J. v. E.

417 S.W.2d 199, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 660
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 29, 1967
DocketNo. 8610
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 417 S.W.2d 199 (J. v. E.) 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
J. v. E., 417 S.W.2d 199, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 660 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

HOGAN, Judge.

This appeal is taken from an order modifying the custody provisions of a divorce decree. J., who was the plaintiff in the divorce action, is the mother of the children involved, and E., the original defendant, is their father. The parties are the parents of three children, a boy fourteen, another boy twelve, and a little girl eight. When the divorce was granted, the father defaulted in appearance, and the court awarded custody of the children to the mother. Subsequently, the custodial order was modified to give the father custody of the children from July 1 to August 15 each year, and during the Christmas vacation on alternate years.

In January 1966, the defendant instituted this action, seeking a further modification of the custodial order. The substance of the defendant’s motion was that a change in conditions had occurred, in that the defendant had remarried and had established a home in Colorado Springs, Colorado; that the plaintiff was neglecting the children in several respects, which were set out at some length; that the plaintiff had become “socially involved with married men,” and had associated with them in the children’s presence. The defendant asked that full custody of the children be awarded to him. The plaintiff filed a responsive pleading, admitting the defendant’s remarriage, alleging further that the defendant had attempted to create a feeling of disrespect for the plaintiff in the children’s minds by representing that the divorce was all the plaintiff’s fault; that defendant had never made his child support payments regularly, and that because of the pressure of inflation the amount originally allowed as child support was insufficient. The plaintiff’s pleading concluded with a prayer for an increased amount of alimony and support, and for absolute custody of the children.

The trial court heard the parties’ evidence and resolved the controversy by (1) placing G., the elder son, in his father’s custody, except for a two-week period during the summer and a period of one week during the Christmas vacation on alternate years; (2) leaving the younger two children with their mother, except for a six-week period [201]*201during the summer and for one week during the Christmas vacation on alternate years; and (3) increasing the amount of child support to $20.00 per week per child. The plaintiff has appealed from that part of the order placing G. in his father’s custody.

Preliminarily, we may consider and dispose of the reciprocal charges of misconduct made by the parents. G., the elder son, seems to have instigated the proceedings by correspondence or by direct communication with his father. When it became apparent that G. was the source of the information contained in his father’s motion for custody, the trial court interrogated the child in chambers, with counsel’s permission. G. was asked directly, for example, about the allegation that his mother had become “socially involved” with married men and had “gone out with them” in the presence of the children. G.’s answer was: “Now, I don’t know where they got the ‘presence of the children.’ I have not seen her, and I know [the younger two children] have not seen her. We have suspected it lots of times. [The younger son] has mentioned it once or twice. At night he will be laying in bed, after she goes out, he will say, T wonder if she is out with some— where she is at tonight; I wonder if she is with some married man. Don’t you think that would be horrible if she was?’ And he suspected and I suspected — I don’t know whether [the daughter] does or not. * * I remember — I am positive I remember her telling somebody — I am not sure who it was or when it was — that she had gone with somebody — I think it was [a local businessman], I am not positive — and she had gone to such remote places they couldn’t get in any way but by boat. And I know it is true; they had a cabin and she — one week end she had to break the car window to get the keys.” G. was then asked about the allegation in his father’s motion that his mother put the safety of her children in danger by driving recklessly, and he answered, in part: “ * * * And she will be following this car, oh, going about thirty or forty miles an hour, and instead of going thirty or forty miles an hour she will drop back about fifteen or twenty feet, and then she will gun it up, race it up to the back of the car and then slow down, drop back and race up. * * * I have noticed that, and whether she thinks I am right or not, there is no need for lying. I particularly watched that, I knew we were going to have the trial this week. * * * and I knew [the hearing] was coming up, and Monday afternoon she told me it was going to be this morning. * * * I particularly watched her driving. I knew she wouldn’t be dumb enough to go out with a man between then and now. * * * I may sound a little bit like my father. I want to live with my father, that’s all.” (Our emphasis.) The trial court pursued the matter somewhat further, and asked if G. had discussed the father’s pleading with his mother. G. answered: “Oh, I read it, and she kept saying ‘Don’t you know I love you?’ and all that. I know she loves me and I know she wantí to keep me. And I really — I kinda want to stay with her, but I want to go live with Dad a lot more than I want to stay. I don’t know why — I can hardly explain it. A lot of people have asked me this * * *. I always say my father. I can’t ever tell them why * * *. Because I love him more, I have been with him more, and I have confidence and trust in him. * * * ”

These quotations fairly typify the substance and tenor of the father’s proof that the mother was unfit to have custody of the children. Aside from G.’s testimony, and the innuendo of counsel’s questions when the plaintiff was cross-examined, there is nothing of substance in the record to indicate that the plaintiff is in any sense an unfit parent. The plaintiff’s associates in business testified that she was a diligent and attentive worker. The plaintiff’s former “next-door neighbor” testified that the children were clean, healthy and well cared for during the two years she observed them. The children’s teachers stated that they were intelligent students making norma! progress in school. The mother categorical[202]*202ly denied that she had ever “dated” or had a married man in her house.

The plaintiff mother’s complaint about her former husband was that he had attempted to alienate the children’s affection and inspire disrespect for her, and that he had failed to contribute to the children’s support as he should. The substance of her testimony was that she had had a very difficult time, financially, because the father had only been “caught up” three times in his child support payments. She had been obliged to live solely on her earnings, and had been forced to obtain short-term loans to make ends meet. She produced a witness, formerly associated in business with the father, who stated she had heard the defendant tell the mother, “I will see you in hell before I give you any money,” and that the father had repeatedly said if he refused to provide her with money “he would see J. come crawling back * * * because she would have to.” The father admitted that he had fallen behind in his support payments, “at one time * * * between four and five hundred dollars,” but said that he had refused to pay because he had been denied permission to visit his children. E.

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Related

Kuhn v. Kuhn
581 S.W.2d 112 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)
J. v. E.
417 S.W.2d 199 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
417 S.W.2d 199, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-v-e-moctapp-1967.