M v. M
This text of 313 S.W.2d 209 (M v. M) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
M---- (Plaintiff), Appellant,
v.
M---- (Defendant), Respondent.
St. Louis Court of Appeals, Missouri.
*210 J. O. Swink, Farmington, for appellant.
Robert A. McIlrath, Flat River, for respondent.
PER CURIAM.
This case involves the custody of Glenda Kathleen, age 10, and Michael Roy, age 6, the children of the parties; and the payment of the amount claimed to be due and unpaid on the judgment for support of the children.
When plaintiff was divorced from defendant on January 7, 1955, she was given custody of the children, and a judgment for $70 per month, payable semimonthly, for their support and maintenance. On February 7, 1957, defendant filed his motion to modify, based on a change in conditions, wherein he prayed that the custody of the children be transferred from plaintiff to defendant. On March 20, 1957, plaintiff caused a general execution to be issued out of the Office of the Circuit Clerk of St. Francois County, Missouri, commanding the Sheriff of that County to collect the sum of $1,715 from the defendant, being the amount purportedly due on the judgment. On April 6, 1957, plaintiff filed motion for suit money and attorney's fee to enable her to defend the motion to modify, and on April 18, 1957, defendant filed what he chose to term a motion to "correct execution," but which could more properly be denominated a motion to quash execution in part, and which we shall consider as such. As a basis for the relief sought in the latter motion, it was alleged that payments had been made to plaintiff for which defendant had not received credit, and that actual custody of the children, following the divorce, had *211 been in defendant and defendant's mother for long periods of time, and that payments due under the judgment had been made to defendant's mother.
At the outset of the trial, and by agreement of the parties, the court, in effect, ordered the three motions taken up and tried together. That procedure was pursued. Following conclusion of the hearing, the court modified the original decree by transferring custody of Glenda and Michael from plaintiff to defendant, subject to reasonable visitation rights by plaintiff, and by relieving defendant of the obligation to pay any amount to plaintiff for support of the children; allowed an attorney's fee of $125; found that since the rendition of the divorce decree, the actual custody of the childen had been in plaintiff for a period of only seven months, that during the remainder of the time custody was in the paternal grandparents; that pursuant to the agreement between plaintiff and defendant, the latter had paid his parents (children's grandparents) the amount necessary for their support, that for the seven months plaintiff had the children the sum of $490 accrued to her of which $452 had been paid leaving $38 due plaintiff on the judgment; and quashed the execution as to all but $38 sought to be collected thereby. From the judgment thus rendered plaintiff has brought the case to this court for review.
With respect to the court's action in modifying the custodial provision of the decree, since the basic point presented is that the evidence failed to establish a change of conditions and circumstances requiring a transfer of custody, we shall review the pertinent testimony bearing on this question.
Following the divorce, plaintiff and the children lived with plaintiff's mother in Farmington, Missouri, for a "short time," after which the children with their mother resided for about two weeks in another house in the same city. Then plaintiff, with Michael, moved to an apartment in Desloge, Missouri, but Glenda, the older child, was taken to the home of defendant's parents who resided in Esther, Missouri. A sister of defendant, who resides with her parents, enrolled Glenda in the Esther School. In the latter part of May or first part of June, 1955, Michael was also taken to the home of the paternal grandparents and plaintiff moved to St. Louis, Missouri. In July, plaintiff took both children and retained them in her custody until about September 14 when they were returned to the same grandparents. At approximately the same time Glenda and Michael were enrolled in the Esther School, and they continued to live with their grandparents until the school term ended in 1956, when plaintiff took the children to her mother's home and resided with them there until the latter part of August of the same year. At that time they were returned to the home of defendant's parents where they remained until the hearing on the motions which occurred in April, 1957; however, on nearly every week end from Christmas, 1956, plaintiff had the children with her.
Defendant remarried in February, 1956, and thereafter resided about a block from the home of his parents. On occasions both children and particularly Michael were in his home. The evidence reveals that defendant's present wife, Virginia, has a child by a former marriage who was six years of age in March, 1957, and defendant has a child, four months old at the time of the trial, by his present wife. By the uncontradicted testimony we learn that no unusual conflict, discord or friction exists between Glenda and Michael on the one hand and defendant's present wife and her daughter on the other; in fact, defendant's wife, Virginia, expressed a desire to have both of the children in her home permanently and as members of the family. She also assured the court that she was willing to assume and discharge her share of the responsibility of providing and furnishing proper guidance, religious training and those other intangibles essential to the development and growth of good character. As to the physical aspect *212 of defendant's home, no contention is made as to the adequacy thereof or that the addition of Glenda and Michael as members of the family would discommode anyone. The facts are that defendant resides in a modern, five-room house with full basement, and defendant expressed the intention of converting a large porch into two additional rooms so that adequate sleeping space would be provided for all.
Plaintiff, by her testimony, did not seriously challenge the accuracy of the testimony relating to the actual care and custody of the children, as above summarized. She sought to justify her failure to keep the children on her inability to work, occasioned, so she said, by a back injury.
The morals of the respective parents properly became the subject of inquiry, as an important factor in determination of the motion to modify, Hurley v. Hurley, Mo.App., 284 S.W.2d 72, 74. As to this phase of the case, it was conceded by plaintiff that subsequent to the divorce, and on July 15, 1955, she gave birth to a child in a hospital in the City of St. Louis, Missouri. While plaintiff stated under questions by her counsel that defendant was the child's father, she admitted under cross examination that defendant had executed a paper in connection with the adoption of the child by another party in which it was stated that defendant was not the father. And defendant's present wife testified, that plaintiff had informed her that defendant was not the father of the child.
The basic, general rules for consideration in after-divorce proceedings affecting the transfer of custody of children from one parent to the other are so clearly defined and established that it is hardly necessary to restate them.
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313 S.W.2d 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-v-m-moctapp-1958.