Matheny v. Matheny

18 So. 2d 324, 205 La. 869, 1944 La. LEXIS 716
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 17, 1944
DocketNo. 37216.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 18 So. 2d 324 (Matheny v. Matheny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matheny v. Matheny, 18 So. 2d 324, 205 La. 869, 1944 La. LEXIS 716 (La. 1944).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

These are separate proceedings by a divorced wife and mother against her former husband and the father of her child in which she prayed that the judgment of divorce awarding the custody of their minor son to the father be amended so as to award her the custody; and that she be granted $50 per month alimony for the support of the child and $50 per month maintenance for herself. The cases were consolidated. There was judgment in favor of the defendant in so far as the custody of the child was concerned, but judgment for the plaintiff granting her $20 per month alimony. Each party appealed from the adverse judgment but the intervenors, the maternal and paternal grandparents who sought the custody of the child, did not appeal. The plaintiff has answered the appeal asking that the alimony be increased to $50 a month. The intervenors did not answer the appeal.

The couple was married on August 28, 1937, and there was born of the union, on January 26, 1939, a son, George Wayne. Domestic difficulties arose between the parties and on February 26, 1941 the child, with the consent of both parents, was placed in the custody of the paternal grandparents by an order of the Juvenile Court of Caddo Parish. On October 22, 1941, the wife sued her husband for a divorce and alleged that she was unable to provide for her two and a half year old son and waived her right to claim the custody of the child in favor of his father, in order to assure its proper future support and education, reserving her right to visit her son at will, and to obtain his temporary custody for reasonable periods of time. No claim for alimony was made. A divorce was granted in her favor on October 28, 1941, awarding the custody of the child to the *873 father, but granting the mother the right to see the child regularly and to have temporary custody of him for reasonable periods of time. The boy, from the time he was a mere infant eleven months old, periodically, was left with the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Matheny, residing on Lynwood Road near Shreveport, and has been in their care and custody since being placed there by the Juvenile Judge on February 26, 1941. The father, who was awarded the custody of the child in the divorce proceedings, left the child with his parents. The mother instituted a rule for the custody of the child on March 31, 1942, and both the paternal and maternal grandparents intervened, praying that the child be given to them, respectively. The district judge sustained an exception to the jurisdiction on the ground that the child was the ward of the Juvenile Court. The plaintiff thereupon instituted proceedings in the Juvenile Court and the judge there reaffirmed his former order continuing the custody of the paternal grandparents. On June 22, 1942, on a new trial, the Juvenile Judge revoked and set aside his previous order under the authority of State v. McMillan, 191 La. 317, 185 So. 269, but stated that his opinion was unchanged that the best interest of the boy required him to remain with the paternal grandparents.

The Juvenile Court having divested itself of jurisdiction, the plaintiff, on October 10, 1942, instituted the present proceedings. The father answered the petitions, denying that the mother was entitled t.o the custody of the child and alimony. The paternal and maternal grandparents again intervened.

On April 8, 1943, the matter was submitted with the stipulation that the situation had not changed since the trial in the Juvenile Court; that the good character of both parents is admitted; that the father has remarried and has been deferred from the draft because of essential employment; that the mother of the boy is in training to become a nurse and expects to graduate as a trained nurse within approximately six months.

The father of the child has a salary of $220 per month and his present wife is earning $100 a month. He is paying $20 a month for the expenses of maintaining the child with his parents, who have practically raised him since he was eleven months old, he being now four years and about two months of age. The home of the paternal grandparents is conceded to be wholesome and beneficial to the child’s welfare.

The mother while in training as a nurse does not receive any remuneration or salary. She earns her board, lodging, laundry, medicine and uniforms. She has to buy her own clothes, shoes, stockings, hats, coats, etc. It costs her $28 per month for the above items and incidentals without considering anything for recreation and cosmetics. She has no income from any source whatsoever and the only money she receives is the small amounts of cash which her mother gives her. At the time of the trial and for six months before then she was required to live at the nurses’ home and this would have made it necessary foi her to leave the child with her ailing mother and stepfather. The maternal *875 grandmother has remarried and she and her husband have offered to assist the plaintiff in providing a home for the child with them. They have an income of $225 per month and property valued at $5,000. It appears that the home of the maternal grandparents is a proper place in which to rear the boy.

The district judge, after a careful review of the record, concluded that present and not future conditions control his decision and that there had not been any material change in those conditions since the mother in both the Juvenile Court and the District Court agreed to surrender the custody of the child to the paternal grandparents. He pointed- out that the only practical effect of awarding the custody of the child to the mother then would have been to transfer it from the paternal grandparents’ home, the only one that it has ever known, to the maternal grandparents’ home, and that he did not consider it to the best interest of the boy that this be done.

Obviously, under the facts of the case, the mother is not in a position either to provide a home or personally to care for her son because she has no income and all of her time and attention is being devoted to her training as a nurse. While we are, as the district judge stated he was, impressed with the mother’s serious efforts to improve her condition (for which she is to be commended) the arduous training and hard work of a student nurse malee it impossible for her to give proper attention to, or to have supervision of the rearing of the child at this time. She would be compelled to turn the boy over to her mother and stepfather, as she must live at the nurses’ home. She, on two occasions, considered that it was to the best interest of the child to-place it with the paternal grandparents through its father and we can give no-sound reason to show that the trial judge erred in refusing to sever the ties of affection between these grandparents and their grandson, who are devoted to each other, when the mother is not in a position to give him a home and her attention or supervision at this time. She has been granted the right to see him at will and to have temporary possession of him for reasonable periods of time. There is no complaint that she has-been prevented from doing so. Clearly the trial judge did not abuse his discretion. State v. Trahan, 125 La. 312, 51 So. 216; Tate v. Tate, 169 La. 862, 126 So. 218; State ex rel., Johnson v. Ashmore, 197 La. 971, 2 So.2d 897; Pullen v. Pullen, 161 La. 721, 109 So. 400; Wheeler v. Wheeler,. 186 La. 362, 172 So. 420. See also American Jurisprudence, p. 519, Divorce and Separation.

Learned counsel refer us to State ex rel.

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Bluebook (online)
18 So. 2d 324, 205 La. 869, 1944 La. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matheny-v-matheny-la-1944.