Bell v. Leonard, 13764
Decision Date | 09 January 1958 |
Docket Number | 13999.,No. 13764,13764 |
Citation | 102 US App. DC 179,251 F.2d 890 |
Parties | Louise Flood BELL et al., Appellants, v. Gwendolyn Hairston LEONARD, Appellee. Alonzo BELL and Louise Virginia Bell, Appellants, v. Gwendolyn Hairston LEONARD, Appellee. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — District of Columbia Circuit |
Mr. Harry E. Taylor, Jr., Washington, D. C., for appellee.
Before WILBUR K. MILLER, FAHY and DANAHER, Circuit Judges.
Appellee Leonard in No. 13764 successfully sought, through habeas corpus, the control and custody of her 9-year-old daughter, and appellant Louise Bell has appealed from the District Court's order. The trial judge, having permitted vindication of the mother's right, thereafter dismissed a co-pending petition for adoption of the child. Appellants Alonzo Bell and Louise Bell1 in No. 13999 seek review of the order dismissing their petition, and on their motion we have consolidated the two cases.
Appellee Leonard had alleged that she and appellant Bell are residents of the District of Columbia, where the child was born to appellee Leonard on January 25, 1948. She further alleged that some time during the month of May, 1948, "The respondent Bell took the said child from the petitioner on the pretense that she would keep the child for less money than petitioner had been paying; that said respondent has unlawful custody and possession of said child * * * and refuses to surrender custody and possession * * * to your petitioner who was lawfully entitled thereto under the memorandum of the court dated August 17, 1953, filed by Judge Walter M. Bastian in habeas corpus No. 34-53, which was one of several prior proceedings of this petitioner to regain custody and possession of her child."
The record reflects the earlier tangled lives of the two principals. At least in 1948, and perhaps until each married, their unconventional paths led them to an establishment operated by a brother of the appellant Bell. There Bell's brother Garfield worked "behind the bar selling whiskey and renting rooms." Appellee Leonard testified she was pregnant with the innocent subject of this litigation when she first met Garfield Bell. Appellant Bell was later to claim that her brother had fathered the child, but, if so, after the baby was born the putative father contributed nothing to the mother for the child's support. The mother testified that when in sore straits, jobless, yet caring for the infant, she and her baby were taken in by a Mrs. Owens whose quarters were also visited by appellant Bell. The latter, learning of the mother's difficulties, "saw the child and she said she wouldn't mind keeping it; she would keep it for less money." Appellant Bell, then living with a man who provided accommodations, was able to receive the child while the mother worked during the week. She sought to take her child on weekends, but
The mother thereafter spirited her child from the care of another woman with whom appellant Bell had temporarily left her. Appellant Bell called police under whose direction the mother returned the child to appellant Bell. In 1950 the mother instituted habeas corpus proceedings in which no final order was signed, and the case was later dismissed under the District Court's rule. In 1951 appellee Leonard married a sergeant in the Army, and, in 1953, again instituted habeas corpus proceedings, in advance of leaving for France with her husband. After a 2-day trial, Judge Bastian filed a memorandum August 17, 1953, from which we quote:
Against the background thus summarized the instant proceedings went forward. Appellee filed a motion for summary judgment, supported by a lengthy affidavit, narrating details as to her present situation, her reformation, and various other circumstances in support of her petition. Refusing to rest on the affidavit, the trial judge denied her motion and after taking testimony entered findings:
Concluding "as a matter of law that petitioner * * * is entitled to the custody of her child * * *" the trial judge granted the petition, overruled appellant's motion for rehearing and dismissed the adoption petition.
We turn first to the adoption proceedings as to which we are satisfied there is no error. It certainly is so that a non-parent may not obtain possession of a child and thereafter invoke the processes of the court to consummate its adoption against the wishes and without the consent of the child's mother.2 "Consent of the natural parents is required save in certain specified circumstances,"3 not shown here.
Turning next to the habeas corpus proceedings, certain points must be deemed definitely to have been established, by our Code and otherwise. A mother is the natural guardian of her child,4 even though the child be illegitimate.5 As mother and natural guardian she has a right to a writ of habeas corpus directed to any person unlawfully detaining her minor child to the end that the child be produced before the court which "upon hearing the proofs, shall determine which of the contesting parties is entitled to the custody of the person so detained, and commit the custody of said person to the party legally entitled thereto."6 It is true that a mother's preferential claim may be lost by contract or forfeited.7 Such conduct may be deemed to "afford very strong evidence of the want of natural affection and the lack of fitness for the charge."8 No such situation is shown on this record. On the contrary, as we have indicated, the mother's persistent efforts to obtain her child belie any such conclusion here.
Beyond peradventure, courts encounter no keener pathos than surrounds the allocation of a little child. That strangers may develop a tender love for one in their care is abundantly shown in the common experience of mankind. We may presume this is true of this appellant, childless, aged forty-six, who undertook the care of the little girl under the circumstances mentioned. It can readily be understood how the trial judge in 1953 was loath then to return the child to a mother who would have introduced the child to a completely foreign life during an intended 3-year stay in France. While the mother by then had married and apparently had risen above the way of life associated with a portion of her earlier years, the judge continued her period of probation, so to speak, that her current fitness might the more certainly be developed. At the same time, after receiving testimony from the parties throughout a 2-day trial, it is clear he ensconced consanguinity at no less level than is established by the law of nature. Even as he did so, he concluded that the best interests of the child then required that she not be removed from the source of the care she had received over the previous four or five years, only to be sent abroad. Still, with full knowledge of the background of the claiming women, he recognized, and held out assurance, that the day might come when the mother might again seek vindication of her personal right.
Thus it was, as the record discloses, that in the instant case the trial judge received further evidence here. The record presents no suggestion of lack of reformation; quite the contrary. No claim was made, no evidence was offered, to preclude the determination of the trial judge that the mother's right is superior to and must prevail over the interest of the stranger. The trier's judgment reflects that conclusion, correctly reached, we believe.
Appellant would have us say that at this point the ultimate determination of the case is controlled by Holtsclaw v. Mercer,9 but we do not agree. In that case we but recognized the policy, then so recently voiced by Congress, that once a mother "had voluntarily consented to the child's adoption, her consent could not be voided because of minority."10 In the Holtsclaw case the mother had entered into an agreement which was before this court and from which we quote:
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