Kovsky v. McNutt

254 S.W.2d 571, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1952
DocketNo. 6252
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 254 S.W.2d 571 (Kovsky v. McNutt) 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
Kovsky v. McNutt, 254 S.W.2d 571, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2289 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

LUMPKIN, Justice.

On May 3, 1947, a divorce was granted the appellant, Emma Lou (McNutt) Kov-sky, from the appellee, Charles H. McNutt, and custody of the couple’s minor children, Laurie Lane McNutt, aged 5 years, and Charles Wayne McNutt, aged 3 years, was awarded to their mother. Later, the mother married the other appellant, Louis Kovsky, and afterwards the appellee, who had come into possession of the children, filed a motion to change their legal custody to him. On December 4, 1951, the trial court, after a hearing without a jury, made the following finding:

* * * that the conditions affecting the welfare of Laurie Lane McNutt and Charles Wayne McNutt, minors, have materially changed since the time of the entry of the previous order of this Court, and that the best interests of said minors require that they remain with their father * * * who has had their care for the past twenty months.”

The court ordered the custody of the children changed from the mother to the father with certain rights of visitation given the mother. The appellants excepted to the order of the court and perfected their appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial Distinct, whence the appeal was transferred to this court by the Supreme Court of Texas in its order equalizing the dockets of the Courts of Civil Appeals. In response to appellants’ request, the trial court had filed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. The court found as follows:

“1. Laurie Lane McNutt, a girl ten years of age, and Charles Wayne Mc-Nutt, a boy eight years of age, are the minor children of movant and respondent. They live with their father, the movant, and their paternal grandmother at 1022 Strickland Street, Dallas, Texas, where they have lived for the past twenty months.
“2. The movant and respondent were divorced on May 3, 1947, at which' time the custody of the minor children! was given to the respondent. The respondent, through the children’s Bureau of Dallas, had them placed in different homes from time to time.
“3. Respondent married a Mr. Kov-sky in July of 1948. About a year later, she took the children from the Dean Home, where they had been placed by the Children’s Bureau. During the period of about nine months that respondent had the children with her, she entered them in school under the name of her present husband, Kov-sky.
“4. On a motion set before the-Court for hearing February 21, 1950, an order was entered by agreement of the parties that the legal custody be left in the respondent and that she have the school authorities register the children under their own name, McNutt, and that she carry said children to Sunday School and church on Sunday mornings. About three weeks after the date of said order, which was about March 15, 1950, respondent, who had! the legal custody of the minors, voluntarily delivered the children to their father, the movant, and at the time of such voluntary action on respondent’s part, she also gave him the children’s [573]*573report cards and entered into an agreement with him whereby she was to have visitation privileges with the children on the first and fourth Saturdays of each month, since which time the children have remained in the care and custody of movant in his home, receiving from him every care and attention necessary to their welfare. Movant and respondent carried out their mutual agreement as to respondent’s visitation privileges, and on one of their agreed days for respondent to visit with the children, which was in June, 1951, she refused to return them to movant, but instead, took them to the Roger Q. Mills School, where they Had been enrolled and completed the school year of 1950 and had almost completed the entire school year of 1951, with instructions to the school authorities that they not be released to movant. The movant went to the school and the children were released to him and the children were returned to his home, where they have remained since they were given to him by respondent about twenty months ago, which was the longest period of time they have been permitted to remain in one place since the divorce was granted.
“5. The home of the movant is a seven-room house in which he, the children and his mother and cousin reside, and is a home where the children have been and are being tenderly and lovingly cared for by the movant and their paternal grandmother, and where they are receiving physical, mental, spiritual, social and emotional guidance by being properly fed and clothed, kept in school, given music, carried to Sunday School and church, and the children are permitted to have their friends in the home. It is a well furnished house and a wholesome environment. The children have joined North Dallas Baptist Church, where they are active and happy. Movant and his mother also belong to the same church. The children are well-mannered and happy in movant’s home and in their church home.
“6. The respondent’s home is a home where the husband and wife are of different religious faith; there is beer and other intoxicants kept in the home and drunk sociably though not to excess in the presence of the children. When the children are in respondent’s home to visit over weekends, they are often carried on fishing trips and picnics and occasionally carried to Sunday School. Respondent’s home is a nice six-room house, nicely furnished.”

In its Conclusions of Law the court said:

“1. Respondent delivered the custody of the children to movant and voluntarily relinquished her right to their care and custody, thereby changing the conditions and circumstances.
“2. The delivery of the custody of the children to movant was a direct result of the voluntary act of the respondent, and by reason of this act, the children were placed in an environment shown to be in every respect a beneficial one, and to disrupt private domestic relations, which respondent has voluntarily brought about, would be against the best interest of the children.
“3. It is to the best interest of the minors and to their future welfare that their care, custody, control and possession should remain where they have been the past twenty months and where the proof shows the home in which they have been placed is not only an ideal one at the present time, but will likely remain so, and they are entitled to the benefits-of the home and environment which will best promote the interests of said minors.”

The appellants contend that the trial court erred, both in law and in fact, in finding that because the mother had voluntarily given the children to the father, she had abandoned her right to their custody.

A person seeking to change the custody of children has the burden of proving that, after the divorce, conditions have so changed as to render the other parent an improper custodian or that the welfare of the child demands a change of custody. 15 Tex.Jur. 681.

[574]*574The appellee pleaded that the mother had voluntarily relinquished the custody of the children to him. But his motion for a change in the children’s custody is based on considerably more than this — he pleaded that there has been a material change in conditions since the court originally awarded the children to their mother and that the welfare of the children demands that a change be made in their custody.

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254 S.W.2d 98 (Texas Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 S.W.2d 571, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kovsky-v-mcnutt-texapp-1952.