In re Custody of the Minors La Place

6 V.I. 550, 1967 WL 177655, 1967 V.I. LEXIS 2
CourtMunicipal Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedDecember 18, 1967
DocketCivil No. 861-1967
StatusPublished

This text of 6 V.I. 550 (In re Custody of the Minors La Place) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Municipal Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Custody of the Minors La Place, 6 V.I. 550, 1967 WL 177655, 1967 V.I. LEXIS 2 (vimunict 1967).

Opinion

JOSEPH, Judge

OPINION'

The matter of the custody of two young children, Louis Andre La Place and Lawrence La Place, aged seven and six, respectively, is before this court on a writ of habeas corpus brought by the Government of the Virgin Islands. The writ was directed to Ruby M. Rouss with whom the children are presently residing under a foster care arrangement made by the Department of Social Welfare. Testimony of witnesses for the Government and witnesses who appeared on behalf of Miss Rouss and the children was heard in open court on November 2, 1967. The evidence, most of which is undisputed, is summarized below.

Louis and Lawrence La Place are the children of Gloria Rivera Allen and Andre La Place. The parents of the children do not live together. When these two little boys were approximately six months and a year and a half old and their mother was 16 or 17 years old physical custody of the children was taken from her. In 1963 their legal custody was placed in the Department of Social Welfare by order of the Municipal Court of St. Thomas and St. John. At the time the children were taken from the mother they were suffering from malnutrition, and it was determined that the mother did not adequately feed or clothe them and that she left them unattended. In March, 1963 [552]*552the children were placed in the Queen Louise Home, an institution for the care of children located at Frederiksted, St. Croix. There they remained until July, 1966, when Miss Rouss took them into her home. The mother visited the children at the Queen Louise Home on a few occasions within the first two months they were there but has had no contact with the Home or the children there since that time. There was testimony of one witness that the mother saw the children on one occasion in 1964 but no information was given as to the nature or extent of the contact she had with them, if any. She was once invited to visit them after they were placed with Miss Rouss but she declined to do so, saying that it was too late in the day. There was no evidence presented to the court that she has any interest in the children or desire to have them with her. She was not called as a witness by the Government nor did she appear at court for the hearing. The father, who has contributed to the support of the children but has had no personal contact with them since they were taken from the mother, appeared as a witness for Miss Rouss and testified that he was opposed to their being returned to the mother as she had abandoned the older child when he was an infant and he did not believe that she would give them proper care at this time. He strongly favored leaving the children with Miss Rouss.

The Department of Social Welfare in the latter part of August, asked Miss Rouss to return the children as it had been decided to place them with their mother. Miss Rouss refused to do this without a determination of the court in the matter. The children, when she took them into her home, had known nothing but institutional life. She had met the “real challenge” of their adjustment to a family life where they are given individual love and attention. In dealing with the children she has shown a natural [553]*553understanding of them and has been able to identify their problems and thus work toward their solution. She has placed the children in a private day school where she is active in the parent-teachers activities, having recently been elected an officer in the association. The Government concedes that the home which Miss Rouss is providing for the children is satisfactory in every way and offered no hint or suggestion that it could be improved upon. In fact, the only Government witnesses who were familiar with her home and with the care she is giving the children were high in their praise of her as a foster mother.

The only reason given by the Government for its decision to move the children is the fact that it is the policy of the Department of Social Welfare to return children to parents when this can be done. Mrs. Bernice Schuster, District Child Welfare Supervisor, who accepted responsibility for the decision to move the children, had never visited Miss Rouss’s home and expressed no interest in it. She testified that the one concern of her agency was the mother and that she and her agency were interested in restoring the children to the mother and not in the traumatic experience to the children of again being uprooted. In fact, she stated that the children are not a factor to be taken into consideration.

Mrs. Schuster who is the only witness having familiarity with the mother testified that she is now 25 years old and employed, receiving slightly more than $200 per month from her employment and from support payments she receives for another child. Mrs. Schuster says that the mother is now rehabilitated, although she does not say in what way, and that the Department’s plan is to place the children with her but to supervise her home and if it is found that she is not ready to accept the responsibility of the children they will again be removed.

[554]*554One Government witness, Mrs. Mary Frances Brown, the child welfare worker who had been instrumental in the placement of the children with Miss Rouss, testified that the removal of the children from her home might have a highly traumatic effect upon them. Her testimony, which was the only offered by the Government which dealt with the best interests of the children, does not lend support to its position.

Copies of the foster care agreements which were signed by Miss Rouss as foster parent and by Mrs. Brown as Child Welfare Worker for the Department of Social Welfare have been introduced in evidence. The Government relies upon paragraph six thereof which is contained in the provisions thereof, as follows: “* * * we agree to comply with the following requirements of the Department of Social Welfare: * * * 6. To give up the child when requested by the Department (advance notice will be given to foster parents).”

The Government is asking this court to exercise one of its most solemn powers, that of determining the custody of children, either by blindly accepting an agency determination which admittedly was not based upon the principles which must guide the courts, or by treating the matter of custody as a suit for the specific performance of a contract. The court can do neither of these things. As Justice Traynor so aptly pointed out in the case of In re McDonald’s Adoption, Cal. 1954, 274 P.2d 860, 868, cited by respondent in argument, “In a proceeding such as this the child is the real party in interest and is not a party to any agreement. It is the welfare of the child that controls, and any agreement others may have made for its custody is made subject to the court’s independent judgment as to what is for the best interests of the child.”

That this “independent judgment” cannot be delegated is illustrated by the case of Crump v. Montgomery, Md. [555]*5551959, 154 A.2d 802. There a child born to an unwed mother was placed with the Montgomery County Welfare Board for adoption. The Welfare Board arranged for his foster care in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Crump while completing the adoption procedure for him. When he had been with the Crumps for approximately 15 months and adoptive parents had not been selected for him they requested the Board’s approval of his adoption by them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fine v. Denny
244 P.2d 983 (California Court of Appeal, 1952)
James v. Holy Family Adoption Service
274 P.2d 860 (California Supreme Court, 1954)
Washburn v. Washburn
122 P.2d 96 (California Court of Appeal, 1942)
Crump v. Montgomery
154 A.2d 802 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1959)
Bemis v. Bemis
200 P.2d 84 (California Court of Appeal, 1948)
Sherry v. Doyle Et Ux.
249 P. 250 (Utah Supreme Court, 1926)
New York Foundling Hospital v. Norton
79 P. 231 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1905)
Turner v. Children's Home Society of Virginia, Inc.
163 S.E. 399 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 V.I. 550, 1967 WL 177655, 1967 V.I. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-custody-of-the-minors-la-place-vimunict-1967.