In re the Guardianship of Thompson

32 Haw. 479
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1932
DocketNo. 2060
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 479 (In re the Guardianship of Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Guardianship of Thompson, 32 Haw. 479 (haw 1932).

Opinion

[480]*480OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

This is a petition by a mother for the appointment of herself as guardian of the person of her infant daughter. The father, who at the date of the filing of the petition had the actual possession and custody of the child, resists the application. The proceedings were instituted before a circuit judge of the first ciieuit, sitting as the court of domestic relations, and that tribunal, after'a very lengthy trial (the testimony is recorded in a transcript of 965 pages) at which all available testimony and other: evidence was adduced, considerable portions of it perhaps being immaterial, awarded the custody and the guardianship to the petitioning mother. Its finding was that it was “for the best welfare and interests of the minor herein, a female child, twenty-one months old, to be in the custody of its mother, the petitioner herein, to remain with its mother in- her home, with the right of [481]*481the respondent to visit said child at all reasonable times.” A decree vvas entered granting the prayer of the petition, reserving in favor of the father certain defined rights of visitation and expressly reserving to the court the right to amend the decree upon due cause shoAvn.

At its session in 1931 the legislature passed an Act, Avhich duly became laAV, reading as folloAvs: “Natural Guardian. The father and mother of an unmarried minor child are jointly the natural guardians of its person and property. They shall have equal powers and duties with respect to it and neither shall have any right superior to that of the other concerning its custody or control or any other matter affecting it; provided, that, if either parent dies or abandons his or her family or is incapable for any reason to act as guardian, the guardianship devolves upon the other parent, and that, Avhen the parents live apart, the court may award the guardianship to either of them, having special regard to the interests of the child; the father and mother of unmarried minor children shall jointly and severally be liable in damages for tortious acts committed by said children, and shall be jointly and/or severally entitled to prosecute and defend all actions in law or in equity in which such children or their individual property may be concerned.” L. 1931, Act 77. In so doing the legislature expressly amended section 3033, E. L. 1925; and by implication this statute of 1931, being the latest expression of the Avill of the legislature on the subject, necessarily repeals, amends and supplants any other preexisting statutes in conflict therewith. The language of the above quoted statute of 1931 is clear and unambiguous. Its meaning and intent are not open to doubt. While primarily the father and the mother of an unmarried minor child are declared to be “jointly the natural guardians” of its person (questions of property are not here involved), provision [482]*482is also made for certain circumstances under winch both parents cannot jointly be the guardians and one or the other of them alone can be or should be. One of the provisos is that if either parent “abandons his or her family” the guardianship devolves upon the other parent, and another is that “when the parents live apart” the court may award the guardianship to either of them “having special regard to the interests of the child.”

The respondent in the case at bar claims that the mother abandoned her family and that for that reason the guardianship devolved upon the father. The material facts with reference to the claim of so-called abandonment are not in material respects in dispute. The parents were married in Canada on August 19, 1929, and lived there until April, 1930, when the mother left for Honolulu to be with her mother at the time of the expected arrival of the child. The child was born on July 13, 1930, and was in the immediate care of its mother until the following October, the father during that period of about three months being in Canada. The mother and the baby left Honolulu in October and arrived at the home of the father in Canada in November and there the three lived together until February, 1931, when all left for Honolulu, arriving there in March of that year. At first they lived with the mother’s parents at their home and on June 1, 1931, moved to a home of their own on Armstrong Street in Manoa in this city, not far from the home of the mother’s parents. The Armstrong Street house continued to be their home until November 28, 1931, although about the middle of September the father accepted employment at Waimanalo Plantation on the northern side of this island and between that date and November 28 made occasional visits to his wife and child. From the 1st until the 15th of August of the same year the mother, with the child, visited with the grandmother at a place [483]*483called Kalama. It is clear and undisputed that there was no separation, actual or legal, between the father and the mother prior to November 29, 1931, with the sole exception, if it may be called an exception, that beginning with August 15 the wife refused sexual intercourse. As a matter of law it may properly be said that the father and the mother had joint possession and custody of the child from the day of its birth until November 29, 1931, and it certainly is the fact that during the whole of that period of time the mother actively shared in that custody and that for some considerable parts of it she alone had the physical, actual care and custody. On November 29, 1931, the father and the mother separated and have ever since been living apart. On that day they quarreled about the custody of the child. To make a long story short, for a few hours on that day the child was by the consent of the two parents left in the custody of a Mrs. Silva, recommended to them by a probation officer as a suitable person to have its care. On the evening of that day the grandfather endeavored to secure a return of the child to its mother, but failed in the effort. A little later, on the same evening, the father secured the child and took it to his home at Waimanalo without the knowledge or consent of the mother and has there maintained it ever since, against the will and in spite of the efforts of the mother to obtain its custody. This proceeding in which the mother asks to be appointed the child’s guardian was instituted on December 1, 1931, only two days after the father took actual possession of the child. He had that possession during those two days clearly against the will and the efforts of the mother to obtain it. Under all of these circumstances here recited there is not the slightest foundation for the claim that the mother at any time abandoned the child. She held it and cared for it as long as she was permitted to do so [484]*484and as soon as the child was taken away from her she sought the aid of the court to recover its possession.

When, as in this instance, the family consists simply of a father, a mother and one child and the mother has not abandoned the child but has become separated from the husband, in our opinion there is not an abandonment by the wife “of her family” within the meaning of Act 77. That this was the intention and understanding of the legislature is made clear by the fact that in a succeeding proviso the legislature provides for the very contingency of .a husband and a Avife living apart.

A second contention advanced by the respondent is that when a Avife, Avithout due cause, leaves her husband there is not such a living apart as is contemplated by this statute. We do not so construe the language used by the legislature.

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

Related

A.A. v. B.B.
384 P.3d 878 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2016)
Newcomb v. McPeek.
Hawaii Supreme Court, 2016
Fernandes v. Fernandes
32 Haw. 608 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-thompson-haw-1932.