In re the Custody of Forbell

198 Misc. 753, 103 N.Y.S.2d 242, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2464
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 Misc. 753 (In re the Custody of Forbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Custody of Forbell, 198 Misc. 753, 103 N.Y.S.2d 242, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2464 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

F. E. Johnson, J.

The resumption of the hearing that terminated in an order in the latter part of June, 1949, which was vacated on an appeal and wherein it was directed that the Special Term should proceed further herein, and take testimony on the subject of the custody of the child, etc. (Matter of Forbell v. Forbell, 276 App. Div. 785) has been had.

All testimony offered on behalf of the mother has been taken, despite what seemed the obvious irrelevancy and remoteness of some of it, but the testimony for the father has been frequently limited by rulings; it is probably conducive to a better understanding of the situation disclosed to have various topics and branches of the proof treated separately.

Events Since the June 24, 1949, Order:

1. While that order was on appeal the mother surrendered the child (August, 1949) to the father, who took her to his permanent residence in Florida, where he and she and his mother have since been residing.

2. A trial of the mother’s separation suit, brought in 1945 in Richmond County, was had in March, 1950, and final judgment entered June 7, 1950, on a filed decision dated May 12, 1950, which upholds the 1948 Florida decree dissolving the marriage, dismissed her action, and refused to entertain her application for custody under section 1170-a of the Civil Practice Act. (Portion of opinion here omitted as being factual and of subordinate importance.)

[755]*755 Jurisdiction of the Florida Court Over the Child at the Time of the 1948 Decree:

The husband sued there as a permanent resident, after the mother, without his permission, had taken the child with her to New York in May, 1947; thereafter, while the child was still in New York a decree giving him custody was entered; the mother now claims that the Florida court then had no power to make that custody award. If, regardless of the reasons why her mother took the child out of Florida, that absence prevented the Florida court from awarding her custody to the father even though the court had jurisdiction over both parents, under Williams v. North Carolina (317 U. S. 287; 325 U. S. 226), the need to continue this hearing would seem to disappear.

But the Appellate Division, knowing the foregoing facts, ordered the hearing to continue. (Matter of Forbell v. Forbell, supra, p. 786.) The entire situation, up to the time of the June 25th order in this proceeding, was fully set forth, not only in the original files (presented in lieu of a printed record), but in elaborate briefs, and that court directed that the factual question of custody should be tried. If, since its rendition', the Florida decree was invalid as to custody, then the order herein reversed should have been held invalid and a dismissal of this proceeding ordered on the ground that he had no custody decree that was entitled to full faith and credit, but had one void for lack of jurisdiction of the child. Thereupon the then outstanding pendente lite custody order in the separation suit should stand and the custody should have been confirmed in the mother.

It is apparent that the right answer to this problem rests upon the fact that the child’s residence and domicile at the time that her mother took her north, was that of the father as a matter of law. If the mother could then divest the child of that residence it would have to be on grounds that warranted her leaving the husband. However, it has been duly adjudicated, by now unquestionable decree which must, under the Williams ruling (supra) be accepted as conclusive that she did not have the right to leave her husband, but that she baselessly deserted him.

Under such circumstances the New York authorities agree that the child’s residence remained that of her father, since it is not the mere removal of the child by a mother that can change the child’s residence from that of the father. The authorities also agree that when an attempted change of the mother’s i’esi4ence takes place without legal excuset or without factual [756]*756justification from the standpoint of the child’s best interests, the effort to change the child’s residence fails. In the situation disclosed, by all the proof arid the files in the evidence, that seems to be true of this case, and the findings of the Master citing the Florida law to that effect are quoted in the father’s printed appeals briefs.

The sound conclusion, therefore, seems to be that the mother’s 1948 adjudicated unjustified taking of the child from the jurisdiction where the father permanently resided could have no effect in giving the child a valid residence or domicile in Mew York even though she was thereafter physically present here and, in the broad sense of the word, resided here.

After she was brought here, but at a time when the lack of legal or factual ground for taking her out of Florida had not yet been the subject of a binding decree, this court because she was physically present and no decree had yet been rendered in the then pending separation action took jurisdiction and awarded it to the resident mother. When thereafter, in that separation pending suit of the mother a decision has been arrived at on the subject of custody contrary to that temporary order previously so made, no one can question that the later decree would be controlling over any such order pendente lite. For the same reason (and for the additional reason of the Williams ruling, supra) no one is now able to question that the later, and undeniably valid foreign decree, is controlling when it also adjudicated the wrongfulness of the mother’s departure and, by its custody direction, the wrongfulness of her taking the Florida residing child from the Florida residing father.

The Burden of Proof, Upon the Mother, Who Seeks to Change a Custody Decree:

All of her March, 1950, charges of unfitness precede the 1948 Florida decree and no attack on him is made by evidence of any new situation since the decree, while the New York policy seems to be to limit the review of the foreign decree custody provision to facts arising thereafter. The Florida decree was entered in 1948, but nothing has been presented on this hearing of any factors that have arisen since that decree (as required by the Court of Appeals decisions) that would affect the propriety of the award to the father, or which would indicate that if the Florida court were now apprised of them, it might reasonably be expected to modify its 1948 custody provision.

The Court of Appeals in People ex rel. Herzog v. Morgan (287 N. Y. 317) unanimously reversed the holding (262 App, [757]*757Div. 763) that the foreign decree be modified because it gave the father the child’s company for too long a time; the Appellate Division decision was not because of changed conditions; the Special Term decision (based on Ansorge v. Armour, 267 N. Y. 492), had been that in order to modify the decree there must be shown ‘‘ change in conditions and circumstances since

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39 Misc. 2d 11 (New York Supreme Court, 1963)
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Bluebook (online)
198 Misc. 753, 103 N.Y.S.2d 242, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-custody-of-forbell-nysupct-1950.