In re Blackburn

41 Mo. App. 622, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 321
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 41 Mo. App. 622 (In re Blackburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Blackburn, 41 Mo. App. 622, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 321 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Gill, J.

This is a proceeding by writ of habeas corpus, instituted by Marshall Blackburn to recover the possession of his child Lydia, now in the custody of Carroll Logsdon and wife, who are the maternal grandparents of the said Lydia. In August, 1884, Marshall Blackburn and Lizzie Logsdon were married. This union resulted in the birth of Lydia (the subject of this unhappy controversy) in September, 1885. The young couple continued to live together as husband and wife, at or near the town of Blackburn, Saline county, Missouri, till in January, 1887, when a temporary separation occurred. After an absence of ten days, however, Mrs. Blackburn returned and resided with her husband until the month of May following, when a second separation transpired, Mrs. Blackburn, with her infant child going back to her father’s home some few miles distant. This final separation took place, as already stated, May, 1887. In January, 1888, the wife commenced an action for divorce, alleging cruel and barbarous treatment, such as to endanger her life, and to render her condition intolerable. Mr. Blackburn, in due season, filed his answer, consisting of a general denial of the charges made. The cause was heard by the circuit court at the October term, 1888, and judgment for divorce in favor of the wife rendered, giving her, too, the custody of her infant child, and fixing the alimony at five hundred dollars. It may be as well to state here that Blackburn made no active opposition at the trial of the cause, and that the amount of the alimony was fixed by agreement. In January, 1890, Mrs. Blackburn, the divorced wife, died at her father’s house in Saline county, where she [628]*628had continued to live as a member of Mr. Logsdon’s family from the day she left Blackburn, in May, 1887. During all this time this divorced mother and infant, child had been cared for and supported by Mr. and Mrs. Logsdon, without any assistance whatever from the father who now seeks the custody of the little girl, the one of all most interested in this contest. For the present this appears all that it is necessary to state, as regards the facts giving rise to this controversy. Other matters will be mentioned later on.

II. Contests of this nature are the most embarrassing with which courts have to deal. This comes not alone because they have to do with ties of relationship and intimate association, but because as well the judge must, to some extent, realize a partial and painful responsibility for the future course of a human being. Cases of this kind, too, rest, more than all others, upon the facts and circumstances of each particular controversy. Custody of children cannot be awarded by any fixed and inflexible rules, as may be done where mere rights of property are involved. The discretion of the court, it is true, will be exercised in the light of some general rules, and yet in may cases these seem ignored in the efforts 6f courts to do the best thing possible for helpless children. For example, it is well understood that the father is entitled to the custody and control of his infant children, and yet, if a dissolution of the marriage is brought about, the courts, if for the best interests of such children, do not hesitate to award the same to the mother, or, in case of her unfitness, will even give the children over to the keeping of third parties. Hence it is said that the polar star, by which the courts are guided on the way to decisions in this character of cases, is the well-being of the infant. So, then, we may say that, primarily, the right to the possession of little Lydia Blackburn is with her fater. He has a prima faoie, right to her custody, based upon the reasonable [629]*629ground, that, being bound in law for her support and education, he should also have possession and control in order to carry out this obligation to maintain, rear and educate her. Respondent Logsdon (Lydia’s grandfather) bases his claim to continue in the care and custody of the child on the grounds : First. That, by the decree of divorce, granted in case of Blackburn v. Blackburn, in 1888, the father, Marshall Blackburn, was forever barred of any further right or claim of custody, and that, as the divorced mother on her death bed intrusted the child’s keeping with Mr. and Mrs. Logsdon, the petitioner father has no rightful claim which he can now enforce; and, second, it is claimed that Mr. Blackburn is an unfit person to rear, educate and control his own child.

Counsel seem to agree (and we think rightfully) that during the lifetime of Lydia’s mother, after the divorce in 1888 to her death in January, 1890, she, the mother, was entitled to the exclusive custody of the child, that is, that by the decree of divorce, and custody awarded to .the mother, Mr. Blackburn’s paramount right as father was postponed to that of Mrs. Blackburn. But respondent’s counsel go further, and insist that this divorce, for fault of the husband, ipso facto, abrogated, or annulled Blackburn’s right of custody for all time, even after death of the divorced wife; and that he now occupies no more favorable status than any stranger in blood, or one in nowise connected with the child’s existence. We cannot give our approval to this position. Section 4505, Revised Statutes, 1889, provides that, “When a divorce shall be adjudged, the court shall make such order touching * * * the care, custody and maintenance of the children, or any of them, as, from the circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case, shall be reasonable,” etc. ' By authority of this statute, the court, awarding the care and custody of the infant Lydia (then perhaps scarcely [630]*630weaned from its mother’s breast), doubtless considered as between husband and wife the father’s paramount right should yield to “the circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case,” and, therefore (if for no other reason), made the order referred to'. This judgment for custody of the child had relation only to the circumstances as they then were. It was not the object of that decree to part forever the father and child, or, as expressed by the court in a case cited, it was not intended “to bastardize” the infant. Taylor v. Jeter, 33 Ga. 195; Bryan v. Lyon, 104 Ind. 234; State ex rel. v. Reuff, 29 W. Va. 751. We hold, then, that the judgment of the court in the divorce case does not operate as a conclusive bar to the petitioner’s rights, as father, to the custody of the infant Lydia. It had only that effect as between Blackburn and his divorced wife, while she lived. By the rules of common law this father’s right of custody was paramount to that of the mother, but the divorce judgment destroyed this priority of right in the father and invested the same in the mother. She is now dead, and the father’s right of custody has been relieved of that paramount right of the mother. His is the only claim (as parent) now to be considered. In arriving at a conclusion on this branch of the case we are not unmindful of the respectable authority tending to sustain respondent’s contention, prominent among which may be named the case from Delaware (Lynch v. Bratton, 15 Am. L. Rev. 359). However, in quite all the cases cited ( with perhaps the exception only of Lynch v. Bratton, supra), the controversy was between the divorced father and mother (both living), and there the integrity of the former decree of divorce, with award of custody of the children, was maintained, and held to be a conclusive bar to the father’s common-law rights. In some of such cases the judges do say that the divorce of' the wife for the fault of the husband abrogates and annuls

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Mo. App. 622, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-blackburn-moctapp-1890.