Bevan v. Bevan

283 S.W.2d 305, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 1955
Docket12901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 283 S.W.2d 305 (Bevan v. Bevan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bevan v. Bevan, 283 S.W.2d 305, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2131 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

POPE, Justice.

This suit is for permanent child custody. Whether the Oklahoma Courts or the Texas Courts have jurisdiction over two minor children is the controlling question in the case. We conclude that Oklahoma had jurisdiction and never lost it, and for that reason the judgment of the Texas Court is reversed.

Thomas J. Bevan, appellant, and Mary Margaret Bevan, appellee, were married in 1938. Two boys were born of that marriage, and they are the subjects of this suit. From 1943 to July, 1954, the mother, father and children continuously lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Carl, now thirteen, lived there from the age of eighteen months and Samuel, now ten, was born there. The parents were divorced on October 18, 1951, by the District Court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma. The mother obtained custody of the children except for week-ends visits by the father. After her divorce, the mother continued to reside in the family home in Tulsa. The father remarried on April 4, 1953, and one child was born of that marriage.

On August 18, 1953, the Tulsa Court entered a new order. It recited the personal appearance of both parents, a trial, the hearing of evidence. It concluded that both parents are fit and proper parents and will afford proper accommodations for the children. It recited, that by reason of the age of the sons “and the circumstances shown by the evidence, the children are in need of and will continue to need the guidance, counsel and training of both parents,” and that custody should be altered. The father was given custody yearly from July 1 to Christmas vacation, and the mother was awarded custody from Christmas vacation to June 30. The details of weekly visits were also specifically stated. The mother appealed to the Oklahoma Supreme Court, and additionally petitioned that court to enjoin the District Judge and the father from enforcement of the order for custody until the Supreme Court decided the appeal. That petition was argued by the mother’s and father’s attorneys before the Oklahoma Supreme Court, 274 P.2d 398, and on September 4, 1953, the mother’s prayer for the stay order was granted.

While the case was pending before the Supreme Court, the mother on May 29, 1954, filed a motion before the District Court of Tulsa County for permission to take her children on a visit to Texas and Mexico, and swore that she would return the children to Tulsa on September 1, 1954. The father then petitioned the Supreme Court of Oklahoma to dissolve its stay order and permit him to have custody as formerly decided by the trial court, for the reason that the mother was preparing to take the children from the State. The mother answered in the Supreme Court under oath and asserted that she desired only to take the children to Texas and Mexico “as a recreational and educational summer tour.” She repeated the sworn assertion that she desired to take the children on a vacation, “but not for the whole summer.” She asserted that she would not in *307 terfere with the father’s two weeks, “as provided in the contract and the decree.” There was no adjudication of the application to take the children out of Oklahoma, nor of the petition that the Supreme Court dissolve the stay order.

The father took the children on a two weeks vacation and returned them to the mother on July 11. The mother at that time was planning to leave for Texas, and did so leave the next day. On July 13 she was in Austin, Texas, and on that same date the Oklahoma Supreme Court affirmed the District Court’s judgment dividing custody of the children. On July 16 or 17 the mother was in Kingsville, Texas, and there learned that she had lost her appeal. According to her, when she talked with her mother and sister in Kingsville, and learned about her unsuccessful suit, she decided not to return to Oklahoma. She phoned her Oklahoma lawyer and they talked about a motion for rehearing, which the attorney filed. The next day she consulted a Texas lawyer, who told her she could not enter the Texas Courts. She thereupon wrote her Oklahoma lawyer to send all her stocks, bonds, money and personal articles to her in Texas. She listed her Tulsa home for sale. While she was doing these things, the Oklahoma attorney filed her motion for rehearing in the Supreme Court of that State, and it was finally overruled by the Court on September 29, 1954.

Before the Oklahoma procedure had run its course, on September 29, the mother commenced a suit in Texas on August 25. She served the father with process on September 1, that being his first information that she intended to stay in Texas. The father challenged the jurisdiction of the Texas Courts. The Texas Court, after hearing, granted the mother temporary custody.

The father, having won the custody case in Oklahoma by final judgment on September 29, 1954, then turned to the Oklahoma District Court for enforcement of its order. He applied for and obtained an order that the mother appear and show cause why she was not in contempt. When the mother was served on October 16 in Texas she immediately consulted her Texas lawyer. That same day she conveyed her Tulsa home to her mother to defeat a possible levy arising out of a contempt judgment. The mother’s Oklahoma attorney was also served with a show cause order and he appeared on October 20 and defended the suit on his behalf and on behalf of Mrs. Bevan. A further hearing was conducted in early November. The court found Mrs. Bevan in contempt and recited in its decree that she had represented to the court that she would return the children to Tulsa after the vacation trip to Mexico; that she, in open defiance of the court’s order, which had been affirmed by the Supreme Court, wrongfully and without permission of the court, removed the children from the custody of the court, and that she had violated the Tulsa Court’s order that the father could have week-end visits.

The next development in this sequence of events was that the mother advised her Oklahoma attorney by telegram that he had no authority to appear for her in the contempt matter. She reached that conclusion only after an adverse judgment. Her Oklahoma attorney then withdrew as counsel and submitted to the court the question of his authority. The Oklahoma Court found he had general authority on her behalf.

Amid this array of resourceful interferences with the orderly processes of courts and the law, Mrs. Bevan raises the plea that she was a domiciliary of Texas since about July 16, 1954, and at the time she called upon the Texas Courts and judges to hear her plea of changed circumstances entitling her to a new custody order.

The Supreme Court, recognizing the confusion among cases about the jurisdiction between States over custody, has stated certain rules of practical import. Domicile and the presence of the child and parties before the court are important, but even those concepts have importance only in a general way. Wicks v. Cox, 146 Tex. 489, 208 S.W.2d 876, 878, 4 A.L.R.2d 1. The rules there announced declare that, even as *308 suming jurisdiction exists, Texas Courts should not always take it. We find no other meaning in these words :

“The foregoing does not, of course, mean that our courts should take jurisdiction to award custody in every case where the child and the parties contending for its possession happen to be here before the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 S.W.2d 305, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bevan-v-bevan-texapp-1955.