Kelly v. Applewhite

231 S.W.2d 974, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2262
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 1950
Docket6046
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 231 S.W.2d 974 (Kelly v. Applewhite) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Applewhite, 231 S.W.2d 974, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2262 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This case involves the custody of two minor children whose parents had been divorced, each had married again and each was seeking full custody of the children through separate suits filed in different states. By reason of the nature of the case, a comprehensive statement of the background should be here made. The record reveals that J. K. Applewhite, Jr. and his former wife, whose maiden name was Doris L. Lawler, grew up in Tahoka, Lynn County, Texas, where they were later married on May 22, 1939. Two children were born to the marriage, namely, J. K. Apple-white, III, a boy nine years old and Sher-ron Lynn, a girl eight years old. After the separation of the parents a divorce was granted to the father of the children by the District Court of Lynn County, Texas, in cause number 1759 on May 19, 1947, but the custody of the children was awarded to their mother without any contest about the matter. Thereafter on August 31, 1947, the paternal grandparents, J. K. Applewhite, Sr. and wife, Beulah Applewhite, who likewise lived in Tahoka, Lynn County, Texas, filed a suit against the mother of the children in cause number 1777 of the Lynn County District Court seeking custody of the said children. J. K. Applewhite, Jr. intervened in the said suit. On November 5, 1947, an agreed judgment was entered in that suit denying any relief to J. K. Apple-white, Sr. and wife Beulah Applewhite, and awarding custody of the children to their father from September 1 of each year until June 1 of the following year and to their mother during the summer months of June, July and August of each year with proper provisions made for their support. The parties to this action and their respective counsel at that time approved that judgment as did the trial court. In the meantime J. K. Applewhite, Jr. married again and his second wife, known in the record *976 here as Geraldine Applewhite, had a six year old daughter by a former marriage. The two children whose custody is here being contested lived agreeably with their father, his second wife and her six year old daughter in Tahoka, Texas, during the time they were awarded to their father. The said children lived with their mother in tha State of California during the summer months of 1948 and 1949. On November 13, 1948, the said children’s mother married Thomas P. Kelly, Jr. and they established a home in Los Angeles, California. By agreement of the parents the children were delivered by their father to their mother on May 20, 1949, to reside with her during the summer. On July 27, 1949, while she had legal custody of the children under the order of the Lynn County, Texas, court, the mother of the said children, known in the record here as Doris L. Kelly, joined by her second husband, Thomas P. Kelly, filed suit against J. K. Applewhite, Jr. in the Superior Court of Los Angeles, California, seeking full custody of the children. J. K. Applewhite, Jr. received notice about the filing of the said suit in California and he personally took possession and custody of the children on August 19, 1949, while they were playing near their mother’s home and returned with them to Tahoka, Texas, where he has since held their custody. On August 27, 1949, J. K. Apple-white, Jr, filed this suit against Doris L. Kelly, joined therein by her husband, Thomas P. Kelly, in cause number 1869, Lynn County, Texas, District Court, alleging changed conditions since the last award was made and seeking full custody of the said children and seeking also a restraining order to prevent the removal of the children from the State of Texas. Doris L. Kelly and her husband, Thomas P. Kelly, hereafter referred to as appellants, filed an answer to the Texas suit in which they challenged the jurisdiction of the Texas court because of the lack of other parties and further because of the suit pending in California. Subject to their plea to the jurisdiction they joined issues with J. K. Ap-plewhite, Jr., hereafter referred to as ap-pellee. Appellants likewise filed a motion or a complaint in cause number 1777 against appellee charging him of being guilty of contempt of court because of his taking custody of the children before September 1, 1949, in violation of the trial court’s order in the said cause in which the last award of the children had been made.

Without objections of the parties the trial court on September 29, 1949, consolidated the contempt proceeding with the coustody hearing and heard them together without a jury. At the conclusion of the hearing the trial court took under advisement the issues raised. Judgment was rendered on December 12, 1949, awarding full custody of the children to appellee, their father, with visiting privileges given their mother, Doris L. Kelly, at reasonable times and she was likewise restrained by injunction from removing or attempting to remove the said children from the State of Texas. The trial court likewise found that appellee was not guilty of contempt by reason of any violation of the court’s former order. Appellants perfected their appeal to this court and predicate the same upon eight points of error.

Appellants charge error and challenge the jurisdiction of the trial court because of the failure of appellee to make his parents, J. K. Applewhite, Sr. and wife, Beulah Applewhite, parties to this suit. They contend that inasmuch as appellee’s parents were plaintiffs to the suit in cause number 1777 wherein the last award was made of the children in question on November S, 1947, they must be made parties to this action. We overrule appellants’ contentions since the agreed judgment entered on November 5, 1947, expressly denied and refused all relief there prayed for by ap-pellee’s parents in that action. J.- K. Ap-plewhite, Sr. and wife, Beulah Applewhite, had no interest in the former judgment and their interest could not be here affected. They are not therefore necessary parties to this action. Mrs. Beulah Applewhite was present and testified in this action and the record reveals that her husband was ill at home. If appellants wanted them made parties to this action, they could have im-pleaded them and made them such parties.

*977 Appellants attack the trial court’s judgment on the grounds that it was without jurisdiction to change custody of the children because a prior suit was filed and was still pending in a court of competent jurisdiction in the State of California between the same parties and seeking the same relief as that sought in the case at bar. While the record here shows that appellee had notice of the filing of the suit in California, there is no showing that appellee was ever served with process in the California suit. The record reveals that no orders of any nature had been entered by the court in California.

In the case of Evans v. Evans, Tex.Civ.App., 186 S.W.2d 277, 279, the court said: “Abatement is a matter of right and the general rule is that, ‘the pendency of a prior suit in one state cannot be pleaded in abatement or in bar to a subsequent suit in another state, even though both suits are between the same parties and upon the same cause of action.’ ”

The court likewise said in the case of Cohen v. Cohen, Tex.Civ.App., 194 S.W.2d 273, 276, that: “The general rule is that the mere pendency of such a suit in one state will not be grounds for abating a suit in another state between the same parties and involving the same subject matter.”

In the case of Wicks v.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W.2d 974, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-applewhite-texapp-1950.