Davis v. Davis

799 S.W.2d 127, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1389, 1990 WL 133434
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1990
DocketWD 42606
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 799 S.W.2d 127 (Davis v. Davis) 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
Davis v. Davis, 799 S.W.2d 127, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1389, 1990 WL 133434 (Mo. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

NUGENT, Chief Judge.

Nenita A. Davis appeals the circuit court order dismissing her petition for custody of her minor child, Vanessa L. Davis, for want of subject matter jurisdiction and recognizing the subject matter jurisdiction of an Alabama court to enter a custody decree. We affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

Ms. Davis first contends that the court erred in failing to consider evidence outside the record from the Alabama circuit court to determine whether or not jurisdictional facts existed to support that court’s custody orders. She next argues that the court erred in recognizing the Alabama court’s orders in that no factual or legal basis supported that court’s exercise of jurisdiction. Third, Ms. Davis maintains that the circuit court erred in recognizing the Alabama court’s orders because of insufficient pleadings and because it did not first make proper jurisdictional findings of fact supporting the orders. Fourth, she asserts that the circuit court erred in recognizing the Alabama court’s orders because that court improperly modified one order. Fifth, Ms. Davis argues that the circuit court erred in ruling that “Missouri was not the ‘home state’ of Vanessa Davis.... ” Sixth, she maintains that the circuit court erred in ruling that the Alabama judge properly considered jurisdictional facts existing at the time of the first order’s entry.

The Davis’ saga began when they met in April, 1983, at Whiteman Air Force Base in Knob Noster, Missouri, where Mr. Davis served in the Air Force. They dated, but kept separate residences until March, 1984, when they began living together. In October of that year, Ms. Davis gave birth to Vanessa. In May, 1985, the Air Force assigned Mr. Davis to a base in Japan where he lived for the next three years. He returned on leave to Knob Noster in the summer of 1986, married Ms. Davis on July 5. He returned again on leave the next summer. During both those summers, Vanessa spent two weeks with her father while he visited his family in rural Alabama. On May 3,1988, Mr. Davis returned to Knob Noster on his way to a new assignment at Maxwell Air Force Base near Montgomery, Alabama. He arranged to move the family’s belongings to his parents’ house in Autauga County, Alabama, and on May 20, the family left Missouri and arrived at his parents’ house the next day. On June 1, the Davises moved to temporary housing in Elmore County, Alabama, near the base.

Ms. Davis testified that after her husband’s return from Japan she realized that their marriage would soon collapse because her husband wanted nothing to do with Stephanie, her daughter from a previous marriage. She further testified that she had opposed the move to Alabama, believing that she needed to remain in Missouri to litigate an upcoming child custody action involving Stephanie. On June 2, she returned to Missouri to litigate that action, taking Vanessa with her. They travelled back to Alabama on July 2, 1988, and, according to her, after her return she and her husband argued frequently. She decided to leave him, and on July 26 she and Vanessa left Alabama. Ms. Davis testified that she informed her husband of her plan to return to Missouri and told him that he could reach her through her sister, who lived on an air base in Alaska. In addition, she testified that her husband and a sister-in-law watched her pack the night before she departed. According to Mr. Davis, however, he did not know that his wife intended to leave him and to take their daughter with her. He testified that he realized that they had gone only when he *129 returned from work on the afternoon of July 26 and noticed their absence along with his car, several appliances, and much of his wife’s clothing. He also testified that two days after her disappearance, his wife telephoned, explaining that she wanted to end their marriage and that she intended to move in with her sister at the Alaskan air base.

Now begins our descent into the many levels of a procedural inferno. On August 30, in the circuit court of Autauga County, Alabama, Mr. Davis filed for divorce and for custody of Vanessa. The next day he moved from Elmore county to his parents’ house. 1 He attempted service of his complaint on his wife at the Alaska air base, but on September 16, the Alabama court received notice that the complaint remained undelivered. He later learned that his wife and daughter lived not in Alaska, but back in Knob Noster, Missouri. On September 26, Mr. Davis obtained service on his wife in Knob Noster, but when she failed to answer his complaint within the thirty days required under Alabama law, the Alabama court on November 5 entered a default judgment against her.

On January 5, 1989, that court held a final hearing on Mr. Davis’ petition. He appeared with counsel; neither Ms. Davis nor her counsel appeared. Recounting four reports of his wife’s child neglect, one involving a house fire, made to Missouri’s Division of Family Services (hereinafter D.F.S.), and reported by that agency to him while he served in Japan, Mr. Davis testified that he believed living with his wife imperiled his daughter. He testified that his wife had told him that she had left their daughter alone in the house. He further testified that he could financially support the child and that his mother remained at home all day and could care for Vanessa while he worked. On January 9, the court granted his petition.

On February 16, he then petitioned the circuit court of Johnson County, Missouri, to enforce a custody decree of another state by warrant in lieu of writ of habeas corpus, and that same day the circuit court ordered the sheriff to deliver Vanessa to her father. About seven-thirty that evening, the sheriff, accompanied by Mr. Davis, met Ms. Davis at her house and asked to see Vanessa. She answered that a friend who babysat the girl had taken her to Kansas City and that they would not return for two or three days. According to the sheriff, Ms. Davis knew only the babysitter’s first name and did not know the address. He also testified that at one point Ms. Davis told her husband, “You’re not getting my child. I’m not going to give you my child,” and then repeated the admonition at least one other time. The sheriff arrested her for disobeying a court order, and a deputy took her to police headquarters in Warrensburg.

Ms. Davis’ lover, with whom she lived and whose child she then carried, volunteered to take the sheriff and Mr. Davis to Vanessa. The three men went to a house on Whiteman Air Force Base, where they found the girl. The sheriff then released Ms. Davis, and Mr. Davis and Vanessa left for Alabama.

On March 14, Ms. Davis moved to quash the February 16 warrant and to regain custody of her daughter. She also filed an answer to her husband’s motion for a custody writ in which she challenged the Alabama court’s subject matter jurisdiction over custody rights to her daughter. In addition, she petitioned the circuit court for custody of Vanessa and for distribution of marital and separate property. On March 15, the circuit court entered an order that found its February 16 warrant defective, because the warrant erroneously ordered delivery of Vanessa to her father, rather than to the court, and because it failed to specify a date by which Ms. Davis had to file her answer to Mr. Davis’ petition. The court set a hearing on the matter for March 31.

On March 16, the Alabama court entered an amended final divorce decree, giving custody of Vanessa to Mr. Davis.

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Bluebook (online)
799 S.W.2d 127, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1389, 1990 WL 133434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-davis-moctapp-1990.