Jennings v. Anderson
Jennings v. Anderson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is a proceeding in habeas corpus to determine the custody of an illegitimate child named James. Fortunately the cardinal facts are not in dispute. Nellie Shaw, one of thé appellants, in 1914 gave birth to an illegitimate child. At the time of the birth of the child Nellie was only 17 years old. Nellie’s mother, after the death of Nellie’s father, married a man named Anderson. Mr. Anderson seems to be an entirely'worthy man. Finding the disgrace that had been brought upon him, Mr. Anderson refused to allow Nellie or her child to come to his home. Mrs. Anderson, Nellie’s mother, placed the child in the Bruner Industrial Home in Greenville, and agreed to and did pay the home $8 per month for the support of the child. After keeping the child for a few months, those in charge of' the Home turned the child over to the respondent and his wife, *508 who in an informal sort of way undertook to adopt it and have had the custody of it until quite recently, when the mother took it away! Nellie married a brother of her stepfather. We shall hereafter refer to the appellants, the mother and daughter, as Mrs. Ora and Mrs. Nellie. Mrs. Nellie’s husband is much older than his wife, and they did not live together long. For a while at least Mrs. Nellie did not live a correct life. The presiding Judge, in his decree, says:
“It may be that a disposition- to trust too implicitly in the attractive promises of a dissolute male companion is' the cause to which the worry and sorrow unfolded by this present case may be attributed.”
Too many young girls, when they fall, are thrown into despair and lead lives of shame from a supposed necessity. Mrs. Nellie claims to have reformed. It is undisputed that she went to work to help pay for the care of her child at the Bruner Industrial -Home and to fit herself for making an honest living. She became a stenographer, and rose rapidly, until she was earning $105 per month in Washington in war work.
There is nothing in the record to show that either Mrs. Ora or Mrs. Nellie knew of or consented to the transfer of the custody of the child from the Bruner Home to Mrs. Jennings. The record does not show how long the mother and grandmother were in ignorance of people who had the custody of the child. The record shows that Mr. Anderson, the stepfather of Mrs. Nellie, has relented, and is now willing to receive Mrs. Nellie and her child into his home, and that he allowed Mr. Jennings to move on his place with the child.
The petition for the writ is based on the right of possession under a deed from the superintendent of the Bruner Industrial Fióme. The appellants deny the validity of the deed, and.set up that Mrs. Nellie is the mother, and that it would be to the best interest of the child that it should be in *509 the custody of its mother. On the hearing on the Circuit the custody of the little boy was given to Mr. Jennings. From this order the mother and grandmother appeal. .
True repentance is the “turning from sin with an earnest endeavor after a new obedience.” Mrs. Nellie’s attitude, without expressly so stating, is that of one who seeks, in a measure at least, to undo the great wrong she has done to the child. She does not ask that the child be given to her, to strengthen her to a better life. For that purpose it cannot be granted, much as our sympathies may be with her. It is to the interest of the child, however, that its mother shall live a pure life. For that reason it may be granted The respondent claims that, as long as the child remains with its mother, the mother’s shame will overshadow the child. The bringing of this suit has fixed in, that community the shame of its birth on the child irrevocably. That which might have been suspicious before is certainty now and matter of public record. If this child continues tó live in *511 that community, a measure of social ostracism is bound to be felt, that will bestow many a heartache and tend to make of the child a misanthrope in heart and an Ishmaelite in life. Be they never so kind, still, if the child shall live with Mr. Jennings and his wife, it will probably live in that community. Mrs. Nellie has been working elsewhere. Self-preservation for herself and the good of her child will or should carry her and her child away, and give both of them a chance to live a new life.
It seems to this Court that the best interest of the child demands that it be left in the custody of its mother, and the order appealed from is reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jennings v. Anderson Et Al.
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- 5 cases
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- Syllabus
- 1. Habeas Corpus — Welfare of Child Paramount Consideration in Determining Custody.- — -The statute do not interfere with the chancery jurisdiction of the Courts to determine the right to custody of children, and all contracts for such custody are subject to the control of the Courts, who give paramount consideration to the best interest of the child in determining the rights to its custody. 2. Habeas Corpus — Deed Giving Custody of Child Effective Only as Shoving Unfitness of Parent. — A deed by a parent, giving to another the custody of his child, does not in fact estop the parent from recovering possession of the child, if it is for the child’s best interest, but operates only to show that the parent is so unmindful of his obligations that he is unfit to have the custody awarded to him. 3. Habeas Corpus — Welfare of Illegitimate Child Held Best Served by Giving Custody to Mother. — In habeas corpus proceedings to recover the custody of an illegitimate child, where it appeared that the mother had reformed, and' had fitted herself to support herself and the child, and would remove the child to a locality where the facts of its birth were not public, the welfare of the child would be best served by awarding the custody to the mother, rather than to persons who had had custody of the child, but who would keep it in •the locality where its disgrace was public. Note. — On right of mother, or reputed father, of illegitimate child to its custody or control, see note in 65 L. R. A. 689.