Gillespie v. Gillespie

40 Haw. 315
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1953
DocketNO. 2933.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 Haw. 315 (Gillespie v. Gillespie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillespie v. Gillespie, 40 Haw. 315 (haw 1953).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

This is an appeal by the father of two minor female children, presently aged nine and eleven years. The ap *316 peal is from an order amending an amended decree of divorce between him and the mother of those children. The order primarily affects the joint custody of the children in both parents as originally decreed and reaffirmed on subsequent amendments. It was entered at the instance of a motion by the mother after a hearing upon an order to show cause. The motion, as well as the return, is based upon the prior record of the case in the circuit court and requires a brief history of the case as disclosed by that record.

The parties were married on August 4, 1937 in Honolulu. Their two children were born there and it constituted their matrimonial domicile until they were divorced on June 24, 1948. The decree of divorce awarded both parties “joint custody of their two minor children,” who were then aged four and seven years, and expressly provided that “neither of the parties hereto shall take either or both of said children from the Territory of Hawaii without further order of this court or the approval of both parties hereto.” The decree ordered the father to pay alimony to his former wife and support money for his children. Three years later on August 31, 1951, the mother filed a motion to amend the decree so as to award her sole custody of the children and to increase the amount originally ordered for their support. After the hearing upon an order to show cause relative thereto, the parties by stipulation affirmed that they “shall have joint custody of their two minor children” but allocated “the periods during which the joint custody of the children shall be shared by and between the parties.” Such stipulated allocation of periods for sharing joint custody by both parties “appearing to be for the best interests of [the] children,” it was adopted by the amended decree, entered on October 8, 1951, as an amend *317 ment of the original decree of divorce which “in ail other respects [remained] in full force and effect.” One month later on November 3, 1951 the mother married a sergeant in the United States Army temporarily stationed in Hawaii. Within the same month the father moved to eliminate from the amended decree, and obtained an order of court eliminating therefrom, “all provision for the payment of alimony.” The order provided, however, that “all other provisions of said Decree of Divorce as amended shall remain in full force and effect pending the further order of this court.”

Upon that record the mother one year later on November 10, 1952 based her instant motion to have the father “show cause if any he has, why the decree of divorce entered *** on June 24, 1948 should not be further amended” so as to (1) permit the mother to take the two minor children “from Hawaii to the mainland of the United States”; (2) award “the sole care and custody” of those children to the mother; (3) increase the original allowance for the children’s support and maintenance; (4) require the father to pay “a reasonable attorney’s fee” to the mother’s attorney. The sole ground for that motion appears from the pleadings to be nothing more than that the mother, having married “a member of the armed forces of the United States [who] has received Avord for transfer from Honolulu to the mainland of the United States,” must obtain court permission “in order for the [children] to accompany [her] and her husband to the mainland.”

Upon the same record the father based his return. The return calls attention to the mother’s prior motion of August 31, 1951 by which she sought to amend the decree in the same manner with respect to sole custody and an increase in support money but after a hearing thereon in *318 effect abandoned that attempt and by stipulation with the father affirmed joint custody with no increase in support money but with allocation of periods to share such custody. It points to the resultant amended decree of October 8, 1951, which, in adopting the stipulated allocation for sharing joint custody as an amendment, noted that it appears to be “for the best interests of said children.” The return thereupon alleges inter alia that “no allegation in the affidavit filed with the present motion alleges any material change in circumstances since the date of the modification of the decree of October 8, 1951, and that therefore insufficient facts are alleged to form a basis for any order by this court amending the decree” as prayed.

Without passing upon the sufficiency of the motion as raised by the return, the trial judge presided at periodic hearings which commenced on December 9 and closed on December 23, 1952. At the hearing’s close he orally found that “each parent, the father and mother, are fit custodians to take custody of the two little girls, but because of the fact that they are females, and because they are so young, the Court feels that and determines that the Court should grant permission for these two children to accompany their mother to the mainland.” He continued by saying that the children “should spend at least July and August with their, father in Hawaii,” that their support money should be increased and that the father should pay the mother’s attorney a fee in the sum of $350. To these oral findings the father excepted and gave notice in open court that an appeal would be taken from any order entered in accordance with them. But before such an order had been entered, the father himself on January 16, 1953 intervened and orally moved in the presence of the mother to reopen the case for the *319 purpose of proving a sudden change in his finances. For that limited purpose the case was reopened on that day. The father resumed the witness stand. He testified that since the close of the hearing his employment had terminated and that he was forced to seek new employment at a reduced salary. On that testimony, which the mother did not dispute, the trial judge orally found that there should be no increase in support money and in effect overruled his prior oral finding as to an increase.

Before entry of a final or appealable order and without court permission or the father’s approval, the mother took both children from the Territory to the mainland of the United States for the purpose of establishing a permanent residence with her husband wherever he may be stationed. On discovery of this departure, the father moved for and obtained an order against the mother to show cause why she should not be held in contempt of court “for removing from the jurisdiction of this Court [the minor children of the parties] contrary to the provisions of the amended decree now effective [herein].” That order for contempt proceedings was returned unserved on January 23, 1953 and later orally dismissed on the motion of the mother’s attorney. Thereafter on February 27, 1953 the instant order, now on appeal by the father, was entered in the continued absence of the mother and the children.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Haw. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillespie-v-gillespie-haw-1953.