Kemp v. Kemp

399 A.2d 923, 42 Md. App. 90, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 283
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 11, 1979
Docket333, September Term, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 399 A.2d 923 (Kemp v. Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kemp v. Kemp, 399 A.2d 923, 42 Md. App. 90, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 283 (Md. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Moylan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We are called upon here to decide whether there was sufficient evidence of extraordinary circumstances to warrant a suspension of the appellant’s right of visitation with his now 11-year-old son.

The appellant, Nicholas Bosley Merryman Kemp (father), and the appellee, Nancy C. Kemp (mother), were married on December 8,1961. Two children were born as a result of that marriage — a daughter, Frances Jeffries (Jeff), born December 17,1962, and a son, Nicholas Bosley Merryman, Jr. (Buzz), born July 20, 1967, the subject of this appeal. Marital problems caused the parties to separate in October, 1972. They were subsequently divorced on May 17, 1974. The divorce decree provided, inter alia, that the mother would have custody of the children and that the father would have reasonable rights of visitation. The decree set out a specific schedule for the father’s visitation with his children. The decree further provided that the father was to contribute $50 per week to the support of each child and such other sums as set forth in the property settlement agreement incorporated into the decree. In the agreement, the father, among other things, agreed to pay the reasonable medical and dental expenses of the children and to maintain adequate *92 medical insurance coverage for them. The agreement provided that he would be consulted on all major medical, surgical and/or dental needs of the children, except where emergency would not so permit.

Apparently, ever since the parties separated, they have argued over the appellant’s visitation with Buzz. 1 The arguments reached a head in the summer of 1975 when each party petitioned the court to hold the other in contempt for violations of the divorce decree, and the mother sought to modify the visitation schedule. Before disposition of the various petitions by the court, however, the parties resolved their differences. Even though the child’s psychiatrist recommended a suspension of visitation, the parties agreed that the father would see his son for two days every other weekend instead of one day every weekend, as set forth in the divorce decree.

The resolution was short-lived. On April 22, 1977, the mother again filed a petition to modify the father’s visitation rights. She alleged that the appellant and his present wife were having domestic problems and that the continued visitation of Buzz with his father under these circumstances and in this environment was not in the child’s best interests. Her allegation was based on conversations between her attorney and the appellant’s present wife. On May 2, 1977, the court ordered an investigation of the matter by the Probation Department of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County.

Meanwhile, since April 10,1977, the mother had not allowed the father to visit with his son. On June 27, the father, therefore, filed a petition to hold the mother in contempt of court for failure to comply with the visitation provisions of the divorce decree. He also discontinued sending her support payments for Buzz. As a result, on July 6, the mother filed a cross-petition to hold the father in contempt for failure to pay child support. In her petition, she also stated that Buzz has been under the medical care of a psychiatrist since *93 December 30,1972, and that his father has refused to pay the cost of this psychiatric treatment.

After a full hearing on the petition of April 22, 1977, to modify the father’s visitation rights and on the cross-petitions of June 27 and July 6, 1977, to hold each of the parties in contempt, the chancellor issued a memorandum and order finding that the continued visitation of Buzz with his father would not be in the child’s best interests. The chancellor also suspended the support payments for Buzz as of the date of the last payment. He found that the conduct of the father was not the sole cause of the estrangement between the father and son and suspended the father’s contributions to the support of his son so long as the child refuses to visit with his father. The chancellor dismissed the cross-petitions of June 27 and July 6 to hold each of the parties in contempt but ordered the father to pay the psychiatrist’s fee.

The father has filed an appeal from that judgment and the mother has filed a cross-appeal. The father contends that the evidence did not justify a suspension of his right of visitation with his son and that the chancellor erred in ordering him to pay the cost of his son’s psychiatric treatment. He further contends that the chancellor erred in failing to hold the appellee in contempt of court for refusing to allow him visitation with his son in accordance with the provisions of the divorce decree. The mother contends that the chancellor erred in suspending support payments for Buzz and in failing to find the father in contempt of court for his arrearages in child support.

The appellant is a general contractor, specializing in excavating. He has operated his own business, on first a part-time and later a full-time basis, since 1949. One month after divorcing the appellee, he married his present wife, Eleanor (Ellie), who is considerably younger than he. The appellant and Ellie have one child, a son, born September 22, 1976, and Ellie has a daughter by a previous marriage, whom the appellant has adopted. The appellant and his current wife reside on the same farm in northern Baltimore County where the appellant and appellee resided when they were married.

*94 The incident which precipitated the appellee’s refusal to permit Buzz to visit with his father occurred in April, 1977. The appellee’s attorney received a telephone call from the appellant’s current wife telling him that she and the appellant were having domestic problems and that she thought it would be advisable that Buzz not visit with them while they were having these problems. She told the attorney that the quarrels had come very close to physical strikings between them and that they were affecting her own two young children. The appellee’s attorney wrote to the appellant advising him that Buzz was aware of the problems at the Kemp home and that they had affected him considerably. He advised the appellant that, under the circumstances, the appellee would not permit further visitation.

The appellant explained to the appellee’s attorney that he and Ellie merely had an argument over money on April 12. At the hearing, the appellant denied that he and his wife are having serious domestic problems or that they had any violent arguments in Buzz’s presence. He testified that on many weekends he consented not to see his son because Buzz would have other activities planned. When the visitation schedule was changed to alternate weekends in November of 1976, Buzz would still have things planned on the weekends he was to visit with him. Sometimes when the appellant went to pick up his son, nobody would be at home. The appellant testified that it would take' his son some time to “unwind” when visiting with him but that once he “loosened up,” he seemed to enjoy himself. He testified that Buzz gets along well with Ellie and their daughter.

The appellee gave a completely different version of the child’s visits with his father.

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Bluebook (online)
399 A.2d 923, 42 Md. App. 90, 1979 Md. App. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemp-v-kemp-mdctspecapp-1979.