Beard v. Stevens

123 So. 2d 860, 239 Miss. 568, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 323
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1960
DocketNo. 41565
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 123 So. 2d 860 (Beard v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Stevens, 123 So. 2d 860, 239 Miss. 568, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 323 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Holmes, J.

This is a child custody suit involving the custody of Ronnie Alan Newman, the minor son of the appellant, who at the time of the hearing below was approximately three years of age. The contest is between the appellant, the mother of said child, and the appellee, Mrs. L. R. Steveiis, Jr., the paternal aunt of said child.

The appeal is from a decree of the Chancery Court of Adams County dated January 30, 1959, dismissing the petition of the appellant for the modification of a decree of said court rendered on June 12, 1957, awarding the custody of said Ronnie Alan Newman to the appel-lee, Mrs. L. R. Stevens, Jr., “pending further orders of the court.”

[570]*570The record discloses substantially the following: By decree of the Chancery Court of Adams County rendered on January 24, 1956, the appellant, then Mrs. Queenie Elizabeth Newman, was granted an absolute divorce from her husband, C. E. Newman, Jr., and was awarded the absolute custody of their three children, namely, G-eorge Dudley Newman, Linda Gail Newman and Bonnie Alan Newman, who were then of the ages of approximately 6, 4 and 2 years respectively. On or about the day after said divorce was granted, the appellant telephoned to the said Mrs. L. B. Stevens, Jr., who resided in Glen Allen, Mississippi, requesting her to take the two younger children into her home, namely, Linda Gail and Bonnie Alan Newman, representing that she was financially unable to care for and provide for said children and that because of her distressed financial condition it was necessary for her to work, and she would, therefore, not be in a position to give the required attention to said children. Mrs. Stevens, in response to the appellant’s request, took the two younger children and brought them to her home and placed Linda Gail in the home of her grandmother, Mrs. C. E. Newman, Sr., and kept Bonnie Alan in her own home. The custody of Linda Gail is not here involved.

Some three or four weeks thereafter, the appellant telephoned Mrs. Stevens from a night club located near Glen Allen, Mississippi, and advised her that she was coming to take the child, Bonnie Alan, back and she thereafter arrived in Glen Allen in the night time, accompanied by one Frank Harrison, whom she claimed to have recently married. According to Mrs. Stevens, she was at the time in a state of intoxication. The appellant denies that she was intoxicated at that time. The appellant took the child back with her, and approximately one week thereafter she again telephoned Mrs. Stevens asking her to drive to Natchez and get the children and she did so and found them in a small apart[571]*571ment in Natchez. The appellant then again advised Mrs. Stevens that she was not able to support the children, saying that the aforesaid Frank Harrison had left her. It appears that the appellant had formed a common-law marriage with the said Frank Harrison, and had separated from him and had been married to one William Henry Beard, Jr. In order to clear up any question as to the validity of her marriage to the said William Henry Beard, Jr., the appellant obtained a divorce from the said Harrison and was then remarried to Beard. The said Beard had three children by his former wife, and on being divorced from his former wife, he was awarded the full custody of his said three children and thereafter he placed them in the Methodist Orphanage at Jackson, Mississippi, for the reason, as he said, that he was not able to care for them and support them. The said three children, after being in the Orphanage about a year and a half, were taken out of the Orphanage by their mother, the former wife of the said William Henry Beard, Jr. The said Beard had a home in Vicksburg. It was a perfahricated house which he purchased and was not fully completed and was not equipped with modern conveniences.

After the child was taken hack and forth from the home of Mrs. Stevens, the appellant finally requested Mrs. Stevens to drive to Vicksburg and bring the child to her. Mrs. Stevens did so, hut upon arriving in Vicksburg, she found conditions, as she said, not favorable to returning the custody of Ronnie to Mrs. Beard and she brought Ronnie hack with her. Thereafter on May 21, 1957, Mrs. Stevens and C. E. Newman, Jr., the father of Ronnie, filed their petition in the Chancery Court of Adams County against the appellant, seeking a modification of the aforesaid divorce decree dated January 24, 1956, so as to award to petitioner, Mrs. L. R. Stevens, Jr., the full custody of Ronnie Alan Newman. It was alleged in the petition that Mrs. Beard was not a [572]*572fit person to have the custody of said child and that it was to the best interest of said child that its custody he awarded to the said'Mrs. L. R. Stevens, Jr. It was therefore prayed in the petition that on the final hearing of the cause the court modify the decree of January 24,1956 so as to award the permanent custody of the child Ronnie Alan Newman to her. The appellant answered the petition and denied the allegations thereof with respect to her fitness to have the custody of the child and made her petition a cross-petition praying that the custody of said child he awarded to her. On May 30, 1957, an agreed decree was entered in the cause wherein it was provided that pending a full hearing of the cause the child, Ronnie Alan Newman, should remain under the care and control of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Stevens, Jr., at Grlen Allan, Mississippi, with the right of appellant to visit him at any reasonable time. Under the provisions of the decree, it was further ordered that the cause he continued to June 12, 1957, at which time a full hearing would he had on the question of the custody of the child, Ronnie Alan. In due course the cause came on for trial on its merits on June 12, 1957, and after hearing the evidence, the chancellor stated in the record his findings and conclusions, in which he discussed the respective merits of the contestants hearing upon their right to have the custody of the child. Concluding, the chancellor said: “I temporarily leave the child in the custody of Mrs. Stevens, and I say I don’t want you to petition this court for another year for this child again. I can’t stop you, hut I tell you it would probably he of no avail to you. However, if after a year you have continued to rehabilitate yourself as you are doing today, this court will hear you with a sympathetic ear, and so the decree will recite accordingly.”

The chancellor thereupon entered a decree signed on June 12, 1957, containing the following provisions: “It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that said [573]*573decree dated January 24, 1956 be and the same is hereby modified to award to Mrs. L. B. Stevens, Jr., custody of the minor child, Bonnie Alan Newman, pending further orders of this court, with the privilege in Mrs. Qneenie Elizabeth Beard of visiting said child at any reasonable time.” (Emphasis ours)

After the expiration of a little more than a year, to-wit: July 10, 1958, the appellant filed her petition in the Chancery Conrt of Adams County against Mrs. L. B. Stevens, Jr. and C. E. Newman, Jr., seeking a modification of the aforesaid decree dated June 12, 1957, as to the custody of Bonnie Alan Newman. It was set forth in her petition that she was happily married to "William Henry Beard, Jr., and she and her said children were living at Vicksburg, Mississippi, in a good community and had a home in which they could provide not only for Bonnie but for the three children of Mr. Beard by his former marriage who had been taken out of the Methodist Orphanage by their mother.

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Related

Reynolds v. Riddell
253 So. 2d 834 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
123 So. 2d 860, 239 Miss. 568, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-stevens-miss-1960.