Walker v. Finney

157 S.W. 948, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1185
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 948 (Walker v. Finney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Finney, 157 S.W. 948, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1185 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

Appellee Finney instituted this suit against appellant for the custody of his minor son, Harry Boyett Finney, alleged to be unlawfully withheld by the appellant, Mrs. Lilia Walker. The case was called for trial, a jury impaneled, and the evidence heard, at the conclusion of which a peremptory instruction was given by the court, directing á verdict in favor of the appellee. The child in controversy is the son of the appellee by his former wife, Eva Finney, from whom appellee had been divorced, and who, a short time before this proceeding was instituted, died in the state of Mississippi. The appellant and Mrs. Eva Finney were sisters, and just before the latter died she requested orally, and perhaps in writing, that appellant take the child, Harry Boyett Finney, who was then about 10 or 11 years of age, to raise and educate. It seems that in obedience to this request the appellant, Mrs. Walker, who was present at her sister’s death, but who lived in Henderson county, Tex., took charge of Harry and brought him to her home. It was very shortly after this that appellee instituted this suit.

[1-3] The first assignment of error presents the principal question arising on the appeal, and is that “the court erred in peremptorily instructing the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff, or relator, R. H. Finney, because the pleadings and evidence raised material issues of fact, which it was the sole province of the jury to decide.” This assignment must be sustained, we think, under the familiar rule invoked by appellant to the effect that the court is authorized to take the case from the jury only when the evidence is of such a conclusive character that there is no room for ordinary or reasonable minds, seeking the truth, to differ as to the conclusion to be drawn from it. Such was not in our opinion the conclusive character of the evidence in this ease. On the contrary, it was sufficient to take the case to the jury for their determination of the paramount issues in it, namely, whether it was for the best interest of the infant to take it from the custody of its aunt and foster parent and give it to its father. The law applicable to contests of this character is too well settled for discussion. It has been uniformly held that the paramount consideration is the interest and welfare of the child; but that, as the father is the natural guardian of his child, and as such entitled to the custody of its person, it Will, in a contest by him, be awarded to him, unless he is shown to be for some reason unworthy or incompetent to take charge of the child, or unless the welfare of the child for some spe *949 cial reason demands a different disposition. The evidence will not be quoted in detail, or any opinion expressed as to its weight or credibility, but in explanation simply of our conclusion and ruling, we will state that appellant offered testimony tending to show that the mother of the child in question had insured her life for its benefit in the sum of $1,000 or more, paying herself, unaided by the appellee, all the premiums; that the relator abandoned said child when it was only about 11 months old, and has never contributed or offered to contribute anything for the support and education of said child; that the child at the date of the trial of this case was 11 years old; and that appellee has had no communication whatever with said child since its infancy, and that the appellant and her sister, the mother of the child, lived together many years and worked together, and that the child was in the house with appellant, where it has been kept with her own children jointly with its mother, except for about one year before the death of its mother, and that the child knew practically no difference between its mother and the appellant, Mrs. Walker; that appellant was at the bedside of her sister when she died in the state of Mississippi, and at the dying request of her sister took charge of the child and brought him back to Texas to her home in Henderson county; that the child is nearly 12 years old, and is unwilling to be separated from his home with appellant and placed in the custody of his father; that his father has never shown any affection for him or given anything to help him along in life; that his father has married again, and now has a young wife who has children of her own; that for about two years appellee lived in the same town with his child, neither recognizing nor making any inquiries about him whatever; and that he had been separated from him about 10 years. He testified : “No, I have never spoken to the child during all these years; never have had anything to do with him at .all. I don’t know whether the child lived here or in Malakoff while I stayed here in Athens; if it was in Malakoff I never went to see it; if it was here in Athens I never went to see it, and I never saw it on the streets of Athens while I lived here; it might be that I could have met the child in the streets here and not have known it.” There was further testimony tending to show that before and after the appellee married the mother of the child, and while he lived in the town of Mal-akoff in Henderson county, Tex., his reputation for truth and veracity and for licentiousness and immorality in that community, from the time he was 18 or 20 years old, was bad. A number of witnesses, claiming to have known him from his childhood^ testified to that effect; that such was his reputation while he lived with the mother of the child whose custody he now seeks to recover; that immediately upon hearing of the death of the child’s mother he applied for letters of guardianship of the person and estate of the child, and warned the insurance company not to pay the life insurance due the child to any one except himself. There was further testimony to the effect that the child, while in the custody of Mrs. Walker, the appellant, is surrounded by good moral and religious influences, and that he regards her and loves her as a mother; that this love is thoroughly reciprocated by Mrs. Walker and that she is not only willing, but anxious and able to rear and educate the child. The child testified in part: “I am 11 years old, will be 12 next August. Been going to school 3 or 4 years. I am in the low fifth grade. I will go to school here this fall. Auntie there (appellant) has been taking care of me. I want to live with Auntie, Mrs. Walker. My father did not take any notice of me when I went to Greenville. I lived here in Athens right down there on the corner when my father worked in the storé here in Athens. If I ever saw him here I did not know him. I understand he was here, he never took any notice of me that I know of, he never did give me anything or send me anything that I know of. I would walk along in front of the store where he was at work. I would go to the telephone, where Mama and Auntie were. Auntie treats me as good as Mama did, and I have everything I want; she is kind to me.” There was testimony in contradiction and rebuttal of the foregoing testimony offered by appellant, and appellee further offered in evidence a certified copy of a judgment rendered in the county court of Hunt county, Tex., appointing appellee guardian of the person and estate of the child in controversy, but our conclusion is that the evidence as a whole was sufficient to require the submission of the all-important and vital question, as to whether or not the interest and welfare of the child would be better sub-served by placing him in the custody of his father, to the jury for their decision, and that the court’s failure to do so is reversible error.

[4] While, as said by this court in Parker v. Wiggins, 86 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 948, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-finney-texapp-1913.