In re Guardianship of Pickard

2 V.I. 363, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1349
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedApril 5, 1945
DocketMiscellaneous No. 3 - 1945
StatusPublished

This text of 2 V.I. 363 (In re Guardianship of Pickard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, 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 Guardianship of Pickard, 2 V.I. 363, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1349 (vid 1945).

Opinion

CYRIL MICHAEL, District Court Commissioner

This is an application for permanent custody of a minor, 11 years of age, by his foster-mother, for permission to take the said minor with her to the United States and for authority to mortgage the minor’s property for the purpose of obtaining funds to defray their expenses thither.

This application is being contested by the mother of the child.

The facts preceding the filing of this application are substantially as follows:

The claimant-mother, Constance Pickard, married Norman Pickard in 1933. At the end of the same year a son, Donald de Altier Pickard, was born to this union. In 1936 Norman Pickard instituted suit for divorce on ground of incompatibility and filed motion for temporary custody of the minor, pending determination of the suit.

The court, upon hearing of this motion, at which the defendant was present without counsel, and offering no objection, granted the motion. In 1937, on motion of the plaintiff, Norman Pickard, the divorce action was discontinued because of the reconciliation of the parties.

In 1938 Norman Pickard instituted another divorce action against his wife on ground of incompatibility. This action was uncontested, default adjudged and decree entered granting the divorce and awarding custody of the child to plaintiff. The decree provided that the child be permitted to visit defendant at reasonable times. Claimant testified that her husband had asked her for the custody because he was better able to support the child; hence, her default. In its findings the court states:

[366]*366“That the defendant is of a nagging, irritable disposition ; that her association with strange men, though not amounting to adulterous conduct, was sufficient to call for rebuke from her husband; that she resented these rebukes and quarrels would always ensue, much to the discomfort, mental and physical, of the plaintiff.
“That from defendant’s conduct it appears that she is not a person to have the custody and bringing up of the child.”

Four months after the divorce, while Norman Pickard was in the United States, he remarried. Meanwhile, the minor was taken care of by “a nurse,” with whom the mother was acquainted. Norman Pickard returned to St. Croix with his second wife in 1939, taking Donald, the minor, who was then about 4 1/2 years old, to live with them.

Norman Pickard died in July, 1943, a period of about 4 years after Donald was in the home with them. Three days after his death Constance Pickard, mother of the minor, Donald, came from Puerto Rico, where she had taken up residence after the divorce, to claim her minor son. Upon her arrival she contacted D. Hamilton Jackson, Esquire, Attorney-at-law, who told her she could not get the child unless her aunt wanted it. She then contacted James A. Bough, Esquire, another Attorney-at-Law, who told her he did not see anything to prevent her getting the child. The testimony does not reveal whether she understood what she had to do in order to obtain the child. The fact is, no petition was filed by her praying for its custody. Her testimony that the same week she heard the court was in the United States is indicative that she was of the opinion that nothing could be done because of the Judge’s absence. Shortly after, claimant returned to Puerto Rico.

While it does not form part of the record in this case and the contents thereof may not now be considered, but [367]*367being in the files of the court, it may be stated that on or about March 7, 1944, the Judge of the District Court, the Honorable Herman E. Moore, received a letter from Puerto Rico, which is on file in the Clerk’s office, from one Lt. William I. Randall, employer of Constance Pickard, written on her behalf and making inquiry as to what she should do to obtain the child. This letter was acknowledged by the Clerk of the Court, who is the Commissioner hearing this case.

On January 18,1945, Leonille Pickard filed this application.

With this background the court has three points to decide:

Point 1: Did the legal right to custody of the minor revert to Constance Pickard, his mother, after the death of his father to whom the court awarded custody in the divorce action ?
Point 2: If it did, has the right to such custody been forfeited by the conduct of the mother?
Point 3: Even if she did not forfeit her right to custody, will it be to the child’s best interest to deny applicant’s petition and grant the mother custody of her infant child?

Point 1: Counsel for petitioner in his brief urges that: “In some jurisdictions it is held that where a decree of divorce awards custody of a child to the innocent party, it operates ipso facto to take from the guilty party all power thereafter over the child, and upon the death of the party to whom the custody was awarded, the other party does not become entitled to the possession and custody of the child.” 20 R.C.L. par. 13, at page 599, note 14; 21 Ann. Cas. 466.

While this is so, the same authority states, categorically, that “a previous decision is not to be taken as res ad judicata, so as to conclude the court from determining [368]*368the question in view of the present facts.” 20 R.C.L. par. 13, p. 598, Wilson v. Elliot, 97 A.S.R. 928 and note.

New facts in this case are shown to exist by the death of the father to whom custody of the minor was awarded and his failure to appoint a testamentary guardian as provided by the Code of St. Croix (1921), Title 3, Chapter 79, section 6, page 274 (15 V.I.C. § 826).

If the custody of a . child has been given to one parent in a divorce action, on the death of said parent, the right of the other revives. Penney v. Sulzen, 137 Pac. 987, Clark v. Lyon, 20 L.R.A. (n.s.) 171 and note; Barnes v. Long, 104 Pac. 296; Bryan v. Lyon, 54 A.R. 309.

As indications are that the majority rule is that the right of the surviving parent revives, and the Code of this jurisdiction also so provides, (1921 Code) Title 3, Chapter 79, sections 4 and 6 (15 V.I.C. §§ 824, 826), this court is warranted in holding that the right of the surviving parent in this case did revive, and it so holds.

Point 2: In his brief, counsel for the applicant concludes in part that: “The evidence adduced shows (1) that this court has found the mother of this child unfit to have its care and custody; (2) that the mother has not shown she is now fit; (3) that the mother is guilty of parental neglect and indifference, and has always left her children to the mercy of other relatives.”

As to 1 and 2 of his conclusion, the evidence in this case does not show the mother is unfit. The court found in the divorce proceeding that “from the defendant’s conduct it appears that she is not a person to have the custody and bringing up of the child;” but that was a case between the father and the mother. She is permitted in this case, which involves a third party, to show her fitness. Wilson v. Elliott, 97 A.S.R. 928, Bell v. Krauss, 146 Pac. 874, in re Neff 56 Pac. 383. The question is, has she shown herself now fit?

[369]

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Related

Bell v. Krauss
146 P. 874 (California Supreme Court, 1915)
In re Neff
56 P. 383 (Washington Supreme Court, 1899)
Lovell v. House of Good Shepherd
37 P. 660 (Washington Supreme Court, 1894)
Frame v. Felix
31 A. 375 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1895)
Barnes v. Long
104 P. 296 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1909)
Pinney v. Sulzen
137 P. 987 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
2 V.I. 363, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-pickard-vid-1945.