McKenzie v. McKenzie

306 S.W.2d 588, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 539
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1957
Docket29739, 29801
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 306 S.W.2d 588 (McKenzie v. McKenzie) 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
McKenzie v. McKenzie, 306 S.W.2d 588, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 539 (Mo. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

WOLFE, Commissioner.

This is an action for divorce. The husband, plaintiff, prevailed below but the defendant, wife, was awarded the custody of their two daughters, and the plaintiff has appealed. There was an allowance of attorney’s fees to the defendant for defending a writ of prohibition hereinafter mentioned and there was also an allowance of attorney’s fees for the defense of this appeal. From these, after trial orders, the plaintiff has appealed.

Both of these appeals were argued and submitted together and both are herein considered.

The petition in this cause was filed in April, 1954. The plaintiff charged his wife with general indignities and habitual drunkenness. The defendant answered with a charge of abandonment and sought separate maintenance and the custody of their two daughters, seven and five years of age respectively, at the time the petition was filed.

The cause came on for hearing on November 8, 1954, and the plaintiff pressed none of his charges except that of habitual drunkenness. The evidence to support this was that for at least two years prior to the date of filing the petition the defendant drank to excess. Both the husband and friends of the couple testified that the defendant drank to such excesses that at times she could not stand. The husband said that she drank about a fifth of a gallon of whiskey a day and that when he came home from his work she would be “glassy-eyed” and incoherent. At one time he was *590 asked to take her home from a party because she was drunk and disorderly. On another occasion she had to be carried to their car. A maid who had been in their employ testified that the defendant hid whiskey in various places about the house and that there were frequent deliveries of it from the drugstore.

There was testimony that the children had been found outside after dark in the late fall of the year and taken into their home by a passing motorist who found the mother asleep on the kitchen floor. There was also testimony that at one time the older child was beaten by her mother during the early hours of the morning because of some hallucination that the mother had about the child’s behavior.

The plaintiff prevailed upon the defendant to have medical attention and in 1953 Dr. Luten arranged to have her sent to St. Vincent’s Hospital. She remained there for ten days and after her return she was sober for three months. In August of that year she again started drinking and in December-she was again hospitalized for a few days but was released for the Christmas holidays on a promise-not-to drink any more. During the holidays she again took to drink and was almost continually intoxicated.

Plaintiff left and took the two children with him in April, 1954. He lived thereafter in an apartment with his daughters and employed the same maid that had worked for him while he was living with his wife. The defendant at the time of the trial was living with her aunt.

Upon the foregoing evidence the court found in favor of the plaintiff and awarded him the custody of his two daughters with the right of temporary periods of custody in the mother. A motion for a new trial was filed and without objection the defendant testified at a hearing on the motion that she had moved to an apartment of her own and that she would be a good mother.to the children. The court, without ruling upon her motion for a new trial, set aside the decree as it related to the.custody of the children and reset the cause for January 3, 1955, for further hearing. On January 3, 1955, the court re-entered the decree of divorce which it had never of record set aside and again gave custody to the plaintiff with certain periods of temporary custody in the defendant, and decreed that such custodial provisions should only remain in force until May 2, 1955, at which time a further hearing was to be held.

The defendant after an unavailing motion for a new trial filed a notice of appeal to this court which appeal was withdrawn on March 21, 1955. Thereafter, on May 2, 1955, a further hearing was had.

Two priests testified that they had seen Mrs. McKenzie on several occasions and had been in her home and that they were, both under the impression that she had fully recovered from alcoholism. One stated that he was present in her home when the children were there and that both she and the children displayed normal affection toward each other. A relative who had seen Mrs. McKenzie on a number of occasions since January, 1955, had noted a great change for the better. She said that defendant is a very capable person. She visited defendant on Easter when the children were with her and she said that the children were very affectionate toward their mother. This witness also testified that she knew Mrs. McKenzie had been an alcoholic and that Mrs. McKenzie had joined Alcoholics Anonymous since her separation from her husband.

A member of that organization testified that Mrs. McKenzie was a member and had been awarded a card indicating that she had not had an alcoholic drink for six months.

A neighbor in the apartment building to which the defendant had moved stated that she had been in close contact with Mrs. McKenzie since her move and that she had never seen her take a drink. She said that she had offered her a drink not knowing of her difficulty and that Mrs. McKenzie had refused it.

*591 The defendant testified that she was currently living in a five-room apartment and had been employed since January as a secretary by a life insurance company. Her salary was $250 a month. She testified that she was a member of Alcoholics Anonymous and that on June 9 she would have abstained from alcohol for a period of one year. She attended weekly meetings of the organization. The rest of the testimony at the hearing had to do with' plaintiff’s ’earnings and the cost of maintaining the children. No point having been raised in regard to the allowance of support money, this need not be set out.

At the- conclusion of this hearing the the court awarded custody to the defendant with temporary periods of custody in the plaintiff. It then ordered that such provisions remain in force until September 8, 1955, setting that date as a time for a “conference between the court and attorneys”.

The plaintiff then filed an unavailing motion for a new trial and appealed to this court. On September 22, the trial court indicated its intention to make permanent the award of custody in the defendant and the plaintiff sought a writ of prohibition here. We issued our preliminary rule in prohibition but on October 5, 1956, the preliminary rule was discharged. See State ex rel. McKenzie v. LaDriere, Mo.App., 294 S.W.2d 610.

After our mandate was sent down the court entered a decree awarding custody to the mother with support money for the children and temporary periods of custody in the father. The plaintiff again filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled on November 9, 1956. The plaintiff again appealed. The defendant filed a motion for attorney’s fees for work done by her attorneys in the prohibition suit and also for fees and expenses to defend the appeal. Both of these were allowed by the court and this was also appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
306 S.W.2d 588, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-mckenzie-moctapp-1957.