; that he indulged in the excessive use of intoxicating liquors; that subsequent to the beginning of his relationship with his present wife he would leave home, giving no information as to his whereabouts and failing to communicate with the mother or child; that he gave the latter practically no attention except in the way of sending her money in accordance with the decree of divorce; and that after the divorce he never visited or wrote to the child; that the divorce was granted because of the illicit relations between appellant and his present wife; that the reputation of the latter was such that the witness did not consider her capable of properly raising or instructing the child; that her reputation was that of an immoral woman; that he had seen telegrams signed by her and addressed to appellant denoting improper relations between them before the divorce; that appellant had told him of visits he had made to her prior to the divorce, and that it was commonly understood among his associates that she was a woman of questionable character.

John M. Wyatt stated in his deposition that he had known appellant since 1904; that for the past few years appellant had been drinking to excess; that he was decidedly unkind to the mother of the child; that on or about October 10, 1916, the witness had seen him kick her out of bed, and at *572 other times slap her face and kick her; that appellant paid “very little attention” to the minor; that “at times in the house he didn’t care to have her around him at all”; that appellant had paid no attention to the child since the divorce; and that his present wife “had the reputation of leading a very fast life in many different ways, as to drinking and being intimate with men.”

James E. Nelson, who was assistant city attorney of Phoenix, Arizona, during 1916, testified that prior to the divorce the present Mrs. Hawkins and another woman were arrested by the police on a charge of conducting a disorderly house and that the former was a disturbing element in Phoenix, “causing the police a great deal of trouble by reason of numerous drunken parties which she and her friend attended.”

L. T. Sutherland, captain of police at Phoenix, testified that she had registered at the Ford Hotel in Phoenix in a room adjoining that of appellant before the divorce, and that her reputation with the police department of Phoenix was that of an ordinary prostitute.

George Brisbois, chief of police of Phoenix; Miss Harriet J. Oliver, chief clerk in the office of the Secretary of State of Arizona; Alpheus Plarding, a business man of Tucson, Arizona; Kirke T. Moore, county attorney of Pima County, Arizona, and Alice M. Birdsall, an attorney of Phoenix, testified that appellant had frequently associated with his present wife before his divorce; that her reputation was that of a common prostitute, and that he neglected the mother and child.

The appellant produced a score of depositions. Some of his witnesses testified to the good reputation of his present wife and himself in New York and that she was fond of children; but none of them had been acquainted either with her or appellant in Arizona. William Mueller testified that her reputation at her home in Hillside, Arizona, was good, but admitted that he could not testify as to her reputation for chastity, virtue, and morality in Phoenix, where she resided during the years 1916 and 1917. Mrs. F. E.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P. 30, 183 Cal. 568, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-merritt-cal-1920.