Taylor v. Taylor

50 S.E. 273, 103 Va. 750, 1905 Va. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 16, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 273 (Taylor v. Taylor) 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
Taylor v. Taylor, 50 S.E. 273, 103 Va. 750, 1905 Va. LEXIS 45 (Va. 1905).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding by -writ of habeas corpus, wherein the plaintiff in error, A. Thomas Taylor, was the petitioner, and the defendant in error, his wife, Sallie L. Taylor, was respondent.

The object of the petition was- to recover the possession of his two infant children who were in the custody of their mother, the respondent.

The writ was awarded, but on the hearing the lower court refused the prayer of the petition and dismissed the proceeding. This action of the Circuit Court is now before us for review.

It appears that the petitioner and respondent were married on the 18th of April, 1900; the former being twenty-one years old, and the latter only seventeen. The fruit of this marriage was two children — William Thomas, who at the time this proceeding began was two years and three or four months old, and Ella Charlotte, then an infant three months of age. The petitioner resides in the town of Cape Charles, where he has provided himself and family with a comfortable home, nicely furnished, which he owns in fee simple and free from encumbrance. The petitioner alleges that he is the proprietor of a prosperous and successful business that has enabled him to provide his wife and children with a comfortable living; that his personal habits are decorous and business like, being strictly temperate, industrious and thrifty; and that he has been at all times to the respondent a provident, loyal and affectionate husband, providing for her and his children amply, punctually, and most cheerfully; that, not content to enjoy the pleasures and comforts of her home, respondent had, without cause, excuse, complaint, or warning, stealthily deserted petitioner, taking with her the two children of their marriage, and established herself with her brother, ETorman D. Rooks, whose last known address [752]*752was Huntersville, a suburb of the city of Norfolk. It is further alleged that Norman D. Rooks owned no property, and was without means except what he derived as a wage-earner,, which was hardly sufficient to support himself and an aged mother who was dependent upon him; that respondent has no. separate estate whatever, and is not only without means, destitute, and helpless, but is powerless to provide common necessaries for herself or children, and must therefore receive srrch provision from those upon whom the obligation of providing does not rest, or endure privation and hardship which her children neither invoked nor deserved to suffer. Petitioner further alleges that, after the departure of his wife, he went, in a day or two to see her in person, and entreated her to return with him to their home, which she refused to do; that in two. or three weeks thereafter he renewed this invitation through his-counsel, but without avail; that then, as well as now, petitioner-was, and still is, able, willing, and anxious to furnish his wife- and children a home in the town of Cape Charles, and all such comforts as should make them reasonably contented and happy therein; that it is an insufferable tax upon his sensibilities to-realize the status of his loved ones, being denied a competency save by the uncertain and, at best, temporary grace of those whose officiousness must sooner or later cease to actuate even the present measure of their charity, and that by the indiscretion of respondent, and in violation of petitioner’s most sácred. rights. Petitioner charges that his children are being illegally-detained in the custody of respondent; that their best interests-demand that they be delivered to and reared under the care of petitioner; that he is in every way prepared to provide them with appropriate and tender care; that if delivered into his-custody they will be cared for and ministered to by his mother,, who is exceptionally devoted to her grandchildren, and that every necessity will be provided for them during his lifetime,. [753]*753and after, as he carries sufficient life insurance in solvent institutions to raise said children in reasonably luxury, if properly administered.

The essential allegations of this petition are supported by evidence other than that of the petitioner. Indeed, it would be difficult for any one to establish by those who have known him from childhood a higher character or better reputation than is accorded the petitioner by those who speak in his behalf in this case.

Lemuel E. Mumford, a banker at Cape Charles, says: “I have known petitioner from his boyhood; I know his general reputation in the community in which we both live, and have no hesitation in pronouncing it to be good.” He further says that petitioner is industrious, thoroughly sober, steady, progressive, and prosperous, as well as amiable in disposition; that as far as ascertainable from outside appearances, petitioner is a comfortable liver in his home, and owns a very cozy residence in Cape Charles, where he and his family lived prior to Mrs. Taylor’s departure from him, and has a business in town that appears, and is generally believed, to be prosperous and successful ; that affiant believes, in common with petitioner’s neighbors generally, that he is thoroughly worth of belief and truthful in all that he may state; that affiant is aware of no reason why petitioner is not a suitable person, amply qualified in every way for the custody and management of his children.

Marion II. Stevenson, the mayor of the town of Cape Charles, says: “I am thoroughly acquainted with the general reputation of petitioner in the community in which we both live, and have no hesitation in pronouncing it first class in every particular. Petitioner is of excellent personal character, sober, industrious, honest, honorable, and amiable. I know of no young man in the town of Cape Charles, or anywhere, more trustworthy, in every way, nor one who is better qualified [754]*754as the head of a small family such as he had up to- the departure a few months' ago of his wife”; that petitioner is the proprietor ■of a prosperous business in the town, owns a comfortable home, and that affiant is aware of no reason whatever why petitioner is not in every way a suitable person to have the custody of his ■children.

E. J. Twiford, a grocery merchant, after speaking in the highest terms of the character and reputation of petitioner, .says that he is comfortably fixed for housekeeping, has a paying business, and is a good manager, and excellent provider for his family, or was before his wife broke it up by leaving him, if affiant may judge from the amount and quality of the provisions bought at his store by the petitioner and his wife, where both had unlimited credit, as petitioner never questioned or refused to pay a bill promptly, whether bought by his wife or .their servant.

A number of other merchants and business men of Oape ■Charles testify in the most flattering terms to the high standing and character of petitioner, and to his entire qualification in -every respect to raise and train his children; but it would unnecessarily prolong this opinion to quote further from this evidence. We have only desired to convey some idea of the -character in which the petitioner has presented himself to this -court, claiming the right to the custody and care of his children.

The petition, from which we have quoted quite fully, was ¡answered by respondent briefly as follows: .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 273, 103 Va. 750, 1905 Va. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-taylor-va-1905.