Earnest v. Earnest

286 So. 2d 747
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1974
Docket9498
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 286 So. 2d 747 (Earnest v. Earnest) 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.

Bluebook
Earnest v. Earnest, 286 So. 2d 747 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

286 So.2d 747 (1973)

Verna Irene EARNEST
v.
Walter Morgan EARNEST.

No. 9498.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

November 13, 1973.
Rehearing Denied December 21, 1973.
Writ Refused March 1, 1974.

*748 Walton J. Barnes, II, Baton Rouge, for appellant.

Joel B. Dickinson, Baton Rouge, for appellee.

Before LOTTINGER, BLANCHE and CRAIN, JJ.

BLANCHE, Judge.

The plaintiff, Verna Irene Earnest, brought suit for divorce and the custody and support of her minor children born of her marriage to the defendant, Walter Morgan Earnest. The children are Samuel Earnest (hereinafter referred to as "Sam") and Walter Earnest, III, and the plaintiff stated at the time of trial on July 12, 1972, that Sam was age five and Walter, III, was age four. The defendant filed a reconventional demand asking for the custody of the older child Sam. The trial judge granted plaintiff a divorce but split the custody of the children, awarding the custody of Sam to his father and Walter, III, to his mother. As to child support, the judgment was silent.

The plaintiff has appealed and assigns as error the granting of the custody of the minor child Sam to his father and the failure to award plaintiff alimony for the support of her minor children. The defendant has neither appealed nor answered the appeal.

Plaintiff and her husband, while living in Oak Grove, Louisiana, separated on or about April 18 or 19, 1970, after an argument. At the time of the separation the defendant took the older child Sam with him to the home of his mother who also lived in Oak Grove. Because plaintiff was unable to obtain Sam from her husband, she left with the other child, Walter, III (called "Hoss" by his father and "Duke" by his mother), to reside with her mother in Baton Rouge. The evidence reveals that except for that time of their marriage when the defendant was in the armed services the couple was in poor financial condition, having at one time found it necessary to purchase food stamps for food. After arriving in Baton Rouge, plaintiff was indeed in necessitous circumstances, applying for and receiving welfare assistance. As a condition for receipt of welfare assistance, plaintiff was forced to file criminal nonsupport charges against the defendant for his failure to support the child that she had in her physical custody. After defendant pled guilty to the charge, he was placed on probation but eventually fell behind in the support payments of $50 per month that he had been ordered to pay for the support of the child Walter, III. These arrearages were later cancelled by the court as a result of a physical disability which prevented defendant from working. Defendant testified that it was only a short time before trial that he was able to work.

The evidence reveals persistency on plaintiff's part to obtain the custody of the child Sam. She testified to her unsuccessful efforts to obtain the services of a lawyer for that purpose in the defendant's home town. She also testified that she attempted to employ a lawyer in Denham Springs, Louisiana, but could not afford to pay the legal fees. Thereafter, on two different ocasions she made application to the Legal Aid Society in Baton Rouge for this purpose. The first application was made on June 2, 1970, and the second on October 27, 1971. Neither of these applications was processed, and the Director of the Legal Aid Society was unable to state a reason for their not being processed. She further testified that a lawyer advised her that if she could obtain physical possession of the child, she would have a better chance of obtaining custody. As a result *749 of this advice, she and her sister went to Oak Grove for that purpose. There she found Sam at a baby-sitter's home where she forceably took him to the home of another friend in Oak Grove. However, before she could "escape" she was apprehended by the defendant's stepfather who blocked her car in the driveway of her friend's home with his truck. The stepfather was unsuccessful in his initial attempts to obtain the child from plaintiff, but as he stated, he knew she would have to come out some time as he had blocked her car with his truck. Arriving on the scene later was a deputy sheriff, who, as the testimony showed, was an old friend of the defendant's stepfather. He purportedly came on the scene just to see that there was no trouble. Defendant finally arrived on the scene and accosted the plaintiff, telling her she was lucky she had not been successful in getting away with Sam as he would have beat her. The plaintiff claims that the defendant's threats were of a graver nature and that he actually threatened to kill her. The deputy sheriff testified that he heard no such threats. In any event, this confrontation ended with the mother surrendering the child, who was purportedly screaming and crying to go to defendant's stepfather. After taking possession of Sam, the stepfather then suggested that plaintiff and defendant repair to his home to talk the matter over like two sensible people. It was there under a shade tree in the yard that the defendant claims an agreement was reached by him with the plaintiff whereby he was to keep Sam and she was to keep Walter, III. That such an agreement was made is corroborated by the defendant's mother and stepfather, and although they did not participate in any of the conversations leading up to the purported agreement, they stated they overheard what was said. Plaintiff denied that such an agreement was made, testifying that she told defendant the next time she attempted to get her child it would be legally. This suit for divorce and custody was filed by her in a legal effort to obtain the custody of Sam and it has now found its way to this Court.

We conclude that plaintiff has never abandoned any right that she may have had to the custody of this child either by agreement or otherwise.

Defendant sought to prove that plaintiff was an unfit mother and was not entitled to have the custody of the child Sam. There was a feeble insinuation by the defendant and his mother that plaintiff deliberately burned Sam with a cigarette on two different occasions in a fit of anger. This conclusion is based upon the fact of the defendant's mother having noticed a burn on Sam's body and of Sam's purported hearsay statement to explain it, "Mother was mad." This was denied by plaintiff and in our opinion the proof of such conduct on the part of plaintiff failed. There is also evidence concerning plaintiff's housekeeping habits which were described by defendant's mother as "slothful." This witness further testified that Sam was not willing to go with his mother and would ask them not to let his mother take him and would cry when he saw her. She also testified that Sam was definitely afraid of his mother. Her other testimony reflects that plaintiff would stay in bed in the morning while her two year old child would have to get up to fix his own breakfast. All of these allegations were denied by plaintiff. To explain how plaintiff could be qualified for the custody of one child and not the other, there are charges but no proof that she favored the younger child Walter, III.

We conclude that there is an absolute failure of proof to show any unfitness, either morally, mentally or otherwise, on the part of the mother in order to deprive her of the right to the custody of her child of tender years.

We are also convinced that both parents are equal in their ability to provide Sam with a good, comfortable and moral *750 home. Sam is loved by both of his parents. He is also loved by the defendant's wife,[1]

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802 So. 2d 726 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2001)
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386 So. 2d 376 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
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Bluebook (online)
286 So. 2d 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earnest-v-earnest-lactapp-1974.