Herpolsheimer v. Herpolsheimer

27 N.W.2d 530, 318 Mich. 200, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 389
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1947
DocketDocket No. 16, Calendar No. 43,480.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 27 N.W.2d 530 (Herpolsheimer v. Herpolsheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herpolsheimer v. Herpolsheimer, 27 N.W.2d 530, 318 Mich. 200, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 389 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

North, J.

Elaine Herpolsheimer, plaintiff, and William Herpolsheimer, defendant, were divorced in February, 1933. Custody of their daughter Marlene, then about two years of age, was given to the mother, and the father required to pay a specific amount per month “to aid plaintiff in the support and maintenance of the minor child.” No provision was made for alimony for the mother. On several occasions amendments of the decree were made as to payments for the support of the minor. As finally amended in September, 1941, on plaintiff’s petition, the monthly payments for the support of the daughter were fixed at $150, to continue until she should become 18 years of age or until the further order of the court. In May, 1945, plaintiff filed a petition for a further increase of the payments for the daughter, stating therein: -

“Under economic’ conditions, and because said minor child has reached an age that requires increased outlays of money for education, clothing, food and insurance, the present allowance of .$150 per month is not adequate.
‘,‘In addition to tuition, clothing and insurance, the child needs substantial allowances for incidentals, amusements and social entertainment. Also there are now expenses for summer camps and vacations. Your petitioner/ working as a trained nurse, is not able to supplement from her income the additional and increased expenses.”

Defendant answered and denied that $150 per .month was inadequate for the daughter’s needs; *203 and charged: “that the plaintiff has been receiving said sum of money ($150) each month and has been using only a small portion thereof for the care, support, maintenance and education of said child, and the remainder she has been expending for her personal use, entertainment and enjoyment.” Later defendant filed in the proceedings a petition praying that the custody of the daughter be taken from the mother and be given to the maternal grandmother, Mrs. Katheryne Scott. Plaintiff answered defendant’s petition and opposed the change of custody. Mrs. Scott sought to intervene in behalf t of the minor daughter who was then living with her, but was not permitted to do so. As a result of a lengthy and acrimonious hearing (including an application for rehearing) the trial judge amended the decree and provided that the monthly payments should be increased to $250; and the trial judge denied defendant’s petition for change of custody of the daughter.

Defendant has appealed. After the case came to this Court we entered an order permitting an attorney who sought to represent the minor daughter to file a brief amicus curiae. The three issues for review are: (1) custody of the minor daughter, (2) the amount of payments for her maintenance, and (3) to whom should the payments be. made.

Custody. The question here is this. Will the daughter’s welfare be best served by continuing her custody with plaintiff or by placing the custody of the minor in the maternal grandmother, Mrs. Katheryne Scott? The daughter is now 16 years of age. Defendant is not seeking to have her custody decreed to him. Instead he admits he is not entitled to custody. Our review of the record satisfies us that plaintiff is not a proper person to have the custody of this .16-year-old girl. For much of the time during recent years plaintiff has not given her per *204 sonal care to the daughter, but instead has kept her in a school as a resident student or has left the daughter with her maternal grandmother, who now seeks the custody of the minor. The testimony discloses that, notwithstanding they have long since been divorced, plaintiff continues to consort with defendant, that on many' occasions while in a drunken condition he has been harbored in plaintiff’s apartment and in the presence of their young daughter. There is testimony that defendant has remained in plaintiff’s apartment overnight and that she has occupied the same room with him, doing so with the knowledge of the daughter Marlene. Also, there is credible testimony that other men have visited plaintiff at her apartment and there drank liquor with her, that plaintiff keeps a liberal supply of intoxicating liquors in her apartment, that she is rather a free user of intoxicants, and at times indulges in “indecent and vile language.” The daughter Marlene testified to the effect that. she could not live happily with her mother because of her mother’s conduct. The record fairly discloses that plaintiff has used a large portion of the support money received by her for her own purposes rather than devoting it to the needs of the daughter. "While not entirely controlling, we cannot overlook the fact that this 16-year-old daughter, who testified against her mother at the hearing in the trial court, rebels strongly against living with and being in the custody of plaintiff. Instead she desires her custody to be in Mrs. Scott in whose personal charge Marlene had been for months prior to the final hearing in the trial court. "We forego review of other pertinent matters disclosed by the record, such as letters written by plaintiff to defendant which clearly indicate that plaintiff’s attitude in life falls short of that of a good mother, Under all the circum *205 stances disclosed by the record we can not avoid the conclusion that,the custody of Marlene should not be continued in her mother.

There is nothing in the record which in any material way tends to indicate that the maternal grandmother, Katheryne Scott, is not a fit person to have the custody of Marlene; and Mrs; Scott has evidenced an intense desire that Marlene’s welfare should be a matter of first consideration. In plaintiff’s brief it is asserted that Mrs. Scott.is interested on account of financial reasons and that: “a conspiracy was formed between Katherine (sic) Scott and the defendant to take the custody of the child away from the mother, plaintiff herein.” We fail to find in the record a justification for the above intimations or claims. On the contrary, as before noted, it appears that Mrs. Scott heretofore has had very much of the responsibility for the actual care and custody of- Marlene, that her services in that particular were rendered without compensation, and that she has expended some of her own money in meeting Marlene’s needs. Further, as negativing the claim that Mrs. Scott’s interest is prompted by financial reasons, she takes the position that she does not care to have the money for Marlene’s support paid to her but instead would prefer that a guardian of the estate of Marlene should be appointed and such payments made to the. guardian. A careful review of this record' brings the conclusion that the welfare of Marlene Herpolsheimer. will be much better served by modifying the. decree of the trial court and placing Marlene’s custody in Mrs. Scott, and it will be so modified.

“The wishes of the parents are a secondary consideration. The welfare of the child is paramount. Weiss v. Weiss, 174 Mich. 431; Smith v. Ritter, 292 *206 Mich. 26. The court may award custody of the child to a third person and require the father to pay for her support. ’ ’ Riede v. Riede, 300 Mich. 300.

Maintenance. Payments.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.W.2d 530, 318 Mich. 200, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herpolsheimer-v-herpolsheimer-mich-1947.