Lokey v. Griffin

322 S.W.2d 239, 45 Tenn. App. 236, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 29, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 322 S.W.2d 239 (Lokey v. Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lokey v. Griffin, 322 S.W.2d 239, 45 Tenn. App. 236, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

*240 CARNEY, J.

This case involves the custody of two minor children of the appellant, Mrs. Louise G-riffin Lok-ey, and her former husband, the appellee, Clarence L. Griffin. . The two children are Elizabeth Jeanne Griffin aged 7 and Stephen Leroy Griffin aged 5.

Mrs. Lokey appeals from a decree of the Circuit Court of Shelby County of date February 28, 1958. Under the terms of this decree the children were adjudged to be dependent children within the meaning and purview of Section 37-242 of the Tennessee Code Annotated and they were placed with their father, Clarence L. Griffin, for parental care and control. In addition, the cause was remanded to the Juvenile Court of Memphis, Tennessee, for the enforcement of said judgment as required by T. C. A. Section 37-273.

This cause has been before this court before and a resume of the litigation prior to the decree of the Circuit Court of date February 28,1958 is as follows:

On January 28, 1957, the Municipal Juvenile Court of the City of Memphis entered an order reciting that neither the father, Clarence L. Griffin, nor the mother, Louise Griffin Lokey, had given proper care and guardianship to said children and that they had not acted to the best interest and welfare of said children. This order declared the two children, Elizabeth Jeanne Griffin and Stephen Leroy Griffin, to be dependent children within the meaning of T. C. A. Section 37-242, sub-section 4, and made them wards of the Juvenile Court. This order then provided for a divided custody of said children between the father and mother as follows:

"Be it further decreed that said children be released to live with their father, Clarence Griffin, and *241 Ms present wife, Opal, wherever he may be stationed within the United States until May 15, 1957, or until further orders of this Court; provided that father’s home will be and continues to be approved by a licensed agency in Colorado.
“Be it further decreed that on May 15, 1957, said children will be returned to the jurisdiction of this court at the expense of the father and will be released to the mother, Louise G-riffin (Lokey) from May 15, 1957 until August 30, 1957 or until further orders of this court; provided the personal conduct and the environment of the mother’s home is approved by this Court.
“Be it further decreed that the father, Clarence Griffin, will execute the necessary papers with the government of the United States that the allotment for said child be paid to the Juvenile Court of Memphis to be disbursed by the bonded clerk of this Court to whomever has the care of said children; and that the mother, Louise Griffin (Lokey) will endorse and pay to the Juvenile Court of Memphis any check received by her as the allotment for said children after the January 1957 check.
“Be it further decreed that the jurisdiction of said children is and will remain with the Juvenile Court of Memphis for further orders, the interest and welfare of said children demanding it.
Elizabeth McCain,
Elizabeth McCain, Judge”

*242 Mrs. Lokey, the mother of the children, appealed from the judgment of the Juvenile Court to the Circuit Court of Shelby County and a trial was had de novo as provided by T. C. A. Section 37-273 upon oral testimony before the judge without a jury.

On May 9, 1957, the Circuit Court of Shelby County entered a decree also finding that the children were dependent children within the meaning of Chapter 177, Public Acts of 1955 (T. C. A. Section 37-242).

The concluding portion of said decree of May 9, 1957, was as follows:

“It Is Therefore Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that the Order of the Honorable Elizabeth McCain, Judge of the Juvenile Court of the City of Memphis, Tennessee, entered January 28, 1957, declaring Elizabeth Jeanne Griffin and Stephen Leroy Griffin dependent children and making them wards of that Court be and the same is hereby affirmed and the cause remanded to that Court for further orders, the interest and welfare of the children requiring, * * # J J

The mother, Mrs. Lokey, perfected her appeal to this court from this decree of date May 9, 1957, and made four assignments of error:

Assignment of error No. 1 assailed the action of the Trial Court in approving the decree of the Juvenile Court in awarding major custody of the children to the father who was out of the state and beyond the jurisdiction of either the Juvenile Court or Circuit Court of Shelby County, Tennessee.

*243 Assignment of error No. 2 insisted that the Juvenile Court was without jurisdiction to determine the custody of the two children as between the mother and father.

Assignment of error No. 3 was as follows:

“That Court erred in sanctioning the action of the Juvenile Court in finding and holding that the home of the mother was an unfit and undesirable place for said children, or that there was in reality, an immoral environment, such as made said children dependent and neglected as defined by Section 37-242, sub-section 4, T. C. A., or any other statute or laws of this state.”

Assignment of error No. 4 insisted that the Circuit Court was in error in decreeing that the father, Clarence Griffin was a fit, suitable or desirable custodian of said children.

This court in an opinion filed of record on December 11, 1957, considered each and every one of these assignments of error and overruled them.

After overruling the four assignments of error this statement appears in our opinion:

“However, it appears to us that the cause must be reversed and remanded to the Circuit Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, for further proceedings # # # J 5

Upon the reading of T. C. A. Section 37-273 this court was of the opinion that upon an appeal from the action of the Juvenile Court the Circuit Court was required to make an independent adjudication of the custody or disposition of said children and that it appeared to this *244 court that Hi's Honor the Trial Judge had failed to do so hut had simply remanded the cause to the Juvenile Court for further orders in regard to the care and custody of said minor children.

The concluding portion of our opinion of December 11, 1957, was as follows:

‘'In our opinion this was error and His Honor the Trial Judge was required by the statute under a trial de novo to make an adjudication for such disposition of said minor children as appeared to him necessary and proper from all the facts and circumstances then obtaining. We construe the statute to mean that this adjudication must be made by .the Circuit Judge upon an appeal and that he cannot delegate this authority to the judge of the Juvenile Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
322 S.W.2d 239, 45 Tenn. App. 236, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lokey-v-griffin-tennctapp-1958.