Dailey v. Dailey

149 N.E.2d 304, 128 Ind. App. 588, 1958 Ind. App. LEXIS 131
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1958
DocketNo. 19,010
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 N.E.2d 304 (Dailey v. Dailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dailey v. Dailey, 149 N.E.2d 304, 128 Ind. App. 588, 1958 Ind. App. LEXIS 131 (Ind. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

Pfaff, J.

From the record in this cause as reflected by the brief of the parties, it appears that the appellee and the appellant, Barbara Jene Dailey, were divorced on March 19, 1955 on complaint of appellee. The child whose custody is here involved was born January 26, 1952. On February 11, 1955, upon an agreed statement of facts, the temporary custody of the child was granted to the appellants, Chester Cook, Sr., and Helen Cook, maternal grandparents of the child. Upon trial, on March 19, 1955, an absolute divorce from appellant Barbara Jene Dailey was awarded appellee, and the custody of the child was given to said maternal grandparents until further order of the court.

On the date and at the time of said divorce decree and the said award of the custody of said child, the appellee was in the United States military service but home on furlough for the purpose of said action. Ap-pellee was discharged from the military service on October 19, 1955, and on November 21, 1955, he filed his original verified petition for modification of the custody order in the divorce decree. This petition was amended and filed, unverified, on April 18, 1956.

The appellee’s said amended petition for modification alleged that since the granting of the divorce certain changes of conditions had taken place affecting the child and the parties and that the decree should be modified by awarding him the care and custody of the child.

[591]*591It further appears that in the proceedings for divorce in 1955, the appellee petitioned the court that the temporary custody of said child be awarded to his mother, Opal Pauline Dailey. The court fixed a date for the hearing and thereafter the appellants, Chester Cook and Helen Cook, filed their petition for the temporary custody of said child, alleging, among other things, that the child had been in their care and custody most of the time from January, 1958. Upon the hearing of both said petitions and upon an agreed statement of facts (said agreed statement of facts is not disclosed by the record), the court found and ordered that appellants, Chester Cook and Helen Cook, are “fit and proper persons to have the temporary care and custody” of said child. Thereafter, as before stated, the court granted the divorce to appellee on March 19, 1955, and awarded the custody of the child to said maternal grandparents, Chester Cook and Helen Cook, until further order of the court. No visitation privileges or removal rights were made in the final order giving custody to the maternal grandparents.

The change of conditions alleged in said amended modification petition were, in substance:

a. That appellee was discharged from military service on October 19, 1955;
■b. That appellee has been unable to get the child except for brief periods on Sundays, and that on one or two occasions he was refused the child “even on a Sunday.”;
c. That the child’s welfare and happiness is being affected by the turmoil created by the uncertainty as to whether the child will live with the grandparents or the appellee;
d. That the child is not being properly cared for, is not gaining weight, has been ill with colds and is not properly dressed;
e. That Barbara Jene Dailey, mother of the child, is morally unfit to be around the child; and [592]*592that she is with the child for great lengths of time;
f. That the maternal grandparents have been unsuccessful in rearing their own children;
g. That the home of the grandparents is not a good and proper home for the rearing of the child;
h. That since his discharge appellee has resumed living with his parents; that he has a good job; that he is attempting to get a college education; that there is plenty of room in a modern home for the child to have its own room and live in a Christian atmosphere.
i. That he now is in position to take thé child and rear it.

Upon hearing the evidence on said amended modification petition and the answers thereto of the appellants, the court, on June 28, 1956, found for appellee on his petition and awarded him thé care and custody of the child, with reasonable visiting privileges in the appellants. No petition or prayer for the temporary or permanent custody of the child was ever made by its mother, the appellant, Barbara Jene Dailey.

Appellee’s complaint for- divorce prayed that the care and custody of the child be granted to him and, at the time of the hearing on the complaint, there was no petition or request by anyone for the custody of the child, other than that contained in appellee’s complaint. No particular or special reason or finding is recited in the court’s divorce decree as the basis of the custody award to the maternal grandparents and it must be presumed, in favor of the decree, that with the record of the entire proceedings in the cause before it and the evidence given at the trial, the court determined that the award it made as to the care and custody of the child was for its best interest and welfare. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the court awarded the custody to the maternal grand[593]*593parents because appellee was then in the military service nor because it did not consider the home of the appellee’s parents as a suitable home for the child. Reference thus made to the record and judgment in the divorce proceedings is required by reason of the fact that the parties erroneously predicate some of their contentions thereon, the appellants asserting that the trial court apparently did not consider the home of appellee’s parents as suitable for the child, and the appellee alleging that we can take judicial knowledge that a member of the armed services cannot be charged with the care of the child and “the trial court properly recognized that fact” in making the custody award.

We may recognize, of course, that a father away in the military service of his country is in no position to look after and care for a three-year-old female child, not only by reason of his own inability so to do, but by reason of the nature, purpose and circumstances of military endeavors. However, in the absence of any finding or decree therefor, such considerations would not establish that the custody of the child was given the maternal grandparents solely by reason of and only for the duration of appellee’s military service, as is intimated in appellee’s brief. The record reveals that the child had been in the care and custody of the maternal grandparents most of the time from its birth to the time of the divorce hearing. Such fact was no doubt given consideration by the court in the making and entry of the divorce decree in which the custody of the child was awarded to the maternal grandparents.

Some of appellee’s allegations of change of conditions were not substantiated by evidence and some, even if there had been evidence to support them, would not constitute a change of conditions occurring since the original custody award. The contest here was not [594]*594between the appellee and appellant, Barbara Jene Dailey, as the parents of the child, but between appel-lee, the father, and the maternal grandparents. The insufficiency of the evidence to sustain most of the allegations of change of conditions could be dwelt upon but appellee makes it unnecessary by the forthright statements made in his brief.

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DuFour v. DuFour
149 Ind. App. 404 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E.2d 304, 128 Ind. App. 588, 1958 Ind. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dailey-v-dailey-indctapp-1958.