Commonwealth Ex Rel. Dinsmore v. Dinsmore

182 A.2d 66, 198 Pa. Super. 480, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 735
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 13, 1962
DocketAppeals, 113 and 114
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 182 A.2d 66 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. Dinsmore v. Dinsmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Dinsmore v. Dinsmore, 182 A.2d 66, 198 Pa. Super. 480, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 735 (Pa. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Watkins, J.,

These are appeals by Neysa E. Dinsmore, the mother relator, from two orders of the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County, Pennsylvania, awarding custody of Anita Ellen Dinsmore, age 16, and Lawrence Douglas Burns Dinsmore, age 10, to their father, Lawrence B. Dinsmore, the respondent.

The parties were married January 22, 1945. At that time the respondent father was a resident of Richhill Township, Greene County, Pennsylvania, and was a Captain in the Merchant Marine. The relator was a resident of the State of Washington and employed by the U.S.O. Anita was born on October 25, 1945, and Douglas on June 21, 1951. After the respondent was discharged from the Merchant Marine he took his wife to live in Bichhill Township and in 1956 constructed a ranch type home in which the family lived together until June 4, 1959. We need not go into the personal records of the parties because the court below determined “Both parents are of good character and we do not question the fitness of either at this time.” This statement was contained in the order of August 31, 1959, but nothing to the contrary appears in the subsequent opinions of the court below.

*483 Sometime during the month of June, 1959 the relator left home and took the children with her to the State of Oregon. Thereafter the respondent followed them to Oregon and returned with Anita to their common home in Greene County. The relator then instituted habeas corpus proceedings in Greene County on August 18, 1959. After hearing, the court below entered an order awarding custody of both children to the mother relator and providing custodial visitation rights to the father, beginning one calendar week after the closing date of the school year and ending one calendar week before the beginning of the next school year. Neither party appealed this order.

Subsequently, as the court below relates: “Apparently, the said Neysa E. Dinsmore was not content with the order of this Court, for on the 28th day of March, 1960, in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Lane County, in equity, a motion was made by her attorney for temporary custody of said children, restraining Lawrence B. Dinsmore from communicating with Neysa E. Dinsmore or interfering with her custody of the children during the pendency of this suit.

“In the absence of personal jurisdiction over Lawrence B. Dinsmore, he being within the State of Pennsylvania, an order was entered on May 2, 1960, awarding temporary custody of Anita E. Dinsmore, then age fourteen, and Douglas Dinsmore, age nine, during the pendency of said equity proceedings, which order reads as follows: ‘This matter coming on to be heard upon the Motion and Affidavit of Plaintiff herein for temporary custody of children and a Restraining Order and the Court having considered the same and finding good cause therefor. It Is Hereby Ordered that Plaintiff, Neysa E. Dinsmore, is hereby awarded the temporary custody of Anita Dinsmore, age 14, and Douglas Dins-more, age 9, during the pendency of this suit. It Is Further Ordered That Defendant, Lawrence B. Dins- *484 more, is restrained and enjoined from interfering with the Plaintiff’s custody of said children and from communicating with Plaintiff during the pendency of this suit, or until further Order of this Court modifying this Order, whichever first occurs. Dated this 2nd day of May, I960’.

“Subsequent to the date of said temporary order for custody in the State of Oregon, the said Neysa E. Dins-more permitted the said Anita Ellen Dinsmore and her brother Douglas Dinsmore, in accordance with the order of this Court, to return to the home of their father, Lawrence B. Dinsmore, in Richhill Township, this county, during the summer of 1960, but not for the full period directed by the order of this Court. The said Neysa E. Dinsmore later entered into a bond to faithfully comply with all the terms and conditions of the order of this Court, and the children were then returned to her in the State of Oregon at the beginning of the school year for 1960, and remained with her until the end of the school term in June, 1961. Thereafter, Lawrence B. Dinsmore gave bond to comply Avith the terms and conditions of the order of this Court, and the children were then returned to the home of their father, Lawrence B. Dinsmore, and were with him at the time of the institution of this proceeding.”

The children arrived in Pennsylvania in accordance with the Court’s order on June 13, 1961. During the ensuing Aveeks Anita, again, as she did in the original hearing, indicated her desire to remain Avith her father. Thereupon the daughter and her father joined in a petition to the Court of Common Pleas asking that a rule issue to Neysa E. Dinsmore, to show cause why the order of August 31, 1959 should not be amended to award custody of Anita to her father. At the same time the father filed a similar petition praying a rule on the mother to show cause why the order should not be amended to award custody of Douglas to his father.

*485 The relator filed answers to both petitions claiming that Greene County no longer had jurisdiction to amend or modify its order of August 31, 1959 and further claimed that the welfare of both children would be better promoted by allowing them to remain with her.

At the hearing the relator requested that the jurisdictional question be settled first and on September 25, 1961 the court below dismissed the objections to jurisdiction. After hearing on the merits, the court below on December 28,'1961, awarded custody of both children to the father, subject, however, to the rights of the mother to visitation. The relator appealed from both orders on both grounds.

At the time of the orders, Anita was 16 years of age and Douglas was ten. At the time of the original order Anita was' not yet fourteen years of age and Douglas was just eight years of age. The order at that time turned on “the policy of the law that children of tender years should be with their mother and also for the further reason that it is the policy of the law to keep children together.” At that time Anita had requested that she be permitted to remain with her father.

Both children are evidently quite intelligent. Anita was quite determined in her request that she be permitted to remain with her father. Her school work in Greene County had been satisfactory. Douglas stated that he loved his father and his mother but that if Anita stayed with the father that he wanted to stay with him.

The decisions of the appellate courts of this State are to “the effect that all orders determining the custody of children are temporary in nature, and always subject to modification to meet changed conditions, so long as the court has jurisdiction. Com ex rel. Teitelbaum v. Teitelbaum, 160 Pa. Superior Ct. 286, 288, 50 A. 2d 713 (1947).

*486 As the court below said concerning jurisdiction:

“There is no question at the time the habeas corpus proceeding was instituted in this county by the said Neysa E. Dinsmore that this Court had jurisdiction. The mere presence of the children here was sufficient to give jurisdiction, and in addition thereto, the said Neysa E. Dinsmore, relator, voluntarily submitted herself to the jurisdiction of this Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 A.2d 66, 198 Pa. Super. 480, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-dinsmore-v-dinsmore-pasuperct-1962.