Arons v. Arons
This text of 94 So. 2d 849 (Arons v. Arons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Jean Mae ARONS, Appellant,
v.
Donald B. ARONS, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Florida, Division B.
*850 Charles H. Wakeman, Jr., Miami, for appellant.
Boardman & Bolles, Miami, for appellee.
O'CONNELL, Justice.
Donald B. Arons, appellee, brought suit for divorce against his wife, Jean Mae Arons, the appellant.
Mr. Arons sought a divorce and custody of the three minor children of the parties. Mrs. Arons filed a counterclaim for divorce and custody of the three children of the parties. Other relief was prayed for by both parties but is not involved in this appeal.
On motion of Mr. Arons, a special master was appointed to take testimony and submit his findings of fact and law to the court. Mrs. Arons did not object to the appointment of a master. Pursuant to the order of reference, which was in usual form, the special master took voluminous testimony and thereafter made his report to the chancellor. This report, consisting of a total of 29 pages, was exhaustive.
In his report the master recited, among other things, that the testimony was conflicting, "that it is to the best interest and welfare of said children that the custody of said children be awarded to" Mrs. Arons, the mother of the children, whom the master found to be a fit and proper person to have the custody of said children. He found Mr. Arons guilty of extreme cruelty. He recommended Mrs. Arons be granted a divorce from Mr. Arons and that she be awarded custody of the three minor children, with reasonable rights of visitation with said children to be given Mr. Arons.
Mr. Arons filed exceptions to the special master's report and after hearing thereon the chancellor entered a final decree wherein he decreed among other things that: (1) the parties be divorced each from the other; (2) the custody of the two younger children of the parties be given to Mrs. Arons; and (3) the custody of the oldest child of the parties be given to Mr. Arons. In each case the parents were given rights of visitation with the child or children living with the other. The decree also provided that when Mr. Arons was required to be out of the State of Florida for extended periods that the oldest child, custody of whom was given to Mr. Arons, was permitted to remain at the home of the paternal *851 grandmother of the child, a Mrs. Arons, Sr.
Mrs. Arons filed her notice of appeal. Both parties filed assignments of error.
Mrs. Arons contends that the chancellor erred in awarding custody to Mr. Arons of the oldest child, Jack Roberts Arons, who at the time of the proceedings below was eight years of age.
Mr. Arons contends that the chancellor was correct in awarding him custody of the child, Jack Roberts Arons, but erred in not also awarding him custody of the two younger children, Cathy Jean Arons and Debra Arons, who were respectively six years and four months of age at the time of the proceedings in the court below.
The other provisions of the final decree are not involved in this appeal.
Mrs. Arons, the appellant, contends that under the decisions of this Court the findings of fact made by the special master in this cause, which master was appointed on motion of Mr. Arons and with the apparent consent of Mrs. Arons, came to the chancellor bearing the dignity of a verdict of a jury and should not have been disturbed unless shown to be clearly erroneous. Harmon v. Harmon, Fla. 1949, 40 So.2d 209; Aldred v. Romano, Fla. 1952, 58 So.2d 436 and Frank v. Frank, Fla. 1954, 75 So.2d 282. She contends that the master's findings are correct and have not been shown to be clearly erroneous.
Mr. Arons, the appellee, agrees that the above cited cases are sound law, but argues that these same cases provide that the chancellor may override or modify the findings of the special master when justice requires, or when the record fails to contain competent substantial evidence in support of the master's findings. Mr. Arons contends that the record does not contain such evidence in support of the master's findings.
Both parties agree that the questions in this appeal must be decided by determining whether the special master's findings were supported by competent and substantial evidence.
The transcript of the testimony consists of 663 pages and no effort will be made to summarize it. Suffice it to say there was evidence that Mrs. Arons was a good mother and capable of rearing her children, and there was evidence to the contrary. Much of the evidence on both sides came from members of the families of the parties with the bias and prejudice usually and naturally found in such testimony. The master heard this evidence personally and having had the witnesses, and particularly having had the parties to this cause before him, he under our decisions is considered to have had a better basis for judging the effect to be given such testimony and for determining the capabilities and actions of the parties, as parents, than did the chancellor who, as we have done, could only refer to the written record.
While the chancellor recited no findings of fact in his final decree we must assume from the provisions of the decree, measured by the rule established in the cases cited above, that he found that there was competent substantial evidence to support the finding of the master to the effect that Mrs. Arons was a fit and proper person to have the custody of all the children of the parties. If this were not true he should not have awarded custody of the two younger children to her.
Further, we must assume that while he found the welfare of the two younger children would best be served by placing them in the custody of Mrs. Arons, the mother, he found the welfare of the oldest child would be best served by placing this child in the custody of Mr. Arons, the father.
In addition the chancellor must have found that the paternal grandmother of the children, Mrs. Arons, Sr., was also a fit and proper person to have the custody of the oldest child, and in fact that the oldest child would be better off in the care of the grandmother than in the care of *852 the child's own mother, since the decree provides that on those occasions when Mr. Arons, the father, is out of the State of Florida the oldest child may remain with the said grandmother rather than living with Mrs. Arons, the mother. The evidence shows that the father is out of the State at least six months of each year because of his employment.
The chancellor in effect overruled the special master in two particulars. First, he placed the oldest child in the custody of the father, Mr. Arons, whereas the master recommended that this child, as well as the other children, be placed with Mrs. Arons, the mother. Second, he provided that the oldest child could remain with the paternal grandmother when Mr. Arons was out of the State, whereas the master had found that the oldest child, who had spent about one half of his life in the care of the grandmother, Mrs. Arons, Sr., "did not receive proper care and training while in the custody of the Senior Mrs. Arons" and also found "that until the children, and particularly until Jackie Arons (the oldest child) is a little older and overcomes his present feeling of insecurity, that it would be for their best interest and welfare that they not be permitted to make any extended visits to the home of their grandmother Arons."
We have carefully searched the record in an effort to determine whether those findings of the master which were overruled by the decree of the chancellor could be said to be clearly erroneous.
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