In re the Custody of Hutchins

8 V.I. 181, 1971 WL 262509, 1971 V.I. LEXIS 13
CourtMunicipal Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedMarch 18, 1971
DocketCivil J.D.R. No. 49-1969
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 V.I. 181 (In re the Custody of Hutchins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Municipal Court of The Virgin Islands 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 Hutchins, 8 V.I. 181, 1971 WL 262509, 1971 V.I. LEXIS 13 (vimunict 1971).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, Judge

OPINION

The above entitled matter came on for a full hearing on March 8 and 9, 1971 in compliance with the Order of the District Court of August 17, 1970 requiring a “full and plenary hearing.” In open Court, testimony was heard from Mr. Victor Hutchins, Mrs. Sandra Hutchins, Dr. Donald Beacock, Mrs. Mary C. Hutchins, and Mrs. Anne Bartlett. The Court also conducted an interview with the minor children, Victor William Hutchins and Mary Alexandra Hutchins in the presence and with the consent of both attorneys, Mr. Alexander Farrelly (who represented the petitioner, Victor Hutchins) and Mr. Warren Young (who represented the respondent, Mrs. Mary C. Hutchins). In addition, the deposition of Dr. Malcolm Marshall was received in evidence without objection.

After carefully considering all of the evidence before it, the Court makes the following factual findings and disposition as set forth in the text that follows:

The parties, Victor H. Hutchins and Mary C. Hutchins, were divorced in September 1963, after having been married thirteen years. At the time of the divorce, they had two minor children, Mary Alexandra who was then about eight [183]*183months old, and Victor William, who was then about two and a half years old.

The final divorce decree of September 30, 1963, awarded to the respondent, Mary C. Hutchins, the custody of the two minor children subject to the petitioner’s right of reasonable visitation. Subsequent to the divorce and until the time he moved to St. Thomas, the petitioner, Victor Hutch-ins, lived in Florida approximately fifty miles from the respondent’s home, and he frequently visited the children on weekends and took them on outings. During this period the children spent most of their time with the respondent in her four bedroom home in Orlando, Florida, where they were adequately fed, clothed and cared for. Either in December of 1964 or in the early part of 1965, the petitioner moved permanently to St. Thomas, V.I. Shortly thereafter, petitioner’s mother, Goldie, brought both children to St. Thomas for a visit which lasted approximately four months. During the next year, 1966, both children again visited the petitioner in St. Thomas; this time for approximately two months.

Over the Christmas vacation of 1966 (either late in December 1966, or in January 1967) Sandra Alexandra, who was not yet four years old, came to St. Thomas to visit once again with the petitioner. She has remained in St. Thomas with the petitioner continuously from that time until the present except for a brief period over Christmas of 1968 when she went to visit the respondent in Florida for approximately two weeks. Sandra Alexandra is presently eight years old.

At the time Sandra Alexandra came to St. Thomas over the Christmas vacation of 1966, Victor William was already showing signs of emotional disturbance and was having difficulty getting along with his peers at the Achenbach School in Florida. It was for this reason that the respondent at that time decided to keep him in Florida [184]*184rather than to send him to St. Thomas with his sister to visit the petitioner. Victor William’s emotional status, however, did not improve; and somewhere between March and May of 1967, respondent was informed by the Achenbach School that Victor could not be handled there and that he would not be allowed to continue at that school after the close of the school year. Rather than seeking psychiatric or psychological help for her son, respondent enrolled him at College Park Kindergarten in the fall of 1967 at the advice of her cousin, Anne Bartlett, who apparently had sent at least one of her own children there previously. This kindergarten was just an ordinary kindergarten (it was not affiliated with any college, contrary to what the name might otherwise indicate) and was not able to offer Victor William any professional help. While respondent testified that Victor William showed marked improvement and that his conduct was perfectly normal after only three weeks of attendance at that school, the Court finds that this simply was not the case.

Victor William remained with his mother in Florida until May 1, 1968 when the first of a series of Florida decrees granted petitioner’s petition to modify custody and gave him legal custody of the two minor children, Mary Alexandra and Victor William.

When Victor William first came to St. Thomas in May of 1968, pursuant to this Florida decree, he was seven years and approximately two months old and he was badly in need of professional help in order to help him cope with his emotional problems, which were described in these words by Dr. Marshall: “He (Victor) had a very low tolerance for stress and for frustration. Even in situations that normally aren’t particularly stressful for children, he still showed a lot of signs of tension.”1 By this time, also, [185]*185the petitioner had remarried (this marriage took place in September of 1967) so that when Victor William came to live in St. Thomas he had both his father and stepmother to take care of him. Since coming to St. Thomas in May, 1968, Victor William has lived here continuously except for a brief period over Christmas of 1968 when he and his sister went to visit the respondent in Florida for approximately two weeks. Victor William is now ten years old.

Shortly after his arrival in St. Thomas, Victor William was taken to the Bureau of Mental Health. Continuous care was administered to him there from this time until June, 1970 by the following doctors: Dr. Robert Dalton, Dr. Malcolm Marshall, and Dr. Donald Beacock.

On March 14, 1969, the District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District, reversed the May 1, 1968 order of Judge Hall which had awarded to the petitioner custody of both minor children and remanded the case to the Circuit Court of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, Lake County, Florida for further proceedings.

Subsequently, the Circuit Court of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, Lake County, Florida upon the agreement of the petitioner, ordered him to produce the children in Florida on July 5, 1969 so that they could visit with their mother, the respondent herein, and also so that a Dr. E. Michael Gutman, psychiatrist, could examine both children between July 5,1969 and July 11,1969, apparently in order to assist that court in determining what the best interests of the children then required.

The petitioner, despite his agreement to deliver the children in Florida, never did this. Instead, he commenced proceedings in the Municipal Court of St. Thomas on July 7, 1969 for custody of the children basing his claim at least in part on Judge Hall’s decree of May 2, 1968, even though he was aware at this time that that decree had been subsequently overruled. By omitting this fact from his petition [186]*186as well as from the statements he made to this Court at the ex parte hearing of July 7, 1969, the petitioner misrepresented the true state of affairs existing at that time. Because of his failure to return the children to Florida on this occasion and for his subsequent failures to deliver the children to Florida as well as for his failure to continue making payments of alimony and support to his wife, the petitioner has been adjudged in contempt of court on a number of occasions in Florida.

At this point it is no longer feasible to defer the resolution of this matter to the Florida courts.2

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Bluebook (online)
8 V.I. 181, 1971 WL 262509, 1971 V.I. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-custody-of-hutchins-vimunict-1971.