Ingalls v. Campbell

24 P. 904, 18 Or. 461
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 24 P. 904 (Ingalls v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingalls v. Campbell, 24 P. 904, 18 Or. 461 (Or. 1889).

Opinion

Lord, J.

The facts in this case are these: On the fifth day of April, 1889, Esther Holladay, widow of Ben Holladay, died, leaving a will, in which she appointed General Rufus Ingalls executor thereof, and the guardian of her two children, Linda Holladay and Ben Campbell Holladay. The will was regularly proven and admitted to probate in the county court on the twentieth day of April, 1889, and General Ingalls was appointed executor of the’will, but in regard to the matter of his.application tobe appointed [462]*462guardian of the children in accordance with the will of the mother, Harriet B. Campbell, the grandmother of said chil dren, Maria A. Smith and Mrs. Wm. H. Barnhart, the aunts, and Joseph Holladay, the uncle of said children, filed an answer alleging that they were the nearest relatives of said children, and united in asking the appointment of said Harriet B. Campbell as the guardian of said children. Upon due consideration, the county court granted the prayer of said relatives for the appointment of the said Harriet B. Campbell, which, upon appeal to the circuit court, was reversed, and from that decision this appeal is taken.

The question involved and to be decided is the right of a mother to appoint by will a guardian for her children. The common law did not recognize the right of a testator to appoint a guardian for his children during their minority. While it made various provisions for the care of infants and their estates, the right to make any testamentary dispositions of the guardianship of the children was denied or withheld. It was years after the power to dispose of his property by will had been established by various statutes, that the right to make a testamentary disposition of the guardianship of his minor children was conferred. This right was given by the statute of 12 Charles II, 2 chap. 24, and by the words of the Act the father only can appoint the guardian or guardians, who shall have the custody of his children and the control of their estates during minority. The power thus conferred, when exercised to its fullest extent, invested the testamentary guardian with an authority over the children and control of their estates almost as coextensive as that enjoyed by the father himself. His appointment supersedes all other guardians, and all control on the part of the mother. So absolute is this power that it may be exerted in utter disregard of the claims of maternal affection and despite its protests, and commit the custody of the children to a stranger and embitter the life of the mother by depriving her of the society of her offspring. It matters not how amiable and [463]*463refined she may be, how competent in every respect to direct the education, and to participate, at least, in the custody of her children, the paramount right of the testamentary guardian deprives her of all right to interfere with his custody of them, or their education. Said Lord Chancellor Cottenham: “It is proper that mothers and children thus circumstanced should know that they have no right as such to interfere with the testamentary guardians, and if, under the peculiar circumstances, I think it proper now to leave the child in the custody of the mother, it is not in respect to right in the mother, but it is in consequence of that power which the court has of controlling the powTer of testamentary guardians.” Talbot v. Earl of Shrewsbury, 4 Myl. & Cr. 683. It was the legal effect of the fact of guardianship that constituted him a trustee, and like all such, subject to the general supervision of chancery to control his actions in a proper case. Beaufort v. Betty, 1 P. Will. 702. While the court of chancery had thus the power to control his actions, neither the statute nor the court recognized any right in the mother to the custody and control of her children; but on the contrary, the power conferred on the father to make a testamentary disposition of his children was unlimited and might be exerted against his unborn child. Under no circumstances could she exercise the power to appoint a testamentary guardian, and wherever she has made such appointment, the courts have declared it absolutely void. Ex parte Edwards, 3 Atk. 519. Ex parte Bell, 2 Tenn. Ch. 327. In all this the statute was in accord with the harsh features of the common law, which, in the marital relations, destroyed the wife’s personality, deprived her of lier property and denied her the right of the custody of her children, save such as her husband might vouchsafe. Oases -there are, which show, so absolute and unqualified was his right to the custody of his children and to take them from the mother, that irrespective of her merits and his demerits, in all the relations of domestic life, he could exclude her from all access to them, and might do this even from the worst of motives. [464]*464Rex v. Greenhill, 4 Ad. & Ellis, 624. See also Forsythe on Custody of Infants, 11, 12.

It is to the credit of the American courts that they' have been guided by a more liberal policy than those of England in awarding the custody of the children to the mother, and have regarded their welfare and interest in such controversies as the paramount obligation to be considered. Mercien v. People, 25 Wend. 104; Schoulder on Domestic Relations, 339 and 40; Hurd on Habeas Corpus, 472, et seq. Yet, notwithstanding the liberality of our courts in this regard, the statute of 12 Charles II has been re-enacted in most of the States, including our own State, shorn only of its verbose phraseology, but without any intention, it is thought, of varying its construction. 2 Kent’s Comm. 225.-It is true that in some of the States, of late years, the injustice to which it subjected mothers provoked a revolt in public sentiment and resulted in legislation which has softened its rigors, or so materially changed its features as to place the parents comparatively upon an equality in the right of the custody of the children. And while the spirit of mod ern progress has characterized our legislation, leading to the removal of numerous disabilities created by the com mon, law, and to a recognition of her individuality and of her rights of property, and what is equally or more sacred to her, the right to direct and control the training and custody of her oflspring, in case of divorce, where the husband is in fault, or shown in any controversy between them to be an unfit custodian of them, yet this relic of barbarism in the form of a statute is still in force in°our own State, unless its rigors have been softened or repealed by the Act of 1880.

With a full knowledge, then, of the injustice which may result to the mother from the operation of this statute, we are to turn to the statute of 1880 in order to determine whether its effect has been to give the mother the right to appoint a testamentary guardian for her children in the same manner as the father could do; for unless the statute works this result, the judgment must be reversed. Our [465]*465statute permitting the father to appoint a guardian by will is as follows: “Every father may, by his last will, in writing, appoint a guardian or guardians for any of his children, whether born at the time of making the will or afterwards, to continue during the minority of the child or for a less time,” etc. § 2885, Hill’s Code. “All laws which impose or recognize civil disabilities upon a wife, which are not imposed or recognized as existing in the husband, are hereby repealed; provided,

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Bluebook (online)
24 P. 904, 18 Or. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingalls-v-campbell-or-1889.