Ex parte Chabert
Ex parte Chabert
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is the second hearing of this case. The court, at the former hearing, decided unanimously that the paternity of the child Nancy had been proved and by a majority vote sent the case back for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion. Chabert v. Sánchez, 29 P. R. R. 225. The idea of the court evidently was, as the opinion shows, to permit the parties to test the question of what the well-being of .the child required, but not to raise any question of its paternity. The case went back. The respondent did not amend his pleadings. The petitioner, perhaps necessarily, made no point about this and raised no further question as to the right of the court to determine the custody of the child as its own well-being might require. Thus the parties went into court with the law of the case established for them and the issue then presented was what was the best interest of the child. Let us, then, examine the case as developed.
Originally the father of Nancy turned the custody over to another and did nothing to recover it for several years. It was the case of a young couple ashamed of a birth occurring shortly after marriage who tried to conceal the fact from the world. But they have been punished, suffered and repented.
When the possession of a young child is concerned passions rage fiercely and men and women will do and try things against which ordinarily their best natures would revolt. In no other way can we explain the actions of the respondent in this case. He and his wife have a keen devotion to Nancy and would probably sacrifice their lives for her. They have given her years of attention and would take good care of her according to their lights. But the respondent has not shown a very generous disposition toward the petitioner and his wife. The record convinces us that the respondent believed, or had good reason to believe, that Augusto de Chabert was the father of Nancy. Indeed, the respondent tolerated the visits of the young couple until a short time before this suit was begun. After this court had unanimously
We are all agreed that the presumption natural to society is that the well-being of a child is best subserved by placing it or leaving it with its natural parents. The writer has. been of the opinion that the well-being of the child was not. duly raised. Two of the members of the court are of the opinion that in an habeas corpus proceeding the well-being of a. child cannot be inquired into and the writer has some doubts, but we are all of the opinion that no good reason now exists which would militate against the issuance of the writ. Assuming that the conduct of the father might have played a role in depriving him of the patria potestas, that reason does not exist today. Assuming that the custody of the child may be inquired into under a writ of habeas corpus, there is reason now to restore the custody of Nancy to her parents. In this last connection, we may add, it is better, as she grows older, that she should not have to wonder why she is differently placed from normal children in society. As against these considerations the greater financial ability of a stranger and the alleged preference of the child should not be allowed to prevail.
The judgment must be reversed and the child turned over to the petitioner.
Reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.