Hutchins v. Moore

97 So. 2d 748, 231 Miss. 772, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 565
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1957
DocketNo. 40558
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 So. 2d 748 (Hutchins v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchins v. Moore, 97 So. 2d 748, 231 Miss. 772, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 565 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

McGehee, C. J.

This suit involves the custody of Lucy Carol Hutchins, who will be eleven years old on December 7, 1957. The appeal is by Grady L. Hutchins, Jr., the father of the child, from a decree of the Chancery Court of Coahoma County at Clarksdale, Mississippi, rendered on September 22, 1956, which appointed the appellees, E. P. Moore and his wife Mary J. Moore, who are the maternal grandparents of the child, the joint guardians of her person and estate, and awarded unto them her permanent custody.

The appellant is a career man and in the United States Navy. He has been a member of the Navy since 1942, and at the time of the rendition of the decree above mentioned he still had four and one-half years to serve in the Navy, at least two and one-half years of which he would be subject to call for service on a ship at sea, but would not necessarily be called for sea duty.

The appellant, Grady L. Hutchins, Jr. married Evelyn Moore on February 7,1946. She was the daughter of the appellees and was born and reared at Clarksdale. The appellant and Evelyn Moore were at the time stationed at the U. S. Naval Air Base at Galveston, Texas. She belonged to the Waves. In May 1946 she withdrew from [776]*776the Navy, and she and the appellant continued to live at the naval base at Galveston until it was decommissioned in August of that year. Thereupon they went on a visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grady L. Hutchins, Sr., at San Antonio, Texas, in September 1946. From there they went to the home of the appellees at Clarksdale, where Evelyn remained until Lucy Carol Hutchins was born on December 7, 1946, and she and the baby continued to remain with her parents until February 1947, when they joined the appellant at a naval station at Orange, Texas, to which he had been assigned in the meantime. Evelyn and the baby remained with the appellant at Orange, Texas, until June of 1947, when she had to undergo an appendectomy. Thereupon the appellant’s orders were changed and he was required to report at San Diego, California. The maternal grandfather of the child then went to Orange, Texas, and brought Evelyn and the baby to the home of the appellees at Clarksdale where she could recuperate from the operation.

The proof discloses without conflict that the appellant was willing for his wife and baby to join him at San Diego, but her father, E. P. Moore, one of the appellees, testified that his daughter Evelyn ‘ ‘ could not go to California”. He did not assign the reason, but at any rate the appellant received orders to go aboard a ship on the west coast, and from there he was away for a period of three months in the Mediterranean area, and during which time Evelyn and the baby made a visit to his parents at San Antonio, where he later went and returned with them to her parents’ home in Clarksdale.

Upon the return of the appellant to the United States he was given orders to go to England, and at first it was understood that his wife was to accompany him, but she decided later not to go, and informed the appellant that she was considering the matter of obtaining a divorce. Thereupon the appellant was able to get a [777]*777transfer to a naval base in Florida instead of going on to England. He returned to Clarksdale from Norfolk, Virginia, had a discussion with Evelyn as to their differences, and then reported to her father, E. P. Moore, who was maintaining an office as a cotton buyer in Clarksdale, and informed her father that everything was straightened out and that his wife and baby were going with him to Florida.

"While at the office of the appellee E. P. Moore, the telephone rang and it developed that it was Evelyn who was calling her father. The appellant testified that her father told Evelyn that if she didn’t want to go to Florida that he wouldn’t let her go or that she didn’t have to go. However, the appellee E. P. Moore testified that when he answered the telephone his daughter Evelyn was crying and that she told him that things had not been straightened out between her and the appellant and that she did not want to go and take the baby to Florida, and that it was then that he told her that if she didn’t want to go that he would not let her go.

Thereupon the appellant went to San Antonio, Texas, employed an attorney, and had a suit for divorce filed against his wife in Falls County at Marlin, Texas, where the appellant had been born and reared. In that suit for divorce the appellant asked that the custody of this child be awarded to its mother. She filed an answer in the case but did not ask for any financial relief either for herself or for the child. However, it was agreed among the attorneys for the respective parties that an allotment would be obtained from the United States Government of $35 per month for the support and maintenance of the child, payable to its mother. These allotment payments were regularly made to the mother until 1950, when they were increased by the United States Government to the sum of $77.10 per month, and were continued to be made to her until her death on December 24, 1955.

[778]*778Thereafter the first two or three checks were returned to the Government since no one had been qualified to endorse the same and receive the money for the benefit of the child.

Thereafter the appellant filed an Ex Parte proceeding in Falls County, Texas, and obtained a decree for the allotment checks to be sent to him for the support of the child, hut the United States Government thereafter sent the same to the appellees, in whose home at Clarksdale the child was then residing.

Prior to the death of the child’s mother she was married to Leon L. Porter, Jr., an attorney at Clarksdale, in October 1952. Although the child had resided continuously with its maternal grandparents at Clarksdale from the granting of the divorce on December 27, 1948, and for sometime prior thereto, it went with its mother into the home of Leon L. Porter, upon the marriage of the mother to him in October 1952, and spent about half of the time in the Porter home and the other half in the home of its maternal grandparents at Clarksdale until the death of its mother on December 24, 1955, and thereupon it returned to the home of the appellees, its maternal grandparents at Clarksdale.

It was agreed in the family that Leon L. Porter would notify the child’s natural father of Evelyn’s death, hut he failed to so notify the appellant until April 1956. At that time he wrote the appellant a letter to where he was then stationed at a naval base at Kingsville, Texas, and suggested that he permit the appellees to adopt the child as their own. Thereupon the appellant and his father, Grady L. Hutchins, Sr., went to Clarksdale to discuss the matter with the Moores, and he then refused to give his consent for their adoption of the child. In August of that year he filed a proceeding in the Falls County, Texas, court to he appointed guardian of the person and estate of the child, and on September 10,1956, he obtained a decree from the said Texas court awarding to him [779]*779the guardianship of the person and estate of the child and of its permanent custody. Process was obtained upon the appallees by having a summons issued by the clerk of the Falls County court to them, and which process was served by the sheriff of Coahoma County after the said officer had received the process through the mail.

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Bluebook (online)
97 So. 2d 748, 231 Miss. 772, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchins-v-moore-miss-1957.