Commonwealth v. Addicks
Commonwealth v. Addicks
Opinion of the Court
The habeas corpus in this case was issued at the instance of Joseph Lee, for the purpose of obtainjng tjje custody of his children, Adelaide and Frances Lee, the former an infant of thirteen, the latter of nine years. The children are held by their mother, Barbara Lee^ formerly the wife of the said Joseph, from whom she was divorced for adultery, committed with John E. Addicks; She afterwards married Addicks, and has two children by him. The case was brought before the Court between two and three years ago, when on account of the tender age of the infants, it was judged improper to take them from the mother. The law was at that time .fully considered and declared by the Court. We are not confined to an abstract question on the rights of guardianship, but are to determine according to our discretion, on the expediency of delivering the infants to the custody of the father. The great object of the habeas corpus is to free the person from illegal restraint. That being done, the Court may proceed farther or not as circumstances require. These children do not stand before us in the same situation as formerly. The eldest has now arrived at a critical age; every moment is important; and the education of the next three years will probably be decisive of her fate. The case of the youngest is not so urgent. But it is important that the sisters should not be separated. When we decide for one, therefore, we must decide for both. I wish not to wound the feelings of the mother by unnecessary censure, but the case being brought before the Court, it is impossible to shut our eyes on the impropriety of her conduct. She was divorced from her first husband for a great crime, and whatever may be her opinion of her second marriage, we know that it is void by the law of this state. Yet I view her hot as a vulgar prostitute. Far from it.- She may have been ignorant of the law, which rendered her marriage' void, and it has not been suggested, that she hair been unfaithful to the man whom she now calls her husband. She is said to have received á good education in a convent in Canada, and having been married by her mother’s command, a,t too early an age, to a man with whom she had no previous acquaintance, she discovered, too late, that neither her years, her habits, ■her education, nor her disposition, accorded with those of her husband. Hence her guilt, and her misfortunes. She may be pitied, but cannot be justified. But what is to be said to
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.