Dow v. Dow

35 N.W.2d 853, 240 Iowa 145, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1949
DocketNo. 47326.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 35 N.W.2d 853 (Dow v. Dow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dow v. Dow, 35 N.W.2d 853, 240 Iowa 145, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 324 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Mulroney, J.

— On September 4, 1946,' Oran Dow was granted a divorce from his wife, Nadine. The record shows she made no resistance to her husband’s divorce suit, and both she and her attorney made written approval of the form of the decree. This decree awarded the custody of their six-year-old *146 son, Larry, to the father, reserving to the mother the right to have possession of the child during summer vacations, designated at approximately from June 15 to August 15 of each year, and reserving to each party -the right to visit the child at reasonable times when he was in the possession of the other party. The decree further provided the child was to stay at the home of plaintiff’s sister, Mrs. Crowder, until further order of the court. An earlier hearing in the divorce action in April of 1946 had resulted in an order placing the child temporarily with Mrs. Crowder.

Three days after the divorce Nadine married Alfred White and about four months later (January 11, 1947) she filed her application to modify the decree of divorce as to the custody of Larry. She alleged a change of circumstance in that she had remarried since the divorce decree and she and her husband had a good home in Davenport; that her husband earned between four and five hundred dollars a month; and that she and her husband were willing and eager to provide for and rear the child and give it every educational and cultural advantage. The application further alleged the child was not properly clothed, fed, and cared for in the Crowder home and it would be for the best interest of the child that she be awarded its custody.

The husband’s resistance denied the material portions of the application and the hearing resulted in an order on February 18, 1948, modifying the divorce decree and awarding the permanent custody of the child to Nadine and granting the father custody of the child from June 15 to August 1 of each year “upon his establishment of a home of his own.” As will appear later the evidence showed the father intended to remarry. The father appeals to this court asserting in effect that the evidence was insufficient to support the trial court’s ruling. No brief or argument has been filed by the mother.

Nadine testified that she was living in Des Moines with her husband at the time he left for service and that after he left she lived for a .short time in Des Moines and then went to Cedar Rapids where she worked and the baby was placed in a day nursery. Nadine’s mother lived in Cedar Rapids but *147 Nadine did not live with her. In January of 1946, she decided to ride to Florida with one Gene Buri, a young sailor home on a furlough, who she said was a “very, very good friend of mine” and with whom she had “kept company” — going to dances and shows with him — but she said her mother always accompanied her when she went with Buri. She called her husband’s sister, Mrs. Crowder, in Des, Moines and asked her if she would take Larry while she went to Florida. Mrs. Crowder said she would take care of Larry, and Nadine and Buri came to Des Moines with Larry on the bus and left him at Mrs. Crowder’s home and they returned to Cedar Rapids and Nadine and Buri drove to Raleigh, North Carolina, and Nadine then took the train to Florida. She testified the trip to Florida was for her health and that she returned in March.

Two ladies testified that Nadine was a good mother to her child. One lady had never been in Nadine’s home until after she had married "White and her opinion was based on observing Nadine and Larry on their visits to Nadine’s mother’s hóme in Cedar Rapids. The other lady rented an apartment to Nadine and Oran Dow after they were married and she saw them for the two years they lived in her apartment.

Alfred White, who is twenty-five years old, gave rather confusing testimony with respect to his earnings and income but it fairly appears that he has a selling job, earning from $80 to $100 a week; that he has paid about $800 on a home in Davenport worth about $8000; and that he has about $1000 in the bank. The child had visited in this home and White testified he would be willing to have the child in his home and he would be able to pay for the support and education of the child.

A member of the juvenile court department of Polk county testified Nadine had become a ward of the juvenile court upon a complaint of dependency and improper guardianship in 1930; had been placed in St. Monica’s Home in Des Moines in 1931, and released to her mother in 1934,; that her progress had been good in the school, but in 1935 seemingly because of irregular school attendance she was committed to the Girls Training School at Mitchellville and paroled under good behavior. In 1936, Nadine had some trouble with her stepfather and was placed in the Home of the Good Shepherd at Omaha and re *148 leased to her parents in 1937. In January of 1938, her parole to the girls training school at Mitchellville was revoked upon application of her mother and. stepfather. Nadine had married while under age and her mother felt she coifid not give her the necessary supervision. Nadine, then about eighteen years old, went to Mitchellville and stayed about fifteen months in the training school and the school’s reports on her were good. Short-, ly after she left the school she married Oran Dow.

The father .testified that he and Nadine had not gotten along very well before he left for service and that after he was in service about six weeks he had a letter from her requesting a divorce. He wrote refusing to grant her a divorce unless he received custody of the child. There the matter rested until he got out of service and came back to Des Moines in January of 1946, a day or two after Nadine had left Larry with his sister, Mrs. Crowder. The father immediately filed suit for divorce. The child remained with Mrs. Crowder and the father lived there for a couple of months. He was sleeping on the davenport in the Crowder home so he moved to a room of his own — evidently in a house near the Crowder home. He saw his child nearly every night, took him to shows and out to dinner, and spent every week end at the Crowder home with him. He took the boy to a doctor immediately and had him treated for a run-down blood condition, and later had his tonsils removed. He paid Mrs. Crowder a dollar a day for Larry’s keep and in addition furnished clothing and medical attention. The father took an interest in his schooling; talked to his teachers and the principal of. the school. Larry seems to be a somewhat mischievous youngster and he would get into trouble on the way to and from school and his father cured that by hiring an older boy, at fifty cents a week, to take Larry to and from school. The father had not remarried but he testified he planned to marry in April of 1948 and that his fianceé had seen about as much of Larry as he had and frequently she had taken Larry out to dinner and to a movie when he had to work.

There was much testimony by the father and Mr. and Mrs. Crowder that when the boy visited Nadine in Davenport he would be hard to handle when he returned; that he had an *149 indignant attitude; that he would not pay any attention to what they would say to him; and that he would ignore correction. Mr. Crowder testified about how the boy would act after visiting Nadine or after she had talked to him on the telephone.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.W.2d 853, 240 Iowa 145, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dow-v-dow-iowa-1949.