Kartman v. Kartman

161 A. 269, 163 Md. 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 5, 1932
Docket[No. 56, April Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 161 A. 269 (Kartman v. Kartman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kartman v. Kartman, 161 A. 269, 163 Md. 19 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a struggle between two' brothers for th© possession of the seven year old son of one of them, and, like all such cases, no matter how decided, it leaves a scar which even time may not obliterate.

Two brothers, Isador Kartman, the appellant, and Jacob Kartman, appellee, married sisters. They resided in the same house, a duplex dwelling. Isador and his wife; with one son, occupied the ground floor apartment; Jacob and his wife, childless, the upper floor. "When the boy in this case, Donald, was three weeks old, his mother died. Eor a few weeks after Isador’s wife died, he and his six year old son, Robert, and th© infant lived upstairs with the appellees; the care of the baby devolving on his aunt, Mrs. Jacob Kartman. The appellant then had his mother and father come to live with him and the son, Robert, in th© lower apartment, where they remained for two years. The four then moved to a house nearby on Liberty Heights Avenue, where they lived *21 together until August, 1929, when the father died. In that month the appellant married, and he, his wife, and son Robert, moved to Mount Washington. In the meantime the younger child has been with his uncle and aunt, the appellees, but has been on an average two days a week with his father, returning to the appellees at night, except on three occasions, on one of which it was manifest that the appellant did not intend to take him back.

The upshot of it all was that on July 30th, 1931, Isador Kartman filed a bill against his, brother Jacob Kartman and his wife, Erma, charging that the appellees were arbitrarily and unlawfully withholding in their custody the seven year old son of the appellant, and prayed a decree that the appellant be awarded his son.

The bill is filed under the provisions of section 80, article 16, of the Code, which gives the equity courts of this state original jurisdiction in all cases relating to the custody or guardianship of children, but by that section it is provided that nothing therein “contained shall be construed to take away or impair the jurisdiction of the several juvenile courts in this state and of the Juvenile Court of Baltimore City in cases relating to dependent or delinquent children, or be taken or construed to repeal or modify the provisions of Section 21 of Article 42 of the Code of Public General Laws.” These cases more often come before the courts on petitions for habeas corpus than on petitions or bills in equity, but, no matter how they come, the principles to be- applied, the status of the |>arties, and the thing to be done- are the same, and for this reason, and because of the intention of the Legislature in the enactment of section 80 of article 16 (Acts of 1920, ch. 573), not to- impair the effect or modify the provisions of section 21 of article 42 (Acts of 1890, ch. 70), it is in order here to quote from the latter act as follows: “Whenever a minor is brought before a court or judge upon habeas corpus in private custody, the court or judge, in the determination of the case, shall be guided and controlled by a parental consideration of what is demanded by the best interests of such minor, and the custody shall be determined *22 without regard to technicalities of procedure and without reference to any alleged technical claim or right of custody; the minor, when brought up by habeas corpus, shall be deemed to be in the custody of and .subject to the order of the court or judge issuing the writ or hearing the case, and the court or judge may adjourn the examination from time to time, and shall not allow the proceedings to be controlled by the parties thereto, or any of them, and it shall not lie within the power of the parties, or any of them, to' dismiss the case or settle it; * * * and any court or judge disposing of the custody of a minor upon habeas corpus may assume and retain jurisdiction over such minor in as ample a manner as a court of chancery, or judge of a court of chancery upon bill or petition, and may pass such other and further orders in relation to his care and custody as may be deemed just and beneficial.” But after all the acts referred to are merely declaratory of the powers theretofore exercised by courts of chancery where the disposition of children was concerned. Barnard v. Godfrey, 157 Md. 264, 145 A. 614. As expressed by Justice Brewer, then on the Supreme Court of Kansas, in the case of Petition of Frank B. Bort, 25 Kan. 308: “When the custody of children is the questipn, * * * the best interest of the children is the paramount fact. Rights of father and mother sink into insignificance before that. Even when father and mother are living together, a court has the power, if the best interests of the child require it, to take it away from both parents, and commit the custody to a third person. In other words, a court of chancery stands as a guardian of all children, and may interfere at any time and in any way to protect and advance their welfare and interests.” See Schneider v. Hasson, 161 Md. 547, 157 A. 739, 741.

In their brief, and at the argument, the appellees stressed an agreement or understanding between the brothers almost immediately after the mother’s death, and alleged declarations of the father afterwards, as in the nature of an estoppel to his right to take these proceedings, and cited several authorities to the effect that such agreements should be re *23 spected, but, as stated in Re Rosenthal, 103 Pa. Super. Ct. 27, 157 A. 342, 344: “The relationship of parent and child is a status — not a property right. * * * The paramount issue— whether the jurisdiction of the court of the county in which the child happens to be at the time (Finlay v. Finlay, 240 N. Y. 429, 148 N. E. 624, and Commonwealth v. Daven [298 Pa. 416, 148 A. 524], supra) is invoked in habeas corpus proceedings, by petition, or by bill, or in any other way — is the best interest and permanent welfare of the child. The contract is not conclusive, but must yield to this consideration.” This is also the rule declared in this state by the statute quoted (article 42, section 21), wherein it is, stated that the court “shall be guided and controlled by a parental consideration of what is demanded by the best interests of such minor, and the custody shall be determined without regard to technicalities of procedure and without reference to any alleged technical claim or right of custody.”'

As was said in the opinion by Judge Digges in Barnard v. Godfrey, 157 Md. 264, 267, 145 A. 614, 616, “There can be no binding, and very little helpful, precedent found in the decisions of the courts on this subject, because essentially each case must depend upon its peculiar circumstances,” but courts are bound, in determining the fate of children, and in fixing the environment which is thereafter to direct the course of their lives, to recognize the natural right of parents toi the custody of their children, and unless convinced that it would be injurious to their welfare, to maintain the relationship which society has always recognized as the one most to be desired.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 269, 163 Md. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kartman-v-kartman-md-1932.