In Re Guardianship of Nichols

216 N.E.2d 690, 70 Ill. App. 2d 376, 1966 Ill. App. LEXIS 769
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 9, 1966
DocketGen. 10,706
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 216 N.E.2d 690 (In Re Guardianship of Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Guardianship of Nichols, 216 N.E.2d 690, 70 Ill. App. 2d 376, 1966 Ill. App. LEXIS 769 (Ill. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The mother of five children, to whom custody had been awarded in a divorce decree almost five years before, died on May 15, 1965. A little over 80 days later, the father filed his petition to modify the decree and sought custody of the four minor children. An adult daughter, then 19 years old, intervened and asked that she be named their guardian and be awarded their custody. The trial court awarded custody of the oldest minor daughter to her adult sister, the intervening petitioner; and the custody of the remaining three children to their father. The intervening petitioner appeals. There is no cross-appeal by the father. The sole issue is the claim that the trial court order is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence on the issue of the best interests of the children.

The father and mother were married November 16, 1944, and divorced January 10, 1961, at the suit of the mother charging extreme and repeated cruelty. The mother did not remarry. On October 17, 1961, the father married his present wife, a widow with a married son and a son 13 years old. All parties resided in the Champaign area until January 1963, when the father and his new family moved to Ocean Springs, Mississippi, near Biloxi, where he is employed on the medical staff at a Veteran’s Hospital at an annual salary of $14,500. At a conference on June 18, 1965, the girls stated they did not want to go with their father to Mississippi. His petition for custody was filed the same day. The intervening petition followed immediately. Issues were made up and a full hearing followed. At the time the ages of the children were as follows: Nancy, intervening petitioner, 19; Clare, 16; Barbara, 13; Julia, 11; and Stanley, 7.

The trial court had before him a family unit which had been shattered once by divorce and now by the death of the parent to whom custody of the children had been originally awarded. A regrouping and readjustment of that unit was now required. The question was when, where, and with whom. In this tense emotional atmosphere, it is to be anticipated that we would have some difficulty in determining what is fact and what is fictional innuendo in this record.

At the outset we would put back in the closet any question of economics or the physical aspects or atmosphere of the home which the children own in Champaign and the father’s home in Ocean Springs. Both homes would appear to be amply adequate. It further appears that about a year before the divorce, the first Mrs. Nichols established a trust now valued at some $250,000, and which on her death was to be divided into separate trusts for each of the five children. Both the interest and the principal are available, if needed, for the support of the children and the principal is distributable at ages 25 and 30. The maternal grandparents are named as trustees along with one James M. Goff. In addition, the children’s mother was a partner in a business from which she had been paid $1,200 per month for some five years and which she had overdrawn about $25,000.

Nancy, with a commendable sense of understanding and moral responsibility, would keep the children together in the home they own in Champaign and where they had lived for eleven years. Nancy had been away from home attending school at Sacred Heart in Springfield for four years and for one year in college at Lincoln, Illinois. Clare had just completed her second year at Sacred Heart, wanted to complete her high school education in Champaign, did not want to go with her father, and felt that he had not displayed much interest in them. The father acquiesced in her request and the trial court properly respected the wishes of Nancy, Clare, and the father. Nancy too wanted to complete her education at the University of Illinois and we think there is sound reason for the order keeping the two girls together. In so stating, we do not intend to infer that the request of a minor child, standing alone, is necessarily either decisive or controlling on the question of custody even though sixteen years old. See Stickler v. Stickler, 57 Ill App2d 286, 206 NE2d 720, where this issue is met head on and appropriately applied. It is just one factor for consideration.

The other three children also expressed a reluctance to go with their father and a desire to remain in Champaign with Nancy. As was observed in Stickler, it would be an abdication of judicial responsibility to grant such a request willy-nilly. No matter with what linguistic niceties you may seek to clothe it, the stark, naked rule in this State, both legislatively proclaimed and judicially declared, is that the right of a natural parent to the custody of his minor child yields to no one unless it can be said that he has forfeited that right or unless the “welfare” or “best interest” of the child or “good reason” exists to take that right away from him. Ill Rev Stats 1965, ch 3, ¶ 131. Giacopelli v. Florence Crittenton Home, 16 Ill2d 556, 158 NE2d 613; McAdams v. McAdams, 46 Ill App2d 294, 197 NE2d 93; Jayroe v. Jayroe, 58 Ill App 2d 79, 206 NE2d 266; People v. Jenkins, 34 Ill App2d 255, 180 NE2d 359; Kokotekian v. Kokotekian, 23 Ill App2d 171, 161 NE2d 712; Stalder v. Stone, 412 Ill 488, 107 NE2d 696; Nye v. Nye, 411 Ill 408, NE2d 300. To review each of these cases is to unduly extend this opinion. Suffice it to say that the terms “welfare,” “best interest,” “good reason,” and “fitness” have been discussed and applied in a multitude of circumstances, a variety of relationships and, depending upon the type of proceedings, with varying emphasis. We would paraphrase McAdams when we say that we deal with a contest between one with a legal right to custody, unless we take it away from him, coupled with a legal duty to support and educate and one with no legal right to custody, unless she is awarded it, and no legal duty to educate or support. In this context, we box in “welfare,” “best interest,” “fitness,” and “good reason” with the material, moral, and emotional qualities and responsibility of the parent together with the ability and willingness to give the care, affection and training which the parental relationship implies. We turn now to the picture painted in this record.

For an indeterminate period ranging in the testimony from six months after the divorce to a long time before the custody hearing, an itinerate sign painter moved into the home occupied by the mother and the children. The children admired and respected him, consulted him as to their problems and enjoyed his companionship and the things he did for them. There is no suggestion of immoral or improper conduct in his relationship with them. His exact status in the home remains in limbo. He did not testify. It seems clear that his presence did little to encourage cooperation between the mother and father as to visitation rights — indeed an altercation between him and the father took place shortly before present litigation began. The trial court, on its own motion, ordered his effects removed from the home and directed him not to return pending the further order of the court. He moved next door.

The original divorce decree provided payments for child support at the rate of $400 per month with visitation on alternate Saturdays from 12 noon to 7:00 p. m., on alternate Sundays from 12 noon to 7:00 p. m. and for two weeks vacation in the summer. During 1961, there was apparently reasonable compliance with these provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
216 N.E.2d 690, 70 Ill. App. 2d 376, 1966 Ill. App. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-nichols-illappct-1966.