Dagley v. Dagley

270 S.W.2d 553, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 340
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 20, 1954
Docket28924, 28949
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 270 S.W.2d 553 (Dagley v. Dagley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dagley v. Dagley, 270 S.W.2d 553, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 340 (Mo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

These are consolidated appeals from two judgments of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis in proceedings ancillary to a divorce action. The appeal in case No. 28,924 is from a judgment modifying a custody award by taking from Dorman L. Dagley, the father, and awarding to Lucy Ellen Briley, the mother, the custody of their infant child Cecelia. The appeal in case No. 28,949 is from a judgment allowing Lucy Ellen Briley $225 suit money and $325 attorneys’ fees as expenses in connection with the appeal of case No. 28,924.

On July 19, 1946 Dorman L. Dagley was granted a divorce from his wife Lucy Ellen and was awarded the complete custody of their then 2-year old daughter Cecelia, in an uncontested proceeding based upon the husband’s charges that the wife had been intimate with and was pregnant by another man, and neglect of the child. Dorman L. Dagley was then and is now in the service of the United States Navy, and was and is a resident of the State of California. The decree made no reference to any visitation privileges of the mother. Although the decree did not expressly permit, it did not prohibit, Dorman L. Dagley from talcing the child out of the jurisdiction.

On August 28, 1952 Lucy Ellen Dagley, now Lucy Ellen Briley, filed a motion to modify the custody order so as to give her the custody of the child, alleging that the decree of July 19, 1946 was improvidently entered, contrary to the rules of the court and without provision for visitation privi *555 leges on her part; that the decree awarding custody was made without her knowledge and contrary to a distinct understanding that she would not consent to the giving up of the custody of the child; that Floyd and Edna Newton, of Ellington and Bismarck, Missouri, the maternal grandparents, have had the actual custody of the child from July, 1946 until August 5,1952, during which entire period the father made no effort to see the child ' except on two occasions, once when he stopped at the home of the grandparents in order to get a rifle which belonged to him, and again in August, 1951, when with the mother’s permission he took the child’ to California for a two weeks’ visit; that during the period 1946-1952 the father neglected the child and provided nothing for her support until the summer of 1952, when the grandparents received three $25 allotment checks from the Navy; that previously the father made his allotment in favor of his mother instead of his child; that the father has remarried and has a child by the new marriage; that during the visit in the father’s home in 1951 his present wife Bessie placed Cecelia and Bessie’s own child in a bath tub for punishment, and that she left them there unattended; that on that occasion the father became intoxicated and spent one night in á drunken condition on the lawn; that the father and Bessie offered Cecelia whiskey to drink; that on August 5, 1952 the father took the child from Missouri and removed her to California without authority from the court, thereby depriving the mother of the right to see the child within this state, causing Cecelia to have an emotional upset; that the mother is now remarried, living with her husband in St. Louis, ready, able and willing to give the child the loving attention to which she has been accustomed, and that the welfare of the child will be best served by permitting her to remain at the home of the maternal grandparents in Bismarck, Missouri.

Plaintiff’s answer denied that the original decree was improvidently entered and that defendant was not aware of the fact that plaintiff was to have custody of the child, and alleged that when plaintiff returned from overseas service he found his wife pregnant by another man and eager for a divorce; that defendant was then living in St. Louis and the child was with the grandparents at Ellington; that from 1946 to 1952 plaintiff was in the United States-Navy and had no opportunity to visit with the child except on the two occasions’mentioned; that he .did not neglect the child but that the child was left with the Newtons by mutual agreement between him and them that they take care of the-child while he was in the service; that the child was provided with clothing and other things by plaintiff’s mother at plaintiff’s request; that most of the allotment money received by plaintiff’s mother was used for. an endowment policy for- the child. He denied the allegations of neglect, misconduct and mistreatment, admitted that the Ne.wtons had furnished a Christian home for the child and found no fault with their care of the, child, admitted that the child had been taken to California, not surreptitiously as alleged, but after advice by counsel and alleged that the child now has the loving attention of her father and stepmother, in whose home she is being educated, receiving all of the care, love and comforts of life, and being raised in the church.

By her reply the mother, in addition to denials of the affirmative matter contained in the answer, alleged that she was coerced into signing the entry of appearance and that by misrepresentation she was denied the services of counsel in the divorce case in 1946.

Following a hearing of the motion to modify, the circuit court modified the custody provisions of the decree of July 19, 1946 by transferring custody from the father to the mother, reserving visitation privileges to him together with the privilege of taking the child, at his own expense, to California for two months in the summer time, under proper restrictive conditions. The judgment further awarded defendant $500 for attorneys’ fees, Plaintiff’s appeal from that judgment is numbered 28,924.

*556 Plaintiff raises thirteen “assignments of error.” The first point is that the trial court erred in sustaining the motion to modify for the reason that the order is against the weight of the evidence and is not supported by the credible evidence. It, therefore, becomes our duty to review the whole record, giving prime consideration to the best interests and welfare of the child, to determine whether defendant has shown by a preponderance of the credible evidence that there has been a change of facts and circumstances since the entry of the 1946 decree, sufficient to require a change in the custody provisions then made. We should defer to, and not lightly disturb, the judgment of the trial court, but if that judgment is in conflict with the clear preponderance of the evidence and discloses a manifest abuse of judicial discretion, it is our duty to direct the entry of the proper judgment under the Taw and the evidence. Davis v. Davis, Mo.App., 254 S.W.2d 270.

Defendant’s evidence on the motion to modify consisted of' her own testimony, and that of' her parents, her present husband; a neighbor, and one of her attorneys. Plaintiff was not present and did not submit any evidence on the merits by way of deposition or by oral testimony, except that of Felix Chopin, head juvenile probation officer attached to the domestic relations court.

Divorced on July 19,1946 defendant, then 21 years old, proposed to and married Lowell Pollc on July 26,. 1946. A child was born to her on January 27, 1947. Plaintiff had returned from overseas service on May 12, 1946. Defendant claims that plaintiff is the father of the child although she at ho time told plaintiff it was his child, and Lowell Polk’s name appears on the birth certificate as the father of the child.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W.2d 553, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dagley-v-dagley-moctapp-1954.