In re Taylor

19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 438
CourtWood County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 438 (In re Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wood County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Taylor, 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 438 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Duncan, J.

This case is here on error from the probate court of this county. It was an action in habeas corpus instituted by Dorothy E. Taylor of Washington county, Pennsylvania, against Charles A. MeGarvey, having in custody in this county one William Taylor MeGarvey, seven years of age, whom she claims the respondent unlawfully detains from her. The court below denied the prayer of the’ petition and awarded the child to the respondent as long as he should keep and care for it in the home of his brother, Benjamin MeGarvey, in this county, and the petitioner is now here seeking reversal of that judgment upon the ground that the same is against the law and the evidence.

The respondent and the petitioner were husband and wife, and said William Taylor MeGarvey is a child of the marriage. They were divorced September 19, 1912, upon her application, by the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County. Penn[439]*439sylvania. They lived together in said county with this child as a member of the family until June 12, 1912, the date of the beginning of the divorce action. The respondent thereupon left the home and soon after came to this county, but the child continued to live with' the petitioner, its mother.

On August 13, after the action for divorce was begun, but before it was heard, the parties entered into a written agreement settling their property rights, stating the fact that their children, this child and another, were in the custody of the petitioner and reserving full right and privilege in the respondent to visit them, but relieving him from any liability for their support as long as they remained with her. The agreement does not in terms provide for their custody. That part of the agreement reads as follows:

“It is further understood and agreed between the parties hereto that the party of the first part (Charles A. McGarvey) shall have the undisturbed right at any time whatsoever to call upon, see and converse with the children of the said parties hereto, as long as they may remain living separate and apart, now in the possession of the party of the second part (Dorothy E. McGarvey), and for the consideration aforesaid, the party of the second part, hereby releases the party of the first part from all liability for the support and maintenance of herself and children.”

On the very night of the day this agreement was signed, August 13, 1912, the respondent went to an adjoining county to that of Washington, where said child was then temporarily with its maternal grandmother, and stole it away, took him to Pittsburgh and thence to Ohio and this county, where it has since been living with the respondent, his father, at the home of’Benjamin McGarvey, his father’s brother.

After that the said divorce case proceeded to trial and a divorce was granted the said petitioner from the respondent, September 19, 1912, on the ground of his adultery as in the petition set forth. But nothing is said about these' children in the divorce petition, in the evidence attached to the certificate or in the judgment of the court, or that they had any. children.

[440]*440The petitioner, for more than a year, was, and still is, the keeper of a restaurant and rooming house in the village of Cannonsburg, a town of sis or seven thousand population, lives there in the house, attends to all finances and manages the business and has a number of employees, both men and women, and manages to make a gross earning of fifteen hundred to two thousand dollars a month, which, of course, speaks well for her business ability and her ability in a financial way to care for her children. She not only employs some men in the running of this restaurant, but she is brought into constant association with them, especially with one William Van Sickle, a married man not living with his wife, on whom she relies for the professional part of the work and as a confidential business adviser, which, of course, created some suspicion upon the part of the respondent that Van Sickle had taken his place in her affections. I do not say that there was anything wrong between the petitioner and Van Sickle, but there was enough in their relations and conduct towards each other to cause others to be suspicious as well, and it became the subject of much talk. I do say, however, that when a married woman with husband and children leaves her home and enters business for herself, she enters another realm from wife and mother, loosens the ties of the marital relation and must necessarily neglect her duty as wife and the care and attention due her children of tender years otherwise bestowed by a devoted mother. Who can say then, that there was no reason in the probate court denying this writ upon the ground that the petitioner did not have a proper place and was not a proper person to have the custody and control of this child?

A reading of the evidence given in the probate court would also lead one to think, from his relations with other women, that there was something to the claim that the respondent had a venereal disease two or three times and warrant the conclusion of the probate court, based, on such facts, that he was not a fit person to have the unconditional custody and control of this child.

We have a statute in Ohio, Section 8032, General Code, which provides that, “When a husband and wife are living separate [441]*441and apart from each other, or are divorced, and the question as to the care, custody and control of the offspring of their marriage is brought before a court of competent jurisdiction in this state, they shall stand upon an equality as to the care, custody and control of such offspring, so far as it relates to their being either father or mother thereof, ’ ’ which, of course, leaves it open for the court to decide the matter in such way as appeals to his judgment may promote the child’s welfare. This seems to be the Polar star for all adjudications on the subject.

In Clark v. Bayer, 32 Ohio St., 299, 305, Judge Ashburn says:

“In cases of controverted custody, the present and future interests of the minor controls the judgment and directs the discretion of courts. While the legal rights of parents are to be respected, the welfare of the minor is of paramount consideration.”

In Richards v. Collins, 45 N. J. Eq., 283, where the custody of a child was in controversy, it is said:

“In a controversy over its possession its welfare will be the paramount consideration in controlling the discretion of the court. The strict right of the parent will be passed by, if a judgment in observance of such rights would substitute a worse for a better condition.”

In Kelsey v. Green, 69 Conn., 291, Chief Justice Andrews says:

“In contests between parents and third persons as to the custody of a child of such parents, the opinion is now almost universal that neither of the parents has any right that can be allowed to militate against the welfare of the infant; the paramount consideration is what is really demanded for its best interests. ’ ’

In Chapsky v. Wood, 26 Kan., 650, Judge Brewer says:'

“A parent’s right to the custody of a child is not like the right of property, an absolute and uncontrollable right. If it were, it would end this ease. The paramount consideration is, what will promote the welfare of the child.”

[442]*442In United States

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-taylor-ohctcomplwood-1913.