In Re Marriage of Cavitt

564 S.W.2d 53, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2069
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 1978
Docket38515
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 564 S.W.2d 53 (In Re Marriage of Cavitt) 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 Marriage of Cavitt, 564 S.W.2d 53, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2069 (Mo. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

ALDEN A. STOCKARD, Special Judge.

This is an appeal by the father from a judgment which modified a previously entered decree of dissolution of marriage pertaining to the custody of an eight year old female child. We affirm.

The decree of dissolution of marriage was entered March 3, 1975. Primary custody of the child was granted to the mother with temporary custody in the father on stated weekends. On March 25 the father filed a motion to modify in which he alleged that the mother had remarried, and that she had removed the child from the State of Missouri, thereby denying him the right of temporary custody as provided in the decree of dissolution. On June 12 a hearing on the motion was held, or at least started, with the mother’s counsel present. The court ordered that “Pending hearing and disposition of [the father’s] motion” the mother was to “comply with the temporary custody provisions of the decree forthwith by sending the child * * * by airplane” to the father. The mother did not comply with this order, but on June 26 filed a motion to modify in which she alleged that she had remarried and that by reason of her husband’s employment she was forced to move to California. She prayed for an order granting to her- the right to remove the child to California and for such other orders deemed proper. On July 9 the court entered an order in which it recited that a hearing was held on July 3 on the father’s *55 motion and that the mother had not complied with the order of June 12. The court then entered an order that the father “shall have the right of custody of [the child] for the balance of the summer months of 1975 until September 1, 1975 and until further order of this court.” Relying on this order, and with the assistance of officials of the State of Oregon where the mother and her husband had moved, the father obtained actual custody of the child and returned her to the State of Missouri. No additional hearing was held or order made prior to September 1,1975, and on November 19 the mother filed a motion that the father be adjudged in contempt for his refusal to relinquish custody to the mother, and in the alternative a motion to modify “the child custody provisions * * * as modified on July 9” to “reflect the geographical separation of the parties.” A hearing on this motion was set for December 1, and on that date the father filed a motion to modify in which he alleged the mother had moved away from Missouri and that it was “in the best interest of the child that she remain in the full custody” of the father. After hearing and on December 5 the court entered an order on January 21, 1976, which in its material parts was as follows:

“The custody of the minor child of the parties, * * * shall remain, on an interim basis, with the [Appellant] until the end of the child’s current school year, the Court specifically retaining jurisdiction of the Motions to Modify in order for the Court, upon a review of the matter during or at the end of the child’s school year, to enter an order as to the permanent custody and temporary custody arrangements with regard to said child and as to child support for said child. The Court is of the opinion that the conclusion of the child’s current school year will constitute a change in circumstances.”

The above order, by reason of the language used was not intended to dispose finally of the pending motions to modify filed by each party, and on August 13, 1976 a hearing was held on the pending motions. On August 18, the court entered its order modifying the decree to provide that the mother “be awarded primary custody” of the child with temporary custody at stated times in the father.

The father has appealed, and by his first point asserts the trial court erred in changing the custody of the child from him to the mother “as there was not a sufficient showing of change of circumstance to warrant a change of custody.”

In his argument under this point appellant asserts that the trial court “awarded the custody of the minor child to [him] on July 9, 1975 until further order of the court,” and “having awarded the custody of the child [to him], it is presumed that he is a fit and proper party to have custody,” and that it then “becomes incumbent upon the party seeking a change of custody to show a change in circumstances since the last order of court and that such a change of custody would be for the child’s welfare.”

Appellant relies on the principles stated in In re Wakefield, 365 Mo. 415, 283 S.W.2d 467, 471 (Mo. banc 1955) that an “order awarding the custody of a minor child, and contained in an unappealed decree of divorce, is a final order entitled to the force and effect of a final judgment, unless and until modified by the court making the decree,” and in M_ L_ v. M_R_, 407 S.W.2d 600 (Mo.App.1966), that “a custodial order once made becomes as conclusive as any other order * * * and may be disturbed only upon proof of changed conditions subsequent to the entry of the order coupled with a showing that modification of the order would promote the best interests of the child or children involved.” He then argues that “There is little change in circumstances of the parties since the order of the court on July 9, 1975.”

We are in agreement with the two cases cited by appellant, but in relying on them appellant has misconstrued the effect of the order entered on July 9, 1975. The decree making a permanent award of custody was the one entered on March 3, 1975. The order of July 9 was an interim order, and it provided only that the father should have *56 custody “for the balance of the summer months of 1975 until September 1,1975, and until further order of this court.” It is clear that the court appreciated that a change in the circumstances had occurred by reason of the mother moving out of the State, but this order did not, and obviously was not intended to constitute a final adjudication of the issue of custody. Subsequently on January 21, 1976 the court entered another order, expressly stated to be another interim order, awarding custody to the end of the school year. At the hearing on the motions to modify held on August 13, 1976, the court for the first time subsequent to March 3, 1975, purported to make a final determination as to which parent should have primary custody.

The issue on this appeal is not whether there was a change of conditions subsequent to the issuance of the interim order on July 9, 1975, but whether in view of the changed conditions resulting from the mother moving, first to California and then to Oregon, the award of primary custody to the mother with temporary custody to the father is in the best interest and welfare of the child. We note, however, that appellant does not specifically present that issue. Because this is a child custody case we will review the record to determine whether the determination of custody by the trial court complies with that standard. In doing so we must first consider the second and remaining point in appellant’s brief.

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Bluebook (online)
564 S.W.2d 53, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-cavitt-moctapp-1978.