Powell v. Powell

255 S.W.2d 717, 36 Tenn. App. 367, 1952 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 30, 1952
StatusPublished

This text of 255 S.W.2d 717 (Powell v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Powell, 255 S.W.2d 717, 36 Tenn. App. 367, 1952 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

HOWELL, J.

In this case the petitioner Betty B. Wright seeks the custody of two minor children of her [368]*368daughter Lois W. Powell who died in May 1951. Lois W. Powell had been granted a divorce from her husband Ernest T. Powell in June 1948, on the grounds of wilful and malicious desertion for more than two whole years and had been given the custody and control of the children. The case remained in the Circuit Court of Lincoln County. One of the children was born in July 1943 and the other in September 1946. At the time of the births of the children, the mother Lois W. Powell was living with her mother, the petitioner Betty B. Wright, and died there in May 1951. The children have always, except for visits to their paternal grandparents in Nashville, lived with the petitioner, their maternal grandmother. After being discharged from the Army, the father Ernest T. Powell went to California to live in 1946, and has lived there since.

The father Ernest T. Powell and the paternal grandparents, Thomas Powell and his wife, filed answers and asked that the custody of the children be given to Ernest T. Powell.

Lipón the hearing the trial Judge granted the prayers of the petition and awarded the sole and exclusive custody of the children to the petitioner, their maternal grandmother.

The defendants have appealed to this Court and have assigned as error that there is no evidence to support the judgment of the Court and that the Court erred in finding that it was for the best interest of the children that their permanent care and custody be awarded their maternal grandmother, Betty B. Wright.

In disposing of the case the trial Judge filed a full finding of facts and stated his conclusions as follows:

“That although this court recognizes that the general rule of law gives a parent a superior right [369]*369to the custody of children, when the contest of custody is with the maternal grandparents still the welfare of the child involved overrides any g*eneral rule of law; that although Ernest T. Powell, the father of the children, or Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Powell of Nashville, the paternal grandparents of the children, are apparently all good people and would and could provide a good home for the children, still also would the maternal grandmother, Betty B. Wright provide a good home for the children, and her character and reputation also is outstanding among both white and colored people in the community; that although Betty B. Wright is of advanced age she is physically well and strong and is financially able to provide for the children. She owns a large house on Cherokee Avenue which is perhaps better than the average colored home in Fayetteville, and, in addition, has two rental houses from which she derives monthly income, and her two children contribute regularly making her total income $135 per month which she can use to rear the two grandchildren. But more important than this is the fact that from the entire record and proceedings in this case it appears that in actuality Betty B. Wright has been the mother of these two children ever since they were born. She apparently has given them as much, if not more, care and attention as any parent would give their own children looking after them while their mother worked.
“ 'That it appears that the father, Ernest T. Powell, the defendant, does in fact love and care for his children and desires to support them but it also appears that he has been exceedingly remiss or [370]*370lacking in diligence in caring for them, considering the fact that by his own proof he has not seen his children since he left to go to California and has never seen the youngest child. While the father may well be a good man and may well be able financially to provide the children with plenty of the material things of life, still it seems to me that any father conld have seen, visited, or in some way done something for the children he loved. This father has not done so, and whatever may have been his difficulties with his wife, the mother of the children, still, considering what is the best for the children themselves — and that is the main thing we are here deciding — it appears to me that it not only would perhaps be wrong but would actually be a grave injustice to the two children to uproot them from the only home and ‘mother’ they have ever known, from the place they have lived and played with their colored cousins, from the environment from which they have been apparently happy and well fed and clothed and kept clean, according to their appearance here in court today — and send them to live in a strange place, a strange state, among comparatively strange people, even though that person might be their father, or send them to live with their paternal grandparents in Nashville. For, in fact, this court must recognize that these people would be strangers to the children.
“ ‘Furthermore, I desire that the record show that from the testimony of the witnesses for the defendant it never was clearly shown that the children, if taken from the custody of the petitioner, would live with the father in California or with the paternal grandparents in Nashville. If it should be [371]*371the intent, admitted or otherwise, of the father to have the children live with his parents in Nashville, the thought occurs to me that they as well as the petitioner are of advanced years. They might be able to give the children a finer home but it is my belief that they could not give the children any more individual love and care and attention than has this old colored woman who had reared these two grandchildren of hers.
“ ‘Let the injunction become perpetual and vest the sole and exclusive custody and control of the children in the maternal grandmother, Betty B. Wright.’ ”

We have read the entire record and considered the briefs and argument of counsel and are of the opinion that the trial judge did not err in his disposition of the case but acted for the best interests of these little children.

In the case of State ex rel. Daugherty v. Rose, 167 Tenn. 489, 71 S. W. (2d) 685, 686, Judge Cook in delivering the opinion of the Court said:

“When such proceedings involve the custody of children, they are not decided according to the strict legal right of the petitioner hut are dependent upon the child’s welfare. By the common law, doubtless re-enforced by the proprietary theory of the Boman law, the' father was the legal custodian of his child and could reclaim it regardless of the child’s welfare or interest, but the common law has yielded to human considerations, so that now cases are not decided according to the strict legal right of the petitioning parent, but according to the best interest of the child. State [ex rel. Paine] v. Paine, 4 Humph. [372]*372[523] 529; State [ex rel. Bethel] v. Kilvington, 100 Tenn. 227, 45 S. W. 433, 41 L. R. A. 284; Kenner v. Kenner, 139 Tenn. [211] 221, 201 S. W. 779, L. R. A. 1918E, 587.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Daugherty v. Rose
71 S.W.2d 685 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1934)
Stubblefield v. State Ex Rel. Fjelstad
106 S.W.2d 558 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1937)
Miers v. Betterton
45 S.W. 430 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1898)
State v. Kilvington
41 L.R.A. 284 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
255 S.W.2d 717, 36 Tenn. App. 367, 1952 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-powell-tennctapp-1952.