Ellis v. Johnson

260 S.W. 1010, 218 Mo. App. 272, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 155
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 1010 (Ellis v. Johnson) 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
Ellis v. Johnson, 260 S.W. 1010, 218 Mo. App. 272, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 155 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*275 COX, P. J.

Suit in equity to secure . judgment awarding the permanent custody of a minor child to plaintiff. The answer concludes with a prayer that the custody of the child be awarded defendant. The court heard the evidence and then rendered judgment awarding the custody of the child to J. B. Ellis and Eliza T. Ellis, grandparents of the child, for one year and. reserved jurisdiction to make further orders at the end of or during said period of one year as to the care and custody of said child. Prom this judgment defendant appealed.

The ease is unusual in that it is a suit in equity rather than by habeas corpus or proceeding in the divorce court to secure an award of the custody of a minor child. The jurisdiction of the court to proceed in this form of action is not questioned in this case and seems to be well founded. [22 Cyc. 519.]

Plaintiff and defendant were married May 7, 1914, in the State of California. The child involved in this litigation-was born there. When he was about two years old the father came to Greene county, Missouri, where his parents reside and brought the child with him. He did not return to California but kept the child here with his parents. Later he filed in Greene county, Missouri, a suit for divorce against his wife, the mother of this child. She appeared to that suit and filed an answer and cross-bill. Tile plaintiff then went back to California but did not take the child with him. A reconciliation between the parties was effected and he dismissed his suit *276 for divorce and lived with his wife about one month when 'he again left and came back to Missouri. The child remained with his parents in Missouri all this time. Later the wife, the defendant in this case, filed suit in California for divorce from plaintiff. Service was had by publication. A decree in her favor was entered and she was also awarded the custody of this child. Later, in 1921, she instituted habeas corpus proceedings in the circuit court of Greene county, Missouri, to secure the custody of the child. In that proceeding a judgment was entered awarding her the custody of the child for one year from July 15,1921, then the father was to have the child for one year and the custody of the child should alternate for one year each thereafter. The defendant took the child back to California and in October, 1921, she married R. H. Johnson, and continued her residence there with him and this child, which constituted the family. In July, 1922, the plaintiff went to California to secure the child to keep it for the next year as the judgment of the court, in Greene county, Missouri, had directed. The defendant refused to allow him to take the child and instituted a suit in California, in the same court where she had obtained a decree of divorce from her husband, in which she asked that court to award her the permanent custody of the child. This plaintiff, who was defendant in that action, was personally served with process and appeared in that court and filed an answer. An order was made in that court, on stipulation of the parties and their counsel, that the custody of the child should remain with the mother pending the suit and the father be permitted to visit the child from 10 a. m. to noon on each Tuesday. An order was also made by the court enjoining and restraining the father from removing the child from the State of California or the jurisdiction of that court pending further orders of the court. Plaintiff visited the child on Tuesday of each week as the court had directed he might, and on one of these visits he took the child to a store, ostensibly to make some purchases for it, but, instead of returning the child to its mother, he ran away *277 with it and brought it back to his parents in Greene county, Missouri. Soon after his arrival in Missouri, he filed a motion in the circuit court of Greene county to modify the judgment entered in the habeas corpus proceeding in that court by which the custody of the child was to alternate between the parents, so that the permanent custody should be awarded to him. The mother appeared for the purpose of defending her rights in that proceeding. The father then dismissed that proceeding and filed this suit and secured personal service upon the defendant. This case was tried resulting in a judgment as heretofore stated.

This is one of that class of cases in which the principles of law involved are very simple and yet, to reach a correct conclusion is most difficult. We are directed by the settled rule of law to seek only the welfare of the child and in that search to proceed upon the well known and recognized premise that, unless the contrary be shown, the presumption will be indulged that the welfare of the child will be best served by placing it in the care and custody of one or the other of its parents. Following this course, the court, in a contest between a parent and some other person, whether a relative or not, will award the custody of a minor child to the parent unless it be shown that the parent is incapable in some way of doing for the child what its best interests demand. In controversies between a parent and one not so related to the child, the judgment of the court may, and often does, rest solely on the legal presumption that the welfare of the child will be best promoted by awarding its custody to the parent; but in a contest between parents, both of whom stand equal before the law, the legal presumption above alluded to is wanting and the court must pass to a consideration of the testimony in each case without the aid of any presumption in favor of either parent. The age of the child and its needs, the character of the parents, their ability, financially and otherwise, to meet the requirements of the child in its physical, mental and moral development in such a way as to insure it becom *278 ing a law-abiding and patriotic citizen and a useful member of society are the matters to which the court should give primary consideration in attempting to reach a correct conclusion in each case. The difficulties which are in the way of a court feeling certain that its judgment is right must he apparent to all, for no one can, with certainty, divine the future. The court can only do what at the time seems to promise best results. In the evidence in this case some aspersions are sought to be cast upon the character of both these parents, but we are of the opinion that both are of good character. Both are financially able to feed, clothe and educate the child. Both are interested in and no doubt will do what they can to see that the moral training of the child will be properly attended to. In that condition of the testimony, there can be no justification for the order of the trial court in this case by which the custody of this child was awarded for one year to its grandparents. The plaintiff did not appeal from that judgment and we presume he is satisfied for the reason that his home is also with the grandparents of the child. The court, however, should have awarded the custody to one or the other of the parents. The grandparents were not in court, neither did they appear, as far as this record shows, before the court and agree to assume the responsibility for the care and training of this child.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 1010, 218 Mo. App. 272, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-johnson-moctapp-1924.