Opinion
No. 3859
Decided January 22, 1946. Decided February 16, 1946.
Parent and child — Custody of child — Father's right paramount, when — Parent loses right as against others, when — Upon mother's death, father allows another to have child's custody — Order of court thereafter awarding custody to father — Not contrary to law or against evidence, when — Father's failure to contribute to child's support — Not abandonment as matter of law, when — Habeas corpus.
1. As a general rule, parents are entitled to the custody of their minor children; and when the mother being dead it is found that the father is a suitable person and the fitness of the home is not in dispute, and such father is able and willing to support and care for his child, the father's right of custody is paramount to that of all other persons.
2. A parent has a right to the custody of his child against all other persons unless and until it is shown that the parent has relinquished his right to custody by contract, forfeited it by abandonment, or has lost it because of his unfitness or inability to provide a suitable home for his child.
3. When, upon the death of the mother, the father allows a maternal aunt to take custody of his infant daughter and the maternal aunt after caring for the child for a short period of time requests the father's permission to transfer the custody of the child to another maternal aunt, where it resides for a period of two years, the custody of such child by the maternal aunt being regarded as a temporary arrangement, the father not contributing to the child's support and the maternal aunt not expecting or claiming compensation for the child's support, an order of the Juvenile Court granting custody of such child to the father in a habeas corpus action is not against the manifest weight of the evidence or contrary to law where the fitness and suitability of the father's home is not in dispute.
4. The mere fact that the father failed to contribute to the support of his minor child, when the person having custody neither expected nor claimed compensation for the care and support of such child, does not amount to an abandonment, as a matter of law.
APPEAL: Court of Appeals for Franklin county.
Mr. Walter B. Moore and Mr. Joseph L. Meenan, for appellee.
Mr. John H. Matthews and Mr. Wm. Harvey Jones, for appellants.
This matter comes before this court on an appeal on questions of law from the judgment of the Common Pleas Court, Division of Domestic Relations, Juvenile Branch, of Franklin county.
This action is one in habeas corpus wherein Leo F. Duffy requests a writ restoring custody to him of his daughter Karen Jean Duffy who is now approximately three years of age.
The case came on for hearing before the juvenile judge, at which time testimony was taken relative to the manner in which temporary custody of the child had been given to the respondents, appellants herein, William Bergen and Elizabeth Bergen, husband and wife. Mrs. Bergen is the maternal aunt of the child. At the conclusion of the hearing the trial court granted the custody and control of the child to the petitioner, appellee herein. From that judgment the respondents prosecute this appeal and assign as error that "the finding and judgment of the Court of Common Pleas, Division of Domestic Relations, is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and is contrary to law."
We have read the entire record in this case and do not find the judgment of the trial court to be contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. The evidence in this case shows that when the child was a few weeks old the mother died and a few weeks thereafter the child was placed in the home of a maternal aunt who, after keeping the child for a number of weeks, returned the child to the father. After a few weeks had passed the child was again returned to the same maternal aunt where it resided for a short period of time. Thereupon the maternal aunt requested the father for permission to take the child to her sister's home, Mrs. Bergen, another maternal aunt, who resided in Columbus, Ohio. The father consented to have the child cared for by Mr. and Mrs. Bergen. The child remained in this home for approximately two years, at the end of which period of time the father remarried and requested the custody of his child, which request was refused.
The question is presented as to whether the natural father of the child or the maternal aunt is entitled to the custody of this child.
This is not a case between the father and mother of the child; neither is it a case where a question is presented as to the suitability or fitness of the home of either the parent or a third person.
Counsel for respondents contend that the welfare of the child is paramount to the rights of the parent and that the judgment of the trial court was contrary to law in that the court ignored the question of the welfare of the child. The welfare of the child was not made an issue in this case. It was conceded that both homes offered moral and Christian influence in rearing and caring for the child. While we recognize the principle of law that the parent's right to custody of a child is paramount to that of all other persons, such right is not absolute under all circumstances. The parent may relinquish his right to custody by contract, forfeit it by abandonment or lose it by being in a condition of total inability to afford his minor child necessary care and support. Clark v. Bayer, 32 Ohio St. 299, 30 Am. Rep., 593. As a general rule, however, parents are entitled to the custody of their minor children. When it is found that the parent is a suitable person and the fitness of the home is not in dispute and such parent is able and willing to support and care for such child, the parent's right is paramount to that of all other persons. We grant that the welfare of the child could have been made an issue in this case, but this issue was eliminated when it was conceded that the father would be able to furnish a suitable home and was able to support the child properly. If this court should give consideration to the question of the welfare of the child it would be disposed to find that since it has been conceded that the father was the proper person to rear the child and the fitness and suitability of his home in not disputed, the welfare of the child would be best served by being reared in its parent's home in the custody of its father and thereby be permitted over the years to form and develop ties of mutual love and affection with its own flesh and blood. However, this court may well rest this case on the right of the parent to the custody of its child against all other persons unless and until it is shown that the father is unfit or unable to provide a suitable home for the child. Clark v. Bayer, 32 Ohio St., supra, at page 310; In re Konneker, 30 Ohio App. 502, 165 N.E. 850; In re Coons, 20 C.C., 47, 11 C.D., 208; In re Lutkehaus, 22 N.P. (N.S.), 120, 29 O.D., 543; In re Swentosky, 25 Ohio Law Abs., 601.
We do not find the judgment of the trial court to be either against the manifest weight of the evidence or contrary to law.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. The case will be remanded for further proceedings.
Judgment affirmed.
HORNBECK, P.J., WISEMAN and MILLER, JJ., concur.
ON APPLICATION for rehearing.
This matter comes on to be heard on an application for rehearing filed by the respondents in which they claim that the court in its opinion did not take into consideration the question as to the welfare of the child. The gist of the respondents' argument is that the facts in this case in and of themselves, as a matter of law, show that the petitioner abandoned the child and that the future welfare of the child would be best served by leaving it in the custody of the respondents.
Counsel for the respondents rest their claim on the case of Clark v. Bayer, 32 Ohio St. 299, 30 Am. Rep., 593, the question in which arose on a demurrer to a petition in which it was alleged that the parents of the children had entered into an oral agreement for the transfer of custody of their two minor children to the children's grandparents, who agreed to accept the care, custody and possession of such children, and to maintain, protect and educate them, and had renounced and abandoned all rights as parents to the custody of the children. For the purposes of the demurrer, those allegations are admitted to be true. In the case at bar, sufficient facts have been stated in the original opinion, and need not be reiterated here, which distinguish this case from the case of Clark v. Bayer, supra. At no time did the respondents expect or claim compensation for the care and custody of this child. Counsel for the respondents make the point that the mere failure of the father to contribute to the support of the child amounted to abandonment as a matter of law. While this may be true under certain circumstances, we do not believe that the father can be considered to have abandoned the child under the facts in this case.
The application for rehearing does not raise any question which has not already been considered by this court. The court approves of its original ruling in this matter and overrules the application for rehearing.
Application overruled.
HORNBECK, P.J., WISEMAN and MILLER, JJ., concur.