This controversy relates to the custody and welfare of three girls, now about twelve, ten, and eight years of age, respectively. Their parents, the parties to the suit, were married on December 30, 1905, and divorced on August 18, 1917. By the decree of divorce, all three of the children were awarded to the father. Each of the parents has since remarried, not one to the other. Upon application of the mother,the original decree was so modified that she was given' “the absolute custody and control of said minor children,” allowing the father to have them at specified occasional short periods of time. From the modified1 decree, the father has appealed.
The history of the case gives us very little trouble. The evidence is clear and convincing, much of it that *14is most important being undisputed. At tbe time of the marriage of .respondent, Martha Smith (formerly Mrs. Martha Frates), and appellant, Louis A. Frates, neither had any means. They purchased a place upon which a residence was built largely by his own labor in the evenings and on holidays. About the oniy fault she charged him with was the excessive use of intoxicating liquors while they were married, which is positively denied by him, his close neighbors, and his business career. He worked regularly for years for the same employer, at constantly increasing wages; and later conducted a business of his own, with employees to help. Among such employees, for some length of time, was the present husband of respondent. Appellant paid cash for his family expenses, modernized their six-room residence, improved the grounds with a lawn and fruit trees and owed only $700 on the residence at the date of the divorce. Respondent became frivolous, and finally habitually neglectful of her home and children. She often spent whole days, and more frequently afternoons and evenings until late at night, without her husband, downtown and at dances,, leaving the children to be cared for by neighbors, without appointments therefor oftener ' than otherwise, until appellant would return from his work, when he would get the supper and put the children to bed. On account of her improper relations with appellant’s brother, first denied but later admitted by her when confronted by the accusation of her own little daughter, she caused a lasting estrangement between the brothers. Still later, about July 16, 1916, she voluntarily confessed to her husband her criminal conduct with E. N. Smith, her present husband, who at that time was an employee of her husband’s. Shortly, appellant’s experience proved in no uncer*15tain way the verity of her confession. Within a little while, as she testifies herself, she deserted her husband while he was at work and the children were at school. She worked around at housework, corresponded with, and met Smith. In the meantime, for three or four months, appellant received the services of his children’s maternal grandmother in caring for the children at his home, after which he placed them together, from time to time, at different homes of friends of his until after his second marriage. He preferred that she appear as plaintiff in the divorce suit. She gave him a conveyance of the property upon which there was a mortgage of $700 (since paid off by him), made no claim to the children at that time, and waived all claim for alimony. The decree entered in the divorce case on August 18, 1917, simply dissolved the bonds of matrimony existing between the parties, gave the care, custody and control of the three children to the defendant, and, as provided by statute, prohibited each party from contracting marriage with a third party within six months.
On the first day after the expiration of the limitation of time fixed in the decree, viz., February 18, 1918, she married Smith—the associate and author of her former delinquencies. She and her present husband own no property. After their marriage, they lived in a single housekeeping room in an apartment house until a few days before the hearing of her application for the custody of the children, when they rented and moved into a small house supplied with their furniture. Her husband works at one of the shipyards at Seattle where, notwithstanding the commonly-known high wages, he gets less than $4 per day for his work. She works at a store for small wages.
*16On the other hand, appellant and a partner conduct a. growing business of their own which yields a net income of $200 per month to appellant. His present wife is the owner of a hospital in Seattle which receives the patronage influenced by twelve to fifteen reputable physicians. Her business is prospering and at dhe present time returns’ a net income of $300 per month. She takes an interest in the children, remaining at home until after they go to school, when she goes to her place of business for the day’s work, returning in the late afternoon. Usually, on Saturday afternoons she takes the girls to a picture show or some other place of .amusement, and on Sundays after they attend Sunday school she takes them out for a ride in appellant’s family car. The children are well dressed and cared for at appellant’s home, where they have the services of a housekeeper who has raised a family of nine children of her own.
The question of whether one of the parents shall prevail, in the spirit of victory over the other, is in no sense involved in this case. Their ways are divided; their rights are subordinate. The serious matter is the welfare of the children, who should be kept together, if possible, and not denied each the others’ society. From a material point of view, there is no question appellant’s home is to be preferred for the children. Other and more important considerations suggest the same course. In cases of divorce where children of very tender years are involved, other things being near equal, the mother is preferred as their custodian, more especially in the case of female children. But there are exceptions to this rule which become more controlling as the child grows older, the chief of which becomes impelling in the case of a female child as it reaches the age of ten or twelve *17years. In the home of respondent and her present husband, these children would be constantly reminded of the past irregularities of a mother who, in order to finally consummate her present marriage, willingly and willfully abandoned her own children to their father whom she deserted. Such influences would be prejudicial to the best interests of the children, who should not be further denied their natural right simply out of respect for the holy institution of a mother’s love, which in this case is proven to be dishonored by a maternal instinct more fancied than real. The children have lost their mother’s influence; but no good reason is shown why they should lose the protection and care of their father.
Their best interests require a reversal of the decree appealed from, which is hereby directed.
Chadwick, C. J., Tolman, Mackintosh, and Main, JJ., concur.