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On Judicial Agency and the Best Interests Test
DANAYA C. WRIGHT
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I am grateful to Eileen Spring and Michael Grossberg for their thoughtful
comments on a study that has occupied my life for the past five years, and
which has finally been produced in a more detailed form as my dissertation.
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Unfortunately, many of their comments point to gaps, in the best interests
standard and comparisons with U.S. law for instance, that are taken up in
the longer study. But if I could put my entire dissertation into a single
sentence, it would be that a history of English custody law reveals
profoundly different commitments on the part of judges to protecting
mother's rights and to recognizing some form of a best interests test as
social conditions changed, and that the patriarchal moorings of custody law
remain with us today as we try to solve the deeply problematic issues
raised for a legal system that still pits parental rights against
children's welfare. Grossberg and Spring both point to the issue of
judicial agency that I grapple with in my article and I will briefly
address a few points on that topic. Then, rather than address their
comments individually, I would prefer to suggest some of the conclusions I
draw in the larger study and make connections to what is presented here.
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Grossberg and Spring have both criticized my strong implications that many
of the English judges can be characterized as either patriarchal and
backward or progressive and liberal. To some extent, I agree. This is an
issue that has particularly plagued my analysis of the materials of this
period. I certainly believe that the judge who admits he is forging a new
trail by interpreting prior case law or statutory language in revolutionary
ways has engaged in what is derisively termed judicial activism, though I
generally reserve judgment of whether such activism is legitimate or
appropriate until further consideration of the type of text being
interpreted and the ends being sought. But I also believe that the judge
who throws his hands in the air and claims that he is bound by precedent to
decide in a manner that, had it been a case of first impression, he would
not have dreamed of doing, is also engaging in judicial activisma
kind of activism that puts a halt to change, that resists the important
feature of the common law, its recognition of the importance of tempora
mutantur. To speak of judicial agency, it seems to me, means to affirm the
position that either all judges do it or none do. Of course, in England,
judges might view their roles differently perhaps than they do in the
United States, which might seem to justify Spring's claim that "[I]n
reality ... [Eldon] had no choice."
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But such a comment overlooks the fact that Eldon himself was a staunchly
Tory politician, a man who, as attorney general, supported the suspension
of the Habeas Corpus Act on numerous occasions, resisted Catholic
Emancipation and abolition of the slave trade at every opportunity,
prosecuted a series of political activists for sedition over a period of
many years (all but one of whom were acquitted), prepared the Treasonable
Attempts and Seditious Meetings Bill, and, most notably, acted as royal
go-between in the dispute between George III and his son over the custody
and education of the king's granddaughter, Princess Charlotte. In December
1804, Eldon penned a memorandum in which he opined that "nothing could be
so mischievous as litigating"
3
the question of the Royal Marriage Act, the act put in place in response
to the Grand Opinion of 1717. Despite Lord Thurlow's belief that a current
suit would result in a different outcome from the 1717 Grand Opinion, Eldon
was less optimistic and suggested that the Prince of Wales just make up to
his father and not put the judges to the test. As that is indeed what
occurred, we have no official statement of Eldon, as chancellor, on the
Grand Opinion, except that his memoirs are full of statements expressing
his antipathy to having been put in the position of mediating between
father and grandfather in the first place. Although the Grand Opinion might
seem like an odd place to begin this study, it seems too coincidental that
an almost identical dispute was occupying the chancellor's attention during
the months he decided the De Manneville case.
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Eldon also had a rather checkered past when it came to issues of marriage
and family stability. It is well known that he eloped with his wife, a
modest heiress, against the wishes of both sets of parents and in
contravention of Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act. He also found himself, in
his first speech as chancellor in the House of Lords, objecting to a
divorce bill brought by a wife on the grounds of her husband's adultery,
which, being particularly egregious in that case, he supported, but about
which he "retain[ed] his opinion, that, in general, the application of a
wife for a divorce, on the ground of her husband's adultery, ought, for the
sake of securing the morals of the public, to be resisted and refused."
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Eldon's views on the sanctity of marriage and the natural subordination of
wife to husband clearly fit within his high Tory politics.
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None of this is to say that judges decide cases only upon the basis of
their personal views and without attention to precedents. It is only to
point out that they are no less embedded in their times than lawyers,
litigants, and historians. Relationships between political beliefs, life
experiences, and judicial decision making are, of course, complexa
complexity with which all legal historians must grapple. Both commentators
point out ways in which historians, as judges of the evidence, ignore that
complexity at their peril.
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In the remainder of this response I will briefly summarize the conclusions
I draw in my larger study, conclusions more thoroughly developed there than
is possible here. Thereby I hope I can address some of the commentators'
concerns while also revealing my own emphasis on the way the
husband/wife relationship was influenced by custody law, rather than
how custody law itself was formed and filled by changing conceptions of
child welfare over time.
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In my dissertation, I have looked closely at the few years leading up to
the 1839 Custody of Infants Act, the arguments of reformers like Caroline
Norton, and the debates in Parliament and the periodical press in an
attempt to locate the types of arguments deployed on all sides. By 1839
times had indeed changed. Jacobin sentiments seemed less threatening while
important Parliamentary reform had occurred in a number of venues in the
first half of the 1830s. By 1839, the legislative reform did not seem out
of place, especially in light of the compelling Greenhill case. But an analysis of the cases between 1839 and 1857 reveals
substantial disagreement over the extent of the legislative change among
judges. Did it enlarge women's rights to petition for and acquire custody,
or did it simply broaden the equity court's jurisdiction over children by
removing the property bar? Judges felt themselves in a dreadful bind, given
the power to decide custody under some sort of undefined best interests
test while still subject to coverture restrictions made unworkable by the
separation of ecclesiastical jurisdiction over marriage and divorce, legal
jurisdiction over property, and equity jurisdiction over custody.
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Ironically, the result of this awkward position caught between the three
different jurisdictions was paralysis. Judges granted mothers custody only
in cases where paternal acts met the pre-1839 forfeiture standard; they
continued to look to ecclesiastical determinations of marital status as a
prerequisite for making custody decisions. Hence, the 1839 act did not
change the substantive nature of the custody law nor grant mothers any new
rights; it merely heightened the tension between the common law rule of
paternal rights and the growing reality of increasing divorce and
single-mother parenting. I suggest that the continuing rhetoric of
domesticity and maternal duties, coupled with the nightmare of three-part
jurisdiction over family issues, led reformers once again to Parliament
where the divorce and matrimonial causes court was created and "family law"
as we know it was born.
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Moreover, it was exactly these custody casespitting mothers against
fathers, child welfare against legal rights, and threatening the breakdown
of coverture while solidifying a patriarchal substance to the best
interests standardthat resulted in the creation of a new court and a
set of doctrines unique to the family and the problems raised by claims of
maternal rights.
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But while many historians mark 1857 as the turning point in women's
reforms, I continue to be skeptical. In analyzing the post-1857 cases, we
see a striking phenomenon. The divorce court judges were initially willing
to grant custody to mothers who suffered at the hands of violent, greedy,
or profligate husbands and came up with a marital fault rule. But within
just a couple of years, the equity courts, which sat in review of the
divorce court decisions, quickly put a halt to the granting of custody to
mothers except on grounds remarkably similar to the pre-1839 forfeiture
standardextreme unfitness. After numerous cases were reversed on
appeal, mothers got custody only in the rare, extreme instance. In 1863 a
judge ordinary would explain, as he denied custody to a mother of her
twelve-year-old handicapped son, that "where the wife is the innocent
party, I consider that she is entitled to the solace of having the custody
of her children. But in deciding such questions, I have been in the habit
of considering only what are the rights of the parents. Here Mrs. Cooke
asks for the custody of the child, not as a solace to herself, but for the
welfare of the child. That is a ground which would, I think, involve the
Court in considerations foreign to it."
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It is not that the judges had varying conceptions of child welfare that is
troubling, but rather that a welfare consideration was entirely foreign to
the court.
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What did characterize the mid- to late nineteenth century, and the first
three decades of the fledgling family law, was the reliance judges placed
on marital fault as a proxy for determining parental rights. After creation
of the divorce court, the custody law that developed in the latter half of
the century used marital fault to determine parental rights. Thus, while De Manneville based parental rights on marital status and the doctrine of coverture, the
cases after 1857 based parental rights on marital fault. It was this shift,
I suggest, that kept a welfare standard from evolving. Notably, the women
reformers, from Mary Wollstonecraft in the late eighteenth century through
Caroline Norton and to Margaret Oliphant in the late nineteenth century,
all advocated a separation of parental and marital duties. They bewailed
the fact that unruly husbands might force wives out of their homes and that
they would thereby lose access to their children as well. What they wanted
was to be able to fulfill their duties as a parent even if they were
prevented from doing so as a wife. By using fault to determine custody, the
new unified family law could avoid engaging in any substantive analysis of
child welfare. This, I believe, put off the welfare analysis until it was
legislated in 1925.
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The unification of marital performance with parental rights has been
applauded by historians and scholars as giving women greater freedom and
control over their children. Here again I must disagree with the
traditional interpretation. Although more mothers began to get custody by
the last few decades of the nineteenth century, they did so at a cost of
adopting traditional domestic roles. Hence, Annie Besant, who separated
from her husband and was an atheist and author of a banned book on birth
control, lost custody of her daughter despite a private separation
agreement granting her custody.
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Similarly, in the 1880s, a judge would remove five children from a mother
who had obtained a separation from her husband on the grounds of cruelty.
Lord Ardmillan explained that the "rule, as a general rule, is settled; and
notwithstanding his conduct to the mother, we have no reason to dread
injury to the health or morals of the child. To leave his wife with the
defender were to subject him to an influence exciting and tempting him to
violence towards her. To leave his little child in his house is, or may
well be, to introduce a soothing influence to cheer the darkness and
mitigate the bitterness of his lot, and bring out the better part of his
nature."
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No concern is given for cheering the darkness and mitigating the
bitterness of the mother's lot, who was forced to jump out a window to
escape her husband's violence, who was cursed and assaulted, and who was
beaten insensible by her lord and master. Women who left were still often
seen as the transgressors and therefore unworthy of receiving custody.
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I am grateful to Eileen Spring and Michael Grossberg for articulating
better than I have been able to the importance of historicizing these legal
doctrines within their contemporary social context. Although my focus has
been principally on the question of mother's rights and I have declined to
address the changing substantive content of the best interests standard,
Grossberg's comments remind me of the importance of analyzing the values
and motives of the father's rights advocates. But even as I say this, I am
reminded of the shrill, almost hysterical objections raised by certain
M.P.s and pamphleteers who called the Custody of Infants Act the Robbery of
Fathers Bill and likened women to caged beasts who, if not threatened by
the loss of their children, would leave their homes immediately and run
into licentious wickedness and folly.
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This is not to say that Lord Eldon and his followers did not have a
legitimate political position from which to deny mothers any rights of
access or custody of their children. In many respects, the proponents of
coverture approved of the legal neatness of marital unity and harmony. But
legal fictions, like the fictions of coverture and royal authority, are
fictions precisely because they cannot adequately represent reality. As
Hendrick Hartog reminds us, the merging of the husband and wife's
identities under coverture is incompatible with a belief that although
married, one "always remains an individual."
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It is how the denial of maternal rights could and could not keep the
beasts caged that has driven this study.
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Notes
1.
Danaya C. Wright, "From Feudalism to Family Law: Inter-Spousal Custody Disputes and the Repudiation of Mother's Rights" (Ph.D. diss., Johns Hopkins University, 1998).
2.
Eileen Spring, "Child Custody and the Decline in Women's Rights," Law and History Review 17 (1999): 317.
3.
Horace Twiss, The Life of Lord Chancellor Eldon (London: Murray, 1844), 1: 477.
4.
Ibid., 383.
5.
Matrimonial Causes Act (1857).
6.
Cooke v. Cooke, 32 LJPMA 187, 191 (1863).
7.
Re Besant, 48 L.J. Ch. 497, 11 Ch.D. 508 (1878).
8.
Session Cases, 8 M 821 cited in "The Law in Relation to Women," The Westminster Review 128 (1887): 705.
9.
See Edwin Hill Handley, "Custody of Infants Bill," British and Foreign Review 7 (1838): 281. "What madness then and atrocious wickedness it would be to take away, not merely the least, not merely one out of a number, but the greatest, the last, the only remaining bar against the outbreak of ever-tempting lusts, and then hope that they will afterwards restrain themselves on account of your impotent good wishes, and unheeded sermons, and vain regrets! As well might you expect, when you have unbarred the cages of so many wild beasts, that they will remain quietly in them at the wish of their keepers!"
10.
Hendrik Hartog, "Marital Exits and Marital Expectations in Nineteenth-Century
America," Georgetown Law Journal 80 (1991): 97.
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