
    JOSEPH T. ENGLAND vs. RHETT MILLER MEGEAR.
    
      Custody of Child — Parents Divorced.
    
    That the mother of a child, after a divorce from the child’s father, married a divorced man, and lived with him, in violation of the teaching of the church in which the child, by agreement of his parents, were being brought up, and in which he had been confirmed, was not sufficient reason for refusing to allow the child, whose custody was by the divorce decree vested equally in the father and mother, to spend part of his Christmas vacation with the mother.
    
      Decided April 10th, 1924.
    
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Baltimore City (Huffy, J.).
    
      Petition by Iihett Miller Megear against Joseph T. England for an order authorizing a visit to her by her son, Joseph T. England, Jr., From an order granting the prayer of the petition and dismissing his cross-petition, said Joseph T. England appeals.
    Affirmed.
    The cause was argued before Thomas, Pattrson, Erner, Oejttt, and Dtgges, JJ.
    
      Ye-rnon Cool-, for the appellant.
    
      Stuart S. Janney, for the appellee.
   Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is by the father from an order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City permitting his sou, now about thirteen years of age, to visit the child’s, mother in New York City, from whom the father was divorced a vinculo matrimonii.

On the 3rd of April, 1917, the court below passed a decree divorcing the appellant from the appellee, and, in accordance with an agreement between the appellant and the appellee, the court further decreed that the custody of Joseph Townsend England, Jr., their minor child, should be “vested equally in” the appellant and appellee; that said child should not be removed from the State of Maryland “except under the order of” the court; that the court retained jurisdiction in the case for the purpose of passing such further order in regard to the custody and care of such infant as might appear to be for his benefit and advantage; that the “legal guardianship of said” infant “be vested in Joseph T. England,” the plaintiff, and that he be charged with his maintenance and support.

The appellant and the appellee were members of the Proteestant Episcopal Church, and prior to their separation attended Mt. Calvary Church, in Baltimore City. After their separation, the appellee went to live with her mother, and the appellant, his maiden aunt, and his child, ha^e lived in Baltimore City. The child attended Sunday school and the choir at Mount Calvary Church, and was confirmed in that church in 1920. In the fall of 1922 he was sent to the Donaldson School, which is a church school, connected with and under the control of Mount Calvary Church, where he is given religious training in accordance with the teaching' and doctrines of the Protestant Episcopal Church. Ever since the separation of the appellant and appellee the child has spent a part of his vacations with his mother, either at her home in New York .or elsewhere.

In October, 1923, the appellee married Thomas J. Megear, a resident of New York City, who was a divorced man, and is now living with her said husband in the City of New York. In November, 1923, the appellee wrote to the appellant with the view of having their child spending a part of his Christmas vacation with her in New York, but the appellant replied that he was not willing for him to do so, whereupon the appellee filed a petition in the court below praying the court to pass an order authorizing the said Joseph T. England, Jr., to visit her in New York on the 2nd of January, 1924, provided he was returned to his school on or before January 8th, “when the school opened after the holidays.” The appellant filed an answer to said petition, and also a cross-petition, in which, after referring to the provisions of the decree of 1917, he alleged:

“2. That subsequent to the passage o£ said decree it was agreed between the parties hereto that the actual custody of said child should be given to the father, and that ever since the passage of said decree * * * your petitioner has had the actual custody of his son. It was also agreed between the parents that the religious training and education of said son should be in accordance with the teaching and doctrine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and that he should be sent to a school identified with that church where he would receive a religious training of the kind desired. This agreement was made at the earnest request of the father and that the mother fully consented thereto, and that, in accordance therewith, the infant son above mentioned has for some time been a student at the Donaldson School, which is a school conducted by persons identified with the church above mentioned and where the boy is receiving a religious training in accordance with the teachings and doctrine of said church.
“3. That for some years past the defendant has lived in the City of New York; that she has visited her son in Baltimore, and that the son has been permitted to spend a portion of his holidays with his mother, hut that recently and since the last visit of the son to the home of his mother in New York, said mother has remarried with a certain Thomas J. Megear, who is himself a divorced man, and that the defendant, a divorced woman and the party at fault in the divorce case and against whom the divorce »vas decreed, having remarried with a man himself also divorced, is necessarily leading a home life entirely incompatible with the teaching and doctrine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and that to permit the plantiiFs son, who is now at the impressionable age of thirteen years, to spend a part of his time at his mother’s home, under the circumstances above mentioned, would, in the opinion of your petitioner and in the opinion of those who are looking after the religious training of said hoy, he extremely detrimental to such training and would necessarily subject him to influences wholly adverse to and in conflict with the religious training which he is receiving and upon which the parents had agreed at the time of the passage of the decree of divorce.”

The prayer of the cross-petition was (1) that the decree of 1917. in so far as it relates to the care and custody of said infant, he modified so as to give the care and custody “of said son and his religious training entirely to the petitioner,” and (2) “that the mother he permitted to visit the child, hut the child shall not be permitted under the circumstances herein-before mentioned to live in the home of the mother for any portion of his time.” The appellee answered the cross-petition denying that there was any agreement that the “actual custody” of the child should he given to- the father, or any agreement “other than that the said child should be brought up as an Episcopalian, and should attend school at Donaldson School.” The answer further denies that the home life of the appellee “is incompatible with the teaching and doctrine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, or any other Christian belief,” and “that her home will be detrimental to her child’s training and subject him to adverse influences,” and alleges that appellee’s “married life with her present husband is happy, the surroundings are dignified and in every way in consonance with the proper training and development of her son.”

At the hearing of the petition and cross-petition the mother' offered evidence tending to show that she and her present husband have a comfortable home in New York; that her son is attached to her and fond of her husband, and that he wanted to come to her for a part of his Christmas holidays, while the father, the rector of Mt. Calvary Church, and the assistant head master of Donaldson School, testified that the marriage of the mother to her present husband, while legal, was contrary to the teaching of the church to which the son belongs, and that in their judgment it would be detrimental to the child to permit him to live in a home that is at variance with his religious and moral training.

It thus appears from the cross-petition, and the elúdeme shows, that the only ground upon which the father objects to 'the boy visiting the home of his mother is that her remarriage was contrary to the teaching of the church to which the child belongs, and that to visit her home under such circumstances would tend to counteract his religious and moral training. The learned court below took the view that the reasons assigned were not sufficient to justify a court in denying the mother the relief asked for in her petition, and in that view we must concur.

It is urged in the brief of counsel for the appellant that “The courts should not pass any order which interferes with the religious training which a child is receiving,” and that “the undoubted effect of the decision of the lower court in this case will be to estrange the boy from the Protestant Episcopal Church. A boy of his age naturally thinks that what his mother does must be right. When ho sees his mother, divorced by her first husband, living with a second husband, this, example will undoubtedly lead him to believe that the religious, teaching of the Donaldson 'School is wrong, and a little reflection should convince any one that the clergymen who testified are absolutely right when they say that such conditions interfere with what they consider proper religious training.” This Court might well agree that ordinarily the courts should do nothing to interfere with the religious training of children, but it by no means follows that a short visit to his mother’s home would have that effect upon a child. If, as argued, a child of the age of the infant in this case “naturally thinks what his mother does must, be right,” then the injury to the child sought to be avoided has already been done, and the possibility that a short visit to her home would add to his estrangement, from the moral and religious training he has received is, too remote to warrant a court in denying to the mother and child the companionship they both desire. In the case of Hill v. Hill, 49 Md. 450, Chief Judge Bartol, speaking for the Court, said: “While the welfare of the child is certainly the primary object to be attained, and is not to be sacrificed or placed in jeopardy, in dealing with a question of this kind, it seems to us there are other considerations not to be lost sight of. Some regard must, be had for the tender relation which the appellant bears to her child. We cannot divest ourselves of the feelings of our common humanity, and ought not, if we could, wholly so disregard the natural claims upon our consideration of the mother’s affection for her offspring.” See also Pangle v. Pangle, 134 Md. 170, where this, Court said: “The primary concern in cases of this nature is to make such an award of the custody of the child as, will promote its highest welfare. The natural feelings and the legitimate interests of the parents are also to be duly considered.”

In this case the evidence shows that the father is actuated solely by a most commendable interest in and solicitude for the welfare of his child, for whom he manifests a deep affection, but we do not feel that the reasons he assigns for his attitude are sufficient, under the circumstances, to justify this Court in depriving the mother of the right granted her by the order of court from which this appeal was taken.

Order affirmed, with costs.  