Hji by Jmi v. Mec

961 S.W.2d 108, 1998 WL 24880
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1998
DocketWD 53571
StatusPublished

This text of 961 S.W.2d 108 (Hji by Jmi v. Mec) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hji by Jmi v. Mec, 961 S.W.2d 108, 1998 WL 24880 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

961 S.W.2d 108 (1998)

H.J.I., by Next Friend, J.M.I., and J.M.I., Individually, Respondent,
v.
M.E.C., Appellant.

No. WD 53571.

Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District.

January 27, 1998.

*111 Sheldon Bernstein, Thayer, Bernstein & Bass, P.C., Kansas City, Katharine S. Shepherd, Liberty, for appellant.

Kevin P. Rotert, Gladstone, for respondent.

Before ULRICH, C.J., P.J., and SPINDEN and SMART, JJ.

ULRICH, Chief Judge, Presiding Judge.

M.E.C. (Mother) appeals the trial court's judgment awarding J.M.I. (Father) child support and sole custody of their minor child, H.J.I. (Child). Mother raises five points of trial court error in this action filed by Father seeking determination of paternity, child custody and limited visitation by Mother. She contends that the trial court erred in (1) ordering Mother to pay one-half of Child's uninsured medical expenses including deductibles and co-insurance where the court did not find that amount stated on Father's Form 14 was unjust and inappropriate; (2) failing to appoint a guardian ad litem to protect the interests of Child; (3) entering a default judgment against Mother because Mother failed to file an answer to Father's Petition where child custody and child support were issues raised by Father; (4) entering default judgment against Mother where she was not provided notice and did not appear at the hearing on Father's petition; and (5) denying Mother's motion to set aside the default judgment and for new trial where Mother established good cause for failing to file an answer and where Mother presented a meritorious defense to the award of child custody and child support. Father asks that the judgment of the trial court be affirmed except for the portion of the judgment ordering Mother to pay one-half of Child's uninsured medical expenses including deductibles and co-insurance. Father, therefore, agrees with Mother that the trial court erred when it awarded child support in an amount greater than that stated on Father's Form 14. For the following reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed in part and reversed in part and the case is remanded.

FACTS

J.M.I. (Father) and M.E.C. (Mother) are the undisputed parents of a minor child, H.J.I., (Child), born on October 30, 1992. Father and Mother have never been married to each other. Father filed on June 8, 1995, an original Petition for Determination of Father/Child Relationship, Custody and Visitation and an amount for periodic child support. Count I alleged that Father and Mother were the biological parents of Child and requested that the court declare Father the biological father of Child. Count II alleged that Child's interests were best served by Child's being placed in the joint legal custody of Father and Mother with Father having primary physical custody and Mother having reasonable visitation rights. Count III requested Mother pay a reasonable sum of child support to Father and a portion of Father's attorney's fees.

Mother filed an Entry of Appearance on June 30, 1995, acknowledging receipt of Father's Petition, waiving the issuance and service of summons, voluntarily entering her appearance and consenting to trial. Mother did not file an answer to the Petition. She was not notified of the trial setting and did not appear at the trial. Father appeared individually by counsel and as Child's next friend. After Father presented evidence, the trial court entered default judgment against Mother because Mother failed to file an answer. Mother alleges she agreed to waive the issuance and service of summons and consent to trial because Father told her if she did so that he would not bring any further court action. Father denied making this statement.

At trial, Father testified that he was the natural father of Child and that both he and Mother acknowledged his paternity. Father *112 testified that Child had resided with him four days each week and with Mother two days and one night per week until August 9, 1996. On the night of August 9, 1996, Mother took Child from Father's residence and did not return him to Father. Mother moved to Independence with her boyfriend, Jimmie D. Wilcox. Mother did not inform Father of her new address While Mother gave Father her new telephone number, she had a block placed on her phone so that Father could not call her. Father attempted to call Mother at her residence on several occasions but never attempted to reach her at her place of employment. Mother did not let Father or anyone else visit Child.

Father's Form 14 estimated Mother's monthly income at $2,028.00. In determining Mother's gross monthly income, Father relied on Mother's statement to him that she made almost $18.00 an hour with tips and worked thirty-two hours a week. This income figure established Mother's presumptive child support obligation at $375.00 per month.

Father requested Mother have supervised visitation with Child due to Mother's relationship with Mr. Wilcox to whom Mother is now married. Father; Mother's friend, Lynn Finder; Mother's mother, Mrs. Leah Brand; and Mother's step-father, Mr. Kenneth Brand, all testified that Mr. Wilcox had struck and beat Mother and that some of those beatings occurred while Child was with Mother. Father also testified that Mr. Wilcox used narcotics. Father asked that Mother receive supervised visitation because of the physical abuse and claimed drug use occurring at Mother's residence. Mr. Brand and Mrs. Brand both testified that Child's best interests necessitating Child's residing with Father and for Mother to have supervised visitation. Mr. and Mrs. Brand both stated they were willing to supervise visitation between Child and Mother.

As an additional grounds for supervised visitation with Child, Father testified Mother has a drinking problem. Ms. Finder, who has been Mother's friend for twelve years, testified that Mother has had a drinking problem since she became twenty-one years of age. Ms. Finder testified that nine out of ten times when Mother drinks, she passes out. Mother received convictions for Driving Under the Influence (DUI) in 1992, 1993 and 1996. The third DUI conviction in 1996 resulted from Mother driving her car into a parked car on the side of a highway. Child was in the vehicle and was not wearing a restraining device. After hitting the parked car, Mother left the scene of the accident and drove to Father's house, followed by an off-duty police officer who saw the accident. After Mother awoke Father, Father went outside and found Child crying and bleeding. An ambulance arrived and took Child and Father to the hospital where Child was treated for a broken leg and four staples were placed in Child's head to treat a wound. Mother was arrested and later convicted of DUI and child endangerment. Father and Ms. Finder testified that Mother continued drinking after the accident.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the court declared Father to be the natural father of Child, awarded sole legal and physical custody to Father subject to supervised visitation by Mother and ordered Mother to pay one-half of Father's attorney's fees, $750.00. The court ordered Mother to pay $375.00 per month in child support pursuant to the Form 14 submitted by Father. Father was ordered to maintain health insurance covering Child. The court also ordered that Mother and Father were each responsible for one-half of Child's uninsured medical-type expenses plus deductibles and co-insurance payments. Thereafter, Father went to Mother's residence and took Child away to live with him.

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H.J.I. ex rel. J.M.I. v. M.E.C.
961 S.W.2d 108 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1998)

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