Jordet v. Wilkinson

80 N.W.2d 642, 248 Minn. 433, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 523
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 11, 1957
Docket36,936
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 80 N.W.2d 642 (Jordet v. Wilkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordet v. Wilkinson, 80 N.W.2d 642, 248 Minn. 433, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 523 (Mich. 1957).

Opinions

Nelson, Judge.

Appeal from a judgment decreeing Robert Lloyd Wilkinson, Jr., a minor, to be the adopted child of Merton C. Jordet, which judg[435]*435ment was granted upon the petition of said Merton C. Jordet and Elsie C. Jordet, his wife, the child’s natural mother.

Elsie C. Jordet and Eobert Lloyd Wilkinson, Sr., the child’s natural father, who was objector below and who brings this appeal, were married in Chicago, Illinois, on November 1, 1945. The child Eobert Lloyd Wilkinson, Jr., was born as the issue of this marriage on November 9, 1947. They moved to Eockford, Illinois, in 1948 where they acquired and furnished a home. In March or April 1949, Elsie abandoned her home and child and remained away for approximately two years. During her absence her husband cared for and raised the child until it had reached the age of 2% years, the abandonment having occurred when the child was nine months old. The father had the aid of Elsie’s sister and her mother in caring for the child. During this time Elsie frequently visited the child.

The Wilkinsons were divorced in 1950, the court awarding the custody of the child to the father. He thereafter remarried, but in 1952 he was divorced from his second wife and remarried Elsie. A short time after their second marriage they were again divorced, this time in an uncontested proceeding, Elsie being granted the divorce and custody of the child and Eobert, Sr., being granted certain rights of visitation. The second marriage of Eobert, Sr., to Elsie was of short duration; they only lived together for about a month. He left her on this occasion and after the divorce he remarried his second wife, who had a child by a prior marriage, which child he later adopted. Eobert, Sr., has therefore been married four times, twice to Elsie and twice to his present wife.

In May 1953 Elsie moved from Minneapolis, her residence at the time of the second divorce, to Sacred Heart, Minnesota, and rented living quarters for herself and Eobert, Jr., in the home of the parents of petitioner Merton C. Jordet, who at the time was resident therein. On July 25, 1953, Elsie and Merton were married to each other at Granite Falls, Minnesota.

Merton O. Jordet was 31 years of age, and Elsie, his wife, 28 years of age at the time of the adoption proceedings. They reside in the village of Sacred Heart, where Merton is self-employed with [436]*436Ms brother in a service station and bulk delivery establishment. Eobert, Jr., has resided with them since their marriage, and Elsie has joined in the petition consenting in writing to his adoption by her husband Merton C. Jordet.

Eobert, Sr., now resides in St. Paul, Minnesota. He is engaged in trucking, operating the St. Paul Transportation Company, from which he takes out for himself about $6,000 a year. He testified that at the beginning of 1954 his net worth was roughly $85,000.

The second decree of divorce, entered August 28, 1952, provided an award of $15 a week as support money for the child and has remained unchanged. Eobert, Sr., met all support payments until May 12, 1953, but since then he has only paid $325 toward Eobert, Jr.’s support. Elsie testified that she had to call him often concerning the payments. The testimony indicates that his failure to comply with the terms of the order for support payments is without lawful excuse and also that he has only meagerly availed himself of the visitation privileges granted to him. He says he stopped making payments regularly after Elsie left Minneapolis; that he made a couple of payments to her at Sacred Heart but gave as an excuse that he was not acquainted with the town, did not know where in Sacred Heart she lived, and did not know how small the town was; and that otherwise he would have come out sooner to visit Eobert, Jr. He gave as his reasons for his failure to exercise his visitation privileges that he did not have Elsie’s address; he thought that, if he mailed a letter to her in Sacred Heart, no one would know who she was. He testified that he finally located Elsie and Eobert, Jr., just before Christmas in 1953.

Elsie in answer to a question by objector’s attorney testified as follows:

“Q. Now, when you moved from Minneapolis to Sacred Heart in 1953, May 12th, what notice, if any, did you give to Mr. Wilkinson of your removal from Minneapolis?

“A. I called him and I told him that I was moving.

“Q. You called him and told him.

“A. Yes.

[437]*437“Q. Did you tell Mm where you were going to be?

“A. I told him where I was going to be.”

Then again objector’s attorney asked:

“Q. Did you give him an address that you would be at in Sacred Heart?

“A. There is no address outside of just my name and the town; that is the address.”

Objector assigns error as follows: (1) “That the Trial Court erred in rejecting testimony tending to show what would be to the best interests of the child sought to be adopted and in refusing to consider facts which took place in point of time prior to the date of the divorce decree awarding custody of the child to the mother and rights of visitation to the father”; (2) “That the Trial Court erred in ruling that it had not the power to look beyond the decision of the Court in the divorce action in hearing and considering facts concerning the upbringing of the child, the relationship between the child and its parents, and the welfare and best interests of the child.”

This presents the legal issue whether it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court to refuse to consider facts concerning relations between the natural parents and the child prior to the entry of the second divorce decree. The same issue involves the question whether evidence tending to prove that Elsie abandoned the child now sought to be adopted by her present husband and remained away, except for visitations, for nearly two years, during which time the natural father cared for the child with the aid of Elsie’s mother and sister, ought to have been admitted by the court in order to more fully test what would be for the best interest of the child. It must be kept in mind that these facts, which objector sought to have elicited, concerned matters occurring prior to the entry of the second divorce decree awarding the custody of the child Robert, Jr., to Elsie.

Objector argues that the trial court confused the difference between the custodial aspects of a divorce decree favoring the mother with custody of the child while giving rights of visitation to the [438]*438father and the effect of granting an adoption changing the status of the child concerning his father and terminating all right of visitation and association between him and his natural son. No attempt had been made to change or modify the custody provisions. Petitioners have had custody and control over Robert, Jr., since their marriage July 25, 1953, Elsie theretofore since August 28, 1952. However, objector argues that the court was not justified in restricting the evidence to a mere consideration of matters concerning the relationship of the proposed adoptive parent subsequent to August 28,1952, and rejecting the proffered testimony concerning the father’s custody and care of the child prior thereto. The rejected evidence, it is argued, would have shed additional light on the basic question of what in the instant case would be for the best interests of the child.

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Jordet v. Wilkinson
80 N.W.2d 642 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.W.2d 642, 248 Minn. 433, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordet-v-wilkinson-minn-1957.