Dansker v. Dansker

279 S.W.2d 205, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 115
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1955
Docket29189
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 279 S.W.2d 205 (Dansker v. Dansker) 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
Dansker v. Dansker, 279 S.W.2d 205, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 115 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

This is an-appeal from a decree of the Juvenile Division of the Circuit Court of the City of - St. Louis transferring the custody of three previously adjudged neglected minor children from a welfare association to the care of their father.

On July 17, 195.1,' on the petition of á probation officer the division adjudged the three children of Eugene and. Miriam. Dansker, then 12, 9 and 7 years of age, respectively, to be neglected children' and committed them, to the Jewish Child Welfare Association of .St. Louis, there to remain until discharged by the court 'or by due process of law. The father was or-' dered to pay $70 per month for .the support of the children.

On January 4, 1954, Eugene Dansker filed a motion to change the care and cusí tody o.f the. children from the welfare association and place them in his care, alleging that after the commitment, he-and. the mother of the children w.ere divorced; tha.t he has remarried and is living with; hi.s wife in Pratt, Kansas; that he has a large and comfortable home and a sufficient income to properly care for, educate and maintain the children; that he is willing and able to do so and to give the children proper moral and religious training; and that the welfare of the children would be promoted by providing them with a regular home, family life and the love and devotion of parents.

The mother of the children, Miriam Dansker, filed an answer praying that the motion be dismissed, or in the alternative that she be awarded custody of the children, or for their retention by the welfare association, or the relinquishment of the children to the custody of the divorce court. She alleged that Dansker had disregarded his duties as a husband, resulting in a decree of divorce in her favor and that he had failed to pay alimony payments or to provide the children with necessary sustenance, as' ordered. Her pleading also alleged that Dansker’s present wife had children by a previous marriage and- :Was about to give birth to a child by Dansker,. and that it would be detrimental to the best interests of her three children to commingle the children of three marriages in the same home.

Following a hearing a decree was entered on August 18, 1954, terminating the custody of the welfare association and awarding the custody of the three children to Eugene Dansker, with certain visitation privileges allowed their mother and maternal grandparents. From that decree, following an unavailing motion for a new-trial, Miriam Dansker for herself and on the part of the three minor children, ’ apl pealed' to this court.--- -

Eugene and Miriam Dansker were- married on'June-13,. 1937. The three children Donald Lee, Alfred , Steven and- Marilyn Ren.ee were born of this marriage in- 1938, 1941 and 1943, respectively. .For comparatively short periods of time following their marriage the Danskers lived in Harrisburg, Illinois, .-and -Evansville,- Indiana. Later they returned.to St. Louis where they lived from jtirr^e to. time with the maternal grand *207 parents, Mr. & Mrs. David Reiss, who are now 65 and 56 years of age, respectively. The grandparents operate a shoe store and live in nine rooms on the second and third ■floors of their building on South Broadway. During a part of the time the grandparents paid for the board' and clothing of the children. On one occasion Eugene Dansker was sued for ■ non-payment of rent. Records of the welfare association show that application was made for the admission of the children to that' home in July, 1950. Dansker testified that on several occasions at which policemen were present he forced Miriam into an automobile on a public street-against her will for the purpose of taking her to an institution for mental treatment, including electric therapy, but stated that he did so on the .advice of a psychiatrist related to, and paid by, him. Some time prior to 1951 Dansker, who had been working in St. Louis for McDonnell Aircraft Corporation, was transferred to the company plant at Pratt, Kansas. The records of Edgewood Retreat Sanitarium for nervous and psychopathic patients show that Miriam Dansker was admitted in 1949, and in April, -1950 and April, 1951. Miriam Dansker was also in the St. Louis State Hospital for the insane for a period of six months. She stated that her husband’s family placed her in these institutions in an effort to discredit her; that although she was emotionally heartsick at the time because - her husband had deserted her and the children she was emotionally stable now. The petition in the neglect case, filed June 15, 1951, alleged that the three children were neglected and homeless “in that their-mother is mentally and physically unable to -care for them.” On March 27, 1952,- Eugene Dansker filed a divorce suit against his wife Miriam. She filed a cross bill. On September 25, 1952, a default ■ divorce was granted to Miriam on her cross bill, and Dansker was ordered to pay Miriam :$25 per week as alimony. On September 27, 1952, two days after his divorce, Eugene Dansker married a divorced woman who had-two children, aged 8 and 6, by a previous marriage: In April, - 1953, Eugene Dansker ceased making payments of $70 per month to the welfare association for the support of his children, and on September 14, 1953, quit paying alimony to his former wife. On October 16, 1953, Eugene Dansker quit his employment at McDonnell Aircraft and bought' a- cleaning and pressing establishment in Pratt, Kansas.

Miriam’s case' history at St. Louis State Hospital shows that.at a staff meeting on January 15, 1954, it was decided that.the patient should have insulin RX, with possible lobotamy, and that the hospital would recommend that she not have her children. On January 31, 1954, the record shows that her father appeared at the hospital and although advised that Miriam Dansker was mentally ill and in need of further treatment, he disregarded the advice of the medical staff and took her out of the hospital. A memorandum of Dr. Arnold S. Block, a consulting psychiatrist, dated June 23, 1954, recited the following:

“All three children are suffering from a severe neurotic disturbance related to conflicts over disturbed relationships with their parents, and a continued contact with • the parents makes the disturbance more severe. It is impossible to make the treatment effective without eliminating all contacts with either of their parents -or grandparents.
“I therefore recommend that an order of the Court be requested eliminating all contacts with either parents, either by telephone, mail or personal visitation in order to protect the children from the disturbed anxiety and symptom producing use of these chil.dren by two grossly ’ inadequate parents.
“The mother herself has been a patient at the St. Louis State Hospital. She was withdrawn by her parents against medical advice and their records indicate' strongly that the mother’s influence on the children is a dangerous- one.”

*208 On the basis of the hopsital records Dr. J. R. Eidelman,' who had not personally examined Miriam Dansker, testified that he would agree with the staff- diagnosis of January 8, 1954, that Miriam’s condition was that of chronic schizophrenia, and gave as his opinion that she was not capable of taking.care of her children. Rabbi Abraham E.

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W.2d 205, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dansker-v-dansker-moctapp-1955.