Gotz v. Gotz

80 N.W.2d 359, 274 Wis. 472, 1957 Wisc. LEXIS 425
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 80 N.W.2d 359 (Gotz v. Gotz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gotz v. Gotz, 80 N.W.2d 359, 274 Wis. 472, 1957 Wisc. LEXIS 425 (Wis. 1957).

Opinion

Martin, J.

Sec. 247.24, Stats., provides in part:

“. . . Whenever the welfare of any such child will be promoted thereby, the court granting such decree shall always have the power to change the care and custody of any such child, either by giving it to or taking it from such parent, relative, or agency, . .

Matters dealing with the custody of children are peculiarly within the jurisdiction of the trial court, and highly discretionary. See State ex rel. Hannon v. Eisler (1955), 270 Wis. 469, 71 N. W. (2d) 376.

Appellant maintains it was an abuse of discretion for the lower court to deny his motion for termination of the visitation rights of the maternal relatives since he had shown that *474 the visits of the aunts had some unfavorable effects on the child.

There is in this case a long history of conflict between the parents of the child, and it is evident from the record that the child has suffered severely from that conflict. The situation existed some time before the divorce. Then the mother was granted the divorce and permanent custody of the boy. Being ill, she was given the right to move to Florida with the child where, apparently, she has lived with her mother since about October of 1953.

In July of 1954 the father was given temporary custody of the boy with the provision that the maternal relatives should have the right to visit him for a few hours on one day each week. Appellant testified that these visits, which were carried on over a period of some ten months, always left the boy emotionally disturbed and upset, sometimes for days thereafter.

It was the trial court’s conclusion that the visits themselves were not detrimental to the child but, rather, the effect of the appellant’s resentment of the visits which grew out of the father’s hostility toward his wife’s sisters.

Dr. James Johnson, psychiatrist employed by Milwaukee County Guidance Clinic, testified that when he examined the child in January of 1955—

“. . . it was my impression that this was a severely emotionally disturbed child whom I did not feel was, frankly, psychotic at that time, but, rather, I thought of him as a borderline case, meaning that his regression was such that he would be — some people would think he might be close to being mentally ill or psychotic. I found, too, he had a very low level of social, emotional, and intellectual functioning at that time. At that time I did recommend that the boy should have therapy in the Guidance Clinic.”

The child received therapy during the period between January of 1955 and the time of this hearing. At the request *475 of the divorce counsel Dr. Johnson gave his views as to the effect of the relatives’ visits with the child, as follows:

“Objectively we have observed no favorable or unfavorable effects of the visits on the child. By this we mean that the child makes no comment about the visits, nor has his play shown any indication that they were causing him to slip backward in his progress. During the course of our contact with this child, we have noticed a gradual but definite improvement in his over-all personality growth. The father has been most co-operative and conscientious in his contacts with us. The father, Mr. Gotz, has reported that the boy seems upset in regard to his visits with the maternal relatives. There is little doubt that the father is anxious about these visits. His concern appears to stem from the fear that the child is being harmed, plus the fact that his own relationship with these relatives is not a smooth and easy one. . . . When considering a problem like this, one cannot think just in terms of the child but must think in terms of tension in the total family unit including the child and father, who compose the main family unit at this particular time. In other words, if there is tension within the unit, father-son, regardless of where this tension comes from, it will tend to cause anxiety in the child in regard to the visits. Thus we can express the opinion that these visits do seem to produce anxiety within the father-son unit. Thus we question whether they are helpful to the child from the emotional point of view. From our point of view, the visits do appear to be upsetting this home situation. Therefore, we can see no particular advantage to their being-continued at this time. This opinion has nothing to do with rights from the legal point of view, nor does it have anything to do with our knowledge of the personality of the maternal relatives. If there is going to be continued friction and disagreement around these visits, it would appear that the only solution to this anxiety would be to eliminate the visits. ... In our original remarks, we suggested that the boy’s life be kept as simplified as possible. Tension over this matter complicates the life of the child; however, we must repeat that children can withstand anxiety even though it is not ideal for them. This means that we cannot state definitely that such visits will be permanently damaging to the child; yet thev do not seem to be contributing much.”

*476 It was his opinion that the boy made “marked improvement” during the time the Guidance Clinic treated him.

The trial court stated:

“I recognize Dr. Johnson’s desire to have Kenneth’s home life be simple, easygoing, tranquil, but there has not been, in my opinion, a demonstration that the order was wrong in allowing visitations of the maternal aunts. There has not been a showing to my satisfaction that these visitations by the maternal aunts are detrimental to the child’s health or welfare, and I am inclined to believe that Mr. Gotz has determined that these visitations should stop and feels it so strongly, whether it be of a sincere feeling or one developed only out of hostility toward his wife’s relatives, but, nevertheless, he has allowed it to upset him to the point where his analyses of its effect on the child are not trustworthy.
“If the court were to adopt Mr. Gotz’s view, in effect I would be reversing the judgment and order of this court simply because he does not approve of it, because Mr. Gotz does not approve of it. That, conceivably is doing an injustice to Mr. Gotz’s rationale in this matter. It is possible that he is absolutely sincere and believes that the visits are against the child’s best interests and feels it so firmly he becomes all upset and disturbed, and the result of that is that the child becomes disturbed. I incline more to the view that Mr. Gotz feels so strongly that these visitations should be stopped that he allows himself to be shaken by the visits and, thus, does his own child a disservice by the extreme of his attitude toward the visitations.
“There is nothing in this testimony today that has been presented to me which suggests that the department of domestic conciliation is opposed to the visitations as they now stand. I think it is a normal and desirable circumstance that the mother of this child, being unable to visit herself, should have her sisters make the visitations. I think that is completely wholesome and desirable not only from the mother’s standpoint, but, even more important, from Kenneth’s standpoint.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.W.2d 359, 274 Wis. 472, 1957 Wisc. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gotz-v-gotz-wis-1957.