Baker v. Baker

224 P.2d 192, 119 Utah 37, 1950 Utah LEXIS 205
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1950
Docket7433
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 224 P.2d 192 (Baker v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Baker, 224 P.2d 192, 119 Utah 37, 1950 Utah LEXIS 205 (Utah 1950).

Opinion

LATIMER, Justice.

This is an appeal brought by the plaintiff from a decree entered September 27, 1949, finding plaintiff in contempt of court, modifying a decree of divorce and making *39 other orders favorable to the defendant. The parties are referred to as they appeared in the court below.

On June 30, 1948, the district court in the original divorce action granted plaintiff a divorce and awarded her the care and custody of the two minor children, subject to defendant’s right of visitation at reasonable times and places. In dividing the property, the court awarded plaintiff certain real property located in Ogden, Utah, and defendant real property located in Salt Lake City, Utah. In addition, the court found that the defendant was capable of earning approximately $300 per month, and that he had no other dependents. He was, therefore, ordered to pay the sum of $50 per month toward the support and maintenance of each of the two minor children. He was also directed to pay $250 to plaintiff for attorneys’ fees and $56.20 for court costs.

On August 4, 1948, plaintiff filed an affidavit in which she requested an order to show cause why defendant should not be punished for failure to comply with the judgment. She alleged that the defendant was in contempt of court in that he had failed to pay the attorneys’ fees and costs assessed against him and that he had paid only $50 support money to the minor children of the parties during the month of July, 1948, and was, therefore, $50 in arrears in the payments. The order to show cause was served upon the defendant on August 16, 1948, and filed on August 18, 1948. On September 8, 1948, defendant was ordered to pay $150 monthly until all payments were brought up to a current basis.

On or about October 18, 1948, defendant notified plaintiff that he desired to take the children to see their grandmother on the following day, it being her birthday, and at that time plaintiff refused to have them available. In the latter part of November, defendant sought to take the children to see his mother, who was then very ill. Plaintiff *40 insisted that the visit be limited to one-half hour. Upon defendant’s demand that he be allowed to take the children for a longer period, a dispute arose between the parties during the course of which defendant told plaintiff that he would make no further contributions toward the support of the children unless or until he was given opportunities to see them and visit them without the plaintiff or other relatives being present. The following day, when defendant went to plaintiff’s home for the children, he found no one at home.

In the fall of 1948, plaintiff sold the property awarded to her and purchased a home in Nyssa, Oregon, where her children by a former marriage and other relatives and friends resided. On November 25, 1948, she left Ogden with the two children and went to that town where she established her residence and made her home. Defendant knew nothing about her departure and did not learn of his children’s whereabouts until the following January.

On February 5, 1949, a second affidavit and order to show cause were served upon the defendant. In this affidavit, plaintiff alleged that the defendant was in arrears in his payments of support and maintenance money in the amount of $300.00. On February 28, 1949, defendant filed a return to the order to show cause, alleging: That by the terms of the divorce decree the award of $50.00 per month toward the support of each of the children was made subject to the right of visitation by the defendant; that the actions of plaintiff in depriving him of this right were in contempt of the court decree; and, that by preventing him from seeing the children and by taking them to Oregon plaintiff had lost her right to require compliance with the decree. He further alleged a change in financial circumstances due to a fire which had destroyed the improvements on the Salt Lake City property and requested *41 that the amount of support and maintenance payments be reduced.

The order to show cause came on for hearing on the 22nd day of July, 1949, and the lower court found the defendant was in contempt of court for his failure to pay the $250 attorneys’ fee and the $56.20 court costs assessed against him in the original decree, but allowed defendant to purge himself of this contempt by paying these amounts within fifteen days, which he did. The court further found that the plaintiff was in contempt of court because of her actions in depriving defendant of his right to visit the children both before she left Ogden and by taking them out of the state. Because of plaintiff’s contempt and the change in circumstances the court modified the original divorce decree and ordered that the defendant’s contributions to the support and maintenance of the children be reduced to $30 per month for each child; that Mthe plaintiff be required to bring the children to the state of Utah at least three times a year; that defendant be allowed to visit the children in Oregon once a month; and that he be permitted to visit them out of the presence of the plaintiff and other relatives. The court further ordered that the reduction in the payments revert back to and be made effective as of March, 1949, the time at which defendant filed his return to the order to show cause, and that plaintiff be deprived of the right to enforce payment of the $350 due for the support of the children from November 15, 1948, to February 28, 1949.

On this appeal plaintiff has assigned eight points for argument, which we have grouped into five contentions for the purpose of this opinion. She contends that the court erred in (1) finding plaintiff in contempt of court; (2) imposing the $350 penalty against her for contempt; (3) modifying the original decree of divorce by decreasing the maintenance and support payments; (4) refusing to *42 modify the decree so as to give her the express right to keep the children in Oregon; and (5) refusing to allow certain evidence to be admitted regarding defendant’s unfitness to be alone with the children. We discuss these assignments in the order stated.

There is ample evidence to sustain the court’s findings of contempt on the part of the plaintiff, particularly with respect to depriving defendant of his right of visitation prior to the time she departed from this state. On at least two occasions defendant’s efforts to visit with the children were thwarted by plaintiff’s actions. In October, 1948, she refused to allow the children to go with defendant to visit their grandmother on her birthday. About a month later, when he requested that she allow him to take the children to visit their grandmother who was then very ill, she refused because he would not promise to return the children in one-half hour. The evidence further indicates that on other occasions she refused to let him take the children or visit with them anywhere other than in her home or in the presence of herself or other relatives, though the divorce decree imposed no such restrictions.

While the court further found that plaintiff was in contempt of court because she removed the children from the state of Utah, we need not pass on that question.

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Bluebook (online)
224 P.2d 192, 119 Utah 37, 1950 Utah LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-baker-utah-1950.