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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Brand Petitioner [1888] ScotLR 26_199 (22 December 1888) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1888/26SLR0199.html Cite as: [1888] ScotLR 26_199, [1888] SLR 26_199 |
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Page: 199↓
(Ante, vol. xxv., p. 332.)
Although the mother of a pupil bastard has no power to appoint by will a guardian to him, the Court gave effect to her wishes where she had by will made such an appointment, being satisfied that the nominee was in a position to attend to the child's welfare.
The mother of a bastard who had been placed by her under the care of charitable persons of the Protestant faith, having become a Roman Catholic, made a will appointing a person of the latter faith her executor and the tutor of the bastard, and expressing a desire that the latter should be brought up a Roman Catholic.
The Court being satisfied with the scheme proposed by the executor for the custody and education of the bastard, gave him the custody thereof, notwithstanding the opposition of those in whose care the child had been placed by the mother.
James Brand, contractor, Glasgow, presented this petition for the custody of John Ingram Hammel, who was born in April 1882, and was the illegitimate son of Ann Hammel, who died at the Convent of the Good Shepherd, Dalbeth, near Glasgow, in October 1886. While residing at the Convent Ann Hammel executed a settlement dated 31st August 1886, by which she bequeathed her whole means to Mr Brand in trust for her son. The deed further provided as follows:—“I hereby nominate, constitute, and appoint the said James Brand to be my sole executor, and to be tutor, curator, and guardian to my said son; and being a Roman Catholic myself, it is my desire that my said son be brought up in that faith.” The testator left no property.
The petitioner averred that Ann Hammel died domiciled in Scotland, and that he accepted the office conferred upon him.
In May 1883, to allow Ann Hammel to enter service, the child was taken care of temporarily by the respondents Mrs Flora Shaw and Miss Flora Shaw, wife and daughter of Charles Shaw, solicitor, Wellington House, Ayr. In 1885 Ann Hammel, in consequence of bad health, and by the aid of the respondents, was received into the Convent, and feeling her strength failing she desired to make arrangements for her child, and applied to the respondents to have him returned. This request was not complied with, and Ann Hammel accordingly instituted legal proceedings in the Sheriff Court at Ayr to compel the respondents to restore the custody of the child, but before these proceedings were completed she died, and the petitioner was sisted as pursuer in the action.
Page: 200↓
“With reference to the proceedings in this action the petitioner averred that “after protracted proceedings in the Sheriff Court it was ultimately decided by the Sheriff on 29th September 1887 that the action was incompetent, and should be dismissed. This interlocutor having been appealed by the present petitioner to your Lordships the same was on 24th February 1888 recalled, and it was found ‘that the compearing pursuer Brand has no title to sue.’ This judgment was pronounced, as the petitioner understands, and according to the terms of the opinions as reported in 15 R. 449, on the ground that the mother's title to sue the conjoined actions was personal to her and intransmissible, in the sense that no one could take up and continue these actions after her death, and that the petitioner, in order to carry out the mother's wishes, must proceed by petition at his own instance.”
The petitioner further stated that he was not aware where the child was beyond the circumstance that it was under the custody of the respondents. He had made arrangements for the due education and upbringing of the child in accordance with its mother's last wishes, and he was prepared to submit to the Court, if necessary, a scheme for its care and custody.
It was further contended that the petitioner was entitled to have the child restored and delivered to him. He founded on the right of the mother at common law to the custody of the child, and on her consequent power to entrust him with the care of the child after her death. He also founded on the Guardianship of Infants Act 1886 (49 and 50 Vict. c. 27), and the power thereby conferred on the mother of any pupil to appoint by deed or will a guardian, or in Scotland a tutor, to such pupil after her death. In any event, and if there should be no technical title either by statute or at common law, the petitioner submitted that the Court in regulating the custody of this child would have regard to the wishes of the deceased mother as expressed in her said settlement.
Answers were lodged for Mrs Shaw and Miss Flora Shaw, who averred that when the child was given into their custody in 1883 the arrangement was understood by all parties to be a permanent one; that the child was at first sent to a home in Kent, and thereafter to Aberlour Orphanage, where it at present was, and that the entire expense of its maintenance was defrayed by the respondent Miss Shaw. They further averred that Ann Hammel when she entered the Convent was a Protestant, and that her change of religion, the legal proceedings taken by her, and the testament executed by her, were all due to the influence to which she was subjected in the Convent. Before the date of the legal proceedings Ann Hammel had never applied either verbally or in writing to have her child removed from the respondents' custody and transferred to Roman Catholic supervision.
Argued for the petitioner — Although there might be no abstract right at common law either to the father or mother of an illegitimate child to nominate a guardian, yet the authorities showed that in the case of the father the Court would (if no good cause was shown against it) give effect to his expressed testamentary will— Johnstone, M. 16,374; Whitson v. Speid, May 28, 1825, 4 Sh. 42; Statutes 1555, cap. 5, and 1672, cap. 2.
Though a bastard has no legal father, yet the Court has always given him the advantage of any benefit which could be derived from these statutes— Wilson, March 10, 1819, F.C.; Kyle, Petitioner, June 15, 1861, 23 D. 1104; Stair, i. 6, 6; Ersk. i. 7, 2; Bell's Prin. sec. 2071. But the Guardianship of Infants Act 1886 materially altered the common law, and considerably extended the mother's rights, and under sec. 3, sub-sec. 1, a nomination such as the present became competent — Macpherson v. Leishman, June 4, 1887, 14 R. 780. This Act applied equally to illegitimate as well as to legitimate children. The interests of the child, which was a paramount element in determining a case like the present, would be equally well attended to whichever party prevailed, and if the Court desired some determining consideration they found it in the express wish of the mother, especially as both parties here derived their title from her— in re Agar-Ellis, 10 L.R., Ch. Div. 49.
Argued for the respondents—It could not be disputed that if the mother had been alive she could at once have recovered the child, but she could make no provision to regulate its custody after her death—Stair, i. 6, 6. In the cases cited there had been money left by the testator, in addition to nomination of tutor, and that made a material difference. As far as the discretion of the Court went no change of custody should be made; the proposed change would not be for the better; the advantage of the child was the governing consideration of the Court, and it was to be kept in mind that the mother had given the custody of this child to the present respondents. Anything done thereafter by her was under undue influence. With regard to the Statute of 1886, it only dealt with legitimate children, and so did not apply in the present case.
The prior proceedings, so far as they bear upon the present question, and are not narrated above, are referred to in the opinion of the Lord President, in which also are quoted the material sections of the Guardianship of Infants Act 1886.
At advising—
Page: 201↓
Having cleared that legal difficulty we come now to consider the case on its merits. The history of this mother is told, I think, very clearly and candidly by the respondents in their defences to the action in the Sheriff Court, and I shall refer to two or three of the statements there for the purpose of endeavouring to explain what are the considerations to be kept in view in this matter. After Mrs and Miss Shaw had taken charge of this unfortunate woman and her child, and had provided a situation in service for the mother, it appears that she again lapsed into criminal courses, and she was found to be in prison in Ayr. But the respondents go on to say in the sixth article of their statement of facts in the Sheriff Court—“As the petitioner was very penitent, and was wishful to be sent on her release from prison to some place where, as she could not take care of herself, she would be looked after by others, Mrs Shaw obtained her admission to a Roman Catholic Institution at Dalbeth called the Convent of the Good Shepherd.” It seems therefore that the residence of Ann Hammel in this Convent was brought about by the interposition of the respondents themselves. They recommended her to go there, and provided for her admission. It was arranged, they say, “that pursuer was to remain there till Mrs Shaw removed her. The pursuer has since remained in this institution. Under the influence of the religious sisterhood who manage this institution the pursuer some time ago, it is believed, embraced the Roman Catholic faith.” Then, in the seventh article of their statements they say that “during the time that the pursuer has resided at Dalbeth Mrs Shaw has occasionally visited her, and received letters from her, and neither verbally nor in writing did the pursuer prior to the said action being raised against Mrs Shaw ever express a wish for the custody of the child, or that the boy should be taken from the defender. On the last occasion Mrs Shaw saw the pursuer prior to said action (which would be in or about June 1886) the pursuer stated that she was desirous of leaving the institution. On the recommendation of the Sisters Mrs Shaw urged the pursuer to remain for sometime longer, and Mrs Shaw promised to remove her when she was fitter to be taken away.” And then in article 8 they say that some letters received by Mrs Shaw were “not believed to be in accordance with the real desire of the pursuer, or sent with her authority, or at least as a weak-minded woman she is entirely under the influence and direction of the nuns. The pursuer has never, since its delivery to the defender, taken any interest in her child, and the defender believes and avers that the present proceedings have been raised without her authority and consent, and that if left to herself, and freed from the influence of her present surroundings, she will totally disclaim them.” Then they add—“The pursuer has been visited by Mrs Shaw since the raising of the action against the latter, but as the interview permitted was in the presence of nuns it is believed that the real wishes of the pursuer could not be ascertained. The pursuer stated that the child, if returned to her, was to be placed under the guardianship of a Roman Catholic gentleman.”
Now, I think the effect of these averments is this, that when Mrs Shaw and her daughter recommended
Page: 202↓
I think the only other element in the case is the mother's recorded expression of what she desired. We find that in the settlement that was executed on 31st August 1886 it is stated by the deceased that, being a Roman Catholic “myself, it is my desire that my said son be brought up in that faith,” and she nominates and appoints Mr Brand, who is known to be of that religious belief, to be the curator of the child. Reference has been made to the proceedings and statements in the action in the Sheriff Court. Of course they go to confirm what has been stated, and so far I regard them as satisfactory, but for myself I am bound to say that if there had been nothing of the kind in the case, my view would have been precisely in the terms of that settlement. I agree that of course we must see that the settlement in that matter really records the wish of the person who directs. I also agree with what your Lordship in the chair has said with reference to the influence that may have induced a cnange of the mother's religious belief. It is true this Court is entitled to inquire in a question of property as to whether a person has been in a weak and facile state of mind, and when he executes a settlement whether undue influence has been used to deprive that person of property. There there is
Page: 203↓
The following scheme was submitted by the petitioner:—“The petitioner having in view the present age of the boy John Ingram Hammel, and the manner in which he has hitherto been brought up, proposes the following scheme for his further education and upbringing — The petitioner's proposal is, that the boy should be sent for a year or two to a junior school where he will be under the charge of ladies, and be properly prepared for his ultimate admission to a school for older boys. After being at the latter school until the age of 13 the petitioner proposes to assist the boy into and through an apprenticeship of four to five years' duration in some trade or business whereby he may be able to support himself. The petitioner has inquired and considered as to the junior and senior school respectively most suitable for carrying out this scheme for the boy's education, with the following results:—The junior school which the petitioner has in view in the first place is the boarding school for little boys attached to St Elizabeth's House, Bullingham, Hereford, under care of Sisters of Charity. The terms for this school are from £16 to £18 per annum. The school for older boys to which it is proposed that the child should be sent after his preparation at the said junior school is St Francis' Home, Shefford, Bedfordshire. This school is under the direction of the Very Reverend Canon Collis, and the ordinary terms are £25 per annum for each boy.”
The Court, on the petitioner appending a note to the scheme undertaking to find caution, allowed extract to proceed on caution being found.
Counsel for the Petitioner— D.-F. Mackintosh, Q. C.— Vary Campbell— W. Campbell. Agent— W. B. Glen, S.S.C.
Counsel for the Respondents— Sir C. Pearson— Maconochie. Agents— J. & F. Anderson, W.S.