Curry v. Curry

416 S.W.2d 372, 57 Tenn. App. 151, 1967 Tenn. App. LEXIS 229
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 16, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 416 S.W.2d 372 (Curry v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curry v. Curry, 416 S.W.2d 372, 57 Tenn. App. 151, 1967 Tenn. App. LEXIS 229 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

SHRIVER, J.

In this case Ashley Jerry Paul Curry sued the defendant, Judith. Ann Talley Curry for a divorce in the Circuit Court of Lewis County, Tennessee.

The parties will be referred to as complainant and defendant.as they appeared in the Court below.

Defendant filed an answer and cross-bill to which the original complainant filed an answer and the cause came on to be heard in the Circuit Court at Hohenwald, on February 17, 18 and 19, 1966, before the Honorable' Wallace J. Smith, Circuit Judge, on oral testimony without the intervention of a jury and resulted in a decree on April 8, 1966, in which the complainant, Ashley Jerry Paul Curry, was awarded an absolute divorce from the defendant on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment and was also awarded the exclusive custody and control of the two infant daughters of the parties, Susan Lea Curry and Jennifer Kay Curry, ages 4 years and 17 months, respectively. The cross-bill was dismissed.

, Judith Ann Curry perfected her appeal to this Court •in due course seeking a review of the decree below only with respect to the custody.of the two minor daughters of the parties.

We quote from the statement of the case filed by solicitor for the appellant, defendant below, under Rule 11 of this Court:

“The points raised by this appeal are: (1) Whether or not it is for the best interest of these little girls of tender years to be taken away from their mother who is taking care of them in the home of her father and [153]*153mother, in as much as there is no evidence in the record of Appellant being an unfit mother, and all of the evidence in the record is to the effect that the home of Appellant’s father and mother is a fit, proper and suitable home for the children. (2) Whether or not the Trial Court was correct in holding in its ‘Finding of Facts and Opinion’ that the father had a primary right to his children as against the mother. (3) Whether or not conduct on the part of the Appellant which afforded Appellee grounds for divorce was sufficient to justify the Trial Court in depriving Appellant the custody of her two children of tender years, or depriving the two little girls of their mother. ’ ’

After hearing the case the Trial Judge took it under advisement and in April 1966, filed an extensive Finding of Facts and Opinion from which the final decree was drawn.

From the Finding of Facts and Opinion of the Trial Judge and from the record the following pertinent facts appear; The defendant, Judith Ann Curry, was horn March 30,1944, while the complainant wais horn March 3, 1941. They were married in Florence, Alabama on May 9, 1959, when Judith Ann was 15 years of age and complainant was 18 years of age. They married the day after school was out, the complainant having just graduated from High School while the defendant had just finished her first year of High School.

After the marriage they went to Nashville where the complainant obtained work with an ice cream company driving a vending truck. When the ice cream season was over they returned to Hohenwald and lived alternately with their respective parents.

[154]*154After the defendant became 17 years of age she went to work for the Henry L. Siegel Company in Hohenwald and has worked there continuously except for periods before her two children were born. From the time of the marriage to the time of their separation on October 7, 1965, defendant made a practice of placing her earnings to the account of the complainant, who spent the money pretty much as he pleased. He owned three different automobiles during the time of the marriage. The two children of the union are Susan Lea Curry born May 9, 1962, and Jennifer Kay Curry born November 19, 1964.

During the time that defendant was working the children were placed in the care of baby sitters approved by both complainant and defendant and it is to be observed that, during the entire married life of these parties the complainant was not critical of the defendant’s treatment of the children or her conduct toward them and until the time their marital difficulties arose in September 1965, there was no criticism of the defendant’s conduct either as a wife or mother.

Complainant also worked at Siegel’s for about five and one-half years until July 2,1965, when he went to another job at first with the Railroad Company and then with the Hohenwald Truck Line where he has continued to work.

The first marital difficulty appears to have arisen during the Lewis County Fair in late August, 1965, when the complainant went to Siegels to pick up the defendant at about 4:00 o’clock one afternoon and when she did not come out of the plant promptly he went inside and found her in conversation with another employee, one George Curtis. Subsequently, when questioned about George Curtis the defendant told complainant that he had been [155]*155“making passes at her.” This situation gathered momentum until the relations between complainant and defendant became strained and defendant insists that the complainant began accusing her of infidelity and tried to make her admit it.

Finally on October 7, 1965, defendant left complainant taking her children with her to the home of her mother and father. She insists that the complainant would not talk to her about their problem but continued to accuse her of infidelity and insisted that she should admit it. Finally, she told him that he would either “get off her back” or she was through and would leave because she could not take any more.

From the proof it appears that on a Sunday in November of that year, after the separation, defendant was seen with George Curtis in an automobile with her two children by Mrs. Monette King and, later on a Saturday, she saw them again together, these occasions being about 2:00 or 3:00 o’clock in the afternoon. Mrs. Peggy Hiekerson testified that she saw the defendant in a car with George Curtis once or twice, while Mrs. Ethel Fielder, employee of Henry I. Siegel Company, stated that she had seen defendant with George Curtis at the plant on a number of occasions during the daytime, usually at the noon hour.

There is testimony of more than one witness to the effect that, after the separation, defendant was seen at the 43 Club on Rockdale Hill on more than one occasion where she danced with George Curtis. Mrs. Trull, an aunt of complainant, testified that she saw defendant and George Curtis at 7-Springs Cafe on Highway 100 in Hickman County near the Perry County line on a Sunday afternoon the later part of October or the first of November, 1965.

[156]*156There was other testimony by other witnesses that defendant was seen with George Curtis at other times and places. One employee of the Siegel Company stated that she had seen Judith Curry and George Curtis together and saw him kiss her at the plant near the eating stand at about 8:30 o’clock in the morning. Martha Bates, an employee of Henry I. Seigel Company testified that defendant had told her on one occasion that she and George Curtis were planning to get married. However, defendant denied that she had ever seriously told anyone that she intended to marry George Curtis.

The defendant herself testified that after she and complainant were separated she went to the 43 Club with George Curtis on one occasion and was at the Ponderosa Club on another occasion and was at the Cloverdale Club, but on each of these occasions her children were at home in the care and custody of her father and mother, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
416 S.W.2d 372, 57 Tenn. App. 151, 1967 Tenn. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curry-v-curry-tennctapp-1967.