Chatwood v. Chatwood

266 P.2d 782, 44 Wash. 2d 233, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 274
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1954
Docket32629
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 266 P.2d 782 (Chatwood v. Chatwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatwood v. Chatwood, 266 P.2d 782, 44 Wash. 2d 233, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 274 (Wash. 1954).

Opinion

*234 Finley, J.

— This is a divorce child-custody action. Elbert Chatwood married Ruth Chatwood on September 6, 1947. One child, Bonnie Jean Chatwood, was born of the marriage on August 8, 1949. The parties separated on February 26, 1953. The husband took the minor child to the home of his parents, where he and the child have resided ever since. Ruth Chatwood secured employment in Tacoma, Washington, and lives there in a small apartment. After the separation, the husband instituted an action for a divorce in which he asked for custody of the minor child. Ruth Chat-wood cross-complained for a divorce and for custody of the child. The trial court granted a divorce to Elbert Chatwood and placed the minor child in his custody for so long as the child and the father should live with the paternal grandparents of Bonnie Jean, in Thurston county, Washington. The mother was granted visitation rights, but was denied a divorce.

In this appeal, Ruth Chatwood questions the action of the trial court in (a) granting a divorce to the husband; (b) denying a divorce to her; (c) denying custody of the minor child to her.

The trial court’s finding of fact No. V reads as follows:

' “The court further finds that the plaintiff is a fit and proper person to have the care, custody and control of the minor child of the parties and finds that said child has been living with the plaintiff since February 26,1953 at the home of his parents in Thurston County, State of Washington; the court finds that the home of the plaintiff’s parents is an excellent home for the child, and that the plaintiff’s mother is taking excellent care of said child, and that the child is now in.good health; that said home is a country home and provides adequate facilities for the care and upbringing of said child. The court further finds that the defendant does not have adequate facilities to care for said child in that she is living in a small apartment in the City of Tacoma and that she is working at a laundry in Tacoma on the average of forty-four and one-half hours a week, and that she proposed in the event that the custody • of the child were awarded to her to place said child in the home of a neighbor to be cared for during the day. The court further finds that prior to the separation of the parties on February 26, 1953 *235 the defendant did not properly look after and care for said child in that she allowed her to- wander away from home along a highway on which there was considerable traffic, and that on several occasions the child was found several blocks from home. The court further finds that it is to the best interests of said child that it be placed in the custody of its father so long as he lives with his parents at their present home; provided, however, that the defendant shall have the right to have said child with her every other weekend and on other special occasions such as holidays.”

The trial court’s finding of fact No. VI reads:

“The court further finds that on about February 26, 1953 the defendant told the plaintiff to take the minor child of the parties and leave their home, which the plaintiff did, and that the defendant likewise informed the plaintiff that she no longer desired to live with him, and that she immediately thereafter on or about the 28th of February, 1953 left the home of the parties and went to Portland, Oregon, but returned from Portland, Oregon shortly thereafter during the first part of March, 1953 and took some of the furniture of the parties and sent to Portland to be stored, and thereafter immediately went to Tacoma and rented an apartment and secured a job and left the minor child of the parties with the plaintiff, who was then residing at the home of his parents. That the defendant has informed plaintiff on numerous occasions that she no longer cares for him and has used vile and obscene language to the plaintiff, all of which conduct constitutes cruelty, and that for some time last past the defendant has assumed and maintained toward the plaintiff an indifferent attitude and has made no attempt to conceal the fact that she has neither affection nor regard for the plaintiff, and has by numerous annoying acts and words made the home life of the plaintiff burdensome, so that it is impossible for the plaintiff and the defendant to longer live together as husband and wife, all of which acts and conduct of the defendant are without just cause and provocation.”

The trial court’s finding of fact No. VII reads:

“The court further finds that the evidence does not sustain the allegations contained in paragraph VI of defendant’s cross-complaint, and that the evidence does not show that the defendant has any grounds for divorce.”

*236 Based upon the above-quoted findings, the trial court entered its conclusions of law and judgment in favor of the plaintiff father and adverse to the defendant mother, as heretofore indicated. We think that the appellant’s assignments of error in her brief here on appeal should be considered as a proper presentation of her contentions for our review.

As to the action of the trial court in granting a divorce to the husband and denying one to the wife, we are not convinced that the evidence preponderates against the pertinent findings. These findings support the conclusions of the trial court: that Mr. Chatwood is entitled to a divorce and that his wife is not.

The only remaining question relates to the propriety of the action of the trial court in placing the minor child in the custody of the father. We are convinced that the evidence does not preponderate against those portions of the trial court’s findings, quoted hereinbefore, which relate to the matter of custody. Consequently, appellant’s assignments of error, directed at such findings, are without merit. The facts found by the trial court become the established facts of this case. Allen v. Saccomanno, 40 Wn. (2d) 283, 242 P. (2d) 747.

Appellant contends that the trial court’s conclusion of law, placing custody of the minor child with the father, is-in error. In this connection, appellant urges that the trial court’s findings indicate nothing as to any unfitness on the part of the mother. Decisions of this court (among them Freeland v. Freeland, 92 Wash. 482, 159 Pac. 698; and Prothero v. Prothero, 137 Wash. 349, 242 Pac. 1) are cited to the effect that children of tender age, particularly girls, will be placed in the custody of their mothers, unless it is clearly shown that the mother is an unfit and improper person. Appellant urges that, in the absence of any indication of unfitness in the findings and because of the positive statement in the trial court’s memorandum opinion negating unfitness, the Freeland and the Prothero cases, supra, are controlling, and the trial court was in error in not placing the minor child in the custody of the mother.

*237 We do not agree. In a long line of cases we have stated over and over again, and quite positively, that the so-called “tender years” doctrine, suggested by the Freeland and Prothero

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Bluebook (online)
266 P.2d 782, 44 Wash. 2d 233, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatwood-v-chatwood-wash-1954.