Fisher v. Montgomery

274 S.W.2d 858, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2387
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1955
Docket10254
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 274 S.W.2d 858 (Fisher v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Montgomery, 274 S.W.2d 858, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2387 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

GRAY, Justice.

On July 25, 1952, appellants filed their application for leave to adopt William Clark Gillum, Jr., a boy then about two and one half years of age, and later referred to as the minor. William Clark *859 Gillum, Sr., the father of the minor, filed his written consent to the adoption. No notice was given to appellee, the mother. However she intervened in the cause, resisted the adoption and asked that the permanent custody of the minor be awarded to her.

A nonjury trial was ’ had, the adoption was denied and appellee was awarded the care, custody and control of the minor who was then approximately four years of age.

Findings of fact and conclusions of law were requested and were filed.

Appellee and William Clark Gillum, Sr. were divorced October 26, 1949, prior to the birth of the minor. At the time of the ■divorce there was a minor daughter, Billie Ruby Gillum, for whose care provision was made in the divorce decree but no provision was made for the care of the minor who was born February 4, 1950. On April 1, 1950, appellee placed the minor with Mrs. R. A. Goff and agreed to pay her $50 per month for his care. This arrangement continued, with appellee paying medical and other incidental expenses in addition to the $50 per month, until September, 1950, when Mrs. Goff became unable to care for the child. Appellee then made an agreement with appellant, Mrs. Roy Fisher, a daughter of Mrs. Goff, whereby she was to care for the minor upon the same terms as Mrs. ' Goff. At this time Billie Ruby Gillum was in the care of Mrs. Fisher. In July, 1951, a judgment was rendered awarding custody of Billie Ruby , Gillum to William Clark Gillum and custody of the minor to appellant) Mrs. Roy Fisher. This judgment required William Clark Gillum to pay $25 per month into' the registry of the court for the support of the minor. Thereafter appellee paid $25 per month into the registry of the court for the minor’s support although the decree did not require her to do so. However she then discontinued the payment of $50 per month direct to Mrs. Fisher. Mrs. Fisher continued to receive these payments from the registry of the court until August 6, 1952, at which time the application for leave to adopt the minor was on file.

Sometime after her divorce from Gillum, appellee married W. O. Montgomery from whom she was divorced in July, 1952.

After the application for leave to adopt the minor was filed and on August 5, 1952, there was filed a petition alleging the minor to be dependent and neglected. No notice of the filing of this petition was given to appellee and no citation was issued. On August 9, 1952, a judgment was entered adjudging the minor to be dependent and neglected.

After August 6, 1952, Mrs. Fisher refused to receive any further payments from the registry of the court.

The trial court found that appellee made her last payment into the registry in June, 1952. Appellee said she tendered payments to Mrs. Fisher after the adoption.proceedings were filed and that Mrs. Fisher would not accept them. Mrs. Fisher said she refused to take further payments from the registry because she thought if she was going to adopt the minor she should support him. On February 12, 1954, appellee paid into the registry of the court'$650 and filed her written statement which in part is s

“Defendant says that her said child should be returned to her possession, and requests this Court to so return it, but says that she desires to.support said child to the best of her financial ability, whether said child be in her possession or in the possession of others, wherefore, she now tenders and pays into this Court the said sum of $650.00 for the support of said child. Said tender and payment on defendant’s part is unconditional. She authorizes and requests this Court to disburse said sum in whatever manner the Court may deem proper for the support, of said child, whether by paying said sum to Mr. and Mrs. John Roy Fisher or otherwise. She also requests that the Court so disburse the $362.50 previously on deposit, making a total of $1012.50 now on deposit in this Court for the support of said minor child.”

*860 The $362.50 mentioned in the' statement being accumulated payments made by William Clark Gillum..

On February 25, .1954, appellants filed their' second amended original application for leave to adopt the minor and alleged the statutory grounds of voluntary abandonment, desertion and failure to support. The trial was had on this application.

The record shows that for some time past appellee has lived in Sinton, where she' has been and is employed; that she maintains her home in an apartment adequate for her needs in caring for the minor; that her income is sufficient to maintain herself and child, and that her sister expects to make her home there and assist in caring for the minor. Appellee has made trips to Austin to see the minor. However these visits appeár to have been unsatisfactory to appellee and did not meet the approval of Mrs. Fisher. She has also written letters to Mrs. Fisher inquiring as to the welfare of the minor but the record does not show that any of such letters were answered.

Mrs. Fisher testified that the minor hardly knows his mother; that he treats her as his mother, and that if he was going to be taken away from her it should have been done before the situation got to where it is now.

Witnesses from Sinton testified to appel-lee's good reputation there; that she was a reliable and responsible employee, and to her fitness to have custody of the minor.

The trial court concluded that the application for leave to adopt the minor must be denied because the mother had not given her consent and facts do not exist authorizing the adoption without such consent; that material changes in conditions affecting the minor require that his custody be awarded to his mother, and that the minor’s best interests require that his custody be so awarded.

Appellants here present ten points; however they say that the “basic questions involved” are whether the trial court erred in awarding appellee custody of the minor since the only matter properly before the court was whether the minor was legally subject to adoption; that the facts warranted the minor’s adoption by appellants who are suitable persons to adopt him,, and appellee did not .prove a material change in conditions since the judgment awarding the minor’s custody to appellant, Mrs. Fisher.

Section 6 of Art. 46a, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. prescribes the conditions authorizing adoption of children. The portion . of this section- pertinent here is:

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W.2d 858, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-montgomery-texapp-1955.