Margolin v. Margolin

796 S.W.2d 38, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1204, 1990 WL 114288
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 7, 1990
DocketWD 41787, 42325
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 796 S.W.2d 38 (Margolin v. Margolin) 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.

Bluebook
Margolin v. Margolin, 796 S.W.2d 38, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1204, 1990 WL 114288 (Mo. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

SHANGLER, Judge.

The marriage of James Margolin and Carol Margolin was dissolved on November 17, 1983. The decree of dissolution was in accordance with the terms of the separation agreement of the parties. It granted sole custody of the two boys, Daniel [born July 24, 1974] and Andrew [born August 6, 1976] to the mother, and provided for visitation with the father. The decree ordered the husband to pay the wife $2300 per month as maintenance until December 1, 1991, and $1000 per month [$500 per child] as support money.

On January 27, 1987, the husband moved to modify the decree to award joint legal and physical custody of the children to the husband and wife, or alternatively, for increased visitation rights with the children. Other components of the pleading sought an order to compel psychiatric counseling, therapy and evaluation for the children, and for the parents as well. The wife made response, and a year later, moved separately to modify the decree of dissolution to increase the award of child support, and for an order that the husband pay the tuition costs of the children at Pembroke Hill School. The motion of each, husband and wife, sought an award for an attorney fee against the other.

*40 Hearing on the motions commenced on December 1, 1988, and progressed discontinuously until July 3, 1989, when the court denied the motion of the father for joint custody of the two sons. That interval was punctuated by suspensions of the proceedings to enable the court to respond to certain trial exigencies. In the course of her testimony on the second day of the hearing, the mother testified that the father had abused the children. The court promptly adjourned the proceedings and appointed a guardian ad litem for the boys Andrew and Daniel with directions to investigate the allegations and to render a report. The court ordered also that pending the report the parents have joint legal custody of both children and that the father have unrestricted rights of visitation with the boys during the daylight hours.

The guardian ad litem, Sonja M. Matson, Esq., presented her report on December 28, 1988. The text and tenor of that commentary evidence a competent and responsible discharge of professional duty.

The guardian ad litem reported, first, that the allegations of physical abuse of the boys by the father were stale and without sequel — and so should not bear on any arrangement for visitation by the father. There were more serious concerns. Andrew, then twelve years of age, professed to hate the father, considered him a liar and manipulator, and told the guardian ad litem that he would run away rather than be compelled to visit him. The difficulty that beset them was simply that Andrew and the father were unable to communicate effectively with each other. The guardian ad litem doubted the appropriateness of visitation between Andrew and the father at all at that time. It would subserve the best interest of the child, the report commented, for Andrew to counsel with a psychologist and to have the benefit of the evaluation of that expert before the court imposed on that child a regimen of visitation with the father. Margolin acknowledged to the guardian ad litem that he and Andrew would benefit from such therapy, but insisted nevertheless that Andrew be made to submit to visitation.

It was the interim order of unrestricted right of the father to have visitation with the sons, recently decreed by the court [the report continued], that had placed “[t]he entire family ... in constant uproar.” The father insisted on the right of visitation, whether the boys agreed or not. Daniel [then 14 years of age] was usually amenable, but Andrew refused, and the father blamed the mother for not compelling the visits.

In summary, the guardian ad litem recommended in the best interest of the children that the court delineate a very precise schedule of visitation and that Andrew be exempted from the visitation schedule until the treating psychologist deemed it appropriate for visitation to resume.

The court accordingly entered a modified interim order that allowed the father visitation with both children for several hours on New Year’s Day of 1989, and for any other occasions agreeable between father and children until January 6, 1989, when the hearing of evidence was to resume.

On that day the mother took up the testimony interrupted by the • appointment of the guardian ad litem. The judge interviewed the children in chambers and then informed the parents he was not yet ready to issue “intrusive orders,” but would allow them another opportunity to govern their own affairs. He invited each of them to prepare a writing as to how they might “get together and in a civil and rational manner, decide how [to] discuss the affairs of [the] children.” The court formulated this hortation into an order, continued the hearing to January 23, 1989, and directed the parents then to present their written plan for “meaningful communication” between themselves and the boys.

On January 23, 1989, the proceedings resumed, and the litigants presented their “papers.” The transcript shows only that the writings were marked as exhibits and made “part of the record.” They do not appear in the record, however, and they are before us only as surmise. The guardian ad litem had no new report, and the session adjourned with a meeting between the judge and principals, off the record.

*41 On February 10,1989, on the basis of the evidence already presented, the court entered an order of modification of decree to increase the allowance of support for each child from $500 to $800 per month, retroactively to February 1, 1988. The increase represented the contribution by the father to the cost of tuition for the boys at Pembroke Hill School — a private academy — an expense until recently met by the paternal grandparents of the children. The court also ordered a $10,000 attorney fee in favor of the wife. These awards were granted on the separate motion for modification by the wife.

The decree also ordered that the mother remain the primary custodian as before, but modified the custody as to the son Daniel by a detailed schedule of visitation with the father that encompassed some one hundred days of significance annually. That order expressed that the schedule of visitation defined for Daniel “will not apply [to Andrew] unless and until Andrew has completed counseling with a qualified health-care professional and such professional finds that Andrew is able to perform the visitation.” The order directed accordingly that Andrew receive counseling and that a report concerning the status of that treatment be presented to the court ninety days thereafter. That aspect of the decree concluded:

At that time, the court will re-evaluate the situation between Andrew and his father. Until such time, Andrew is to have no overnight visitation with his father, but will have visitation with his father from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. on Wednesday nights. The specific visitations herein ordered may be modified by agreement of the parties and the child.

The proceedings convened on July 3, 1989, specifically to receive any further proof on the motion by the father for joint custody of the boys.

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Bluebook (online)
796 S.W.2d 38, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 1204, 1990 WL 114288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margolin-v-margolin-moctapp-1990.