In Re IMJ

428 S.W.2d 18
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 1968
Docket8664
StatusPublished

This text of 428 S.W.2d 18 (In Re IMJ) 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
In Re IMJ, 428 S.W.2d 18 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

428 S.W.2d 18 (1968)

In the Interest of I. M. J., a minor under the age of seventeen years.

No. 8664.

Springfield Court of Appeals, Missouri.

April 26, 1968.

*19 Jack L. Koehr and Deeba, DeStefano, Sauter & Herd, St. Louis, for appellant.

Ted M. Henson, Jr., Poplar Bluff, for respondents.

HOGAN, Presiding Judge.

This case involves the custody of I.M.J., a little girl seven years old, who was declared a neglected child in November 1963 by the Juvenile Court of Butler County. The court made I. its ward and placed her in custody of her mother's aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. T. This proceeding represents the second attempt by F., the child's mother, to regain custody. F. has appealed from an adverse ruling, as provided by § 211.261, RSMo (1959), V.A.M.S.

I. was born December 1, 1960, in St. Louis, where the appellant, then unmarried, was employed. The appellant kept her child there until April 1962, leaving I. with an aunt (appellant's sister) during the time she worked. In April 1962 F.'s brother-in-law "beat and abused" I., and F. was obliged to take her child to her parents' home in Poplar Bluff. F.'s mother had other children at home, her father became ill, and consequently I. was taken to live with her present custodians, Mr. and Mrs. T. As indicated, Mrs. T. is the grandmother's sister. In November 1963, a petition was filed in the Juvenile Court of Butler County, alleging in substance that I. was in need of care and treatment because she had been wilfully abandoned and neglected by the appellant. After a hearing in which F. participated with counsel, the trial court found that I. was an abandoned and neglected child, made her its ward, and formally placed her in the custody of Mr. and Mrs. T. In July 1964, the appellant filed a motion to amend the custody order, setting out that she was able to care for I. and was then a fit person to have custody of her child. A hearing was had on this motion in September 1964, and the cause was taken under advisement "pending the filing of briefs and investigations of the Welfare Department." On February 8, 1965, this motion was denied. On May 17, 1966, F. filed this second motion to amend the custody order, alleging that she had at all times attempted to care for her child; that she had married in June 1965 and was now able to provide a home *20 for I., and that she was a fit and proper person to have the custody of her child. After a hearing on October 25, 1966, the trial court denied this second motion, and F. now appeals.

As material here, the record consists of the testimony of three witnesses: the appellant, her husband, and Mr. T. Mrs. T. was present when the case was called, but became ill, suffering what her physician called an attack of "nervous exhaustion," and was unable to testify. Counsel asked for the opportunity to present Mrs. T.'s evidence at some future date, stating that he believed she was a "vital witness," but the trial court refused and the hearing proceeded.

The appellant's evidence was that she had originally taken I. to Poplar Bluff, as we have indicated, because her brother-in-law had "abused the child and beat her." The nature of this mistreatment is not further disclosed; the appellant did testify that she made a formal complaint at the time, but nothing came of it. "[H]e [the brother-in-law] was booked and held for three hours and the Judge overruled the— well he said she wasn't beat bad enough." I. was brought to the grandparents' home, the appellant stated, with the request that they "* * * watch her until I could get a place of my own and get somebody to watch her." When it had subsequently become necessary for I. to go and stay with Mrs. T., F. testified, she had again only "* * * asked them to keep her until I could get somebody to watch her." On several occasions thereafter, the appellant had attempted to get Mr. and Mrs. T. to return her child, but they had refused, and at one point had physically prevented her from taking I. back to St. Louis with her. As a consequence, I. had simply remained where she had been, with Mr. and Mrs. T., and F. had continued to visit the child in her aunt's home. Beginning in February 1965, the appellant had contributed regularly to her child's support. Cancelled checks introduced in evidence by the appellant show that between March 16, 1965, and June 14, 1966, the appellant and her present husband contributed the sum of $650.00 toward I.'s support. There are 36 checks covering this period, all endorsed by Mrs. T.

The appellant further testified that she was living in the city of St. Louis and was regularly employed, but that she would immediately quit working if the court gave her custody of her daughter. She had married one O. in June 1965, and her husband was also employed. At trial time, the appellant and her husband lived in a four-room apartment in south St. Louis. The apartment consisted of a living room, two bedrooms, a kitchen and a bath. One of these bedrooms had been prepared as a nursery, and the appellant introduced several snapshots of the interior of the apartment.

O., the appellant's husband, was 46 years old at the time of the hearing. He was earning $125.00 per week, but felt he would soon be earning more, since he was "planning to buy a filling station." He also testified that F. was his fourth wife. All his previous marriages had ended in divorce. Being asked by the trial court about these divorces, O. stated that "the first one I got. The second one I got was in California, she run off with another man," and on the third occasion "* * * I was getting it [the divorce] but they turned the tables and let her get it." O. has two children of these previous marriages; one is "grown" but O. contributes $50.00 per month to the support of the other. According to O., he not only wanted his wife to have her child but was prepared to adopt I., and had made rather elaborate preparations to receive I. in the event she was returned to the appellant. He had made arrangements to have I. examined by a physician and a dentist, she would be able to attend school "half a block away," and would have a "cyclone fence in the big back yard and a one hundred and fifty dollar dog and her own room." O.'s acquaintance with I. consisted of having seen *21 her "about seven times," apparently in Mrs. T.'s home.

Mr. T. was the principal witness in opposition to the motion. He testified that at trial time he was living in "Galconda (sic), Illinois," about 150 miles from Poplar Bluff. He operated a sawmill in Illinois, but since Mrs. T. had relatives in Poplar Bluff and he came back there "every week or two weeks" to visit, he had considered it unnecessary to ask permission of the court to remove I. out of the jurisdiction. T.'s further evidence was that in May 1962 I. had been left at his home, and in June, F., the appellant, had told him and Mrs. T. that "* * * we could have the kid forever, she never wanted it back but she would like to see it." Mr. T. produced a witness (one of his employees) who had been present when this statement was made. This witness, a Mr. H., said the appellant had told Mr. T. "that she was giving him the child and she expected him to keep her forever." Mr. T. testified that he and his wife wanted to adopt I. and were making preparations to do so when this proceeding was begun. This, generally, is the background of the case, and other facts will be noted in the course of the opinion.

We have considered the arguments of the parties, but we do not find either viewpoint persuasive.

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Bluebook (online)
428 S.W.2d 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-imj-moctapp-1968.