McCallister v. McCallister

455 S.W.2d 31, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 612
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1970
Docket33501
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 455 S.W.2d 31 (McCallister v. McCallister) 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
McCallister v. McCallister, 455 S.W.2d 31, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 612 (Mo. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

BRADY, Judge.

The divorce decree in question in this appeal awarded defendant a divorce upon his cross bill and granted him custody of the two children. The decree provided for plaintiff to have reasonable rights of visitation and the right of temporary custody every other weekend beginning at 10:00 A.M. Saturday and ending at 7:00 P.M. Sunday, together with three weeks during summer vacation. Plaintiff’s appeal is limited to the custodial grant.

The facts bearing upon the issue of custody are somewhat hidden in this transcript; the divorce was the issue really tried. However, we can discern that these children came to the parties by adoption when they were infants. At date of trial in October, 1968 Kevin was approximately’ four years of age while Sharon was some twenty months. There is no real issue as to plaintiff’s housekeeping or her general care of the children. While defendant testified she did neither to his satisfaction, it appears his opinion is subject to question as being without proper facts to support it. For example, that the house was thoroughly cleaned only about once a week; that the dishes were not kept washed through the day; that on one occasion he found Kevin playing outdoors on a cold day with his nose running and he put a sweater on the boy; that the children were not bathed when he came home from work; that “Half of the time they’re kind of sickly and colds all the time when I pick them up”; and that during the summer months he sometimes had to go find “him” (obviously Kevin) to bring “him” home. On the other hand, he admitted he never complained to her about her housekeeping, and his witnesses stated the house was clean and the children well cared for so far as their physical requirements were concerned, and their relationship with plaintiff was good. As one of defendant’s own witnesses put it, “She certainly kept them as clean as mine ever was, if not at times perhaps more so.” Plaintiff’s witness described plaintiff as an able and concerned mother.

There was evidence concerning plaintiff’s control of and supervision over Kevin. Defendant’s witnesses testified the parties lived within four houses of a very busy street which they considered dangerous for children and to which' plaintiff had testified the children were not to go. One witness testified she saw Kevin on this street five or six times while the other had seen him on two or three occasions. There was also testimony Kevin is often out at about 7:00 in the morning in his pajamas either in his yard or on the street they lived on “wandering around”, frequently with a bottle of soda pop. One witness testified she considered Kevin a neglected child on the basis that “* * * since he was two years old he’s just been let run all day long.” He also comes over in her yard and bothers her when she’s gardening. Another of defendant’s witnesses testified Kevin could have more supervision but seemed to be “all boy” with more “steam” than the other children. There was also testimony that when plaintiff was working until 11:30 at a hospital (following the separation) she would leave the children alone while taking'the baby sitter home, a trip of some fifteen to twenty minutes duration.

Another matter that bears upon plaintiff’s control and supervision of the children has to do with an occasion when Kev *33 in and Jim, a boy who had just moved into the neighborhood, walked eight or ten blocks. Plaintiff had seen the boys about 2:20 or 2:30 when she gave them each an apple and they went back out to play. About 3:00 o’clock Jim’s mother came looking for him. They couldn’t find him and Jim’s mother, understandably concerned, called the police after a neighborhood search. There was testimony plaintiff was opposed to calling the police. About 4:30 Jim’s father picked the boys up a couple of blocks from the house. Plaintiff testified she called defendant about 4:00 o’clock to tell him the boys were missing. His testimony was she called him at about 5:00.

Some of the testimony as to plaintiff’s affair with a Bill Friedman is pertinent to the issue here involved. Plaintiff admitted she had sexual relations with this man after the separation from her husband. It further appears that she had told her husband she was in love with Friedman during the month prior to completion of the adoption of Sharon. Defendant also so testified. About ten days after the adoption was completed plaintiff and defendant separated. Defendant testified that he had been checking on plaintiff during their separation and he had seen this man’s automobile parked near her house as many as twenty times during the period from April to October, and it often stayed there until 2:00 o’clock in the morning; that on these occasions there were no lights on in the house. One of defendant’s witnesses testified to the same general effect except that she went to bed at 10:30 or 11:00 when the car was still there and does not know how much longer it stayed. Defendant’s witnesses testified that as a result of this affair plaintiff’s reputation in the neighborhood was not good. Defendant testified that Friedman is now divorced and that he saw Friedman’s ex-wife and the Friedman children at plaintiff’s residence. He has not seen Friedman there but that is the inference he draws from his testimony as to the presence of the automobile in front of plaintiff’s residence.

The evidence as to the parties’ respective abilities to care for the children financially and otherwise is very meager. Plaintiff’s evidence was that at the time the divorce action was heard she was working in Clayton, Missouri, at a salary of $350.00 per month. She works from 8:20 in the morning to 5:00 in the evening. She would take the children to the baby sitter at 7:15 in the morning and pick them up at 5:30 in the evening at the baby sitter’s home. The baby sitter is a licensed practical nurse who has a nursery set up in her home and keeps four or five other children in addition to Kevin and Sharon. The children get hot meals while they are being cared for. After 5:30 she calls for the children and they go to her home where she prepares dinner. Then they play and watch television until bedtime. Her testimony was that she paid $80.00 per month for this service by the nursery. There was no description given of her living quarters.

Defendant testified that a family by the name of Thompson who have three children of their own, two of which are school age and the other the same age as Sharon, would take care of Kevin and Sharon in the event the court awarded custody to him. He did not give the amount they would charge for their services or any particulars of their care. He works from 8:00 in the morning until 5:00 in the afternoon, and gets home about 5:30. On weekends he takes the children to his father’s house but his father and stepmother can’t care for the children as the stepmother works all day. He testified that he makes $150.00 per week plus car expenses which sum he did not state. Plaintiff testified that her husband’s income in 1965 was $9,200.00, in 1966 it was $8,500.00, and in 1967 it was $7,000.00. The only expenses he gave were the payments on his car of $126.00 per month. There was no testimony as to the physical surroundings in the home in which defendant intended to place the children for day care nor any description of his present living quarters. The only evidence as to the father’s character and his concern for the children and *34

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Bluebook (online)
455 S.W.2d 31, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccallister-v-mccallister-moctapp-1970.