Freeman v. Freeman

547 S.W.2d 437, 1977 Ky. LEXIS 396
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 547 S.W.2d 437 (Freeman v. Freeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Freeman, 547 S.W.2d 437, 1977 Ky. LEXIS 396 (Ky. 1977).

Opinion

STEPHENSON, Justice.

This appeal illustrates some of the problems encountered by a trial court dealing with a custody proceeding involving an “interstate child.” If nothing else, the circumstances here reveal the intolerable state of affairs resulting from ignoring the orderly processes of law. We are of the opinion the trial court acted properly and affirm the judgment giving full faith and credit to the orders of the Florida court granting custody of the infant child of the parties to the father.

The appellant-mother and the appellee-father, we infer from the record, were married in the state of Florida; and the infant child, the subject of this controversy, was born in the state of Florida. In June 1975, the mother and father were divorced by a judgment of the circuit court of Palm Beach County, Florida. By the terms of the judgment, the mother was granted custody of the infant child, Elizabeth Candace Freeman. The judgment provided for visitation rights to the father from Friday night to Sunday on alternate weekends and for Sunday on the other weekend.

It is apparent from the record that subsequent to the divorce proceedings, the parties’ relationship was stormy. The mother has many complaints concerning the conduct of the father including the expressed fear that the father would, on one of the visitation weekends, spirit the child out of the country to Australia or to places un *439 known. According to the mother, the father made this threat on more than one occasion.

The mother then proceeded to take steps to remedy the situation. Without any notice to the father or to the circuit court of Palm Beach County, the mother with the child departed from the state of Florida and arrived in Lexington, Kentucky, March 7, 1976, with the intention of establishing her domicile and residence in that city. The mother tells us that there was no contact with the father and that he did not request any visitation between the date of the move to Kentucky and the latter part of June 1976. The father’s story seems eminently reasonable to us. He says that after the mother and the child moved from Florida he did not know their whereabouts and spent considerable time and funds locating them. Finally, on June 21, 1976, he located them by telephoning the mother’s sister and her mother, who had moved back to Lexington from Florida in December 1975. The father informed them that he intended to be in Lexington on the July 4 weekend and expected to see his daughter who he learned had been enrolled by the mother in a Day Care Center in Lexington as Candy Wickes. About the 30th of June, the mother called the father and informed him that family plans had been made for July 4 and he could not have the daughter visit with him for the weekend, but some arrangement could be made for a visit with the child.

The father then, after notice and motion to compel visitation set for July 2, 1976, procured an order from the circuit court of Palm Beach County, Florida, directing the mother to deliver the daughter to the father for visitation from July 2,1976, to July 5,1976. The mother denies receiving notice of the hearing.

Armed with this order, the father proceeded to Lexington to visit with his daughter. On arrival he requested a deputy sheriff to accompany him. He and the deputy proceeded to the residence of the grandmother where the deputy alighted from the car and approached the house. Thereupon, according to the deputy and the father, the grandmother and two men, all intoxicated, told them to “get the hell out of here” and other threatening remarks. The father then got back into the car and the deputy went to the door and gave the order of the Florida court to the mother, who advised him she would not let the father have the child. Then after saying she would call her attorney, she reappeared and informed the deputy that she did not consider the order valid in Kentucky. The deputy and the father then retired from the scene, the father back to Florida where a hearing was held in the Florida court on the father’s motion for contempt and for temporary custody. On August 5, 1976, the Florida court entered an order holding the mother in contempt and granting temporary custody to the father. The scene now shifts back to Lexington where the father filed in the Fayette Circuit Court a petition for writ of habeas corpus and temporary custody based upon the August 5 order of the Florida court. On August 13, 1976, the trial court entered an order giving full faith and credit to the order of the Florida court and awarding custody of the infant to the father. This order was held in abeyance pending a hearing on the merits requested by the mother. The father then filed an amended complaint styled “Petition for Possession of Elizabeth Candace Freeman,” which we construe to be an equitable proceeding.

After hearing testimony by the parties, essentially the same as recounted here, the trial court on September 2,1976, entered an order finding that the Fayette Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction to determine custody, reciting that the proper jurisdiction lies with the Florida court and further ordering the August 13, 1976, order held in abeyance until September 2, 1976, giving the mother an opportunity to resubmit herself to the jurisdiction of the Florida court by filing a motion to be heard in the Florida court, otherwise, the August 13, 1976, order be held in full force and effect.

The scene now shifts back to Florida. The mother filed motion in the circuit court of Palm Beach County to set aside the order *440 of contempt. After a hearing, the Florida court on September 30, 1976, adjudged the mother in contempt of the court’s orders of October 22, 1975, July 2, 1976, and August 5, 1976, for not providing reasonable visitation to the father. The Florida court further ordered the mother to deliver the infant child to Palm Beach County, Florida, by October 7,1976, so that the father would be afforded his visitation rights. The order further provided that should the mother fail to comply, then permanent custody of the infant would be granted to the father.

On October 13, 1976, the Florida court being informed that the mother had not complied with the order of September 30, 1976, entered an order awarding permanent custody of the child to the father.

As to be expected, the father next filed motion, with the Florida court orders attached, in the Fayette Circuit Court for an order giving full faith and credit to the orders of the Florida court. Then, what do our wondering eyes see but a response by the mother informing the trial court that in an action for custody filed by the mother and assigned to another division of the Fa-yette Circuit Court, the other division has assumed jurisdiction of the minor child and entered an order granting temporary custody to the mother. Curiously enough, this action was filed on October 7, 1976, the petition for custody rehashing all the facts heard by the trial court and reciting that the appearance before the Florida court did not resolve any issues, although it appears to us that the issue was resolved. There is a further pious recitation that the mother will cooperate with the court on any orders for visitation. It occurs to us that lack of obedience to orders for visitation on the part of the mother is the cause of this bizarre situation.

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Bluebook (online)
547 S.W.2d 437, 1977 Ky. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-freeman-ky-1977.