Bird v. Bird

285 P.2d 816, 132 Colo. 116, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 266
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 11, 1955
Docket17549
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 285 P.2d 816 (Bird v. Bird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird v. Bird, 285 P.2d 816, 132 Colo. 116, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 266 (Colo. 1955).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*117 The subject of this review is an order of the district court modifying its custodial award previously made by the trial court in its final decree of divorce dated February 11, 1947, under which decree the wife, plaintiff in the divorce action, was awarded the sole care, custody and control of the minor children of the parties, i'.e., Tommy Allen Bird, Judith Ann Bird, and Michael Lewis Bird, with orders therein with reference to the payment of alimony and support money for the minor children. On April 20, 1954, Earl Allen Bird, the husband, father of the minor children, and defendant in the divorce action, filed his petition in the district court, and, as a result of the hearing upon his petition, a modified custodial order was made and entered, and it is from the modification order that this review is sought.

The record discloses that plaintiff’s divorce was granted on the grounds of defendant’s extreme and repeated acts of cruelty.

Defendant, in May, 1949, remarried, now resides in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and is the father of two children by his second marriage, one being about four years old and the other about seventeen months. Defendant owns his home in Albuquerque, which is sufficiently large to care for his children by his second marriage, as well as Tommy, Judy and Mike, who at the time of the hearing were approximately sixteen, thirteen and eleven years of age, respectively. Both the father and stepmother are in all respects, according to the record, proper persons, interested in the children, and have provided the two younger children at all times since 1951 with proper parental care and a suitable, comfortable home. Defendant is a governmental employee at a monthly salary of approximately $350.00. The work in which he is engaged is such that he is obliged to be away from home from noon one day until 5:40 P.M. the following day, and in response to a question he stated: “I make a couple of trips like that, I have a day off. I *118 make a couple more trips, I have three days off. I make another trip and I have five days off.”

Plaintiff remarried in April, 1951, and in May, 1953, obtained a divorce. Subsequent to 1951, when the children of the parties here went to live with defendant in Albuquerque because of conditions hereinafter explained, plaintiff visited her children on several occasions, and in the latter part of 1953 she moved to Albuquerque, obtaining employment in a cafe. When asked if she went to Albuquerque with the intention of taking the children or being close to them, she stated: “I don’t really know what my intentions were. I was so homesick for them I couldn’t stand it any longer, and when I got there the situation was rather unhappy, and I got a job until it would be straightened out.” Plaintiff now lives in a three-bedroom home in Enumclaw, Washington, with her three children and her mother; she is employed at a monthly salary of $190.00 and works from 7 A.M. until 3 P.M. five days a week. Her mother, now aged sixty-four, is employed, working from 9:30 A.M. until 7 P.M. In the small town in which the plaintiff and her children are now living, two of plaintiff’s brothers-in-law are engaged in business, and Tommy, Judy and Mike are all attending school.

The record discloses that when domestic difficulties between plaintiff and defendant arose in the latter part of 1945 or early 1946, plaintiff and her three children went to live with her father and mother at a resort town about eleven miles westerly of Loveland, Colorado, and while plaintiff was employed in assisting her father in a cafe and 3.2 beer parlor, the children were in charge of plaintiff’s mother. Some time prior to March, 1951, plaintiff’s father became involved with some woman other than his wife, and this involvement caused local gossip and apparently considerable embarrassment to plaintiff’s children.

In March, 1951, defendant visited his children and was then requested by plaintiff to take the two younger *119 children with him to Albuquerque, thus removing them from the family discord arising from her father’s involvement. Defendant phoned his wife, and she readily consented to the two younger children being brought to their home in Albuquerque. Tommy was at that time attending junior high school in Golden, residing with one of plaintiff’s sisters, and subsequently, at the conclusion of the school year, he also went to Albuquerque to reside with defendant and his wife.

While the two younger children were with defendant and their stepmother, they attended Sunday School regularly, were interested in scout activities, and were given proper care in a comfortable home. Until plaintiff and her mother came to live in Albuquerque, the two younger children seemed to be happy in defendant’s home.

It appears that Tommy became somewhat of a problem occasioned by his tendency to play “hookey.” Defendant discussed Tommy’s proclivities with the school authorities, and finally with the school counselor, as a consequence of which Tommy was placed in a detention home for several days and was released at his mother’s insistence, ¡after having been warned that a repetition would result in his being sent to the reform school. Tommy thereupon went to reside with his mother and continued to live with her until some time in April, when plaintiff and her mother, who had recently come to Albuquerque, and the three children all departed for Washington without giving defendant an opportunity of intervening by court action as he had threatened. Plaintiff explains her sudden departure from Albuquerque by the statement that she did not have sufficient funds to litigate her right to the custody of her children.

This record presents a most unusual problem for in it there is not a word reflecting upon the character, reputation or parental love and care of either plaintiff or defendant. Defendant himself testified that plaintiff’s mother was a fit and proper person to have charge and care of the children and had all the affection and love *120 for 'them that a parent should have. It appears from the record that defendant and his wife are highly respectable and want to assist in giving Judy and Mike the care, attention and training necessary to fit them for life’s work, and it also appears that plaintiff and her mother are equally interested in the children and desirous of educating, caring for and raising them in a proper home environment. Tommy, for some reason, has developed an intense dislike for his father and will not willingly return to him.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the judge seemed to be in somewhat of a quandary and announced that before determining plaintiff’s petition for a modification of the custodial order entered at the time of the divorce he would undertake some method of learning of the children’s wishes as to their future home. Accordingly, on April 6, 1953, he wrote each of the children ;a letter, and before doing so cautioned both plaintiff and defendant that they were not to influence the children whatever in the answers to the questionnaire which he enclosed with his letter. The answers to the questionnaires disclosed that all three children were in public school.

Mike was in the sixth grade.

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Bluebook (online)
285 P.2d 816, 132 Colo. 116, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-v-bird-colo-1955.