Bierce v. Hanson

233 P.2d 520, 171 Kan. 422, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 3, 1951
Docket38,318
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 233 P.2d 520 (Bierce v. Hanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bierce v. Hanson, 233 P.2d 520, 171 Kan. 422, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 278 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment denying a motion for a change in the custody of a child which previously had been awarded to the father and to permit the mother to remove the child to her new home in the state of Idaho.

A brief introductory statement of events in chronological order, may be helpful. The appellant, Mary Agnes Hanson, formerly Mary Agnes Bierce, and the appellee, Donald F. Bierce, were married in Pennsylvania in 1946; appellee is now twenty-four years of age and appellant is twenty-one; in the latter part of 1946 tihey moved to Dodge City and lived with appellee’s parents; the son, Donald F. Bierce, Jr., over which appellant seeks the custody, was born in June, 1947; in the fall of 1947 appellee filed an action for divorce against appellant in the district court of Ford county, which is the same court that heard the instant motion for change of custody; appellant filed an answer in the divorce action and asked for custody of the child; a divorce was granted to appellee on December 13, 1947, and custody of the child was awarded to him; although the journal entry of judgment in the divorce case recites both plaintiff and defendant introduced their evidence it is here conceded that, for reasons not indicated, appellant did not appear at the hearing of the divorce action but was represented by counsel; it appears her counsel did not know of her whereabouts; we are not advised concerning the ground, or grounds, on which the divorce was granted and are not supplied with a record or the substance of the evidence adduced in support thereof; the court awarded the wife alimony in the sum of $300 payable at the rate of *424 $12.50 per month until paid; she was also granted the privilege of visitation at reasonable times; the privilege was not exercised until a few days before the instant hearing in November, 1950.

Within a month and a half after the divorce was granted to appellee the appellant married a man by the name of Hanson in Kansas City; appellant and her new husband lived in Nebraska about six months and then moved to Sagle, Idaho, and bought a property containing seventy acres of land; appellant and her present husband are the parents of a boy who was thirteen months’ old November 12, 1950; appellant stated that at the time of the divorce she was in poor health as a result of the Caesarean birth of the child and was financially unable to support the child; appellant had her mother carry on a correspondence with the child’s paternal grandmother and had caused her mother to send gifts to the child on occasions; the frequency of the gifts or the nature thereof is not disclosed; approximately a year or a year and a half prior to the hearing of the instant motion appellant consulted her attorney at Dodge City about trying to obtain custody of the child and expressed her desire to visit the child but her attorney advised against it; no motion for a change of custody was filed; the reason, or reasons, for the advice of her attorney are not disclosed.

On November 18, 1949, appellee’s mother filed a motion in the district court to obtain a transfer to her of the sum of $62.50 to be used for the support and maintenance of the child; that amount had been deposited by appellee with the clerk of the district court to the credit of appellant as payment on the alimony award; the court found an unsuccessful Federal Bureau of Investigation search for appellant had been made and her whereabouts was unknown; that the money so deposited had remained unclaimed for over two years; that appellee had placed the care of the child in his mother and that the money should be paid to his mother for the care, maintenance and education of the minor son.

In November, 1949, appellee’s parents filed a petition in the probate court of Ford county for the adoption of the child; appellee filed his written consent to such adoption; appellant contested the adoption and the petition was denied; a few days thereafter she filed the instant motion for change of custody which was denied.

Other testimony by appellant was, in substance, as follows:

Appellant’s present husband is employed as a journeyman line *425 man for an electric company and earns between $200 and $300 a month; he also deals in timber; he is forty-eight years of age and in perfect health; he would welcome the child into his home; her husband is affectionate and kind in his dealings with their own child; the property in Idaho has a modern house and equipment; appellant’s husband invested about $5,000 in the Idaho property and owes about that same amount on it; he is indebted on his automobile but has no other debts; a modern country school is located about four or five miles from their home; there is school bus service passing them home; appellant belongs to and is a regular attendant of a Catholic church; it is her intention that her son should receive religious training if she is awarded the custody; appellant has a slight heart ailment but it does not impair the performance of her duties as a housewife and mother.

Appellant called appellee as her witness. His testimony, in substance, was: He admitted he consented to the adoption but denied he had abandoned the child; the child had been under the immediate care of his parents who live near Dodge City with whom appellee now also lives; there are no other children in that home but there are children in the neighborhood; after the divorce appellee was married to another woman, with whom he lived about eighteen months in Hutchinson; during that time the son was with him and his wife occasionally during week ends; while in Dodge City he lived in the home of his parents about six months and also had a trailer house parked in the yard of his parents; the child lived in the trailer house with him and in the house with appellee’s mother about equal portions of the time; appellee’s mother has taken care of the child since he was divorced from appellant; whenever he was at home he helped care for the child with respect to anything that needed to be done; he helped discipline the child and paid his mother for its support to the extent of about $10.00 a week; that if the custody was not changed the child would continue to reside with his parents and he and his parents would continue to care for him.

Appellant contends (1) the evidence disclosed appellee had abandoned the child; and (2) the court abused its judicial discretion in not sustaining her motion for a change of custody.

Touching the first contention appellant emphasizes the fact appellee placed the child into the actual care of his parents instead of caring for the child himself. It is true the child was for a time left in the immediate care of appellee’s parents. The reason was *426 appellee was at that time working elsewhere to earn a living. That fact alone, however, did not establish abandonment. Nor did it in itself constitute a ground for a change of custody from the father to the mother. See Dodd v. Dodd, 171 Kan. 46, 48-49, 229 P. 2d 761, in which this precise subject was ably treated.

It is not contended the child was not well treated and cared for in the home of the paternal grandparents. In fact the trial court expressly found the contrary to be true. It stated: “. . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 P.2d 520, 171 Kan. 422, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bierce-v-hanson-kan-1951.