Supreme Court of
Canda
Hepton et al. v. Maat
et al., [1957] S.C.R. 606
Date 1957-06-26
In the Matter of Richard
John Maat and Roland Charles Maat.
Austin Hepton and Ethel
Hepton (Defendants) Appellants;
and
Herman Maat and Trudy
Maat (Plaintiffs) Respondents.
1957: May 30, 31; 1957: June 3, 26.
Present: Rand, Locke, Cartwright, Abbott
and Nolan JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Infants—Custody—Governing
considerations—Prima facie right of natural parents to custody.
The natural parents
of an infant are entitled to its custody unless by reason of some act,
condition or circumstance affecting them it is evident that the welfare of the
child requires that custody be given to some other person. The natural parents
can lose their right only by abandoning the child or so misconducting
themselves that in the opinion of the Court it would be improper to leave the
child with them. Their wishes in respect of custody must not be disregarded
unless very serious and important reasons connected with the child’s welfare
require it. Re Baby Duffell, [1950] S.C.R. 737; In re Agar-Ellis (1883),
24 Ch. D. 317, applied. The fact that the natural parents of a child have
Consented to its adoption does not affect this principle. It cannot be said
that a consent to adoption, once voluntarily given, is in effect irrevocable,
or that the withdrawal of this consent before the adoption has been completed
should be disregarded by the Court unless it appears to be in the best
interests of the child that withdrawal be allowed. Re Baby Duffell, supra, applied.
The mother of
newborn twins, who before their birth had told the doctor and others that she
wished to have them adopted, signed a consent to their being taken from the
hospital by the doctor, to be given to adopting parents. After her discharge
from the hospital she and her husband both signed formal consents to the
adoption of the children, but within three months they changed their minds.
They were at first unable to find out where the children were, but eventually,
having done so, they took proceedings to obtain custody. The trial judge
awarded custody to the foster parents with whom the children had been placed,
but this judgment was reversed by the Court of Appeal. The foster parents
appealed.
[Page 607]
Held (Locke
J. dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed. The conduct of the respondents,
though reprehensible in many ways, did not constitute “very serious and
important reasons” sufficient to justify the Court in depriving them of custody
of their children.
Per Locke
J., dissenting: Under the law of Ontario the paramount consideration in
matters of custody, to which all others must yield, is the welfare and
happiness of the infant. McKee v. McKee, [1951] A.C. 352 at 365, quoted
and applied. Here the trial judge, having heard the parties and considered the
matter most carefully, awarded custody to the appellants. It was not shown that
in so doing he had acted on any wrong principle or disregarded any material
evidence; on the contrary, he had clearly followed the principle declared in
the McKee case. Accordingly, under the rule laid down in that case at p.
360, his decision should not be disturbed.
APPEAL from a judgment
of the Court of Appeal for Ontario reversing a judgment of Treleaven J. on an
issue as to the custody of two infants. Appeal dismissed.
C.L. Dubin, Q.C., for the defendants,
appellants.
J.J. Robinette, Q.C., for the plaintiffs,
respondents.
RAND J.:—It is, I
think, of the utmost importance that questions involving the custody of infants
be approached with a clear view of the governing considerations. That view
cannot be less than this: prima facie the natural parents are entitled
to custody unless by reason of some act, condition or circumstance affecting
them it is evident that the welfare of the child requires that that fundamental
natural relation be severed. As parens patriae the Sovereign is the
constitutional guardian of children, but that power arises in a community in
which the family is the social unit. No one would, for a moment, suggest that
the power ever extended to the disruption of that unity by seizing any of its
children at the whim or for any public or private purpose of the Sovereign or
for any other purpose than that of the welfare of one unable, because of
infancy, to care for himself. The controlling fact in the type of case we have
here is that the welfare of the child can never be determined as an isolated
fact, that is, as if the child were free from natural parental bonds entailing
moral responsibility—as if, for example, he were a homeless orphan wandering at
large.
The view of the
child’s welfare conceives it to lie, first, within the warmth and security of
the home provided by his parents; when through a failure, with or without
parental fault, to furnish that protection, that welfare is
[Page 608]
threatened, the
community, represented by the Sovereign, is, on the broadest social and
national grounds, justified in displacing the parents and assuming their
duties.
This, in substance, is
the rule of law established for centuries and in the light of which the common
law Courts and the Court of Chancery, following their differing rules, dealt
with custody. As applied in equity, where the absolute right of the father,
recognized in the common law Courts, was not acknowledged, it is now by s. 3 of
The Infants Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 180, the governing law of Ontario.
As was said by my
brother Cartwright in Re Baby Duffell; Martin and Martin v. Duffell:
The wishes of the
mother [here the parents] must, I think, be given effect unless “very serious
and important” reasons require that, having regard to the child’s welfare, they
must be disregarded.
and by Bowen L.J. in In
re Agar-Ellis; Agar-Ellis v. Lascelles, quoted in the Duffell case at p.
747:
... it must be
the benefit to the infant having regard to the natural law which points out
that the father knows far better as a rule what is good for his children than a
Court of Justice can.
It might be that the
foster parents would furnish to the children here a home of easier
circumstances and better fortune than that of the respondents; but who can say
that that difference is for the ultimate welfare of the child? It might, in
fact, prove to be the reverse. Carried to its logical result, the presumption
that it would be would involve the conclusion that a modest home can, with
better grace, be torn apart than one of opulent means. This needs only to be
mentioned to be rejected. In the home of the respondents a third child, a
daughter, was born in the year following the birth of her brothers, and that
what forms the home for this child is not fit for nurturing these young boys
cannot, in the circumstances shown, be seriously urged.
Various acts of the
mother in special relation to these boys are argued to show her unfitness to
resume the care of them. At the time of their birth this young woman was 21 and
the father 23 years of age, they had within 5 or 6 years of that time come to this
country from Holland, the husband had been out of work for almost 6 months,
they
[Page 609]
were undoubtedly
passing through very dark days and hope was at its faintest. That at such a
time thoughts from which they would afterwards shrink could enter their minds
needs only a bit of imagination to be understood. The mother’s evidence does
exhibit almost a primitive idea of her duty to a Court in this country; but she
was young, in a strange land, fighting for her children, and however much she
is to be condemned as an individual, it would be psychologically unsound to
take that conduct to evidence her unfitness as a mother. Within less than 2
months of handing the children over these parents were seeking them and that
desire had been made known to the foster parents. Whether it was instigated by
the admonition of the maternal grandmother to remember their duty as Dutch
parents or by the awakening of the parental sense or both is unimportant; that
it was not for the purpose of exacting a price was the conclusion of the Court
of Appeal in which I entirely concur; and it is not disputed that from
September 1954 they sought first to discover the whereabouts of and then to
recover their children. It may not unfairly be suggested that if the foster
parents had extended to the respondents the sensitive and sympathetic
imagination that enabled them to long to bestow parental love on children of
strangers, they would have better understood the thoughts and feelings of the
young couple seeking their own, and not have sought to strengthen their claim
by keeping the whereabouts of the children secret. I should have thought that,
to avoid any unnecessary distress to the latter, however temporary it might be,
they would at least have allowed the dispute to be determined without delay.
Nor can I view the pain of a permanent separation on the part of these foster
parents to be comparable with that of the natural parents.
I find it, therefore,
quite impossible to say that the conclusion arrived at by the Court of Appeal
was wrong. The appeal must be dismissed, but there will be no costs.
LOCKE J. (dissenting):—In
my opinion this appeal should be allowed.
There can be no doubt
as to the principles to be applied in matters of this nature in the Province of
Ontario since the judgment delivered by the Judicial Committee in
[Page 610]
McKee v. McKee, which reversed the judgment of this
Court which had, in turn, set aside the
judgment of the Court of Appeal and that of Wells J. who had heard the
application for custody. In that case Lord Simonds said in part
(p. 360):
Further, it was
not, and could not be, disputed that the question of custody of an infant is a
matter which peculiarly lies within the discretion of the judge who hears the
case and has the opportunity generally denied to an appellate tribunal of
seeing the parties and investigating the infant’s circumstances, and that his
decision should not be disturbed unless he has clearly acted on some wrong
principle or disregarded material evidence.
He said further (p. 365):
It is the law of
Ontario (as it is the law of England) that the welfare and happiness of the
infant is the paramount consideration in questions of custody¼ To this paramount consideration all others yield.
In this matter
Treleaven J., after having heard the parties and given the most careful
consideration to the matter, awarded the custody to the appellants. It was not
shown, in my opinion, that in doing so that learned judge either acted on any
wrong principle or disregarded any material evidence. On the contrary, it is
clear that he followed the principle declared by the Judicial Committee in the McKee
case, which I have quoted.
As the other members
of the Court are of the opinion that this appeal should be dismissed, I refrain
from making any comment on the evidence other than to say that my consideration
of it would lead me to the same conclusion as that reached by Mr. Justice
Treleaven and by Mr. Justice F.G. MacKay in the Court of Appeal.
The judgment of
Cartwright, Abbott and Nolan JJ. was delivered by
CARTWRIGHT J.:—This is
an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, reversing a
judgment of Treleaven J. and ordering that the respondents do have the custody
of the infants Richard John Maat and Roland Charles Maat.
[Page 611]
The infants whose
custody is in question are twins. They were born on June 23, 1954, in lawful
wedlock. The respondents are their natural parents, but since leaving the
hospital, on or about July 23, 1954, the children have been in the custody of
the appellants.
At the time of the
trial of the issue before Treleaven J. in November 1955 the respondent Herman
Maat was 24 years of age and the respondent Trudy Maat 22. Both of them were
born in Holland. The former came to Canada in July 1949 and the latter in
September 1952. They met each other in September 1952 and were married on
October 10, 1953.
Shortly after their
marriage Herman Maat experienced difficulty in securing steady employment. He
was unable to keep up the payments on a home which he had purchased and lost
it. For some time the respondents’ only home was a trailer. In this they moved
to Windsor where Herman Maat sought employment without success. In May 1954 he
returned to Toronto where he got work with a former employer. He left his wife
living in the trailer at Windsor and returned there at week-ends. He did not
get a room in Toronto but slept in his truck. In June 1954 he brought his wife
and the trailer from Windsor and they lived in the trailer at the trailer camp
in Cooksville, some 10 miles west of Toronto. On the drive from Windsor to
Cooksville they suffered some minor mishaps.
Speaking of their
state of mind at this period the learned trial judge says:
There can be no
doubt they were both greatly worried about the expected child, and there is
much convincing evidence that both parents regretted it was going to be born.
On or about June 16,
1954, Trudy Maat consulted Dr. J.D. Smith of Cooksville. There are direct
contradictions between the evidence of this witness and his wife, who is also a
doctor, on the one hand and that of the respondent Trudy Maat on the other. Where
it conflicts with that of the respondents the learned trial judge has expressly
accepted the evidence of the Smiths and I proceed on the basis that the facts
are as testified to by them. Trudy Maat was very upset emotionally and was
crying. She told the doctor that she was pregnant, that she and her husband did
not want to have the baby, and that she had, at the sugges-
[Page 612]
tion of her husband,
taken an overdose of pills without result. She asked the doctor to bring on an abortion.
He, of course, told her he would not do this, and went on to say that she must
let the child be born and could make one of three choices, to keep it, to have
it adopted through the Children’s Aid Society, or to have it adopted privately.
The next day Trudy
Maat returned to the doctor’s office and told him that she and her husband
wanted the baby to be adopted. He examined her, found her condition normal and
formed the opinion that the child would be born in about a month. About a week
later Herman Maat telephoned the doctor that his wife’s pains had commenced.
Dr. Smith arranged for hospital accommodation, went to the trailer and told
Herman Maat to take his wife to the hospital. The doctor asked if they still
wanted to give the baby up and they both said that they did. Later in the day
the twins were born. Being premature they were placed in an incubator. That
evening Herman Maat went to the hospital to see his wife. He had asked the
doctor if he could see her and the doctor, thinking that he might not be able
to see her if he went alone, offered to drive him to the hospital.
Mrs. Smith was also in the car. On the way Mrs. Smith asked Herman
Maat if he was sure he wanted to give the babies up and he replied that he wanted
to get it over with. Neither of the parents saw the children. On the fourth day
after their birth Dr. Smith again asked Trudy Maat the same question and she
replied in the affirmative. It is customary for a newborn baby to leave the
hospital with the mother unless written instructions are given to the contrary.
Trudy Maat signed the necessary form to permit the babies to be taken out by
Dr. Smith and knew they were to be taken to adopting parents. When she was able
to leave the hospital, apparently on June 30, Dr. and Mrs. Smith drove her
home and on the way went to the office of Mr. Leslie Pallett, a solicitor
whom the respondents had visited at Dr. Smith’s suggestion before the babies
were born. At that time Herman Maat had told Mr. Pallett that they wished
to have the baby adopted and when Mr. Pallett learned that the Maats were
married he tried to discourage them from taking this course. The Smiths also
tried to persuade them to keep the children.
[Page 613]
In Mr. Pallett’s
office Trudy Maat signed a consent to the adoption of each twin and later in
the day Herman Maat came in and signed these also. Mr. Pallett explained
to them that the making of an adoption order would permanently deprive them of
their parental rights. On July 31 Trudy Maat went to Mr. Pallett’s
office to ask about a notice she had received regarding the registration of the
children’s birth. At Mr. Pallett’s request she signed fresh consents as he
understood that her consent should be on a document other than that signed by
her husband. Mr. Pallett asked her if she had changed her mind about the
adoption and she replied in the negative. In reciting the above facts I have
proceeded on the evidence of Mr. Pallett which the learned trial judge accepted
in preference to that of the respondents.
At no time did the
Smiths or Mr. Pallett disclose to the respondents either the identity or
the whereabouts of the appellants, to whom the twins had been given when they
left the hospital.
By the middle of
September 1954 the respondents had regretted their decision and were actively
seeking to recover their children. They interviewed Dr. J.D. Smith and
Mr. Pallett, both of whom refused to tell them where the children were but
communicated to the appellants the respondents’ request for their children. The
request was rejected. The respondents consulted a solicitor who wrote to Dr.
Smith on October 6, 1954, but received no answer. After months of persistent
effort the respondents finally discovered the whereabouts of the children and
the respondent Herman Maat forcibly repossessed them. On being visited by the
police, however, the respondents were persuaded for the time being to
relinquish such possession and the present proceedings resulted. It is not
suggested that there was any undue delay in commencing these proceedings.
Mr. Pallett
testified that on the occasion of the last-mentioned visit, after he had told
the respondents that the appellants would not give up the babies and that he
did not think he could do anything for them they went out. His evidence
continues:
Very shortly
after the husband came back in and said to me, “Will they give me some money
for the babies?” I said, “Get out.” He said, “Will I get my money back?” I
presumed he was referring to the money paid for the hospital bill, and we had a
few nasty words, and he left.
[Page 614]
This was put forward
as indicating a willingness upon the part of Herman Maat to sell his children
but I am quite unable to so interpret it. Assuming that he used the words
quoted, it must be remembered that Maat had just been told by Mr. Pallett,
the only lawyer with whom he had had any discussion about adoption, that he
could not get the babies back, and that he was at this time without independent
advice, Mr. Pallett being solicitor for the appellants. Under these
circumstances what he said was consistent with his seeking repayment of the
expenses to which he had been put in connection with the birth of the babies
if, as he had just been told was the case, he could not have the babies
themselves. I share the view as to the incident expressed by Aylesworth J.A. as
follows:
... I must say at
once that if the learned trial judge attributed any particular significance to
what was then said as bearing upon the question of custody I must respectfully
disagree.
I agree with the
following statement of Aylesworth J.A. as to the appellants:
It is quite clear
that Mr. and Mrs. Hepton are of reputable character and no one
suggests that they are not both well qualified and anxious to become foster
parents or that the twins presently in their custody have not been well and
lovingly cared for. Respondents at the present time are considerably better off
financially than the Maats and are both in their middle thirties and childless.
I also agree with the
view of the respondents which he expressed as follows:
The evidence
shows that the young parents, although of extremely modest means, are
hard-working, religious people of respectable parentage. They are regular
attendants at their church and have many friends in their community of the same
racial strain as themselves.
* * *
... If in any of
the quotations which I have made from the learned trial judge’s reasons he is
to be taken as concluding that the parents are unfit persons to have the
custody and upbringing of their children then again I must respectfully
disagree. I am quite unable to find anything in the evidence so far as the
welfare of their children is concerned in impeachment of the appellants from a
moral, spiritual or social viewpoint; reference has already been made to the
economic situation, or even to the contrast in the economic situation, as
between appellants and respondents, but the appellants are much younger than
the respondents and have yet to make their way in their new country. As I have
already said, the evidence indicates that they are industrious and of good
character¼
The material position
of the respondents at the time of the trial was accurately described by the
learned trial judge as follows:
Since the babies
were born the Maats’ material position has improved somewhat. They no longer
live in the trailer but are now in a modest apartment. The locality, however,
is not a very desirable one in which
[Page 615]
to bring up
children. They have had another child born to them, a daughter. As at present
situated if the twins are returned to them all three children would be
occupying the same room. Herman Maat is earning between $80 and $90 a week as a
truck driver for a fuel oil company.
With the greatest
respect it appears to me that the learned trial judge has attached too much
importance to the consents to the adoption of the infants which were signed by
both of the respondents. The argument that a consent to adoption once
voluntarily given by the natural parents is in effect irrevocable or that the
withdrawal thereof should be disregarded by the Court unless it appears to be
in the best interests of the child that withdrawal should be allowed was unanimously
rejected by this Court in Re Baby Duffell; Martin and Martin v. Duffell. That case concerned the claim of the
unmarried mother of an illegitimate child but as Aylesworth J.A. points out:
“The position of a man and his wife jointly seeking custody of their children
is of course at least on a par with that of the mother of an illegitimate
child.” In the course of his able argument, Mr. Dubin submitted that much
that was said in the judgments delivered in Re Duffell as to the
principles by which the Court should be guided in dealing with a question of
custody in which one of the parties is a natural parent and the other a
stranger in blood, was obiter. I incline to disagree with this
submission and in any case I regard it as settled law that the natural parents
of an infant have a right to its custody which, apart from statute, they can
lose only by abandoning the child or so misconducting themselves that in the
opinion of the Court it would be improper that the child should be allowed to
remain with them, and that effect must be given to their wishes unless “very
serious and important reasons” require that, having regard to the child’s
welfare, they must be disregarded.
While not accepting
this view of the law, Mr. Dubin put forward a number of matters which in
his submission should be regarded as “very serious and important reasons” that
the respondents should not have their children; these may be summarized as follows:
(i) the desire of the parents to procure an abortion, (ii) the fact that they
consented to give up the children for adoption when their circumstances were
such that it was not impossible for them to have kept them, (iii) the
conversation as to money with which I have
[Page 616]
dealt above, (iv)
their apparent willingness to give untrue testimony, (v) the taking of the
children from their carriage without the permission and against the will of the
appellants, (vi) the sense of irresponsibility which, it was argued, the above
matters indicate, (vii) the suggestion that their desire to get the children
back was not spontaneous but was inspired by their spiritual adviser and by the
wife’s parents and that there is no evidence that they have real love for the
children.
As to the last of
these items, I can find nothing in the evidence to warrant the inference that
the respondents are actuated by any motive other than the normal desire of
parents for their children, and I cannot see in what way it would have been
possible for them to demonstrate their love for the children, whose whereabouts
were concealed from them for months and who were thereafter kept from them,
except by doing their best to regain possession of them. I do not find it
necessary to deal with the other items in detail as I share the view of my
brother Rand and that of Aylesworth J.A. that they do not warrant the
conclusion that the parents are unfit persons to have the custody and
upbringing of their children.
In argument we were
pressed with the authorities that emphasize the peculiar advantage possessed by
the trial judge in cases as to the custody of infants and the reluctance of
appellate Courts to interfere with the exercise of his discretion; but, in the
case at bar, with respect, I am of opinion that the learned trial judge erred
in principle in failing to give due weight to the fact that the respondents are
the natural parents of the children and in attaching undue importance to the
consent to adoption which the respondents withdrew when the children had been
for less than two months in the possession of the appellants.
Having reached the
conclusion that the respondents are fit and proper persons to have the custody
and upbringing of their children and that there is no very serious and
important reason requiring that, having regard to the children’s welfare, the
wishes of their parents must be dis-
[Page 617]
regarded it
follows that I would dismiss the appeal, but before parting with the matter I
wish to adopt the view expressed by Aylesworth J.A. as follows:
Indeed, so far as
the welfare of the children is concerned, I do not think it should be
overlooked that now that the whereabouts of the children is known to the
appellants their desire to keep in contact with their children if the children
are left with respondents may well work against the children’s welfare; nor do
I think it unimportant that the children are almost bound to become aware of
their ancestry and of their racial heritage. Knowledge of these things and that
they are being brought up in alienation from their own flesh and blood is
something which to my mind must play an important part on a consideration of
what is best for the welfare of the children. Nor is it without significance
that in their parents’ home they will in all probability experience the
affection and companionship of their sister and perhaps of future brothers and
sisters. I also regard these as additional considerations demonstrating in an
affirmative way the absence in this case of anything of a serious or important
nature militating to deprive the parents of custody.
While in view of the
difference of opinion in the Courts below and in deference to the full and able
arguments addressed to us I have set out my reasons in my own words, and
perhaps at undue length, I wish to express my agreement with the reasons of
Aylesworth J.A. with whom Roach J.A. concurred.
I would dismiss the
appeal. Both counsel made it plain that, whatever the result, costs were not
asked and there will be no order as to costs.
Appeal
dismissed without costs.
Solicitors for the defendants, appellants:
Pallett & Pallett, Port Credit.
Solicitor for the plaintiffs, respondents:
W.E.G. Young, Woodstock.
(1883), 24 Ch. D. 317 at
337-8.
[1951] A.C. 352, [1951] 1
All E.R. 942, [1951] 2 D.L.R. 657.
[1948] O.R. 658, [1948] 4
D.L.R. 339.
[1947] O.R. 819, [1947] 4
D.L.R. 579.