Roberts v. Biggs

1953 OK 134, 272 P.2d 438, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 688
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 28, 1953
Docket35294
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1953 OK 134 (Roberts v. Biggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Biggs, 1953 OK 134, 272 P.2d 438, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 688 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal has been taken from a judgment in a habeas corpus proceeding instituted by James Milton Biggs and his wife,. *439 Marie Moselle Biggs, to obtain from Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Roberts the custody of their infant daughter, Deborah Sue.

Mr. and Mrs. Biggs, residents of Kilgore, Texas, were married in 1942 when the latter was only seventeen years of age. During the first eight years of their marriage, Mrs. Biggs gave birth to five children and had three miscarriages. At the time of the trial the oldest of these children was 8½ years of age and the youngest, Deborah Sue, was only 17 months old. After the birth of her third baby, John Gary, Mrs. Biggs, being in a weakened and nervous condition from bearing or attempting to bear a child each year, went for a rest to the home of a sister in another Texas city, against her husband’s wishes. She left home again after the birth of her fourth child, Sherry, and wanted to again, in February, 1950, when Deborah Sue was only a few days old. Her husband continued to oppose these trips away from home, but when Deborah Sue was 2 or 3 months old, Mrs. Biggs “got to feeling so bad” that she went to a doctor, who examined her and advised her to go to a hospital. Her husband then consented to her leaving the family and the two commenced trying to make arrangements for the care of the children. In this endeavor, they first went to see an acquaintance by the name of Mrs. H. A. Forrester, there in Kilgore on September 10, 1950. Mrs. Forrester testified that they told her they were separating and it is undisputed that they asked her if she would like to take the baby Deborah Sue and perhaps one of the older daughters. She further testified that after questioning the couple, in an effort to ascertain if they fully realized what they were doing, she indicated that she was not in a position to take any of the children, but told them she had a sister in Norman, Oklahoma, who would be glad to take one or two of them, and promised that she would get in touch with them later as to this. On or about September 13th, Mrs. Biggs left Kilgore and went to West Texas. She was out there approximately a month before going to Bakersfield, California, where she began living at her brother’s home and though she had never been so employed before, and, according to her testimony was still in poor health and weighed only 91 pounds, she became a waitress in a cafe. The evidence further discloses that during her absence from Kil-gore she was guilty of misconduct in her relations with others, unnecessary to detail here.

After Mrs. Biggs departed from Kilgore, Texas, Mr. Biggs, lived with his wife’s brother there for a week during which time the Biggs’ children were taken to their paternal grandparents’ home; and the next Monday, or about September 18, 1950, he contacted Mrs. Forrester again concerning the placing of the baby, Deborah Sue, and her older sister Sherry. Mrs. Forrester then telephoned Mrs. Roberts, her Norman, Oklahoma sister, who, with her husband, a Norman businessman, had an adopted son three years old, and had been wanting to adopt a little girl, too. Mrs. Forrester told Mrs. Roberts that Mr. Biggs wanted someone to adopt Deborah and a few days later Mr. and Mrs. Roberts came to Kilgore to look into the matter. When they arrived they found Deborah at Mrs. Forrester’s home and ascertained definitely from Mr. Biggs that he wanted to give the child to them for adoption. They then consulted the County Judge and later a Longview lawyer, after which, Mr. Biggs executed, before a Notary Public of Texas, a sworn instrument designated, as Respondent’s Exhibit 3, in which he represented that he did not desire to retain control and custody of Deborah Sue, and purported to “relinquish benefit of parental legal rights” over her, agreed that she should be “offered for adoption”, and waived “issuance of notice to me of any adoption hearing and proceedings pertaining to my said child and agree that such hearing may be had at any time.” Mr. and Mrs. Roberts then brought Deborah Sue back to their home in Norman, where she has since lived and been cared for, and apparently loved in a most commendable manner and as if she were their own child, without court proceedings ever having been instituted for her adoption.

In April, 1951, Biggs obtained a decree of divorce by default from his wife, who had no notice of such proceedings. (Inci *440 dentally the allegations or grounds upon which he obtained this divorce to not appear in the record). ■

While in California, Mrs. Biggs started corresponding with Mr. Biggs in Texas, and they agreed she would return to Kil-gore and they would resume marital relations with each other on condition that she could forego bearing any more children. This agreement was carried out when Biggs sent his wife money to come home on and she did so return; and her husband had an operation performed upon himself similar to, or in the nature of, a vasectomy which rendered him sterile or incapable of reproducing. The Biggs then got their children together, (except Deborah Sue), and reestablished a home at Kilgore, and - almost immediately thereupon commenced trying to regain custody of Deborah from Mr. and Mrs. Roberts, their efforts culminating in their present proceedings for a writ of habeas corpus.

After Mr. and Mrs. Roberts had filed their response to the Biggs’ petition for the writ and the issues had otherwise been joined by pleadings, the Roberts moved for a postponement of the trial to allow them to take depositions and investigate Mr. and Mrs. Biggs’ background in Texas and California.

During the postponement Mr. and Mrs. Biggs returned to their home in Kilgore, Texas, where they were remarried on July 20, 1951, and when this cause finally came on for trial, July 23, 1951, were apparently living normal and exemplary lives as dutiful spouses and parents. At the trial it was shown that Mr. Biggs was then regularly employed 7 days a week at wages of $1.35 per hour, sometimes totalling $16 per day. Both he and his wife testified that since her return from California, her health had improved,- she had gained weight and was -a “changed” or different person from what she was before she left her family, being now normal in every respect.

After hearing proof of the above related undisputed facts and many others not now necessary to mention, the trial court granted the writ and awarded custody of Deborah Sue to the natural parents and petitioners, Mr. and Mrs. Biggs. In their appeal from said judgment, the Respondents, Mr„ and Mrs. Roberts, allege that on the basis-of the evidence, the court erred in said judgment.

The parties will hereinafter, when not designated by particular name, be referred to as “Petitioners” and “Respondents”, respectively, as they appeared in the trial court.

Respondents say the well-established rule in this jurisdiction is that the only issue to-be determined in a case of this nature is what would be for the best interest of the child involved. They argue that the court cannot be said to have served the best interest of Deborah Sue in returning her to-parents who had willfully and knowingly “abandoned” her, and to a mother who showed no intention of returning home until an encounter with law enforcement agencies in California.

Among the cases relied upon by Petitioners in support of their position and the trial court’s judgment, is Hedtke v. Kukuk, 93 Okl. 264, 220 P.

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Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 134, 272 P.2d 438, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-biggs-okla-1953.