Lawson v. Lawson

94 S.E.2d 215, 198 Va. 403, 1956 Va. LEXIS 221
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 4, 1956
DocketRecord 4575
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 94 S.E.2d 215 (Lawson v. Lawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawson v. Lawson, 94 S.E.2d 215, 198 Va. 403, 1956 Va. LEXIS 221 (Va. 1956).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The sole issue in this case involves the custody of two infants, Linda Ann Lawson, ten years of age, and Patricia, nine years, the daughters of Levi Owen Lawson and Edna Hancock Lawson. Levi Owen Lawson having died during the pendency of this appeal, the controversy is between the mother of the children on the one side and the uncle of the children, J. A. Lawson and his wife, Rebecca Lawson, on the other.

On August 3, 1951, Edna Hancock Lawson instituted a suit for divorce against her husband, Levi Owen Lawson, in the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond. In her bill she alleged that her husband had refused to contribute money for the support of herself and children, had assaulted her, and that she was in constant fear of her life from him. She prayed that she be granted a divorce from bed and board on the ground of cruelty and reasonable apprehension of bodily hurt; that she be awarded the custody of their two infant children; and that her husband be required to furnish such amounts as might be reasonable, necessary and proper for the maintenance of herself, and the children then in her custody.

Levi Owen Lawson answered, denying the material allegations of fhe bill, and praying that he be given the custody of the children, “to be kept in the home of his brothers and sisters.”

On August 1, 1955, Edna Hancock Lawson filed a petition in the divorce suit, setting out that her two children were then temporarily living in the home of the defendant’s brother, J. A. Lawson and the latter’s wife, Rebecca Lawson, in Gloucester County, Virginia, where they had gone during petitioner’s illness. She stated that she had recovered her health, had established a home; but that J. A. and Rebecca Lawson refused to deliver the children to her without an order of court to do so. She prayed that such an order be entered. Thereupon the court directed J. A. and Rebecca Lawson to appear and show cause why an order should not be entered granting the sole custody of the children to their mother.

J. A. and Rebecca Lawson filed their answer, setting out that the children had come to five with them on several different occasions; that both the father and mother, as well as the children, had had *405 tuberculosis; that the children had lived with them continuously since August 1, 1953, and had attended school in Gloucester County two full sessions, where they were making good progress in their school work; that the children were happy and well adjusted; that the father was desirous of having the children cared for by the respondents; and that it would be to the best interest of the two children to continue to live in their home.

While a hearing on the petition for the custody of the children was pending, Edna Hancock Lawson went to the school in Gloucester County which her children attended, took the children from the school, and carried them to her home in Richmond. J. A. and Rebecca Lawson immediately filed a petition, setting out the above fact, and the court entered an order directing that the children be returned to the custody of J. A. and Rebecca Lawson until further order.

The trial court with the above proceedings before it, and with the evidence heard ore terms, after consideration thereof, on November 4, 1955, entered the following decree:

“It appearing to the Court that there was born of the marriage of Edna Hancock Lawson and Levi Owen Lawson two children, Linda Ann Lawson born on June 23, 1945, and Patricia Lawson bom on July 26, 1946; that the father of said children, Levi Owen Lawson, contracted tuberculosis in the year 1947 and is presently a patient at the Veterans Administration Hospital (McGuire’s) at Richmond, Virginia; that in the year 1953 Edna Hancock Lawson contracted tuberculosis and was a patient at Pine Camp Hospital, Richmond, Virginia; that in the late summer of the year 1953, the aforesaid children, Linda Ann and Patricia, were placed by consent of both the father and mother in the home of J. A. Lawson, brother of Levi Owen Lawson, and Rebecca Lawson, wife of J. A. Lawson, in Gloucester County, where the children are presently living; that Edna Hancock Lawson has recovered from tuberculosis, is now gainfully employed, capable of furnishing a home for her children, is a fit and proper person to care for her children and that the welfare of the children will be promoted by being in the custody of their mother.
“Upon Consideration Whereof, the Court doth Adjudge, Order and Decree that J. A. Lawson and Rebecca Lawson forthwith return the two children, Linda Ann Lawson and Patricia Lawson, to the custody of their mother, Edna Hancock Lawson, who shall retain *406 the custody of the two said children until the further order of this Court.”

Upon petition of Levi Owen Lawson, J. A. Lawson and Rebecca Lawson, we granted this appeal on February 29, 1956. On June 11, 1956, it appearing to this Court that Levi Owen Lawson had died on May 14, 1956, he was dismissed as a party to the cause.

J. A. Lawson and Rebecca Lawson contend that the evidence showed that the best interests of the children required that they be given the custody of the infants, and that, in determining that question, the court erred in failing to take into consideration the wishes of the children and their father that their custody be given to their uncle and his wife.

The facts are without material dispute.

Levi Owen Lawson, the father of the infants, had, since 1947, been a patient in a United States Veterans’ Hospital for the treatment of tuberculosis, and at the time of the trial of the case in the lower court was still in such a hospital. He was apparently a permanent invalid, and as such not a physically fit person capable of having the custody and care of his infant children. His wife, Edna Hancock Lawson, became ill in 1948, and subsequently developed tuberculosis; but according to the medical evidence she is now cured. Both of the infant children developed the same disease; but are also apparently cured, only scars remaining from their former illness.

In 1954, Edna Hancock Lawson learned that her husband, while a patient in a Veterans’ Hospital in North Carolina, had obtained a decree of divorce from her in a court in that State, without notice to or appearance by her. She applied for and was granted an appeal, and the Supreme Court of North Carolina set aside and annulled the decree. In the meanwhile, the divorce proceeding instituted by Mrs. Lawson in the Law and Equity Court of the City of Richmond was awaiting trial. The trial had not been concluded at the time of the death of her husband.

Mrs. Edna Hancock Lawson, thirty years of age, testified that when she became ill in 1948, the children, with her consent, spent three months with their uncle, J. A. Lawson, and his wife, in Gloucester County. In the fall of 1953, Mrs. Edna Hancock Lawson had pleurisy, her condition: was such that she had to be hospitalized, and the children were again sent to the home of their uncle in Gloucester County, where they remained until the institution of the proceeding to determine their custody.

*407 It appears that J. A.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E.2d 215, 198 Va. 403, 1956 Va. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-lawson-va-1956.