Kershman v. Kershman

248 S.W.2d 809, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1952
Docket6200
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 248 S.W.2d 809 (Kershman v. Kershman) 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
Kershman v. Kershman, 248 S.W.2d 809, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2115 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This is a habeas corpus action instituted on June 13, 1951, by relator, Mrs. Geneva E. Kershman, of Beaver County, Oklahoma, seeking custody of her daughter, Linda Kershman, 2½ years of age, alleging that she and her husband, Chester R. Kershman, were separated and the child was being illegally restrained and held by her husband’s older brother, Martin L. Kershman, and his wife, Lorraine Kershman, of Ochil-tree County, Texas. Respondents answered with a general denial and further alleged that they had, by mutual agreement, been given the care, custody and control of the said child by relator and her husband, Chester Kershman, the child’s father, until such time as both parents should agree on some other disposition of the said child’s custody and that Chester Kershman wanted the child to remain with them.

Without a jury the trial court heard the issues on June 16, 1951, and by judgment awarded temporary custody, care and control of the said chlid to respondents with visitation privileges allowed the parents and further enjoined the removal of the child from the trial court’s jurisdiction with all costs adjudged against respondents. Relator has perfected her appeal to this court and predicates the same upon four points of error. The controlling issue to be here determined, however, is whether or not the trial court was justified, under the facts presented and the law governing such matters, in awarding the care, custody and control of the said child to a tenant farmer and his wife who have four children of their own ranging in age from 4 to 12 years rather than awarding it tO' its 23 year old mother who, through the help of her relatives, could and would establish *810 a fairly satisfactory home for herself and her children in Beaver, Oklahoma.

It appears from the record that relator grew up as the daughter of Elmer Williams and wife in Beaver County, Oklahoma, near the Texas-Oldahoma state line. Elmer Williams is a prosperous farmer cultivating 1,000 acres of land and owns S60 acres of it. Chester Kershman grew up in Ochil-tree County, Texas, some 20 or 30 miles from the Elmer Williams farm. He was one of 12 children reared by his mother, who was living with her fourth husband at the time of the trial. Chester served 2 years or more in the Army during which time he had been married and was divorced from his first wife. On February 10, 1947, after he was discharged from the Army and when he was only 21 years old he married relator who was then only 19 years old. Three children were born to the marriage prior to their separation early in March, 1951 and they were expecting the birth of another child late in September or early in October, 1951. Diana, the oldest child, is a girl and was 3 years of age at the time of the trial; Linda, a girl and the principal child involved in this controversy, was born January 10, 1949 ; while Eddie is a boy and was 11 months old at the time of the trial. Chester Kershman was a plasterer by trade or a transient laborer moving with his family from place to place, having worked temporarily in Liberal, Kansas, Longview, Texas, Tulsa and Beaver, Oklahoma, and numerous intermediate points between these places. He and his family lived much of the time either with his wife’s parents in Beaver County, Oklahoma, or with some of his own relatives who resided in Ochiltree County, Texas, just across the Texas-Oklahoma state line from Beaver County, Oklahoma. The evidence reveals that respondents, with whom Chester and his family lived some of the time, resided 20 miles from Elmer Williams, relator’s father. Chester was often away leaving his family either with his relatives or his wife’s parents and, according to his own testimony, he often failed to provide sufficient means for their support. He testified that his total income for 1950 was $2,675.44; yet, according to his testimony further, he gave his wife only a total of $570 covering a period of 18 months preceding the hearing in this action. Several, letters, written by relator to her husband and introduced in evidence by respondents, revealed that she and the children were left with her parents for some time in 1950, during which time she and the children needed more money to live on than they were getting. He sent some money to them in Beaver, Oklahoma, but it was insufficient to meet their needs. Relator likewise pleaded in her letters for her husband to come and get her and the children provide a home for them but he did not do so. On May 15, 1950, Chester Kershman was arrested in Tulsa, Oklahoma, upon a charge of child desertion, returned to Beaver, Oklahoma, where he was placed in jail and there detained until his father-in-law, Elmer Williams, paid the court costs, got the chargé dismissed and Chester was released after he admitted to a deputy sheriff and Elmer Williams that he had not treated his family right and he promised to stay with them thereafter and support them. However, he failed to live up to his promises and the county attorney and the sheriff of Beaver County, Oklahoma, again sought his whereabouts for child desertion in February, 1951, just prior to the separation.

Early in the year 1951 Chester came home from some place. Upon his arrival he found his son Eddie was ill. Relator had taken the child to Doctor Kingle of Perryton who diagnosed the trouble as “Spastic Diplegia”, treated the child and referred the case to a child specialist in Amarillo. But Chester had a job plastering in Bonham, Texas, near Dallas, and he and relator decided to take Eddie with them to Bonham where the child would receive medical treatment either in Bonham or in Dallas. Prior to making the trip to Bonham Chester and his wife, relator, by mutual agreement with respondents left Linda with respondents temporarily and left their oldest child, Diana, with another one of Chester’s brothers, M. L. Kershman, and his wife who lived at Booker in Lipscomb County, Texas, while they went to Bonham where they planned to have Eddie treated by a specialist either in Bonham or in *811 Dallas. The child did not receive medical attention during the few days they lived together in Bonham but Chester accompanied his wife and child to the bus station, bought them a ticket and she and the child returned home by bus leaving Chester in Bonham. Relator thereafter took Eddie to the Amarillo child specialist as a result of which his condition was much improved.

An accumulation of existing bad conditions, unpleasant circumstances, broken promises and neglect of his family by Chester Kershman, as reflected by the record, prompted relator to separate from her husband early in March of 1951, and file a divorce action in Beaver County, Oklahoma, there seeking a divorce from him and asking for custody and support of her children. Such a suit was there filed by relator and was still pending when this action was heard. When relator returned to the home of respondents to get Linda, they refused to let her have the child, which resulted in the filing of this action. When relator returned to the 'home of Chester’s other brother in Booker to get Diana, that brother 'and his wife likewise refused to let relator have Diana but said “they would hand her over” to relator i’f she succeeded in getting custody of Linda. It therefore appears that final judgment of this action may determine who shall have custody of both of relator’s little girls. However, relator testified hat she would seek custody of Diana through court action if need be.

Relator has challenged some of the trial court’s findings, charging that they are not supported 'by the evidence.

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Related

In re Herrera
402 S.W.2d 782 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1966)
Anderson v. Martin
257 S.W.2d 347 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Snodgrass v. Snodgrass
250 S.W.2d 624 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 809, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kershman-v-kershman-texapp-1952.