Duffie v. Duffie
This text of 387 So. 2d 654 (Duffie v. Duffie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Gordon Leon DUFFIE
v.
Diane Laird DUFFIE.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*655 Michael J. Matthews, Gonzales, for plaintiff and appellant.
Ralph Tureau, Gonzales, for defendant and appellant.
Before COVINGTON, LOTTINGER and COLE, JJ.
LOTTINGER, Judge.
This is a rule to change custody filed by the mother against the father.[1] From a judgment awarding "provisional" custody of the nine year old boy to the mother and "physical possession" of the child to the maternal aunt and uncle, both husband and wife have appealed.
Two prime issues are before us:
(1) Can a custody decree be a "considered decree" if the trial judge who rendered the decree declares in a later custody judgment that his first decree was not "considered"?
(2) In a custody case between ex-spouses in which the maternal aunt and uncle were not parties, did the trial judge err in awarding "physical possession" of the nine year old boy to the maternal aunt and uncle and "provisional" custody to the mother?
THE FACTS
Diane Laird and Gordon Duffie were married on November 12, 1967. One child, Michael Steven Duffie, was born of the marriage on October 21, 1971. In mid-December of 1978, Diane left the matrimonial domicile and took the child with her to Tickfaw, Louisiana. She took a job in Tickfaw caring for the two children of Paul Purvis, who she later married.
On January 10, 1979, Gordon Duffie filed suit in Ascension Parish for a judgment of separation on grounds of abandonment. On the same day, Gordon signed an "affidavit and writ" in Franklin County, Mississippi, charging Diane with kidnapping of the child and grand larceny of a 1971 community automobile. Authorities arrested Diane in Tickfaw on January 15, 1979 on the two charges. Her husband, who accompanied deputies to her residence, took possession of the child. Soon thereafter, he placed the youth in the home of his wife's sister and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ahrend of Brookhaven, Mississippi.
After spending a night in the Amite Parish Jail, Diane was taken to Franklin County, Mississippi, where she was told the charges would be dropped if she admitted herself to a Mississippi mental hospital. She stayed at the hospital for about two weeks and the charges were dropped.
Diane was never served with process of the separation suit, perhaps because the *656 husband had listed as her address the matrimonial domicile which she had abandoned. In a supplemental and amending petition filed January 31, 1979, Mr. Duffie prayed for an immediate divorce on grounds of adultery and sought permanent custody of the child. He also asked that an attorney be appointed to represent his wife and that service be made on the attorney. A court appointed attorney accepted service the next day. Mrs. Duffie was not notified of the trial, but her attorney filed a general denial and apparently represented her at the proceeding. Two witnesses, Mr. Duffie and Diane's alleged paramour, testified at the trial, and a judgment ordering the divorce was rendered. The court also gave permanent custody of the child to Mr. Duffie, subject to "reasonable visitation" of Diane. As to visitation privileges, the trial court added: "It is the finding of this court that due to the habitual intemperance of defendant herein that defendant's visitation to the aforesaid minor child be limited to the daylight hours as deemed reasonable" by Mr. Duffie.
Diane married Paul Purvis on May 11, 1979, and filed this rule on May 30, 1979.
The record reveals that Mr. Duffie left the child at the Ahrends' house soon after he obtained physical possession. There is no question that the Ahrends have provided a good and healthy environment for the boy to grow up in.
However, the record also reveals that Diane visited the child at least four times since the youth was placed at the Ahrends' house. She has also telephoned her son numerous times. Diane's relationship with her family members was poor, at best, and she felt her family and ex-husband were frustrating some of her efforts to see her child.
Mr. Duffie made numerous allegations as to Diane's abuse of alcohol and prescription drugs. His evidence, however, was riddled with hearsay and innuendo, and the trial judge correctly disregarded it.
In his reasons for judgment, the trial judge stated that "there had been no real evidence presented which would warrant a finding that [Diane] was unfit morally or otherwise to have custody of her minor child." The trial judge also noted that a psychiatrist's deposition, like the testimony in open court, "fails to prove any problem of sufficient magnitude to warrant depriving the mother of custody. The father, due to his employment and lifestyle, cannot provide for the actual physical custody of the child. In addition, the court finds him to be unduly harsh in his conduct and outlook on life and to have deliberately testified falsely under oath for the purpose of deceiving the court. Custody should therefore be vested in the mother."
"However," the trial court continued, "the child has now become accustomed to an environment which is economically, socially, morally and educationally superior to anything he has ever known. He expressed to the court in chambers after he had had opportunity to visit with his mother and new stepfather on several occasions a very strong desire to continue to live with his aunt. He went into a paroxysm of fear when the court suggested to him that perhaps he should return to live with his mother. While the court reinterates [sic] its finding that the mother is not unfit [,] the environment which she and her present husband can provide is in such marked contrast to that which the child now enjoys and has become accustomed to that it would be extremely cruel and unjust to the child to compel him to return to his mother." With that, the trial judge vested "provisional" custody in Diane and "physical possession" in the Ahrends. The court also gave "reasonable and liberal visitation rights" to Diane, consisting of visitation every other weekend from 6:00 p. m. Friday until 6:00 p. m. Sunday, Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving and the first month of summer vacation.
SPECIFICATIONS OF ERROR
Mr. Duffie on appeal claims that the trial court erred in failing to apply the so called "double burden rule," which, if applicable, would have required Diane to prove that the present custody arrangement was deleterious *657 to the welfare of the child and that she could have provided a better environment; that the trial court's failure to apply the double burden rule resulted from an erroneous finding that the first custody decree was not a considered decree; and that the trial court erred in relying on the "maternal preference rule" in awarding Diane "provisional" custody.
Diane on appeal argues that the trial court erred in failing to follow a well established jurisprudential rule giving a parent a greater right to custody in most cases over a nonparent.
CONSIDERED DECREE
The proceeding in which Mr. Duffie obtained permanent custody of the child originally was in the nature of a confirmation of default. No transcript of the proceeding was kept, thus none is before us on appeal. Mr. Duffie claims that the statement in the trial court's judgment concerning Diane's "habitual intemperance" and limiting her visitation rights is an indication that the trial court took evidence on the custody issue and rendered a "considered decree."
This court in Stevens v.
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387 So. 2d 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffie-v-duffie-lactapp-1980.