Fronk v. State

322 P.2d 397, 7 Utah 2d 245, 1958 Utah LEXIS 133
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1958
Docket8734
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 322 P.2d 397 (Fronk v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fronk v. State, 322 P.2d 397, 7 Utah 2d 245, 1958 Utah LEXIS 133 (Utah 1958).

Opinion

WORTHEN, Justice.

Appeal from an order of the Juvenile Court of the First District, made June 10, 1957, depriving the parents, Vernal Fronk, the appellant, and his wife, Betty Fronk, of their three minor children. Appellant and Betty Fronk were married January 4, 1952.

Appellant was drafted into service about January, 1955, and returned home in the early part of 1957. In August, 1956, a petition was filed charging that the three minor children of appellant and Betfy Fronk were neglected children, wherein it was alleged that the children became neglected by reason of the fact that the mother of said children had been living with a man not her husband. The Juvenile Court after a hearing and on September 7, 1956, found that the mother lived with said party, that she held herself out as his wife and represented that the minor children were his. The court also found:

“That the said father on July 8, 1956, was accused and found guilty before a general Court Martial of the offenses of: possession of ration books not issued to said father, transfer of military payment certificates to an unauthorized person, counterfeiting a name on said ration books and failing to register a privately owned pistol.”

By its decree the court left the children with the mother under the protective supervision of the Utah State Department of Public Welfare. The court warned that if the mother did not discontinue seeing the man, with whom she had been living, the children would be taken from her.

Thereafter the Utah State Department of Public Welfare requested that the judgment made on September 7, 1956, be modified.

The mother was present at the hearing but appellant was not. The court found that the mother had continued, from September 7, 1956, to the present time to associate with the man mentioned in the decree of that date.

The court entered a modified decree on November 19, 1956, as follows:

“That the Decree and Judgment heretofore made and entered herein by the Court on the 7th day of September 1956, be and is hereby modified as follows:
“That the mother and father of said children be and they are hereby deprived of custody of said children and said children be and are hereby committed into the custody of the Utah State Department of Public Welfare.”

Thereafter and shortly after appellant returned home, his wife filed suit for divorce. He counterclaimed and he was *248 granted the divorce. The District Court of Weber County entered an order on June 7, 1957, on its own motion, transferring the matter to the Juvenile Court “to make such determination and, or recommendation as appears appropriate to him, regarding the present custody of said children, and, or whether not the parents should be permanently restrained from visiting the children and the children released for adoption.” The District Judge ordered said hearing to be held in his courtroom at 3 p. m. June 10, 1957.

The District Court in its decree which was signed April 26, 1957, and filed June 7, 1957, declared as follows:

“It Is Further Ordered, Adjudged, And Decreed, that the care and custody of said children be, and it is, hereby awarded to the Weber County Department of Public Welfare until further order of this Court, and that the defendant, Vernal K. .Fronk, is hereby required to deliver said children to said Department of Public Welfare before 9 :00 o’clock a. m., on Wednesday April 24, 1957.
“It Is Further Ordered, Adjudged, And Decreed that until further order of this Court, the said minor children are not to be remaining with either party herein, or the mother of the defendant.” (Emphasis added.)

In its Findings of Fact No. 5 the District Court found:

“That the defendant, Vernal K. Fronk is not, presently, a fit and proper person to have the care, custody, and control of said minor children because he has not been shozvn to be law abiding, honest, or understanding of the children’s needs or welfare * * (Emphasis added.)

The District Court in Finding No. 4 found that “Betty May Garder Fronk is presently grossly immature, keeps company with men ttnder circumstances seriously adversely effecting the community feeling toward the family unit * * * and is, therefore, not a fit and proper person to have the care, custody, and control of said minor children.”

The Juvenile Court seemed to be of the opinion that it had jurisdiction of these children. The mother on April 19, 1957, filed a petition with the Juvenile Court alleging that conditions had changed and that she had filed for divorce from the father of the children, and asking that an investigation be made and that the children be placed in her custody. The Court on May 10, 1957, dismissed the petition but the minutes of said hearing disclose:

“May 10, 1957: Court is in session.
“Judge Ziegler: I am at a loss to establish the relevance of this petition. The only thing that seems to be *249 changed is the fact that Mrs. Fronk has sued for divorce.
“Attorney Barker: Are you familiar with the findings of the District Court.
“Judge Ziegler: Yes. I have a copy of the order.
“Attorney Barker: The divorce was granted to the father of these children not the mother.
“Mr. Leverich: We have had several contacts with the mother and .she plans to live with her parents.
“Mr. Scott: We have been in a position where we have been unable to completely evaluate the homes of these people. Both parents have been ■out of the State for a considerable length of time. We are not in a position to solicit the cooperation of the parents in this matter and they apparently have been unaware of our role.
“Mr. Barker: There was a question as to which court has jurisdiction.
“Judge Ziegler: We have original jurisdiction and this jurisdiction is continuing. I do not believe the District Court have the power to review our jurisdiction. I am going to cite Black v. Anderson, [3 Utah 2d 42] 277 P.2d 975 where the question arose. We are going to take the stand that we have the jurisdiction to decide the matter.”

On June 10 the Juvenile Court held a hearing which resulted in the order from which this appeal was taken.

At that hearing the mother of the children testified that she wanted the children and that she could care for them.

Betty Frank's mother testified that Betty had been living with her; that Betty had been attending church and that she did not drink. She testified that she had never approved of the association of Betty and the man she had been living with.

Appellant testified that he has a job at the Ogden Iron Works as an electrician; that he worked from 9 to 5 and received $1.95 per hour; that the children were in.

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Bluebook (online)
322 P.2d 397, 7 Utah 2d 245, 1958 Utah LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fronk-v-state-utah-1958.